Bess was already forty-five
minutes late when she heard the slap of a flat tire against the pavement. She
smacked the steering wheel in frustration, turned on her hazard lights and
maneuvered the Camaro to the narrow grass shoulder. Grabbing her cell phone,
she climbed out, just avoiding an oncoming car. Teetering on three-inch spiked
heels, she saw that the rear driver's side tire was indeed very flat, and was a
mere inch from the glowing white line marking the edge of the road. She opened
the trunk and glanced at her watch. She sighed.
Then she pushed aside all the
random debris, the overnight bag packed just in case Nancy called her out of
town on some very important case, a blanket, a wrinkled pale yellow dress. She
heaved up the carpet, careful to keep her freshly-polished nails unmarred.
No spare tire.
No spare tire?
She felt herself
hyperventilating and picked her way back to the front of the car, where she
climbed back inside, staring ahead at the deserted road. Well, attempting to
change a tire in this ensemble would be stupid anyway, she told herself. Which meant her cell phone.
With one bar of signal.
Ned arrived half an hour later,
pulling up close behind her car with his own hazard lights on. He climbed out,
leaned down to inspect her tire, and Bess maneuvered out of the car again,
apprehensive.
"Did it blow?" he
asked, straightening again.
Bess shrugged. Ned was standing
in silhouette, in the glow of his headlights, and Bess put a palm on her car.
Being off-balance due to three-inch heels was one thing. Being off-balance due
to best friend's boyfriend, was quite another.
"Maybe we'd better get out
of the road," Ned said, glancing back over his shoulder as another pair of
headlights approached. Bess nodded, then came back to climb into his car. Ned
closed his door just as the other car slipped by.
"Thank you so much for
coming," Bess said. "I couldn't find anyone else. Nancy and George
didn't answer."
Ned brushed a hand through his
hair. "You didn't hear?" he asked, a scowl on his square-jawed face,
marring his perfect lips. "She's out of town on some deathly important
case. At least, that's what she told me."
Bess stared through the
windshield at her crippled Camaro, silent. "I'm sorry."
She could hear the faint nervous
sound of his jeans against the seat before he broke the silence with a forced
laugh. "Me too," he said. "So, do you have Triple-A?"
"Yeah," Bess admitted.
"Couldn't get the number I have to work. Well, that is, if I could find
the little card with the number on it. Plus my cell phone's battery died."
"You're just having a bad
time tonight, aren't you?" Ned asked, shaking his head. He pulled out his
own phone. "One of my Omega Chi brothers works at a repair place near here
over the summer, let me see if I can call you in a favor."
"Thanks," Bess
replied, as Ned dialed.
"Don't mention it,"
Ned said. "Where were you going, anyway?"
"Mitch's," Bess said.
"I was going to meet some people there, but they're probably gone by
now."
"You should've taken a left
off the interstate," Ned said. "You're in the middle of
nowhere."
"Yeah," Bess replied,
looking over at him. His frat brother answered and he arranged for a tow truck
to come pick up Bess's car, but Bess just kept staring at him. It's late, she told herself. Just get him to take you home.
But when he hung up the phone,
she found herself saying, "So, if this is the middle of nowhere, how come
you know it?"
Ned laughed, easily now.
"There's a roadhouse a couple miles from here," he said. "The
only thing on this road."
"I could use a soda,"
Bess said. "What were you doing when I called you?"
"Watching a movie with my
parents," he said. "I just heard from my cousin Laurel, she wants me
to come out to San Francisco and visit her before I go back to school. But I
won't, not if Nancy can't go. I haven't seen her all summer, it would be nice
to get out of town. And then..." He shrugged. "Is she avoiding
me?"
Bess swallowed and looked away
from Ned's penetrating gaze. "I'm sure she isn't," Bess choked out.
The roadhouse was dim and fairly
packed with people. When Ned and Bess walked in, a band was just leaving the
stage. Bess settled into a booth while Ned went up to the bar to order them
both drinks. She glanced down and noticed that no one else was wearing shoes.
Before Ned came back with two fizzing sodas, Bess took her heels off and
savored the feel of the cool floor on the bare soles.
"Diet for you," Ned
said with a flourish as he put her drink down in front of her.
Bess nodded her thanks at him.
"You're a really great guy," she said.
Ned leaned back in the booth and
nodded his teasingly smug smile. "I know."
