Suzanne couldn't remember and Beth hadn't noticed. Ivy drove them around and around the mall lot. Beth looked for the car while Suzanne advised Ivy on clothes and romance. She covered everything from telephone strategies and how not to be too available to working hard at looking casual. She had been giving volumes of advice for the last three weeks.
'Suzanne, I think you make dating too complicated,' Ivy said at last. 'All this plotting and planning. It seems pretty simple to me.'
Incredibly simple, she thought. Whether she and Tristan were relaxing or studying together, whether they were sitting silently side by side or both trying to talk at the same time-which they did frequently-these last few weeks had been incredibly easy.
'That's because he's the one,' Beth said knowingly.
There was only one thing about Ivy that Tristan couldn't understand. The angels.
'You've had a difficult life,' he had said to her one night. It was the night of the prom-or rather, the morning after, but not yet dawn. They were walking barefoot in the grass, away from the house to the far edge of the ridge. In the west, a crescent moon hung like a leftover Christmas ornament. There was one star. Far below them, a train wound its silver path through the valley.
'You've been through so much, I don't blame you for believing,' Tristan said.
'You don't blame me? You don't
He held her tightly in his arms. 'I can't believe, Ivy. I have all I need and all I want right here on earth,' he said. 'Right
'Well, I don't,' she replied, and even in the pale light, she could see the sting in his eyes. They started to fight then. Ivy realized for the first time that the more you love, the more you hurt.
What was worse, you hurt for him as well as for yourself.
After he left, she cried all morning. Her phone calls hadn't been returned that afternoon. But he came back in the evening, with fifteen lavender roses. One for each angel, he said.
'Ivy! Ivy, did you hear anything I just said?' Suzanne asked, jolting her back to the present.
'You know, I thought if we got you a boyfriend, you'd come down to earth a little. But I was wrong. Head still in the clouds! Angel zone!'
'We didn't get her a boyfriend,' Beth said quietly but firmly. 'They found each other. Here's the car, Ivy. Have a good time tonight. We'd better dash, it's going to storm.'
The girls jumped out and Ivy checked her watch again. Now she was really late. She sped over the access road and down the highway.
When she crossed the river, she noticed how rapidly the dark clouds were moving.
Her delivery was to one of the newer houses south of town, the same neighborhood where she had driven after her first swimming lesson with Tristan. It seemed as if everything she did now made her think of him.
She got just as lost this time, driving around in circles, with one eye on the clouds. Thunder rumbled. The trees shivered and turned over their leaves, shining an eerie lime green against the leaden sky. The wind began to gust. Branches whipped, and blossoms and tender leaves were torn too soon from their limbs. Ivy leaned forward in her seat, intent on finding the right house before the storm broke.
Just finding the right street was difficult. She thought she was on Willow, but the sign said Fernway, with Willow running into it. She got out of her car to see if the sign could have been turned-a popular sport among kids in town. Then she heard a loud motor making the bend on the hill above her. She stepped out into the street to wave down the motorcyclist. For a moment, the Harley slowed, then the engine was gunned and the cyclist flew past her.
Well, she'd have to go with her instincts. The lawns were steep there, and Lillian had said that Mrs. Abromaitis lived on a hill, a flight of stone steps lined with flowerpots leading up to her house.
Ivy drove around the bend. She could feel the rising wind rocking her car. Overhead the pale sky was being swallowed up by inky clouds.
Ivy screeched to a halt in front of two houses and pulled the box out of the car, struggling with it against the wind. Both houses had stone steps that ran up side by side. Both had flowerpots. She chose one set of steps, and just as she cleared the first flowerpot it blew over and crashed behind her. Ivy screamed, then laughed at herself.
At the top of the steps she looked at one house, then the other, 528 and 530, hoping for some kind of clue. A car was pulled around the back of 528, hidden by bushes, so someone was probably home. Then she saw a figure in the large window of 528-someone looking out for her, she thought, though she couldn't tell if it was a man or a woman, or if the person actually beckoned to her. All she could see was a vague shape of a person as part of the window's reflected collage of thrashing trees backlit by flashes of lightning. She started toward the house.
The figure disappeared. At the same time, the front porch light went on at 530. The screen door banged back in the wind.
'Ivy? Ivy?' A woman called to her from the lit porch.
'Whew!' She made a run for it, handed off the package, and raced for her car. The skies opened, throwing down ropes of rain. Well, it wouldn't be the first time Tristan had seen her looking like a drowned rat.
Ivy, Gregory, and Andrew arrived home late, and Maggie looked miffed. Philip, of course, didn't care. He, Tristan, and his new school pal, Sammy, were playing a video game, one of the many gifts Andrew had bought for his birthday.
Tristan grinned up at the drenched Ivy. 'I'm glad I taught you to swim,' he said, then got up to kiss her.
She was dripping all over the hardwood floor. 'I'll soak you,' she warned.
He wrapped his arms around her and pulled her close. 'I'll dry,' he whispered. 'Besides, it's fun to gross out Philip.'
'Ew,' said Philip, as if on cue.
'Mush,' agreed Sammy.
Ivy and Tristan held on to each other and laughed. Then Ivy ran upstairs to change her clothes and wring out her hair. She put on lipstick, no other makeup-her eyes were already bright and her cheeks full of color. She scrounged around in her jewelry box for a pair of earrings, then hurried downstairs just in time to see Philip finish opening his presents.
'She's wearing her peacock ears tonight,' Philip told Tristan as Ivy sat down to dinner across from the two of them.
'Darn,' said Tristan, 'I forgot to put in my carrot sticks.'
'And your shrimp tails.' Philip snickered.
Ivy wondered who was happier at that moment, Philip or her. She knew that life did not seem so good to Gregory. It had been a rough week for him; he had confided in her that he was still very worried about his mother, though he wouldn't tell her why. Lately his father and he had had little to say to each other. Maggie struggled to converse with him but usually gave up.
Ivy turned to him now. 'The tickets to the Yankee game were a terrific idea. Philip was thrilled with the present.'
'He had a funny way of showing it.'
It was true. Philip had thanked him very politely, then leaped up with excitement when he saw the old
During dinner Ivy made an effort to keep Gregory in the conversation. Tristan tried to talk to him about sports and cars but received mostly one-word replies. Andrew looked irritated, though Tristan didn't seem to take offense.
Andrew's cook, Henry-who'd been let go after the wedding, but reinstated after six weeks of Maggie's cooking-had made them a delicious dinner. Maggie, however, had insisted on baking her son's birthday cake. Henry carried in the heavy, lopsided thing, his eyes averted.
Philip's face lit up. 'It's Mistake Cake!'
The rich and lumpy chocolate frosting supported nine candles at various angles. Lights were quickly extinguished and everyone sang to Philip. With the last measure, the doorbell chimed.
Andrew frowned and rose to answer it.