Nancy's
first mistake was volunteering to go for a last minute present. Hannah was
elbow-deep in raw turkey and Carson was wrapping presents and Avery was rolling
out sugar cookie dough, and Nancy somehow hasn't felt totally at home in River
Heights since she left for Wilder. She loves the lights and the decorations and
the carols over the intercoms in the stores, but River Heights is beginning to
feel like a place she'll see only at the holidays, for birthdays. She's more
comfortable in the living room than her bedroom; she looks around her old room
and sees who she used to be, not who she is now. Pictures of Bess and George
with their arms around her, awkward and gangly, teeth gleaming with
long-removed braces. Empty frames where her boyfriends' pictures used to be.
Pastel walls that seemed very chic in high school and feel impossibly dated
now.
Soon
Avery will paint the walls beige and take the canopy off her bed and take down
the old, crinkling posters of movie stars. She is distantly aware that she should
care about that. She doesn't, though.
So
she feels restless and when her father says he promised to bring two
remote-controlled cars to their big extended-family celebration the day after
Christmas, she's scrambling for her keys before he can even say where they're
on sale.
The
roads are covered in ice but she takes the Mustang anyway, squinting through
her fogging windshield, and passes three wrecks before she reaches the mall.
Traffic
is a nightmare. All the restaurants near the mall are doing a brisk business,
their parking lots full. Slow-moving cars drift ponderously through the mall
entrance lanes, making the other drivers wave their fists in frustration, Nancy
among them. In the lots, in the parking deck, she joins the endless river of
cars searching for parking spots. Every now and then a car fishtails and skids
on the ice and Nancy breathes on her mittens, shivering, pinned in place by all
the cars around her, hoping for a miracle.
Her
gas tank light has just chimed a warning when she pulls into a parking spot.
She fastens her coat securely, knots her scarf fastidiously around her neck,
but she's still covered in snow and shivering by the time she walks through the
doors at the department store. She feels frozen down to the roots of her eyelashes.
The
store is a madhouse. Crying toddlers and harried mothers cluster around
freestanding displays and customer service desks. Bored husbands flip
desultorily through sales racks while their wives sort through stacks of
sweaters. Openly hostile sales clerks glare at the disarranged displays.
Nancy
wrestles her way through a cluster of scrabbling housewives. She actually
stayed in on Black Friday this year, hoping to avoid this kind of insanity. She
tries the usual places and finally breaks down and asks one of the hassled
clerks, who replies, "Housewares."
Twenty
minutes later, two of the last three remote control cars are in Nancy's arms
and she's working her way through the crowd to find a checkout. The children's
department is a mob and the staff in housewares seem to have abandoned their
posts. In the men's section she finally finds a relatively short line.
Then
she discovers it's short because the person at the front seems to have
exclusively selected items without price tags, and the clerk and an assistant
are busily checking every single item.
She
heaves a sigh and shifts the cars in her hands. The person in front of her
turns. "I think we're in for a longÑ"
His
eyes meet hers and he finishes, weakly, "wait."
Nancy's
eyes widen. "Ned? Hey!"
"Hey!"
He looks down at the car and belts in his own hands and manages to maneuver one
hand to where he can shake hers. "It's so good to see you."
"It's
so good to see you."
"What
have you been up to?"
While
that same familiarity they've shared is still there, she feels awkward around
him. It hasn't been so long since she broke up with Michael; then she does a
mental count, and suddenly discovers it's been almost a year. She and Ned keep
in touch through mutual friends, but there have been no late-night phone calls,
no rambling letters, no great reunion. Even so, he's always been at the back of
her mind.
"The
usual. You know."
"So
you're back in River Heights for a case." His eyes are sparkling.
"No,
no. Christmas. And Dad asked me to come get these, which was the stupidest
thing I've agreed to do in a long time."
"Traffic
is awful, isn't it?" Ned shakes his head. "And then after this I need
to go over to the pizza place and get some gift cards for my mom's
friends..."
"Oh,
I wish you hadn't said that."
"Why?"
"I'm
starving," she says ruefully, patting her belly.
Somehow
she ends up following him to the pizza place. The tiny tables are packed and
the line of couples and families waiting to be seated is out the door, their
faces creased in frowns. After he buys his gift cards, Ned buys a couple of
slices of the special to go, and passes one over. They find a tiny space mostly
out of the snow, their hands warmed by the hot pizza.
"Thanks."
She smiles at him over the slice.
"Sure
thing."
"There's
all this food in the kitchen, in the fridge, and none of it that we can eat
until tomorrow." She sighs, folding the slice in half and biting off the
tip. "How are your parents doing?"
"They're
doing well." Ned chews thoughtfully. "Now I really need a drink.
Great."
"A
drink, or a drink?"
She raises an eyebrow.
Ned
laughs. "A soda," he responds. "I can just imagine how happy Dad
would be if I came home with rum on my breath."
Nancy
chuckles. "Remember that time there was that huge party at Omega Chi and
your parents came by the next dayÑ"
"Oh,
don't remind me." He clutches at his head playfully.
They
take their time with the pizza, take their time wiping their hands and finding
a trash can. She doesn't necessarily want to leave; she dreads the idea of
finding a gas station in all the chaos.
"I'm
sure you wouldn't want to follow me back over the highway, would you? My gas
light is on."
Ned
pauses, absently putting his gloves back on. "I will if you buy me
dinner."
Her
heart is trying to race. This is ridiculous. It's Ned, for God's sake. Familiar
as old shoes and just as comfortable, despite the drift in their relationship.
