“Mmm.”
He turned and pulled open a cupboard above her head. “And in here we have crackers, mayonnaise, potato buds and oatmeal.”
“Yech.”
“I have been eating out a lot.”
“So it would seem.”
“There’s a Chinese place about three miles away that stays open late, and delivers,” he suggested.
“Oh, good. Then I won’t have to get dressed up.”
“I’m in favor of that,” he replied, rummaging in a drawer. He held out a takeout menu for her to see.
“I knew I had this someplace,” he said triumphantly.
“Shanghai Sam’s?” she said, reading the heading.
“Despite the name, the food is good.”
“What’s that interesting stain on the edge of the menu?” Marisa asked, laughing.
“Moo goo gai pan?” he said.
“Don’t ask me.”
“Probably chicken lo mein,” he amended. “That’s always been a favorite of mine. What would you like?”
“Anything. I’m in no mood to be particular.”
He lifted the receiver of the wall phone and frowned. “It seems to be dead.”
“It’s off the hook upstairs,” Marisa reminded him.
“Oh, right. Would you go up and replace it?”
Marisa did so.
“Do they know you at Shanghai Sam’s?” Marisa asked, grinning as she reentered the kitchen.
“I am the best customer of Shanghai Sam’s. Also of Bay Point Pizza, Mabel’s Lunch, and Uncle Morty’s Subs.” He tossed the menu back in the drawer and slammed it shut.
“Not to mention Leduc’s, and that sawdust wonderland we patronized the other night.”
“Correct.”
“I gather you don’t like to cook.”
“I can’t cook, there’s a difference. I have tried. Everything always winds up burned, dried, flattened, or whatever it’s not supposed to be. I gave up a long time ago.” He extended his arms invitingly and she walked into them.
“I suppose you can cook, of course,” he said, nestling his cheek against her hair.
“A little. I’m no chef.”
“I ordered shrimp in lobster sauce with saffron rice and sauteed string beans.”
“Sounds good.”
“Low sodium, no MSG,” he added.
Marisa drew back to look at him.
“That’s what it says on the menu,” he said, shrugging. He undid the knot at her waist carefully and pulled back her shirttails to reveal her bare midriff.
“Jack,” Marisa said warningly.
“Yes?” He bent to plant a kiss on her skin just above the button on her slacks.
“Someone is going to be delivering that order in about five minutes,” she said.
“Ten.”
“What’s the difference? I need sustenance, Jack, I’m not used to this pace.”
“Are you suggesting that I’m wearing you out?” he said.
“If I faint it’s your fault,” she said impishly, slipping out of his grasp.
“Oh, all right, I suppose I do have to feed you.” He got a couple of glasses out of another cupboard and rinsed them under the tap.
“Jack?”
“Yeah?” He looked over his shoulder at her.
“What’s going to happen when all this is over?” she asked.
“All what?” He put the glasses on the table.
“The case, you know.”
“We’ll go on as before,” he said lightly, not looking at her
“But I live in Maine, for heaven’s sake.”
“So what? It’s not the moon. There are planes and trains and roads that go there, right?”
“Do you mean that?” she said quietly.
“Of course. Did you imagine that I would leave here and forget you?” he asked, taking napkins from a box on the counter.
“I... I didn’t know.”
“Come here,” he said, putting the napkins down.
Marisa stepped into his arms again.
“What do you think, that this is a casual fling for me?” he said gently, stroking her hair.
“I was hoping not.”
“But you were still willing to take the chance?”
“I wanted you, Jack. But I knew you must have done this sort of thing before,” she said lamely.
“Not this sort of thing,” he replied quietly.
The doorbell rang.
“Saved by the bell?” Marisa said.
“Don’t make light of it,” he said soberly, releasing her. “I meant what I said.” He went to answer the door and when he returned he was carrying two brown bags and a newspaper.
“I forgot to take this off the steps,” he said, putting the paper aside and diving into one of the bags.
Marisa went to join him, postponing the subject of their relationship until later.
“Can you use these?” he asked, indicating the set of wooden chopsticks included with his order. He took the mineral water out of the refrigerator and filled their glasses.
“Hold one stick like a pencil,” Marisa said, demonstrating.
Jack sat down, opened a carton, and attempted to imitate her. A shrimp slid into his lap.
“Thank you,” he said, staring down at his jeans.
“You asked.”
“Stop showing off,” he added, as she manipulated the chopsticks dexterously.
“I’d advise you to get a fork, Jackson,” Marisa commented, grinning wickedly.
He went for some silverware and sat again, saying, “It must be genetic. Native Americans aren’t meant to use those things.”
“I’m no more Chinese than you are.”
He used his fork as a slingshot and sent a string bean flying in her direction.
“That was mature,” Marisa said.
“My specialty, maturity.”
“So I’ve noticed.” Marisa opened the newspaper and riffled through the pages.
“You’re not reading the newspaper tonight,” he said, around a mouthful of rice.
“It says here that Deception is playing on the movie channel at twelve o’clock.”
“You’re not watching television tonight,” he added.
