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If We Lived Here Page 3


  Chapter 3

  Emma drew seven tiles from the Scrabble pouch, then arranged and rearranged the letters on her rack until a seven-letter word emerged: BURGERS. A bingo on her first turn! She laid the tiles down on the board, and tallied her points: 76.

  “On second thought, I think I’m too tired to play,” said Nick.

  “No way, dude! You’re the one who convinced me.”

  Nick sighed, examined his tiles, then dropped FAX above and slightly to the left of BURGERS, also creating AB and XU vertically.

  “Thirty points, not bad.”

  When three of the next five of Emma’s words were diner-related—FRIES, SHAKE, and CHEESE—Nick said, “Any chance you’re hungry?”

  “Affirmative.” Emma liked to send messages via Scrabble moves. Nick preferred a more straightforward mode of play, laying down a boring but strategic two-or three-letter word and cleaning up in points. “Let’s do takeout from the Meatball Shop.”

  “Em, you’re averaging once a day there. Soon you might turn into a meatball.”

  “I’m just trying to enjoy as much meat as possible before I’m sentenced to a life of seitan and portobellos.” It was one of Emma’s concessions for the move-in, that she’d respect Nick’s preference for a meat-free apartment. “Although I am looking forward to the slimming results of tofu and kale. Five or six veggie balls for you?”

  “Five’s good.”

  Emma swiped open her phone, but heard no dial tone. “Hello?”

  “Ems, thank God you’re there.”

  “Annie?” It was her best friend, sounding more frantic than usual. “What, do you live in my phone now?”

  “Huh? Listen, I just found out there’s a weight limit for my suitcase, and I need you to help me figure out which shoes to ditch: hiking boots, wedges, or kitten heels?”

  “I thought you guys were going on an African safari.”

  “We are, but there’s supposed to be this big banquet at the end. I want to look cute! I’ve spent months putting together my honeymoon wardrobe, and only now do I find out I can’t bring it all. This is a disaster.”

  “Annie, this is not a disaster. Tomorrow we’ll go over it together, okay? I’m with Nick tonight.”

  “Hey, remind him to bring a flask this weekend. I don’t know what the guys have planned, but Eli said a flask was imperative.”

  “The flask?” Nick whispered. “She’s already emailed me twice about it.”

  “Flask packed, check! Anything else?” Emma’s stomach was growling.

  “Yeah, about a million things. I’m only getting married in seventy-two hours!”

  “Put a pin in those concerns and we’ll deal with every little thing in the morning.”

  “You’re the best maid of honor ever.”

  “I know I am. I’ll talk to you tomorrow.” Emma hung up, called in the dinner order, then flopped onto the couch.

  “How’s she holding it together?” Nick asked.

  “Just barely. But who expected anything other than Annie Bridezilla Blum?”

  “She’s why you’re so good at your job, you know. You can deal with all those crazy parents because you’ve had a lifetime of practice with Annie.”

  “You’re right. Prepping for a dozen college interviews is nothing compared to what Annie used to put me through before a middle school Snowball Dance.”

  “Yeesh, Annie as a preteen.” Nick shook his head. “It’s your turn.”

  Emma switched her theme: She laid down the words VEIL and SPEECH, then cleaned up with BOUQUETS, right through the triple-word score for 116 points.

  “Think it’s safe to say I won?” Emma asked.

  “I do.”

  “I do, too.”

  “You set me up for that,” Nick said.

  “I did. Just like you set me up for the triple-word score, and the win. Boo-ya!”

  “And now, you may kiss your poor opponent.” And they did, until it was time to pick up their food.

  On Emma’s way to the Meatball Shop, Annie called again. “I didn’t know you found an apartment!” Her shrieking made Emma jerk the phone away from her ear.

  “You have a lot going on, Annie. I didn’t want to add—”

  “Thanks for listing me as a reference, by the way. It’s an honor and a privilege. And the place sounds unreal! I know you were worried about having enough space to breathe with Nick, and what did she say, eight hundred square feet? Wow! With hardwood floors and a skylight? Killer! I’m a little concerned that the bathroom hasn’t been redone since the eighties, but we can re-grout and spruce it right up. Have you thought about paint colors? I’ve seen this gorgeous Robin’s Egg swatch that I think would be great for the bedroom, seems very you and Nick. I’ll bring it this weekend.”

