On Second Thought
Page 69
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“Most people think that!” Chip exclaimed, delighted with my mistake. “But back in the 1800s, you could skate right into New York Harbor!”
“Really!” I said. His enthusiasm was infectious.
“It’s all about the salinity of the water,” he continued, his eyes glazing over with love of his subject.
By the time we left, the sky was growing dark with a summer thunderstorm, black clouds piling up across the river, the wind fluttering my dress. Chip and I hugged goodbye, as we were now close personal friends, and I promised to come back in the winter to see the ice-carving demonstration.
“Thank you so much for your time,” Jonathan said, shaking Chip’s hand.
“That’s a great girl you’ve got there,” Chip said. Same thing Eric’s bosses used to say.
“Yes,” Jonathan said. “Have an enjoyable weekend.”
Captain Flatline struck again, I thought as he got into the car. I texted Kate to see how dinner was going as he backed out of the parking lot.
Really well. Thx for checking! Be careful, okay? The weather map shows red.
“Bad weather’s coming,” I said to my driver. “Big boomers.”
“Excuse me?”
“Thunderstorms, Jonathan.”
He turned on the radio, and sure enough, the meteorologists were practically peeing themselves with joy. “Wind gusts up to fifty miles per hour, heavy rains, some local flooding. Stay inside, folks!”
Jonathan sighed.
“Do you have to pick up your girls?” I asked.
“No, not till tomorrow.” He drove with both hands on the wheel, looking straight ahead. “You did well with the director,” he said.
“Thank you.”
“You’re good with people.”
“I like people.”
His mouth curled up in a flash smile, then returned to its normal straight line.
A gust of wind rocked the car, and rain abruptly slapped the windshield. Jonathan switched the wipers to high.
The farther south we drove, the worse the weather. The lightning was getting intense, and twigs littered the road. Thunder rolled overhead, sometimes so loud that the car vibrated with it.
Then there was a crash, a flash and a huge branch came down about twenty feet in front of us.
“I’m going to bring you to my place,” Jonathan said. “It’s closer. You can wait out the storm there. Is that all right?”
I glanced at my watch. It was 7:30 anyway. And it wasn’t like I had plans. “Sure. Thank you.”
The power seemed to have gone out; the houses we passed were dark. We saw more downed branches, and sure enough, a Con Edison truck passed us, lights flashing.
Jonathan turned onto a road that wound through the woods. The rain was so loud now, the wipers slapping frantically. Outside, the trees waved and bent, and clumps of leaves hit the car. I hoped nothing bigger would fall on us. It was getting a little nerve-racking.
Jonathan turned again, onto an even narrower road, this one dirt, that brought us out into some farmland. No trees to fall on us here, but the road was like a river, water gushing along the side of it. The headlights showed only rain and mud. The clouds were so thick and black that it seemed like midnight.
We turned again, and when the lightning flashed, I saw a big white farmhouse and red barn. Jonathan’s headlights illuminated a stone wall. “Wait for me,” he said, turning the key. He got out and, a second later, opened my door, holding his suit jacket over my head. “Let’s make a run for it.”
There were leaves all over the slate walkway, and the sharp smell of rain and summer thick in the air. Jonathan unlocked the door, and in we went. It was pitch-black. He took my hand and led me farther inside, my footsteps short and uncertain. “Stay right here,” he said. “I have a generator. I’ll just be a second.”
Then he was gone, the thunder swallowing all other sound.
I waited, my clothes sopping wet despite Jonathan’s effort to cover me. It smelled nice in here, like wood and maybe a little bit of cinnamon. A cluster of lightning flashes showed me that I was in an entryway with a bench and a door leading into the house.
A woman stood in front of me.
I screamed, my hands going up in front of me.
“Ainsley?” Jon’s voice was sharp.
“Who’s here?” I shrieked. “Someone’s here!”
Then the lights came on, and I looked up and saw my reflection.
I was standing in front of a mirror.
“Never mind,” I called. “I—It was me. Sorry.” And speaking of me, my hair looked ridiculous. I fluffed it up, ran my fingers under my eyes and fluffed out my soaking wet dress, sending raindrops pattering to the floor.
“Are you all right?” Jonathan stood before me, also soaked, though his hair looked quite...well, Darcy-esque; there was really no other word for it. Colin Firth and Jane Austen had ruined us chicks for other men, let’s face it.
