30
The first thing Andrew does the second time he comes over is search my apartment. He didn’t do that the first time he was here, on my birthday. Then he only saw my living room, bedroom, and bathroom, but as I watch him move through my apartment, half peeking in, half peeking out of the doorways, I wonder if this is some famous-person version of seeing someone’s home. Either that, or he’s checking for intruders. But how dangerous does he think our city is? Okay, we’ve got our bad neighborhoods, but my bedroom isn’t one of them. Anyway.
Being with him again after two months apart was like when we first met, plus our whole relationship all at once. The sex contained every minute of it. The kissing was drinking in every moment we’d been apart, and our moving and touching were like water thrown into the ocean, we were unable to un-merge again.
“Tell me,” Andrew says, “I want to hear everything.”
We are lying on my bed, his chest is on my stomach, my hands on his back, and I weave for him the story of my line selling out of Beverly Hills and getting into the Hawaii store while I knead the muscles of his back.
“So your art’s become jewelry or jewelry is your art, I should say.” He pulls his head up and looks at me with his illustrious eyes. “I want to see.”
I am glad that my body is held securely beneath his, because otherwise I would have fallen off the bed hearing him finally mention my art. “Now?”
“As opposed to?”
I get up and walk out of the bedroom. In the studio, I crouch in front of the safe and spin the dial. The floor feels refrigerated under my bare feet, the steely-cold February night pressing into the room through the windows, but I am warm and even sweating a little at the thought of what I am doing. Showing Andrew my jewelry reveals my physical nakedness to be the easy exposure that it is. I feel the same prickliness under my skin, the same clenching of my stomach, as when he looked at my slides at the Ritz-Carlton. I put the samples from my new line—earrings and bracelets, rings, necklaces and pins—into a felt-lined tray and arrange them perfectly.
As I walk down the hallway to my bedroom, I look down at the jewelry and their colors begin soothing me, the weight of them in the tray, the work I put into them that can’t be taken away. I enter the room and see that Andrew is sitting up in my bed, leaning against the headboard, gazing at me as only he can, way down inside.
He swings his legs around and sits on the side of the bed, and I sit next to him, putting the tray in his lap. As he picks up each piece, he is silent the way he was the only other time he has ever looked at my work.
There are no taxis driving through a park outside my window for me to count, nothing distracting enough in my bedroom to take my attention, so I sit and watch him examining my world. His brow is furrowed as he holds each piece, looking at it from all angles.
“Beauty hanging in the air,” he says, and holds a pearl and tourmaline necklace out toward me as if putting it in context. “Like you. You’re doing great—I can tell.”
I blush. He is the only person who has ever created that response in me, as if certain emotions were staked out and claimed by him.
Andrew puts his hand over mine and looks me in the eyes. “If you and I were where we are now, but just back then—I would never have let you go.” And he pauses for a moment, dividing everything before and since. “You’re a heavyweight.”
The tray of jewelry on his lap holds rings of everlasting gold with wedding-white pearls, as he talks about what could have been for us.
Lying in bed after Andrew has gone, I think about how I was back then, and I finally understand his inability to commit to me. I wouldn’t have fit into his world at all. I would have become a kind of mute appendage of him. Would never have discovered creating jewelry and the joy it brings me. So in a weird and wonderful and terrible way, maybe that was for the best. But I go to sleep with the words “if we were where we are now, but just back then…” filling my head.
When I awaken the next morning, every inch of my apartment is filled up with him. He’s only been here twice, but in the rooms where there aren’t memories of us, I have memories of the fantasies of us, so it’s all here—a kind of parallel life that happens as soon as I open my eyes to the day.
Andrew and I talked every day for two weeks after that night, but then he went to New York, so the phone calls have stopped for the past week, and since he’s with his family, I know we can’t talk, but this silence will end as soon as he comes back to L.A. I hope to God that it’s soon because I am about to lose my mind not speaking to him. Fortunately, I’ve been busy getting the order ready for Hawaii, though not distracted enough to not think about him every minute.
I am stuck in four-thirty eastbound traffic on the 10. Cars have surged to a stop, but sitting here isn’t bothering me too much because I just shipped off my jewelry to Greeley’s receiving warehouse to then be sent to Hawaii in time for my early March delivery. Greeley’s has a warehouse in west Texas where every item must go to be processed, then directed to the appropriate store. Even when my jewelry was going across town to Beverly Hills, it first had to make a journey to Texas before it could be shipped here. Getting the order inventoried, packed, and shipped to Greeley’s specifications was like doing a tax return with lots of those frightening schedule forms. I wish Andrew were back in town so he could come over tonight to celebrate with me—or even just call me, so I can tell him about it. How long is this damn New York trip going to last? I wish I could fly down to Honolulu and see my jewelry in the store. But even with the check for the sales in Beverly Hills, the amount of inventory I just invested in for this order was large, so I should be conservative until it blows out of the Honolulu store—please, God. The cars in front of me have barely moved. I suddenly realize that I’m not stuck in traffic—I am traffic.
I am also famished. I skipped lunch to make my deadline, so as I inch toward the Robertson Boulevard exit, I decide to get off and find some food.
Daydreaming about my jewelry being in every Greeley’s store—there are nine across the country, dotting the map like bright lights of style—keeps me driving north on Robertson and forgetting my hunger until I’m in the fashionable shopping district almost at Beverly Boulevard. I notice that across from Wisteria and its eternally sun-drenched patio is a café I’ve never seen before. I pull into a parking spot—a miracle on this street after eleven A.M.—and walk in.