  “Annie, slow down. First of all, you are not bringing paint swatches for my apartment to your own wedding. Secondly, how do you know all this stuff?”

  “Oh, Mrs. C and I got to chatting. We have a lot in common. We both prefer the Whitney over MoMA and we both want to be best friends with the Dowager Countess on Downton Abbey—no offense to my real bestie. Mrs. Caroline seems like she really cares about you guys. She was so interested. I think you’re a shoo-in.”

  “I knew you could charm her.” This is why Emma loved Annie, because as impossible as she could be, she would also do anything for a friend. Emma spotted the hostess and, covering her speaker, whispered, “Yes, Emma Feit. Five veggie, six lamb.”

  “Ems, you are not eating meatballs three days before my wedding, are you? That dress of yours is skintight.”

  “I plead the Fifth.”

  “Blerg. Okay, enjoy your greasy dinner. Kindly go for a run afterward. Ta-ta!”

  Back home Emma found Nick crouched over a notepad. “So I concede that you won either way,” he said, “but with our superior version of point scoring, you only beat me by thirty-two, instead of the sixty-eight-point slaughtering you delivered with traditional scoring.”

  “Only thirty-two, huh?” Emma kissed Nick on the forehead and dug into the takeout bag.

  Together Emma and Nick had developed what they thought was a fairer way to score Scrabble. Based on facility of use and frequency of appearance, they believed that Qs and Zs should be worth eight, not ten, points; that Cs should be four, not three; that Ys should be five, not four; and that Us should be two, not one. They disagreed only on the V; Emma thought it should be five, but Nick felt it was aptly weighted at four points. For her twenty-ninth birthday last year, Nick had designed Emma a poster of their scoring (he valued the V at 4.5), framed it, and hung it above her bed. Emma was so touched that she’d insisted on showing off the poster to everyone who came over. Most people deemed it super-sweet or super-dorky. Except Emma’s brother and his wife, that is.

  “Oh, we used to have board game nights, didn’t we, Max?” Alysse, Emma’s sister-in-law, had remarked during a visit. “Gin rummy and Monopoly.” Those games aren’t at all like Scrabble, Emma had thought but not said. “That was before we had real responsibilities, of course.”

  “Well, I think it’s cute that you guys spend so much time playing games,” Max had added, patting Emma’s head like she was a puppy instead of his younger sister. “It’s whimsical.” The implication seemed to be that the way she spent her time was insubstantial, and Emma had fumed. Her brother often managed to diminish whatever she felt proud of or excited about. That memory still gave Emma a twinge.

  “You know,” Nick said now, reaching for his dinner, “I think our point system has subconsciously affected my play. Whenever I recalculate the score using our version I always come out ahead.”

  “So that’s your excuse, huh?” Emma dug into a lamb meatball, and with mouth full, added, “How many more times do you think I’ll hear from Annie tonight?”

  As if on cue, her phone rang. She swiped it open and, still chewing, said, “Annie, I told you we’d figure it all out tomorrow.”

  “Excuse me, Emma?”

  Emma nearly choked on
her food. “Oh, Mrs. Goldstein, I’m so sorry. I thought you were someone else. How are you this evening?” Ever the professional, Emma had all her clients’ voices memorized. It was important to let the Hellis know how much she valued them. She chastised herself for being so careless.

  “Good. Well, listen, we have somewhat of a doozy on our hands. We just received Isaac’s fall course schedule, and he got Mr. Trundle for A.P. World.”

  “I see.” Emma had dealt with this issue before with her students from Riverdale; she knew that Mr. Trundle didn’t believe in grade inflation, and—arguably a graver crime for her clients—didn’t tolerate overinvolved parents.

  “I’m sure he’s a fine teacher,” Mrs. Goldstein continued, “but I’ve heard rumors about suspect comments he’s made regarding the Israel-Palestine situation. And this class covers World War II, you know, the Holocaust”—this last part she whispered—“so I wouldn’t want to put Isaac in any uncomfortable situations… .” She trailed off, and Emma rolled her eyes. There was no way Riverdale would hire an anti-Semite to its faculty, as Mrs. Goldstein seemed to be insinuating, but these parents always had to feel justified in their special requests.