“Oh, come on! It’s a great movie, Bette Davis at the top of her form. Terrific music, too.”
“I can’t watch that—those shoulder pads she wears are too distracting.”
“You’re thinking of Joan Crawford.”
“I am not. Crawford is the one with the bug eyes and Davis is the one who’s always spinning around, flipping her skirts. And smoking.”
“They’re both always smoking. I can see you’re really a fan of forties movies.”
“They’re so dated, aren’t they? And the dialogue, so corny!”
“That’s part of their nostalgic appeal, something a writer should be able to appreciate. And Davis is really good in this one.” Marisa popped the last string bean in her mouth and chewed industriously.
“I feel I should warn you that if you’re addicted to Bette Davis weepers, the future of this relationship is in doubt.”
“Watch out or I’ll tie you down and force you to watch Dark Victory with me.”
“Which one is that?”
“Bette is a playgirl with a brain tumor who falls in love with her doctor.”
“Spare me. I thought you didn’t like television.”
“I don’t, not today’s television. I like old movies, pre-nineteen-sixty, preferably.” She smiled invitingly. “We could build a fire and watch it together on that old console TV in the living room.”
“How about the portable in the bedroom?” he said, grinning.
“Not a chance. I want to see the film, Jack.”
He shrugged. “I’m sure it’ll be better than the programs on the tube. The only television I really watch is CNN and sometimes the sports channel, anyway.”
“Liar. You’re probably addicted to Saturday morning cartoons.”
“Well,
I am partial to Scooby Doo.”
“I knew it!”
He scraped the bottom of the rice carton and tossed the empty container in the trash.
“But in all honesty I’d have to say I’m equally fond of Spiderman,” he added, smiling.
“Hah! And I’ll bet you watch the shopping channel all night and buy onyx rings at three o’clock in the morning.”
“I confess that when I’ve been up late with a manuscript I’ve had it on occasionally. Some of those people who call in during the wee hours really do bear watching.”
Marisa looked at the wall clock pointedly. “I rest my case. Bette’s waiting.”
“You owe me one.” He rose, grumbling, and Marisa heard him laying a fire in the living room as she straightened the kitchen. By the time she joined him the movie was on and he was using the bellows on the fire to get it going.
“Isn’t that the guy from that Ingrid Bergman flick?” he asked, gesturing at the screen.
“That’s Claude Rains. He was in every Ingrid Bergman movie. And every Bette Davis movie too, I think.” Marisa settled on the couch and turned up the volume slightly.
“No, no, you know the one I mean, the famous one. Humphrey Bogart in North Africa, World War II?”
“You are referring, I believe, to Casablanca?”
“Right. This guy was the crooked police chief or something?” Jack put the bellows back on the rack and stood up.
“Yes. He’s a symphony conductor in this one.”
Jack sat next to her and folded his arms behind his head. “And how about the one where he’s a neo-Nazi married to Ingrid and Cary Grant is the government agent?”
Marisa stared at him. “Notorious. I thought you hated old movies.”
“I never said that. I said they were dated and corny but I’ve seen my share of them.”
“Apparently.”
“I’m a night owl. I do a lot of my writing late at night. If I get stuck I sometimes turn on the TV. That’s when they’re on, okay?”
“You would never be caught renting one, of course.”
“Of course.” He leaned forward to adjust the color knob. “I guess this one hasn’t been ,colorized,”’ he said, when the picture remained black and white.
“Thank God. I saw the colorized version of Little Women and everything and everybody in it was sepia, like those daguerreotypes from the Civil War.”
He chuckled.
“Who’s this?” he inquired, as the screen featured a close-up.
“Paul Henreid.”
“Looks familiar.”
“Ingrid’s husband in Casablanca,” Marisa said dryly.
He snapped his fingers. “Right!”
Marisa shot him a sidelong glance as he settled back and fixed his gaze on the screen.
“What?” he said, looking at her.
“I thought you were enduring this for my sake.”
“Well?”
“Don’t look too much like you’re enjoying yourself or I might get the wrong impression.”
He reached out suddenly and yanked her into his lap.
“Forget Paul whatever his name is. He’s dead. I’m right here and I’m alive.”
“So I see.”
He untied her blouse and eased the sleeves off her arms.
“What about the movie?” she asked.
“We’ll just have to watch it another time,” he replied, unbuttoning her slacks.
The screen flickered in the background as they made love.
* * *
In the morning Marisa woke to find herself in Jack’s bed, having no recollection of getting there. She slipped into a shirt she found lying on the dresser and padded downstairs barefoot, to find him scrambling eggs in the kitchen as the delicious smell of brewing coffee wafted around him.
“Good morning, gorgeous,” he said, saluting her enthusiastically with a spatula.
“I thought you couldn’t cook,” she said, putting her arms around his waist from behind as he stood at the stove.
“This is the limit of my repertoire,” he replied, leaning back into her embrace.
“How did I get upstairs last night?” she asked, opening the refrigerator to discover it stocked with new items.
“How do you think? I carried you.”