She smiles, ignoring the tension. "Well, tonight's outÑ"
"And
tomorrow. How long will you be home?"
"Probably
just after the first of the year."
"Okay.
How about in four days. By then maybe all this traffic will have cleared
out."
"Don't
bet on it."
As
soon as Ned sees her safely to a gas station, Nancy parks at the pump and calls
Bess, strangely exhilarated.
--
He
doesn't suggest Chez Louis, for which she is incredibly grateful. She can't
imagine going there with him now, remembering him proposing to her just
outside.
Instead
he picks her up, a fresh dusting of snow falling, and they go to Chicago. When
he first had his driver's license and she didn't yet they would go to Chicago
almost every weekend, to games, parties, restaurants, somewhere. She has
forgotten, in the interim, all the aborted vacations, the broken dates, the
hour-late arrivals while she was tracking down clues.
They
go to a new place, one she hasn't seen before, with small individual heaters
out on the patio. She's not brave enough for that, not while she's in thin
stockings and a sweaterdress, so they sit at a window with an excellent view of
the lake.
"Get
anything good for Christmas?"
She
shrugs. "Remember how amazing it was when you were eight years old and you
scrambled out of bed on Christmas morning and there was this huge hulking thing
in front of the tree, before you ever could really see it clearly? And then you
rip the paper off and it's a bike or something else amazing." She traces
the stem of her wineglass. "That doesn't happen anymore."
"So,
nothing good."
Her
eyes sparkle as she props her chin on the heel of her hand. "What did you
get?"
"A
few sweaters, a scarf, a very nice tie. The usual."
"No
cute stuffed bears or books of poetry?" She smoothes her napkin over her
lap.
"Nope."
He unwraps his silverware, shooting her a surreptitious glance.
"You?"
"No."
"So
you're not with..."
"Michael.
I'm not with Michael anymore." She runs out of ways to fidget and picks up
the wrapper from her straw, twisting it around her finger. "It's been a
while."
He
dips his head. "Hmm."
Their
gazes meet, then, and hold. She can feel the words at the back of her throat
but can't bring herself to say them, not quite, and then the waiter arrives
with their appetizer and the spell is broken.
They
talk about the year between, his internship and her work at the newspaper and
the television station. He has an apartment now, in Emersonville, and he's
already talking about graduate school. His suit is smart and she doesn't
exactly want him to have languished in squalor without her, but he seems so
calm, so complete without her.
"What
is it that you want, Ned?" she asks him, over dessert, the tip of her
spoon tracing a design in the chocolate mousse. "You seem to have
everything figured out."
"Don't
you?" He steals a bite of her dessert and meets her gaze. "'Private
investigation firm by the time I'm twenty-five,'" he parrots back from
their countless conversations, across the front seats of cars during stakeouts,
over local and long-distance phone lines.
She
shrugs, opens her mouth to speak, and has to begin again. This shouldn't be so
hard. "I remember you saying a while back that, if we ran into each other,
maybe we should try again. But I don't know if you feel that way anymore."
He's
in the middle of stealing another bite of her dessert, but he stops. "It's
a long way," he says softly. "Between Wilder and Emerson."
"True."
She scoops up a bite of mousse. "But we won't be there forever."
On
the way back to River Heights they talk about movies, books, classes, Bess and
George, his fraternity brothers, everything else, anything else. They carefully
avoid making plans for New Year's, talking about a casual lunch and a movie
after, but not that night, not the kiss at midnight, the kiss at midnight that
they shared so many New Year's Eves. And then she realizes that they have not
touched, the entire night, no brush of their hands, nothing, and she suddenly,
desperately craves that contact.
He
opens the car door for her at her father's house, following her up the walk.
It's like coming home with a curfew, when her father would be waiting just inside
and Hannah would be waiting with a mug of cocoa or tea, waiting to hear all the
details of their date. But she's twenty now, and the woman who looks back at
her from the mirror is more polished and sophisticated and even than the girl
who used to stay up all night on the phone with him, until they fell asleep,
breathing into each other's ears as they dreamed.
"Would
it be different, this time?" Ned's hands are in his pockets and the cold
wind ruffles his hair, as he stands on the porch beside her.
She
smiles at him. "Yeah."
"Because,
well, there were a lot of things that worked, but..."
"Like
what?" She steps in close to him and reaches for his hand, and oh yes, oh
yes, that immediate electric spark is still there, as soon as they touch.
"Like..."
He
tries to be casual about it but it's been so long that she tilts her face up
waiting like a teenager on her first date. He looks down at her, and when he
takes too long her eyes pop open to see him regarding her from an inch away, so
close his breath touches her mouth.
"Well,
this, for example."
"You
sure? Because I really think you should test it."
He
chuckles. "If there's anything I doubt..."
The
kiss he gives her then goes from the chaste touch of parted lips to her hands
clasping desperately at his lapels, his arms around her and their tongues
tangling hot and her heart hammering in her chest. He starts to pull back and
she rocks forward on her heels and the earth is spinning away entirely, and
he's all she can feel, all she knows.
Finally,
slowly, they part and she's aware of just how cold her skin is from the wind
and just how warm his skin is. "Wow."
"I
think that was even better than I remember."
She
nods, the air cold against the back of her throat. "Look, Bess invited me
to a New Year's party. And maybe we can just start out slow and go to that.
After lunch and the movie."
"I
think, technically, that kiss at midnight is meant to be shared with the person
you want to kiss for the rest of the year." His eyes are sparkling.
"I
really don't have a problem with that," she says, and shivers a little
when he takes her hand.
"Me
either," he admits, smiling.