Winter Solstice (Winter #4)

“No,” Ava, Patrick, and Jennifer all say at the same time.

Ava takes off her jacket and slips it over one of the stools at the counter. She drops her overnight bag to the floor and pulls an envelope out of her purse. “For you,” she says. “Happy birthday.”

It’s two round-trip Acela tickets from Boston to New York.

“I left the dates open,” Ava says. “Figured you could either come twice by yourself and stay with me, or you could bring a date and stay at Drake’s apartment, which is a three-million-dollar piece of real estate sitting empty.”

A date? Bart thinks. Why are his siblings suddenly so keen to set him up with a girl? Girls are the farthest thing from Bart’s mind. Still, the idea of going down to New York appeals, sometime before he goes back on active duty.

He’ll have to pass a battery of tests before he’s allowed to reenlist. The physical ones he’ll pass. The psychological ones…?

“Thanks, Sis,” Bart says. He studies the train tickets. First class! “This is a great idea.”

Kevin and Isabelle walk in the side door next. “Look,” Kevin says. “It’s a party.”

“Want a beer?” Patrick asks.

“Pope, funny hat,” Kevin says.

“Ava, Isabelle, wine?” Jennifer asks.

“Isabelle is nursing,” Kevin says.

“Une biere, s’il vous plait,” Isabelle says. She hands Bart a garment bag. “Pour toi. Bon anniversaire!”

“Thanks, Isabelle,” Bart says. The garment bag is from Saks Fifth Avenue, which means it’s not a navy blazer from Murray’s. Bart has no fewer than eight such blazers in ascending sizes hanging in his closet. Mitzi won’t let Bart take them to the thrift shop. They’re a record of his growing up, she says.

Bart unzips the garment bag to find a slate-blue cashmere jacket, the cut and beauty of which Bart cannot believe. It’s the most beautiful article of clothing he has ever seen, certainly more sophisticated than anything he owns. It’s an adult jacket, an adult civilian jacket. Still, Bart feels a thrill as he slips it on. It fits perfectly.

Patrick whistles. “Looks great, bro.” To Kevin he says, “What’d that run you, six bills?”

Kevin says, “Isabelle got it and she’s too elegant to disclose the price.”

Jennifer swats Patrick. “How much it costs doesn’t matter. What matters is that you look gorgeous in it, Bart.”

Ava claps her hands. “You can wear it to New York City.”

“Tu peux le porter ce soir,” Isabelle says.

“Ce soir?” Bart says.

“A la soirée,” Isabelle says.

Bart shoots his cuffs. Maybe he will wear it to the party tonight. Why not? He looks around the kitchen at his siblings and he raises his beer.

“Thanks, you guys,” he says, but he is too overcome with emotion to say anything more. He doesn’t even need to go to the party, he thinks. The real party is right here.





EDDIE


Allegra is ready to go—she has been ready for nearly twenty minutes, despite the two-hour preparation to do her hair and makeup and to get into her kimono, obi, and silk slippers. The costume looks authentic… and very, very expensive.

Meanwhile, Eddie is torn.

He has two ideas for costumes and he can’t decide between them. His first idea is to go dressed as a pimp—fur coat, wide-brimmed hat, sunglasses, diamond rings. It’s outrageous because, technically, Eddie used to be a pimp. Dressing as a stereotypical one now would be Eddie poking fun at himself. Everyone would be talking about him and his costume—but would the other partygoers think the costume was hysterical, brave, and appropriately self-effacing, or would they think it was in atrocious taste? Eddie would like to believe the former, but he fears the latter. It’s probably too soon to go dressed as a pimp. Next year enough time will have passed that absolutely everyone will think it’s funny.

And so Eddie defaults to his second idea: he will go dressed as Fast Eddie. What this means is that he will dress as his former self—in a beige linen suit and a Panama hat.

When he emerges from the bedroom, Allegra gives him a sharp look. Or maybe that’s just her makeup.

“Really, Dad?” she says. “The hat?”

“It’s my trademark,” Eddie says.

“Was your trademark,” Allegra says. “Back when you were breaking the law.”

Eddie is very glad he didn’t pursue the fur coat option. “Let’s go,” he says.


They head out to the Cherokee. Allegra, whose range of motion is constricted by her costume, needs help getting in.

“Are you going to be able to dance in that getup?” Eddie asks.

“If I feel like dancing, I’ll take the kimono off,” Allegra says.

“But you do have something on underneath, right?” Eddie says.

“Yes, Dad,” Allegra says. “What kind of woman do you think I am?”

Eddie lets that question slide as rhetorical. As they head out of town, he realizes he has the next twelve minutes alone with his daughter, a rare opportunity.

“How are you feeling about the breakup?” Eddie asks.

Allegra shrugs.

Okay, Eddie thinks. He tries another avenue. “Do you miss your sister?”

“A lot more than I thought I would,” Allegra says. “I feel… I don’t know, abandoned almost. She’s off at school, meeting people, creating a network of friends and connections that will last her the rest of her life. And I’m stuck at home in a dead-end job.”

“It’s not a dead-end job,” Eddie says. “You’re the face of the company.”

“Glenn is the face of the company,” Allegra says.

“You’re the first person people see when they walk through the door,” Eddie says. “And you’re doing a terrific job. In no time you’ll be a sales associate, and then once you take the requisite courses, you’ll be a broker like me.”

“I don’t expect you to understand,” Allegra says.

“Understand what?” Eddie says.

“You and Aunt Barbie grew up in New Bedford,” Allegra says. “So for you guys, coming to Nantucket was a big step forward. But I grew up here. And here I remain.”

“Well, I’ll point out,” Eddie says, “you could be stuck somewhere worse. There aren’t many places better than here.”

“I always saw myself someplace more glamorous,” Allegra says. “New York City, London…”

“Tokyo!” Eddie says, but Allegra doesn’t even crack a smile. He understands what she means, but at the same time, he feels hurt. He worked his ass off to be able to raise the twins here—and until his recent misfortunes, their lives had been pretty darn blessed. He’d given them whatever they asked for—fancy Italian leather jackets, three-hundred—dollar jeans, riding lessons, a Jeep, and the expensive college-prep classes that Allegra chose to skip.

There’s no time to bemoan his daughters’ squandered privilege, because now he and Allegra are pulling into the parking lot at the VFW, which is already jam-packed with cars. Eddie feels a surge of excitement. Finally he’s back in the swing of things; he’s where the action is. When he told Glenn and Barbie that he’d been invited to Bart Quinn’s birthday, they were envious. He saw it on their faces.

“Here we are,” Eddie says. “Let’s get this party started.”

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