How did you get ready for the reunion? Were you staying with friends? In a hotel room? I never had a chance to ask you.
The reunion was a little insane—don’t you agree? People conspicuously holding on to their husbands or wives. A few of us wearing high-end maternity dresses. The same way I felt those jealous eyes on us in Bloomingdale’s years before, I saw women at the reunion looking at me with envy. I’d nabbed the successful husband, I was about to have the baby. It didn’t matter that we went to an Ivy League university, that the women there were lawyers and doctors, playwrights and bankers, consultants and academics—they all came up to me and asked about the baby, about the wedding. No one asked where I was working, what I’d been up to since graduation. No one cared that I’d just been promoted to associate producer, that I was developing a new show on my own called Rocket Through Time that took kids on an exploration of history and showed how it affected the present. It was just, “When are you due?” “Have you found out the sex?” “How long have you been married?” “Where did you meet him?” I wouldn’t be surprised if half the women I spoke to put in for share houses in the Hamptons that summer. I was starting to think that my college roommates had made the right decision in staying away.
Then I saw you. You were on the other side of the tent, and a woman I didn’t recognize had her hand on your forearm while the two of you spoke. She smiled at something you said, then responded. You laughed. All of a sudden I felt nauseated.
“I need some air,” I whispered to Darren, who had found another investment banker and was talking shop.
“Oh!” he said. “Are you okay?”
I nodded. “Just a little queasy, I’ll be fine.”
I’d only gotten over the morning sickness phase of the pregnancy a few weeks before. Darren was used to watching me vomit, but it wasn’t a pleasant experience for either one of us.
“You sure?” he asked.
“Positive,” I answered, and headed out of the tent.
I took a few deep breaths and then turned back around. There were no walls, so I could see straight inside the tent. I couldn’t find you anymore, but that woman was talking to someone else, her hand on his arm. That did more for me than the deep breaths. My nausea abated.
I was about to head back to Darren when I felt someone touch my shoulder. It was you, of course.
“Luce,” you said.
I turned. “Gabe,” I answered. “Hi.”
The skin on my shoulder prickled with goose bumps where you’d touched me.
“Nice dress,” you said.
Darren told me once that when men say that, they mean, “You look hot in that dress.” I’ve never been completely sure if he was right about that. I should’ve asked you then what you meant.
“Thanks,” I answered. “Nice shirt.”
Your dimple appeared. “I can’t even tell,” you told me. “You look exactly the same.”
Then I turned sideways and held the drapey dress close to my body. “How about now?” I asked.
Your eyes grew wide for a moment before you smiled. “Well that’s . . .”
“Yeah,” I said. “That’s a baby.” It wasn’t much of one, just about a four-month bump. But I couldn’t wear my regular clothes anymore. I’d had to buy a new dress.
“Congratulations, Luce,” you said. “I’m happy for you.”
“Thanks.” I let go of my dress. “How’s everything been on your end?”
Your smile faded and you shrugged. “Coming back to New York is always strange. It feels like I’m in Back to the Future and I’ve returned to a world that jumped ahead while I wasn’t looking.” Your eyes wandered back to my stomach.
“Your world’s changed too, though,” I said.
You shook your head. “I can’t explain it. My world’s changed, but my New York feels like it should be the same. Everything should be just as I left it, like coming back to a childhood bedroom.” You stopped abruptly. “I’m not making any sense.”
“No,” I said, “you are. Your safe space has changed.”
“Yeah,” you said. Your gaze lingered on my stomach. “Yeah,” you said again. Then, “I should probably go . . . it was great to see you, Lucy. Good luck. I really am happy for you.”
You walked quickly toward the bar set up next to the sundial.
I wanted to call out and tell you to wait. I wanted to ask you more questions so I could understand what you were feeling, so I could hear what your world was like. I wanted you to touch me again and give me goose bumps.
But you were right to walk away. Nothing good could have come of prolonging that conversation. So instead I went back to Darren.
“You feeling okay, sweetie?” he asked.
“Much better,” I told him, and leaned my head against his shoulder.
Without missing a beat in the conversation he was having, he wrapped his arm around me and dropped a kiss on the top of my head.
It didn’t give me goose bumps, but it did feel good.
li