On Any Given Sundae

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On Any Given Sundae Page 8

by Marilyn Brant


  It also didn’t have anyone railroading him into marriage.

  “Thanks for sharing,” he told Miguel dryly. “Now get your butt back to work.”

  “If you persist in talking to me in such an uncouth manner, I’ll—”

  “Quit?” Rob finished for him. “Don’t you dare, man. I need you.”

  There was a long pause on the line. “Oh, now see? There you go saying something sweet. You’re a man of many facets, Rob Gabinarri.”

  “So are you, Miguel.”

  The self-titled Hot Latino Gay Brother blew him a kiss on the line and hung up.

  ***

  Somehow, and Elizabeth still didn’t know how, she made it through the next two weeks of this crazy schedule:

  Write and revise all morning and afternoon.

  Nibble only on fruit and veggies during the day in preparation for an evening of feasting.

  Flutter around in an hour-long panic over which outfit to wear to the Gabinarris’ house at night that they hadn’t yet seen.

  Meet Rob in front of Tutti-Frutti at five-thirty and spend the most pleasurable and most anxiety-producing two and a half hours of her day with his family and, briefly, alone with him.

  Fall into a fitful sleep, dreaming about a man she should know better than to love.

  But tonight there was going to be a break in the routine. Rob’s mother was going out of town for the evening, staying overnight at Rob’s uncle’s sister-in-law’s house in Milwaukee for some kind of Summerfest concert series. No, Madonna would not be performing, but apparently some band from Michigan would be there doing covers of all her big hits. Alessandra Gabinarri and her distant relative were beside themselves with excitement.

  Elizabeth was beside herself with uncertainty. Her first night in half a month without obligatory dinner plans and she didn’t know what to do.

  Rob, who’d been ever-pleasant but hadn’t gotten any closer to her since that hand-kissing incident, breezily announced that she was “off the hook” for this evening. That he had “some stuff to do.”

  Gretchen had some artsy-craftsy thing planned with her siblings in nearby Kenosha.

  Nick had a basketball game up in Port Washington that he’d talked Jacques into going to with him.

  They’d even closed Tutti-Frutti early for once. Everyone had plans for the night but none of them included her.

  It was simply ridiculous. She used to spend almost all of her nights alone. She’d read. She’d work on new cookbook ideas. She’d watch Jane Austen classics on A&E. She’d tend to her herb garden—plants she kept in small pots on her windowsill. And, occasionally, she’d meet up with her friends at one of their apartments for a Treat Swap night. Regardless, she’d go to sleep at a reasonable hour, and she’d never, ever meander around her place like a chef without her spatula just because she didn’t have a pseudo date for the evening.

  Okay, so maybe it was difficult getting used to loneliness again after being a part of lively family camaraderie for two weeks. But still. This silliness had to stop.

  She tossed on one of her favorite DVDs—Rachael Ray’s Fasta Pasta—and sank into the sofa. She lasted ten minutes.

  She fixed herself a steaming mug of hot cocoa with shaved bits of chocolate on top. She didn’t savor it. She gulped it down and found herself scanning the room for her purse and keys. What she needed was a real date, but she wasn’t going to find it here.

  She threw on a semi-fashionable ensemble, strode out the door and slammed it shut behind her.

  For the first time ever in Elizabeth Daniels’s personal history, she was going out on the town, and maybe, if she played her cards right, she’d pick up a man while she was at it.

  ***

  Elizabeth sniffed the air of Hauser’s Grill and Ale. Wisconsin’s Garden Spot, this wasn’t. Budweiser’s Basement was more like it but, though she’d made no promises to herself to stay late, she did vow she’d give the experience at least thirty minutes. How hard could it be to have a few drinks, meet a few people and, maybe, make out with some guy that she’d probably never see again? Other women did stuff like this all the time.

  She bravely marched up to the bar and placed her order. White wine. She just couldn’t go for the hard stuff. Imagine her drinking scotch or whiskey or bourbon!

  No. Now that was the problem right there.