“And when did you buy all this stuff?” she asked, removing a carton of cream from the refrigerator and putting it on the table.
“I got up early and went to the store.”
“You must think I have a big appetite,” she said, laughing.
“I know you have a big appetite, darlin’,” he answered, grinning wickedly.
“Stop making fun of me. You started me on the path to destruction,” Marisa replied.
Jack turned off the burner on the stove and carried the pan to the table. It was already set with dishes and cutlery, and a plate of toast sat in the middle of it.
Marisa selected a piece and bit into it.
“Not bad,” she said optimistically.
“Liar. I burned it.”
“Only slightly. I hate pale toast anyway.”
“You won’t get that around here, mine is always charred.” He scooped the eggs onto her plate and then sat across from her, watching as she took a sample.
“Very good,” she said brightly.
He took a bit himself.
“Not bad, if I do say so,” he agreed, digging in with relish. “So, what are we going to do today?”
“Jack, I have to work.”
“Come on, you can play hooky for one day.”
“I don’t think so,” Marisa said. “I didn’t come to Florida to socialize with you, Jackson, I came to represent a client.”
“Socialize?” he said, raising his brows. “Is that what we’ve been doing?”
“If you’re going to take a double meaning from everything I say, I’m going to stop talking to you.”
“As long as you don’t stop sleeping with me,” he said, shoveling a forkful of eggs into his mouth.
She kicked him under the table.
“Ow. You’re on a break from court now. Can’t whatever you have to do wait until tomorrow?”
Marisa hesitated, sorely tempted.
“You’re a bad influence,” she finally said.
“So I’ve been told,” he replied.
“What about you? Don’t you have writing to do?”
“It can wait.”
“We’re both going to wind up unemployed,” Marisa said gloomily, munching toast.
Jack got up and took her hand, leading her out of her chair and into his arms.
“Let’s use this time while we have the chance,” he said against her hair. “It may be difficult for us to get together in the future.”
Marisa felt a chill. What was he trying to say?
“We’ll find a way, won’t we?” she asked anxiously.
“Of course we will. But this interlude is a gift. Let’s take advantage of it.”
“All right,” Marisa said, looking up at him.
“I have an idea.”
“Somehow I thought you might.”
“My friend who owns the boat also has a beach house.”
“What is this guy, a millionaire?”
“He’s well off, yeah.”
“Why doesn’t he keep his boat at the beach?”
“You can’t dock a boat on the open ocean, it would get battered to pieces. Are you sure you live in Maine?”
“I forgot,” she said sheepishly. “So what about the beach house? And I think I should warn you that despite your recent swimming escapades, the water here is a bit too chilly for me.”
“So we won’t swim. The view is beautiful. We’ll walk on the beach, take a lunch along with us, okay?”
“Okay,” Marisa said, ducking her head against his shoulder and clutching him tightly.
It was sunny when they left the house. Twenty minutes later it was overcast, and by the time they got to the beach it was pouring rain. They trudged through the
wet sand and climbed up the exterior stairs to the deck, and then Jack unlocked the sliding glass doors. They bustled through them and turned glumly to watch the rivulets of water running down the glass, obscuring the shoreline in a gray wash.
“So, this was a great idea, huh?” Jack said flatly, and Marisa laughed.
“I’m not a weatherman,” he said, shrugging. “Sue me.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it.” Marisa flung herself on him and they both tumbled onto the suede couch to the left of the door.
“Who needs sunshine?” he said.
“Not us.” They lay together and listened to the rain drumming on the roof of the A-frame house. “What does your friend do for a living?” Marisa asked. “This place reeks of money.”
“Actually, he doesn’t do much. I think he inherited most of it. His father invented something and it’s kept them all in the chips for about fifty years.”
“What did his father invent?”
“Some kind of aquarium cover.”
Marisa sat up, staring down at him. “An aquarium cover?” she said incredulously.
“I’m serious. It allows the fish to breathe, or be fed through it, or something. Pet stores and zoos use it. I’m telling you, the thing was a big hit.”
Marisa started to giggle, and then laughed out loud. “The house the fish feeder built,” she said, gesturing to the walls.
“This ain’t the half of it, honey. You haven’t seen the family house in Jacksonville, the co-op in New York, or the flat in Paris.”
“How did you meet this guy?”
“School,” he said, offhandedly.
“Oh. The prep school where you didn’t fit in too well.”
“That’s the one.”
“And he befriended you.”
“How do you know it wasn’t the other way around?”
“Well, he would have felt secure in that environment, so it stands to reason he’d be the one sticking up for you. Am I right?”
“You know a lot about human nature, don’t you?” he said, pulling her down next to him again.
Marisa shrugged, embarrassed.
“You’re right,” Jack said. “He did help me a lot. He was my roommate in college too. It was his wife you saw me with in the hotel dining room that night we...”
“Made fools of ourselves?” Marisa suggested.
He grinned. “You were jealous, weren’t you? When you thought she was my date.”
“I was not,” Marisa said indignantly, snuggling into his side and sighing contentedly.
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