not anger. I wondered if she believed me to be love-struck; the truth, I thought, was much more complicated.
“Get up,” Renata said. “That same lady wants you.” I sighed. There weren’t any more red roses.
The woman leaned on folded elbows at the counter. She wore an apple-green raincoat, and a second woman, younger and prettier, stood next to her in a red coat of the same belted shape. Their black boots were wet. I looked outside. The rain had returned, just as my clothes and room had dried from the week before. I shivered.
“This is the famous Victoria,” the woman said, nodding in my direction. “Victoria, this is my sister, Annemarie. And I’m Bethany.” She reached her hand out to me, and I shook it. My bones melted within her strong shake.
“How are you?” I asked.
“I’ve never been better,” Bethany said. “I spent Thanksgiving at Ray’s. Neither of us had ever cooked Thanksgiving dinner, so we ended up throwing away a half-baked turkey and heating up cans of tomato soup. It was delicious,” she said. It was obvious by the way she said it that she was referring to more than the soup. Her sister groaned.
“Who’s Ray?” I asked. Renata appeared at the doorway with the broom, and I avoided her questioning stare.
“Someone I know from work. We’ve never shared more than complaints over ergonomics, but then Wednesday, there he was at my desk, asking me over.”
Bethany had plans again the next night with Ray, and she wanted something for her apartment, something seductive, she said, blushing, but not obviously so. “No orchids,” she said, as if this was a sexual flower and not a symbol of refined beauty.
“And for your sister?” I asked. Annemarie looked uncomfortable but didn’t protest as her sister began to describe the details of her love life.
“She’s
“Okay,” I said, taking it all in. “Tomorrow?”
“By noon,” Bethany replied. “I’ll need all afternoon to clean my apartment.”
“Annemarie?” I asked. “Is noon okay?”
Annemarie didn’t answer right away. She smelled the roses and dahlias, the leftover oranges and yellows. When she looked up, her eyes were empty in a way that I understood. She nodded. “Yes,” she said. “Please.”
“I’ll see you tomorrow,” I said as they turned to go.
When the door closed, I looked up to see Renata, still in the doorway with the broom. “The famous Victoria,” she chided me. “Giving the people what they want.”
I shrugged and walked past her. Grabbing my coat off the hook, I turned to leave.
“Tomorrow?” I asked. Renata had never given me a schedule. I worked when she told me to.
“Four a.m.,” she said. “Early-afternoon wedding, two hundred.”
I spent the evening sitting in the blue room, mulling over Annemarie’s request. I was well acquainted with the opposite of intimacy: hydrangea,
There was the linden tree, which signified
Below me, Natalya’s band started up, and I reached for a pair of earplugs. The pages of the book vibrated on my lap. I found flowers for
As I searched, it occurred to me that if I couldn’t find the right flowers, I could give Annemarie a bouquet of something bold and bright and lie about its meaning. It wasn’t as if the flowers themselves held within them the ability to bring an abstract definition into physical reality. Instead, it seemed that Earl, and then Bethany, walked home with a bouquet of flowers expecting change, and the very belief in the possibility instigated a transformation. Better to wrap Gerber daisies in brown paper and declare sexual fulfillment, I decided, than to ask Grant his opinion on the subject.
I closed the book, closed my eyes, and tried to sleep.
Two hours later I got up and dressed for the market. It was cold, and even as I changed my clothes and put on my jacket, I knew I could not give Annemarie Gerber daisies. I had been loyal to nothing except the language of flowers. If I started lying about it, there would be nothing left in my life that was beautiful or true. I hurried out the door and jogged down twelve cold blocks, hoping to beat Renata.
Grant was still in the parking lot, unloading his truck. I waited for him to hand me buckets and then carried them inside. There was only one stool in his booth; I sat down on it, and Grant leaned against the plywood wall.
“You’re early,” he said.
I looked at my watch. It was just past three in the morning. “You, too.”
“I couldn’t sleep,” he said. I couldn’t, either, but I didn’t say anything.
“I met this woman,” I said. I turned my stool away from Grant as if I would help a customer through the window, but the market was nearly empty.
“Yeah?” he said. “Who?”
“Just some woman,” I said. “She came into Bloom yesterday. I helped her sister last weekend. She says her husband doesn’t want her anymore. You know, in a—” I stopped, unable to finish.
“Hmm,” Grant said. I felt his eyes all over my back, but I didn’t turn to face him. “That’s tough. It was the Victorian era, you know? Not a lot of talk about sex.”
I hadn’t thought of that. We watched the market begin to fill in silence. Renata would come through the door any minute, and I would think of nothing but someone else’s wedding flowers for hours.
I didn’t know desire. “How?”
“Jonquil,” Grant said. “It’s a form of narcissus. They grow wild in the southern states. I have some, but the bulbs won’t bloom till spring.”
Spring wasn’t for months. Annemarie didn’t appear as though she could wait that long. “There’s no other way?”
“We could force the bulbs in my greenhouse. I don’t, usually; the flowers are so associated with spring, there isn’t much of a market for them until late February. But we can try, if you want.”
“How long will it take?”
“Not long,” he said. “I bet you could see flowers by mid-January.”
“I’ll ask her,” I said. “Thanks.” I started to walk away, but Grant stopped me with his hand on my shoulder. I turned around.
“This afternoon?” he asked.
I thought about the flowers, his camera, and my dictionary. “I should be done by two,” I said.
“I’ll pick you up.”
“I’ll be hungry,” I said as I walked away.
Grant laughed. “I know.”
Annemarie looked more relieved than disappointed when I told her the news. January would be fine, she