  She should be able to imagine herself doing anything she darn well pleased. Maybe she’d work her way up to a martini next. Or maybe she’d settle for a rum and Coke. But if she wanted to try a Brandy Alexander, who was going to stop her?

  “Lizzy Daniels?”

  Elizabeth turned. The not-so-sweet voice belonged to the not-so-sweet mouth of the not-at-all-sweet Tara Welles.

  “What are you doing here?” Tara inquired, her razor-thin eyebrows raised like mini-boomerangs, waiting for the answer to come back to her.

  “W-Wine,” she said. “Very thirsty.” And, to underscore her point, she took a long sip. “Mmm.”

  Tara swept her sneering glance from side-to-side, in search of something. “Is Rob here with you? I haven’t seen him tonight.”

  “Nope.”

  Tara’s beady little blue eyes brightened. Well, no. That was a lie. They weren’t actually beady. They weren’t actually little either. They were big, round, blue…

  “Well, where is he?”

  …like dinosaur eggs, of the Tyrannosaurus Rex variety.

  “C-Couldn’t tell you,” she said before taking another swig of wine. Yeah, where was he? What “stuff” was he doing tonight? Not that she had any hold on him or any say in where he went or what he did, but she was curious. In an Old High School Friend sort of way.

  Ah. That was a lie, too.

  Tara, dressed in a skintight jungle-print miniskirt and a sage-green blouse, took a couple of slithery steps forward on her spike-heeled sandals.

  “You need to stop monopolizing him,” she hissed. “I’ve seen him at your uncles’ shop, you know. And every time I ask him about his plans for the night, he says he has to do something with you. I can tell it’s some kind of chore you’ve concocted to get him to go out with you.”

  Elizabeth drained her wineglass and ordered a martini. “Really?” she said through gritted teeth.

  “You’ve always been so transparent, Lizzy. Having a crush on Roberto Gabinarri. Honey, he wouldn’t seriously go for someone like you in this or any other lifetime.”

  The truth, Elizabeth thought, always hurt just a little more when it was about something you prayed you could keep hidden. She chewed the olive from her martini and regarded the terrible lizard standing before her.

  “A-Appreciate your insight, T-Tara.”

  “Hey, Elizabeth! Over here.”

  She turned to see, of all people, Maria-Louisa waving at her from a table in the corner. Never had Rob’s considerate sister-in-law felt more dear to her than at that moment, even if the woman was sitting with a group of six strangers who were bound to make Elizabeth nervous.

  “Hi,” she called back in her cheeriest, most confident voice and took a healthy gulp of her second drink. Alcohol. Definitely helpful in situations like these.

  “Come join us!” Maria-Louisa shouted over the din of country-western music. To emphasize the invitation further, she motioned with not one, but both hands. “It’s Rob’s girlfriend,” she explained loudly to her group of friends, and soon all of them were calling her over.

  Elizabeth looked between Tara, who was staring at her with a kind of mild horror melded with bewilderment, and Maria-Louisa’s grinning, girlish face and waving arms.

  No contest.

  “L-Later,” she said to Tara as she walked toward the table of women, half-full martini in hand, ready to do a little partying with an as-of-yet unknown Wilmington Bay crowd.

  She took a very, very deep breath.

  Hey, she could be spontaneous and fun if she wanted to be. She could act like a popular girl. Goodness knows she’d watched women like them long enough to be able to app
roximate how they behaved. All it would take was another dr—

  “We’re drinking strawberry margaritas, Elizabeth. Can I pour you one?”

  “A-Absolutely,” she said, shining her best smile at Maria-Louisa and then greeting the woman’s merry band of friends. “I was just thinking of trying something else.”

  “Ooh, these are the best,” one of the other ladies said. “Jimmy, over there at the bar,” she pointed, “makes ours extra sweet and—”

  “Extra potent,” another woman finished.

  All the ladies at the table giggled and raised their glasses in agreement.

  “Sounds exactly l-like what I’m looking for,” Elizabeth declared, polishing off the martini and gratefully reaching for the margarita. She took a good look at Jimmy the bartender. He was pretty cute. And their waiter—his nametag said “Ivan”—was even cuter.