“I saw my reflection. But I didn’t know it was me. Sorry for the screaming.”
He looked me up and down. “Would you like some dry clothes?”
“Um...sure. Thank you.”
He led me through his house, which was not at all what I expected. I’d pictured him...well, in many places. Hell, for one. A casket, for another, like Dracula needing to sleep on Transylvanian soil. That sterile condo.
But this house was big and rambling and filled with comfortable furniture and the occasional antique. Not the fussy kind that you don’t want to touch—rough, battered, we’re here because we’ve earned it kind of pieces. A grandfather clock, a big brown sofa with a patch of pink fabric on one arm. We went upstairs, and Jonathan went into his room, which featured a sleigh bed and fireplace. Old chest of drawers, pictures of his girls, a view of the fields from his windows.
“I don’t have any women’s clothes,” he said.
“Really?” I asked. “You’re not a drag queen?”
He ignored that. “And you won’t fit into my daughters’ things.”
“Of course I won’t, Jonathan! I’m a grown woman. Just give me some sweats, okay?”
He complied. “You can change across the hall. There’s a bathroom, as well.”
“Thank you, Mr. Kent.” I took the clothes he handed me, went across the hall and fell instantly in love.
It was the girls’ room, clearly; bunk beds, two desks filled with cheerful clutter and construction paper, a giant box-turned-playhouse with windows cut in it, flowers drawn in Magic Markers at the base. Bookcases surrounded a huge window seat, the shelves filled with piles of books and photos and little treasures—a music box, a porcelain cat. A hammock was strung across one corner, filled with stuffed animals. There was an enormous soft chair on one side of the bed, perfect for reading and cuddling.
I took off my dress, laid it across the desk chair and pulled on Jonathan’s sweatpants (which fit far too well; I’d have to go on a diet very soon). He’d given me a flannel shirt, too. Huh. I didn’t picture him owning one. An ascot, yes. Flannel...not so much.
The photos on the bookshelves called to me.
Damn.
There he was, holding a little white burrito of a baby, smiling into the camera with all the happiness a man could have. Emily, I decided. He looked so young in the picture. And there was another, Jonathan holding toddler Emily in one arm, infant Lydia in the other, smiling at Emily as she touched her baby sister on the nose with one shy finger.
“Really!” I said. His enthusiasm was infectious.
“It’s all about the salinity of the water,” he continued, his eyes glazing over with love of his subject.
By the time we left, the sky was growing dark with a summer thunderstorm, black clouds piling up across the river, the wind fluttering my dress. Chip and I hugged goodbye, as we were now close personal friends, and I promised to come back in the winter to see the ice-carving demonstration.
“Thank you so much for your time,” Jonathan said, shaking Chip’s hand.
“That’s a great girl you’ve got there,” Chip said. Same thing Eric’s bosses used to say.
“Yes,” Jonathan said. “Have an enjoyable weekend.”
Captain Flatline struck again, I thought as he got into the car. I texted Kate to see how dinner was going as he backed out of the parking lot.
Really well. Thx for checking! Be careful, okay? The weather map shows red.
“Bad weather’s coming,” I said to my driver. “Big boomers.”
“Excuse me?”
“Thunderstorms, Jonathan.”
He turned on the radio, and sure enough, the meteorologists were practically peeing themselves with joy. “Wind gusts up to fifty miles per hour, heavy rains, some local flooding. Stay inside, folks!”
Jonathan sighed.
“Do you have to pick up your girls?” I asked.
“No, not till tomorrow.” He drove with both hands on the wheel, looking straight ahead. “You did well with the director,” he said.
“Thank you.”
“You’re good with people.”
“I like people.”
His mouth curled up in a flash smile, then returned to its normal straight line.
A gust of wind rocked the car, and rain abruptly slapped the windshield. Jonathan switched the wipers to high.
The farther south we drove, the worse the weather. The lightning was getting intense, and twigs littered the road. Thunder rolled overhead, sometimes so loud that the car vibrated with it.
Then there was a crash, a flash and a huge branch came down about twenty feet in front of us.
“I’m going to bring you to my place,” Jonathan said. “It’s closer. You can wait out the storm there. Is that all right?”
I glanced at my watch. It was 7:30 anyway. And it wasn’t like I had plans. “Sure. Thank you.”