  “I hear you,” Emma said. “Let me put a call into the school. Mr. Trundle tends to teach A.P. in the afternoons, and I’ve had luck in the past suggesting that a student’s right-brain processing is keener in the morning.”

  “Emma Feit, you’re a star. I don’t know what we’d do without you.”

  Without me, you’d have a kid who’d know what it was like to get a B, a kid who’d have an easier time dealing with real life someday when he won’t just be able to hire someone to make all his problems go away. Emma didn’t say this, of course, especially since she knew she was part of the problem. But she also knew that some of these kids would in fact grow up to live in a world where they could keep hiring someone to disappear their problems; so, she figured, why not take advantage for a cut of the profits? Anyway, that’s what Emma told herself when she was up in a cold sweat in the middle of the night debating the ethics of her job and questioning her long-ago flight from academia. (At other times, Emma found these twinges of guilt reassuring—they would make it easier one day when she’d decide to flee this job, as she inevitably would when some shiny new opportunity presented itself.)

  As soon as Emma got rid of Mrs. Goldstein, her phone rang again. This time she checked the caller ID: Annie.

  “So Eli’s staying at his parents’ place. They said they want to bond with him as a single man for the last time. Lame-slash-sweet, right? Ems, will you please come sleep over at my place? I’m freaking out and don’t want to be alone tonight.”

  “Well, Nick is down here at my apartment.”

  “Tell Nick he can get a six-pack and an on-demand movie, my treat. Or leave him your Facebook password so he can cybersnoop. Come on, please?”

  Nick was furiously shaking his head. Emma turned away. “All right, fine. I’ll be over there soon.”

  She hung up, and Nick groaned. “If that girl asked you to hide the body of someone she just murdered, you’d start clearing out your closet.”

  “If it was three days before her wedding, yeah, I probably would. But guess what? She’d do the same for me.”

  “I should’ve brought Mensa over to keep me company. He could watch me play video games and then we’d cuddle together under your covers.”

  “Gross.” Emma shuddered at the thought.

  “The little guy would be so cozy, curled up on your pillow.” Nick contorted his facial features into a surprisingly realistic depiction of a gerbil, and Emma pelted a plastic fork at him. “Nice, Em. I actually think I’ll head home. Come on, I’ll walk you out.”

  When Annie swung open the door, the fact that her face was covered in blue goop didn’t stop her from leaning in to kiss Emma hello. She was wearing oversized shorts (probably Eli’s) and a sports bra, and her hair was twisted up into a shower cap.

  “Why does it reek of mayonnaise in here?” Emma asked. “I thought you’d sworn off fat all month.”

  “To eat, yes. That’s my hair mask. It’s for shine and luster, and condiments are cheaper than the spa stuff.”

  “Yuck.”

  “I have ten minutes left of my Insanity workout. Come and squat with me.”

  “No way, my butt isn’t doing anything but planting itself onto your couch. But first I’m raiding the fridge.” In the freezer Emma found a rice-milk coconut bar, probably the closest thing to junk food Eli and Annie had. She tore it open and plunked onto the couch, which afforded her a first-rate view of Annie’s calorie-blasting contortions.

  “Eli would kill you if he saw you eating that there,” Annie said between gasps.

  “Good thing he’s not here then. Who buys a white leather sofa, anyway?”

  “Eli’s boss has the same one, and he was inspired. It’s imported from Italy.”

  “Of course it is. Whatever happened to that futon from your old place, the one we scored on Avenue A after that mile-long bar crawl about a million years ago? Remember we paid those guys ten bucks to haul it up five flights to your apartment?”

  “God, they should’ve insisted on at least twenty. When I moved I put that ratty old thing right back where it came from, down on the curb. Good riddance.”

  “It’s exhausting me just looking at you.” Annie had moved on to burpees, manically launching herself into the air, squatting down, flinging her legs back into a plank, performing a push-up, then catapulting her body back up for more. “Does Eli freak out that you’re sweating on the rug, which he probably had airlifted in from Persia?”