  Mmm. This night had a lot of potential. She sipped her new drink, smiled again at everyone and winked at Ivan.

  ***

  Rob and Tony sat in front of the TV, beers in hand, discussing in intimate detail the parts of the visiting team’s pitcher’s anatomy that they’d like to eviscerate, since he caused the Brewers to lose again. Rob grinned through the goriness. He missed spending nights like this with his kid brother.

  “I keep envisioning a baseball version of Braveheart,” Tony said, tossing his empty beer can into the trash. “But I guess TV can’t show everything.”

  “Guess not.” Rob checked his watch. “Hey, it’s after nine. How long is your wife going to be out?”

  Tony shrugged. “Late. She gets it into her head that she needs an outing with the girls once a month and, you know, with five kids at home, I don’t blame her.”

  “You don’t mind doing everything by yourself for an evening, though? Putting all the kids to bed and all?” he asked.

  Tony laughed. “Look, Maria-Louisa does it all by herself during the day. Every day. I’d give her the whole night off three times a week if she asked for it. Once a month is nothing.”

  Rob thought of the five children sound asleep upstairs. Sammie, when Rob poked his head in on him an hour ago, was actually snoring. And one of the triplets—Michael—was talking to a PBS dragon in his sleep. It was kind of cute, he had to admit. In a Family Channel sort of way.

  He got up to stretch his legs. “Hey, you feel like cookies or ice cream or something? I can run out and pick up a half-gallon or two for us.”

  “I’d love some, but aren’t you sick of that sweet stuff after all the hours you spend scooping it up every day?” Tony stared at him with one of his deep, penetrating gazes. This question wasn’t intended to be literal.

  “Yes and no, Tony,” he admitted. “You know how I like to talk to people, so that part of it has been fun. The shop itself is running fine, and Elizabeth is so organized that we have on hand anything we need days before we actually need it.”

  “Ah, yes. Elizabeth.”

  He groaned. “Oh, c’mon. Don’t start on me. I can’t tell Mama the truth yet. That’s the part that hasn’t been going so well. I mean, Elizabeth’s been awfully kind about helping me fake this relationship, but soon Mama’s going to have to know that it could never happen for real.”

  “Because?” Tony prompted.

  Man, let me count the ways. “Because we’re not of the same type. She’s quiet and reserved and straight-laced. A class act. I’m loud and extraverted and a little on the wild side.”

  Tony indicated his agreement of that last point.

  “She’s a brain who writes. I’m a jock who does business. She wants to live out the rest of her life in Wilmington Bay. I want to get the hell back to Chicago at the end of the month, preferably sooner. She wants four kids, and I don’t want any if I can help it—”

  “Whoa, big brother. Slow down.” Tony’s wide eyes blinked at him. “You two talked about kids?”

  “Just theoretically.”

  “No, no, no. There’s no such thing with women.” His brother crossed his arms. “Who brought it up? You or her?”

  Rob thought back over their coffee shop conversation a few weeks ago. “I did, I think.”

  Tony nodded. “Bad move, bro. You’ve got her thinking and evaluating now. Plus, with all that playacting and your lovey-dovey hand massaging… Don’t fool yourself, Rob. This may be harder to break off than you think.”

  “Hey, I was totally open with my intentions. I’ve never led her on with this in any way. She knows it’s a game. I don’t think she’ll be heartbroken when it ends.”

  His brother laughed. “I don’t think she will be either. I wasn’t talking about her. I was talking about you.”

  “What? That’s—that’s—”

  “Not nearly as crazy as you may believe,” Tony finished for him, although that wouldn’t have been how he’d have chosen to end the sentence.

  He and Frizzy Lizzy together? For real?

  He thought about her kindness to his family, her understated prettiness, her sweet nature and the way she was slowly relaxing around him. He remembered her soft, soft hands and the attraction he’d felt for her that night of the coffee outing—an emotion he’d worked hard to suppress because, well, because they just didn’t mesh. They were too different. Right?

  A jolt of “So what?” smacked him in the gut.

  So what if they had polar personalities?