The power seemed to have gone out; the houses we passed were dark. We saw more downed branches, and sure enough, a Con Edison truck passed us, lights flashing.
Jonathan turned onto a road that wound through the woods. The rain was so loud now, the wipers slapping frantically. Outside, the trees waved and bent, and clumps of leaves hit the car. I hoped nothing bigger would fall on us. It was getting a little nerve-racking.
Jonathan turned again, onto an even narrower road, this one dirt, that brought us out into some farmland. No trees to fall on us here, but the road was like a river, water gushing along the side of it. The headlights showed only rain and mud. The clouds were so thick and black that it seemed like midnight.
We turned again, and when the lightning flashed, I saw a big white farmhouse and red barn. Jonathan’s headlights illuminated a stone wall. “Wait for me,” he said, turning the key. He got out and, a second later, opened my door, holding his suit jacket over my head. “Let’s make a run for it.”
There were leaves all over the slate walkway, and the sharp smell of rain and summer thick in the air. Jonathan unlocked the door, and in we went. It was pitch-black. He took my hand and led me farther inside, my footsteps short and uncertain. “Stay right here,” he said. “I have a generator. I’ll just be a second.”
Then he was gone, the thunder swallowing all other sound.
I waited, my clothes sopping wet despite Jonathan’s effort to cover me. It smelled nice in here, like wood and maybe a little bit of cinnamon. A cluster of lightning flashes showed me that I was in an entryway with a bench and a door leading into the house.
A woman stood in front of me.
I screamed, my hands going up in front of me.
“Ainsley?” Jon’s voice was sharp.
“Who’s here?” I shrieked. “Someone’s here!”
Then the lights came on, and I looked up and saw my reflection.
I was standing in front of a mirror.
“Never mind,” I called. “I—It was me. Sorry.” And speaking of me, my hair looked ridiculous. I fluffed it up, ran my fingers under my eyes and fluffed out my soaking wet dress, sending raindrops pattering to the floor.
“Are you all right?” Jonathan stood before me, also soaked, though his hair looked quite...well, Darcy-esque; there was really no other word for it. Colin Firth and Jane Austen had ruined us chicks for other men, let’s face it.
“I saw my reflection. But I didn’t know it was me. Sorry for the screaming.”
He looked me up and down. “Would you like some dry clothes?”
“Um...sure. Thank you.”
He led me through his house, which was not at all what I expected. I’d pictured him...well, in many places. Hell, for one. A casket, for another, like Dracula needing to sleep on Transylvanian soil. That sterile condo.
But this house was big and rambling and filled with comfortable furniture and the occasional antique. Not the fussy kind that you don’t want to touch—rough, battered, we’re here because we’ve earned it kind of pieces. A grandfather clock, a big brown sofa with a patch of pink fabric on one arm. We went upstairs, and Jonathan went into his room, which featured a sleigh bed and fireplace. Old chest of drawers, pictures of his girls, a view of the fields from his windows.
“I don’t have any women’s clothes,” he said.
“Really?” I asked. “You’re not a drag queen?”
He ignored that. “And you won’t fit into my daughters’ things.”
“Of course I won’t, Jonathan! I’m a grown woman. Just give me some sweats, okay?”
He complied. “You can change across the hall. There’s a bathroom, as well.”
“Thank you, Mr. Kent.” I took the clothes he handed me, went across the hall and fell instantly in love.
It was the girls’ room, clearly; bunk beds, two desks filled with cheerful clutter and construction paper, a giant box-turned-playhouse with windows cut in it, flowers drawn in Magic Markers at the base. Bookcases surrounded a huge window seat, the shelves filled with piles of books and photos and little treasures—a music box, a porcelain cat. A hammock was strung across one corner, filled with stuffed animals. There was an enormous soft chair on one side of the bed, perfect for reading and cuddling.
I took off my dress, laid it across the desk chair and pulled on Jonathan’s sweatpants (which fit far too well; I’d have to go on a diet very soon). He’d given me a flannel shirt, too. Huh. I didn’t picture him owning one. An ascot, yes. Flannel...not so much.
The photos on the bookshelves called to me.
Damn.
There he was, holding a little white burrito of a baby, smiling into the camera with all the happiness a man could have. Emily, I decided. He looked so young in the picture. And there was another, Jonathan holding toddler Emily in one arm, infant Lydia in the other, smiling at Emily as she touched her baby sister on the nose with one shy finger.