  “Ha ha. You forget, my friend, I don’t sweat.”

  Emma reached out a foot and nudged Annie mid-jump, causing her to stumble. “Hey, clumsy, you don’t sweat, and apparently you don’t have any coordination, either.”

  “Ems, how dare you!” Annie stopped and caught her breath. Her flush overlaid with the blue goop gave her face a green sheen. “If I broke my ankle right then, you’d be responsible for carrying me down the aisle on Sunday.”

  “And I’d do it with pleasure and panache. So, wanna go through your suitcase?”

  “Nah. I know you’ll make me ditch all the fun stuff, like my mood candles and hot rollers.”

  “You’re flying to South Africa with hot rollers?”

  “See? Let’s do something fun instead. Ooh, I know. Wait here.”

  Annie scurried off. Moments later she returned, her face scrubbed clean and a flash drive between her fingers.

  “Eli converted all my old VHS tapes. You are not going to believe what I found.”

  Cozying up next to Emma, Annie opened her laptop, and moments later Emma was staring at moving images of the two of them from half a lifetime ago. There they were in Annie’s childhood basement—Emma recognized the teal wallpaper—both in off-the-shoulder dresses, practicing their pouts. Emma could almost smell the rich rosiness of Heather Moon, the Clinique lipstick they both wore back then. Watching her teenage self make kissy faces to the camera, Emma felt half-convinced that this scene was from just last week; it was as if the last fifteen years had never happened, or had simply whooshed by in a dream, her brain’s invention during a particularly intense bout of REM sleep.

  “This is what I’m going to do all over Doug’s face tonight,” on-camera Annie said, her voice the same as now. She smooched Emma’s cheek, and Emma grimaced at the camera. Emma remembered the lead-up to this night. Though they’d only been freshmen, Annie had strategically scored them invites to Prom. For months she’d been “running into” senior Doug Parker in the halls, at the mall, wherever, and reeling him in with her charm and her well-developed chest. This effort was made partly because Doug was a hot football player and Annie could imagine nothing more incredible than slow dancing with him at Prom, but also because she’d known that his best friend, Joey Puck, would be too shy to get himself a date, and then Emma could come, too.

  “How far are you gonna go with Joey to
night, Ems? First base? Second?” Video Annie tugged fast at the zipper on her friend’s dress, exposing Emma’s suddenly bare top half to the camera.

  She shrieked. “Annie, what the hell! You better destroy this tape tonight.” Her teenage squawk made Emma wince; she hoped she’d grown out of it.

  “I will, I will.” Emma flashed a look at her present-day friend, who was wheezing laughter identically to how her fifteen-year-old self was currently doing onscreen.

  “You’re lucky I didn’t post it online,” present-day Annie said, as her younger counterpart remarked, “I’m telling Doug he has to take me out at least ten times before I’ll go all the way. That’s how to get respect from a guy. And then he’ll want to marry me and have a dozen little babies with me.”

  “You want to marry Doug Parker? Yuck!” Emma was no longer in the shot, presumably off fixing her dress.

  “Why not? Our wedding would be unreal. I’d wear one of those mermaid gowns, and the bridesmaids would be in pink and green, and you’d be my maid of honor, natch.”

  Emma watched the screen, rapt. She’d played plus-one at all of Annie’s bridal appointments this past spring, and when her friend had stepped out of the Bloomie’s dressing room in the Carolina Herrera mermaid number, they’d both known it was totally Annie, tiara to train. For Emma’s maid-of-honor getup, her friend had picked a green sheath dress with a pink sash.

  “You’re a psycho, Annie.” Emma was back in the shot, her dress now crooked.

  “Oh come on, don’t tell me you don’t dream about your wedding day.”

  “I don’t!”

  “Well, who’s the freak now? When you’re off studying Advanced Calculus and A.P. Astro-whatever, the rest of us are choreographing our first dances with our future grooms.” Teenage Annie grabbed Emma’s hands, and off they went, sashaying through Annie’s basement, in and out of the camera view. “You must fantasize about the future.”

  “Of course I do. About doing something amazing with my life. Also, having a maid so I’ll never have to do laundry again, and owning a soft-serve machine.”