  So what if she could spin rings around him intellectually?

  So what if he did want to kiss her on the lips, just once?

  Not that he’d admit any of these things to Tony.

  “I’m going to get that ice cream now,” he informed his brother. “Either suggest a flavor or I’ll have to pick one for you.”

  Tony smirked. “Avoidance is the devil’s game. Play it at your own risk.”

  Rob took several pointed strides in the direction of the door. “I’m leaving.”

  His brother crossed his arms and leaned back against the sofa. “Okay, Peaches and Cream or Butter Pecan, then.”

  “How very wholesome of you.”

  “Not especially,” Tony said. “I just like what I like. But since you’re going out, could you do me a favor?”

  “I’m not picking up Happy Feet for you or any other heartwarming kiddie DVDs, no.”

  “Wasn’t what I was going to ask. Did you always jump to conclusions like this or is it a recent development?”

  He sighed. “What do you want?”

  “Maria-Louisa’s mom called earlier and their hair appointments got canceled for the morning. She’s either got her cell phone clicked off or it’s too hard to hear it at Hauser’s ‘cause I can’t reach her. Could you swing by there and give her the message? She’d appreciate being able to stay out later tonight knowing she’ll get to sleep in tomorrow.”

  “Yeah, okay,” Rob said, pondering how frightening it was that Tony was so taken in by his petite wife that he’d urge her to stay out later on a Saturday night and sleep in longer on a Sunday morning.

  And tomorrow was Father’s Day.

  He squinted at his brother and shook his head. The guy was whipped.

  He walked out of their House of Love and into Hauser’s a few minutes later still thinking about this. About having a totally loving, accepting relationship like Tony and Maria-Louisa’s. About what that would be like on a day-to-day basis.

  He inhaled the pungent aroma of extinguished cigarettes by the door mingling with half-empty pints of beer. He felt the vibration of the classic Garth Brooks song, “Friends in Low Places,” from the tips of his ears to the tips of his toes. People snickered in one corner, laughed in another, argued in a third. But it was the group in the fourth corner that stopped him like a ten-foot stone wall.

  They were chugging strawberry margaritas as though they expected Diane Sawyer to announce a world-shortage on the news tomorrow.

  They were flirting with one of the waiters, hooting over his jokes and then dissolving into giggling aftershocks.

  They were rising up en
masse and dancing in place for fifteen straight seconds before collapsing into their chairs again, arms flung to the sides, glasses dangling precariously in delicate-looking hands. Someone dropped one and they all roared with laughter. The waiter called for another to be sent over.

  They were people he knew, or so he’d thought.

  Soft-spoken Maria-Louisa. Her cousin Angelica. Her best friend Sandy, who’d been maid of honor at the wedding when he’d been best man. Three of the young neighbor women, all with preschoolers, who’d brought over casseroles and cakes so very primly the week he’d arrived back in town. Nice, sensible people. Usually.

  But it was the last lady there whose name caught in his throat. He struggled to say it aloud. He whispered it at first, but no way could she hear above this racket. He spoke it a second time, louder, but still no luck. Finally, he resorted to shouting.

  “Elizabeth!”

  Heads from all four corners of Hauser’s turned to stare at him. Conversations ground to a halt. Then they all turned back and continued their chattering. Except for the group of women he knew (or thought he knew). They pointed their polished fingernails at him. Shrieked. Hollered cheerful greetings he couldn’t quite catch. Motioned him over, waving their margarita pitcher in invitation.

  His feet sent him staggering toward The Sirens.

  “Rob!” Elizabeth said, beaming a cute but somewhat sloppy grin aimed in the vicinity of his left shoulder. “How are you? I’m really g-good.”

  “She’s wonderful,” Angelica gushed, sploshing some of her pink drink on her cream-colored blouse. “And so am I. And we think you’re wonderful, too.”

  “Well, um, thanks,” he said.

  Maria-Louisa popped in with, “Wanna join us? We’ve got lots here.” She examined the almost-empty pitcher. “Well, more’s coming.” She grinned at him. “How’s my darling hubby? At home asleep yet?”

 

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