“Again, menacing,” I say, getting up to let him out.
I lock up and pour myself another drink, the scrapbook still open in front of me. Blood is thicker than water, Felipe said, an offhand, overused phrase that I feel the accuracy of like a knife between my ribs tonight. Belotti blood is thick and rich, the binding agent that holds them all together, even Felipe. And I understand it well, because even though there was just me and my mother in our family unit, the bond that glued us together sustains me. I’m alone in the world, but never entirely, because her love shields me even now.
She didn’t have a family of her own. Abandoned on some town hall steps at three days old with nothing but a blanket and a gold signet ring, she was a product of the 1960s London care system, passed from foster home to foster home until she left for America. Her voice saved her. It saved us. It was her currency when she was broke, her identity in the absence of a birth certificate or a loving home. She was a motherless child, and because of her own experience she held me closer, loved me harder.
I twist my mother’s signet ring on my finger again, a heavy conviction in my heart that I must do the right thing. I appreciate that Felipe has given me some grace in terms of schedule, and it’s not as if I ever thought I’d be able to keep the balls in the air indefinitely: Adam; the recipe; my mother; Gio. Gio. Much as I like to tell myself that what’s happening between us is separate and private from the rest of the world, it isn’t really. We are all concentric circles, not desert islands. I don’t have much time left with Gio before I’m going to have to draw the blinds for the last time, because if I know anything about Gio Belotti, it’s that he values honesty and loyalty above all. I’ve compromised both of those things to be with him and, once he knows, I don’t think there’s going to be any more to our story.
Life is just so damn complicated, isn’t it, a series of random coincidences and chance meetings that add up to a lifetime. Perhaps in coming here the symmetry between my mother’s life and my own has become too linear. There’s probably a cosmic scraping sound every time our tracks unexpectedly overlap, a shower of dangerous iron filaments sparking through the ether.
I pour myself another generous measure of whiskey in the darkness of the noodle house and sit alone, recalling how Felipe mentioned the ball drop. I watched it alone on my small TV last year, Times Square ablaze with technicolor billboards and overexcited people in razzmatazz party hats and puffa jackets, their eyes on that huge faceted ball as they shouted the countdown to midnight. I’d planned on going to bed early and missing it altogether, but as the New Year flashed up in huge block numbers and the presenters waltzed to the sentimental sound of “Auld Lang Syne,” I wrapped my arms around a cushion and let the tears stream down my face. But then they changed tempo in Times Square to Sinatra’s “New York, New York” and showered the crowd with glittered confetti, and I lowered my cushion and watched, my tears drying to mascara tracks on my cheeks. I found myself mumbling the words, and then sitting up and singing the words, my voice trembling but gathering strength, because if I can make it in New York, I can make it anywhere. And I have. I’ve made lifelong friends in Bobby and Robin, I have a job and a home and part-time custody of a reluctant cat. Those things matter, and they were enough until I saw that painted glass door.
Sitting alone in the dark noodle house, I count how many days there are until New Year’s Eve. Nineteen, I think. Three of them are Mondays, including tomorrow, but the holidays will probably mean Gio’s busy with family stuff. Felipe didn’t expressly set a New Year’s deadline, but I understood him well enough—don’t dangle my son’s heart on a string. Impending exclusion isn’t a new feeling for me, but I guess I’d hoped I’d left it behind me. No such luck. I’m about to be that lonesome kid again, the one with her face pressed against the window, on the outside looking in.
I wish I could turn the clock back to the Feast of San Gennaro festival and guide myself past Belotti’s without a sideways glance. I didn’t notice the heat from the shower of sparks when the tracks of the past and present touched that day, but I feel them tonight, hot filings scattergunned across my chest. They really fucking hurt.
27.
Wrap up warm tonight, I’m taking you somewhere I think you’ll like.
GIO’S TEXT ARRIVES AS I’M staring into the depressingly empty fridge trying to decide.
Or you could just come over and roleplay Moonstruck again? Masterful Gio turned me on something terrible.
I press SEND and my cell bips again after a couple of minutes. I drop the gone-soft cereal in the bin as I reach for my phone.
Put your coat on or freeze, we’re going out whether you like it or not.
My eyes round, startled, and I laugh sharply in my quiet apartment even as my phone bips for a third time.
For the record, I really didn’t want to send that text.
And that, right there, is why I feel so safe with this man. I crack eggs into a bowl as I text with my other hand.
Don’t ruin it now, I was just about to call you for phone sex.
Great. Am about to go into a meeting with Bella’s teacher and now all I can think of is you naked.
You’re so welcome.
And you’re so…and the teacher’s here. Be ready at 7, I’ll pick you up.
I flick the gas on beneath the pan and tip the eggs in.
Damn it, and I’d just unhooked my bra. Saved by the bell, Belotti x
I make the omelet on autopilot, tired even though it’s barely half past nine. Last night’s heavy-handed serving of Jack Daniel’s sent me to sleep but didn’t keep me there—I woke up anxious a little after four and ended up at the kitchen table drinking coffee. I can’t expect Felipe to keep my secrets indefinitely and it isn’t fair to ask it of him. It’s good of him to allow me to handle things in my own time. I came to a conclusion of sorts in the small hours. I’m going to live my life strictly in the here and now until the ball drops in Times Square, and then I’ll tell Gio everything. Oh, I’m well aware that, as plans go, this one is akin to driving headlong at a solid brick wall with my foot flat to the floor. There’s nothing else I can do, though, because the thing I privately acknowledged this morning is that I’m uncontrollably, intoxicatingly, ferociously in love with Gio Belotti.
* * *
—
I HEAR A CAR HORN rather than my door buzzer, and cross to look out of the window, surprised. It’s just before seven and, as requested, I’m bundled into my winter coat and bobble hat, gloves shoved in my pocket, scarf on the table to pick up on my way out.
Gio is outside, not in a cab as I expected, but standing in the road beside a long, low-slung retro black car.
I scrape the window up and lean out into the see-your-breath cold evening.
“Have you ever seen Pretty Woman?”