The café’s interior could have been airlifted from SoHo. There are tons of that very tiny white tile with deep blue accents and heaps of stainless steel. I walk toward the glass-fronted deli case and see to my right a section of white-clothed tables set with deep blue linen napkins and yellow roses in French jelly jars. Light streams in through tall windows that have red geraniums growing in weathered window boxes. Every dish in the deli case is gorgeous. Salads and seafood and tarts and pastas and vegetables with incredible things done to them—the kind of food I like to think I will someday make, but doubt I ever will. There isn’t another person in sight. It’s that funny nontime for restaurants between lunch and dinner, and as I gaze at the different delicacies, I wonder if they are even open.
“See anything you like?”
I look up into clear blue eyes refracting the light. The man who owns them is tall with dirty-blond hair and looks like he came from the Brittany coast with his strong jaw and cheekbones, rugged but refined.
“Everything looks amazing and I’m starved. What do you suggest?”
“The artichoke pesto penne is really good.”
“Sounds great.”
“You like salad? I’ll put some greens with walnut and mandarin orange in for you.”
“Thanks.”
“Don’t worry about it.” As he arranges large portions in a takeout box, his strong back and arms are apparent under the white of his chef ’s shirt. I look back in the deli case as if fascinated by its contents to keep from staring at him.
“So, when did this place open?”
“Three and a half weeks ago. Do you work around here?”
“No, I design jewelry. My line’s not in these stores, but Greeley’s just picked it up.”
“That’s great—that’s a big deal.”
“Oh, thanks.” I look up into his eyes, and they are waiting for mine to join them. For a moment, I have to remember to breathe. “Well. So, what do I owe you?”
“That’ll be six dollars and eighty-nine cents.”
As I try to figure out if that’s right—according to the prices on the large blackboard, it seems he only charged me for one item—I discover that I’m out of cash, so I pull out a credit card.
“Our machine’s not hooked up yet.” His eyes are still on mine like they belong there.
“Oh, God, well, this is embarrassing, but I’m out of cash and left my checkbook at home. I’m sorry you went to all that trouble.”
“Don’t worry about it.” He puts two pieces of baguette into the bag with the food, folds it closed, and hands it to me. “Here.”
“I can’t let you do that, bosses and profits and all.”
“Take it. Enjoy your dinner.”
I will if I think about you during it, I think as I take the bag from his large, strong hand. “That’s incredibly sweet of you. Thanks so much.”
And he smiles at me. A tangible smile. Like it could leave with me, too.
As I pass the café’s large front window, I want to see him one more time, so I look inside, pretending it is for another thank-you in the form of a wave. His eyes are already on mine and he lifts his hand to wave before I do.
It has been five weeks since I have seen Andrew and three weeks since we have spoken on the phone. Every day I have to resist not calling his cell phone. He’ll call when he’s back, I keep telling myself, just like after his last trip. But maybe he’s already back and isn’t going to call. No, he wouldn’t do that. He’s never done that. But maybe he’s decided he can’t see me anymore, which I guess is best for me and definitely for his wife, but to not even call isn’t like him, but maybe that’s how he ends things. No, he’s just still in New York on some crazy extended trip and I’ll hear from him. Please God.
Every day I force myself into my studio to work on commissions, or I drive downtown in a daze of Andrew thoughts to pick up work from Dipen. I found a woman to do a Web site for me, so I need to get pictures of the jewelry together and write copy and I still need to go over Greeley’s arcane accounting for the Beverly Hills sales, not to mention see how Honolulu is doing, but my mind is a constant blur about Andrew. I spend lots of time staring at the phone, like it is my mortal enemy for not ringing with him at the other end of the line, while wishing it would and thinking magical thoughts, like “In this next ten minute period, Andrew will call.” Or “If I think about him hard enough, that energy will connect to him and he’ll call.”
I am screaming at the top of my lungs, staring at the empty spot in my bedroom where the black-clad apparition stood. The vision has already faded before my open eyes, but I still give the scream one last burst of energy as if that will make it go away permanently.
“I finally saw something this time.” I am spooning oatmeal into a bowl, the phone is at my ear, and after I pour soy milk in, I take the bowl to the living room and sit on the couch to look at the tree (my tree, as I think of it) outside the window while I talk to Reggie. He isn’t sipping through a straw anymore, but the crunchy sounds I’m hearing from his end of the line indicate that he hasn’t gone back to sausage and eggs. Grape-Nuts, probably. We have tentatively been having telephonic breakfast together again for the last week and so far it’s been okay. As long as I don’t talk about Andrew.
“So tell me already, the suspense is killing me.”
“Some kind of a figure, a man, all in black, near my bed. And menacing. Then he disappeared.”
Reggie is quiet for a moment, then softly says, “Yvette, are you having some kind of a memory come up? About your father, I mean?”
“Oh, God, no. I mean, okay, fine, I have some Daddy issues, who wouldn’t with the way he took off.” I know Reggie is thinking about my relationship with Andrew as more living proof of that, but I decide to ignore that. “But my father never did anything like that to me. I mean, look, I met a woman once at SVA who was an incest survivor and she told me about this therapy group she was in and convinced me that I should check it out, maybe uncovered stuff would come up. So I went a few times and not only didn’t anything come up, but I didn’t relate to it. The symptoms they have and everything.”
Reggie says nothing, so I know he is still convinced his theory is right.
“I just hope they stop soon, honey.”
“So do I.”