"Not just any guy would
come out to the middle of nowhere just for his girlfriend's friend, with no
promise to get anything out of it."
"You mean I don't get the
Camaro for the rest of the weekend?" Ned snapped his fingers in mock
disappointment.
"No, really," Bess
said, shoving her barely tasted drink aside and leaning forward. "I mean,
we've known each other how long?"
"Three years," Ned
filled in.
"Three years," Bess
said. "Feels like so much longer."
Ned took a sip of his drink.
"It's cool," he said.
"No, it's not just
cool," Bess said. "You've put up with being Nancy's boyfriend for
three years. Trust me, no one else's made it that long. You're thoughtful and
sweet and‹and perfect."
Ned snorted. "Hardly,"
he replied.
"But you are," Bess
said. "And she's‹and she's a fool if she doesn't see that."
Ned regarded Bess for a long
moment, and she half-willed him to ask what she meant, what she could possibly
mean. But he broke first, and looked away. The next band was setting up on
stage.
"Let's dance," he
said.
Ned was nearly a foot taller
than Bess, so she had resigned herself to an aching neck for the rest of the
evening, for tilting her head back to look at him. After all, he was accustomed
to dancing with Nancy, who had a full five inches' height on Bess. But he
surprised her, with twirls and dips and the kind of energetic dancing that made
her glad she had sacrificed her shoes.
At least, until the band started
a slower number, and three inches of additional height would have been very
useful.
They were quiet, and then Ned
chuckled to himself. "I haven't even asked you," he said. "How
was Europe?"
Bess considered the minefield of
his question, nodding in admiration as Ned carefully sidestepped another
couple. "Exciting," she settled on at last. "A few cases, some
hot guys, you know... the usual trip to Europe."
"You mean Nancy's usual
trip to Europe."
Bess caught the soft bitter
undertone. "Whatever Nancy's life may be, it isn't boring," she said,
smiling. "We all get caught up in that."
"It is that," Ned
admitted. "But you know, sometimes, I just want to know that I'll have
someone who's there for me. Who cares. Who'll answer the phone when I call, and
not just to tell me about someone else who needs her more than I do, just for a
few days, just for a week or so, and that turns into the rest of our
lives."
The song was just winding down
to its last few notes, Ned's feet were slowing, and Bess looked up into his
face with sympathetic eyes. Her heart was sounding painfully in her chest as
she pulled him down to her and kissed him.
The band went silent and the two
of them stood very still in the middle of the crowd. The feel of his lips on
hers couldn't have lasted more than a second or two, and when he pulled back
Bess only wanted more.
"Ned, I‹from the moment I
met you‹" Bess looked down. "You're the nicest guy I've ever
met."
Ned's arms were still around
her, as though in shock, but the look on his face was a thousand miles away.
When he finally seemed to come to himself and see her, she smiled at him, small
and tentative.
"Bess," he said, then
shook his head, responding with his own, incredulous smile. His arms loosed
their hold. "I'm with Nancy."
And then the words bubbled far
closer to the surface, driven by her sudden anger, at the unfairness of it all.
She, your precious Nancy, the one you're with, the one who isn't here for
you right now, was with another guy the entire summer. Barely gave you a second
thought. And this guy, this Mick, didn't give a second thought to you either,
especially not when he proposed to her on bended knee one night. Your girlfriend. My best friend. None of this is ever going
to change. She's never going to change. You want someone you can depend on? I'm
standing right here.
Bess bit it all back and ducked
her head, looked down at her bare feet, next to his. "Yeah," she
said.
The rest of the evening was a
blur. Ned paid for her soda, Bess could remember, as though he was her date, or
maybe in some small way to make up for his rebuff. He drove her back to her
house, they listened to the radio, and it was all as though it had never
happened. As though the roadhouse had been swallowed up in the night, and Ned
had not needed to remind her of what she already knew.
The next morning Bess's Camaro
was in her driveway, with a nice new rear tire. Ned called soon after.
"I'm going with Nancy, to
San Francisco," he told her. "We're leaving this afternoon."
Bess took a deep breath.
"Have a good trip, then."
"Your car back okay?"
"Yeah, it's fine,
perfect," Bess replied. "I'll see you when you get back."
"Yeah," Ned replied.
"Take care, Bess."
"Yeah," she replied,
faintly. "I will."
Bess clicked the phone off and
stood at her window, her face wooden. Then she came to herself, tossed her
hair, and forced a smile. "I will," she said.