"I'm so sick of this."
"Of what?"
The three of them had managed to
meet for lunch that Thursday, but Nancy picked at her salad while Bess tackled
an enormous plate of pasta, and George finished her first bowl of soup.
"All these damn long hours
Ned's keeping."
George took a long sip of her iced
water. "When's the presentation?"
"Tomorrow," Nancy and
Bess chorused, and then Bess giggled.
"Hey, at least this way I
know Kent's not lying when he says he can't come see me. I think Ned would move
heaven and earth to come see you, if he could."
Nancy cracked her first smile at
that. "Yeah," she admitted. "I think tomorrow night he's just
going to lose it, and drink himself under a table somewhere, and then call and
sing me some terrible pop song at three o'clock in the morning."
"Unless you're with
him," George pointed out, lifting another spoonful of soup. "The idea
of having a drunk Ned under our power is very appealing."
Nancy burst out in shocked
laughter. "Just for that, I really hope that if we do go out tomorrow
night, you two aren't around."
"Well..." Bess trailed
off, her cheeks coloring. "I kind of... have something else planned."
George turned avid eyes from her cousin
to her best friend. "So you're both going to ditch me, aren't you."
"Not ditch you," Bess
said softly, her voice too sweet to be serious. "More like... call you
when it's last call and ask you to come pick us up."
"Which is no fun at all," George protested, as Nancy smacked Bess
on the shoulder. "I'll just have to go out Friday night and find my own
guy."
"And you know what? Then
we'll all win, because you won't be pestering me to go jogging at six o'clock
on Saturday freaking morning." Bess twirled her fork in her pasta.
"Yeah, but it's
tradition," George protested, grinning. "I knock on your door, you
throw a pillow at me, and by the time I get back you've made pancakes."
"So that's why you wake me
up," Bess said in mock outrage. "You just go and jog off the pancakes
before you eat them."
With ten minutes left on her lunch
break, Nancy stopped by the downtown florist, drunk with the memory of roses.
Bouquets made of flower-shaped cookies, in vases hugged by big-eyed teddy
bears, tall with sprigs of baby's breath. Besides, she couldn't imagine Ned
squealing with joy upon receiving a vase of Gerber daisies or a pot of
chrysanthemums.
He's not even my boyfriend, Nancy thought when she caught herself trying to remember
what she would have sent Frank, if he had just finished a complicated case. She
would have sent him herself, for one of their weekends, which always seemed
better in the planning than the execution. He's not my boyfriend, she thought at an especially cute bear dressed in a
football jersey, complete with helmet and a miniature ball tucked under his
arm.
"You shouldn't have,"
Ned said, when he called an hour later.
"You don't like it."
"No, I do," Ned said,
defensively. "I do like it. And the stripper you sent with it was
outstanding. Absolute tops."
"The florist must have mixed
up my order, then. Or you have another girl."
"Another girl..." He
chuckled. "I don't even have enough time for you."
"But you'll have enough time
for me tomorrow night, won't you?"
"Oh yes," he promised.
"Because I've been looking forward to tomorrow night... I mean, you have
no idea. I will be attached to your hip the entire weekend."
"That could prove
awkward," she chuckled. "I've never had a siamese twin before."
"We can just tell everyone
we're doing a three-legged race all weekend."
"Okay, now you're scaring
me," she told him. "How many shots of espresso have you had
today?"
"Too many," he admitted.
"The good news is that the slide show's finished. The bad news is how long
I was volunteered to babysit a copier."
"Have you not discovered
modern civilization's gift to hapless money managers and procrastinating
college students, the professional print shop?"
"Only hapless money managers
who aren't trying to keep their newest international strategies secret."
"Tell me about it,"
Nancy chuckled. "All right, tomorrow night. Hell or high water."
"Or Japanese tourists,"
he promised. "You got anything in mind?"
"I do," she said, her
voice low. "But it's a surprise."
"Then I can't wait."