1
Jack checked his watch: 2:30. Dad’s plane would be touching down in an
hour.
“I should hit the road.”
He and Gia sat in the antiquated kitchen of
number eight Sutton Square, in one of the most select neighborhoods
in Manhattan. The low December sun kept the room bright despite the
dark cabinets and paneling.
Jack drained his Yuengling lager. He’d
rediscovered the oldest working brewery in the country a few weeks
ago. The name had triggered memories of summer afternoons in his
backyard, his father sipping from a Yuengling between tossing him
pop flies. So he’d tried it and liked it so much he’d made it his
official house brew. And Gia’s house brew as well, since he made
sure to keep her fridge stocked with at least a six-pack.
Gia glanced at the Regulator clock from her
seat across the round oak table where she sipped her tea.
“He’s not due in for an hour. You’ve got a
little time.” She smiled at him. “Are you looking forward to seeing
your father or not? You’re hard to read on this.”
He gazed at the love of his life, the mother
of his unborn child. Gia seemed to thrive on her pregnancy. Jack
had always thought the old saw about the “glow” of mothers-to-be
was a sentimental fiction, but lately he’d had to revise that: No
question, Gia glowed. Her short blond hair seemed glossier, her
eyes brighter and bluer, her smiles more dazzling than ever. She
was still in the warm-up she wore for her daily walks. Though
nearing the end of her sixth month, she looked like other women do
ending their third. The loose-fitting top hid the bulge of her
abdomen, still barely noticeable even in more form-fitting
outfits.
“I’m definitely looking forward to it. And to
introducing him to you and Vicky.”
Gia smiled. “I’m dying to meet him. You’ve
talked so much about him since your Florida trip. Before that, it
was as if you were an orphan.”
Yeah, the Florida fiasco had changed things.
He and Dad had been close during his childhood, but estranged—not
completely, but mostly—during the past fifteen years. The goings-on
in South Florida had forged a new bond between them. And Jack had
learned that he wasn’t the only one in the family with
secrets.
“Glad as I’ll be to see him, I’d prefer going
to him instead of him coming to me. No lodging problems that
way.”
Wide-eyed, Gia said, “Did he think he was
staying with you?”
Jack nodded. “Uh-huh.”
She stifled a laugh. “How did you tell him
that nobody stays with his son?”
“Nobody except you.” And only when Vicky was
sleeping over somewhere.
“How did you break it to him?”
“Told him my place is too small and too
crowded.” He shrugged. “Best I could come up with on such short
notice.”
His father’s holiday jaunt had been sprung on
Jack. Dad had planned to be moved back to the northeast by now.
He’d found a buyer for his Florida house and had had a signed
contract in hand. Then, a week before closing, the buyer dropped
dead. Talk about inconsiderate.
So Dad had had to put the place back on the
market. He found another buyer, but the new closing wasn’t until
mid-January.
He’d planned to be settled in time to spend
Christmas with his sons and grandkids. Since that wasn’t happening,
he’d decided on the spur of the moment to come north just for the
holidays. Spend a couple of weeks up here, then head back to finish
packing for the move.
Great, Jack had thought, until Dad had
announced that his first leg involved a stay in New York
City.
Yikes.
“But didn’t you tell me you think he has a
pretty good idea of what you do?”
Jack nodded. “Yes. An idea. But he doesn’t know.
And I’d like to leave it like that. It’s one thing for him to
suspect what I hire out for; it’s another entirely for him to get
involved in the day-to-day workings of my life.” He had to laugh.
“He’ll be giving me all sorts of advice and maybe even trying to
set up a pension plan for me. He’s very big on pension
plans.”
“Well, he’s an accountant, isn’t he?”
“Was. And once an accountant, always an
accountant, I guess. But that’s not the only reason I’m putting him
up in a hotel. I—”
Gia shook her head. “I think that’s awful.
Here’s this old man—”
“He’s a very spry seventy-one.”
“—coming here for the first time in ages to
visit his son, and he gets stuck in a hotel. It’s not right.”
“Gia, we were together in his place down
there maybe three or four days and he was making me crazy, always
asking me where I was going or where I’d been, worrying about me if
I was out late… like I was a teenager again. I can’t handle
that.”
“Even for a few days?”
He could hear Dad’s voice in his head now.
He’d meet Gia, his future daughter-in-law, and be enchanted by her
and Vicky, but when they were alone he’d start in on how they did
things differently in his day: First they got married, then started a family. Jack didn’t want to hear
it.
A tough old bird, Dad, and traditional to the
core.
“You’re making me sound like a Blue Meanie. I
can’t have him nosing around my place while I’m out. He might pull
open the wrong drawer. You know how that is.”
Gia nodded. She knew.
Jack remembered the time, early in their
relationship, when she’d wanted to surprise him by cleaning his
apartment. She’d happened upon a stash of guns and phony ID and
he’d almost lost her.
“Well, did he buy your too-small
story?”
“I doubt it—not completely. It was awkward,
and it’s going to remain awkward the whole time he’s here.”
“It’s going to be really awkward when he sees your place and notices
the daybed in the TV room.”
“I’ll think of something.”
“You don’t have to. He’ll stay here.”
Not this again.
“Gia, we’ve been through—”
She held up her hand. “Too late. I’ve taken
it into my own hands. It’s a fait accompli.”
“As much as I love when you speak French,
what are you talking about?”
“I canceled your father’s hotel
reservation.”
“You what?”
“I’m the one who made it, remember? So I
figure I have a right to cancel it.”
“Do you know how hard it is to find a hotel
room this time of year?”
She smiled. “Virtually impossible. Which
means he’ll have to stay here.” She reached across the table and
took his hand. “Come on, Jack. Lighten up. He’s going to be Vicky’s
adoptive grandfather. Shouldn’t she get to know him, and he
her?”
Jack couldn’t argue. It would take his father
ten minutes—probably less—to fall in love with Vicky.
“I just don’t like the burden it’ll put on
you, being pregnant and all. The extra work—”
“What extra work? I’ll bet he makes his own
bed. That leaves me with the burden of putting out an extra coffee
cup and toasting extra bread in the morning.” She gave a dramatic
sigh and pressed the back of her wrist against her forehead. “It’s
going to be rough but I think I’ll be able to muddle
through.”
“Okay, okay. He stays here.” He stared at
her. “Have I told you lately that you’re wonderful?”
She smiled that smile. “No. At least not in
recent memory.”
He gently squeezed her fingers. “You’re
wonderful.”