Authors: Lauren Weisberger
âPleasure, Sammy. Come sit and keep an old man company. You from around here?'
We all sat. My father poured the Yogi Egyptian licorice tea that my mother brewed by the bucket as Sammy carefully arranged his large frame on one of the oversized beaded floor cushions scattered around the table. I flopped between him and my mother, who folded her legs Indian-style so gracefully that she appeared to be twenty years younger.
âSo what's the plan for the weekend?' I asked cheerily.
âWell, no one will be coming until late tomorrow afternoon, so you're free until then. Why don't you guys see what's going on at the university? I'm sure there's a good program or two,' my mother said.
âThe campus ballet troupe is performing an early Thanksgiving matinee tomorrow. I could arrange for tickets if you're interested,' Dad offered. He had taught ecology at Vassar for so long and was such a beloved professor on campus that he could arrange just about anything. My mother worked for the campus health clinic's emotional health department, dividing her time equally between hotline work (rape crisis, suicide, general depression) and rallying the university to adopt a more holistic approach to students' problems (acupuncture, herbs, yoga). They were the pet couple of Vassar, just as I knew they'd been the pet couple at Berkeley for so many years in the sixties.
âMaybe I'll check it out, but you're forgetting that Sammy is here to visit his family,' I said, giving them both what I hoped were warning looks to lay off. I spooned some of the unprocessed brown sugar and passed the dish to Sammy.
âSpeaking of which, what was Will's excuse again for not being able to make it?' my mother asked nonchalantly.
Sammy stepped up before I could intervene, not realizing that my parents had long been onto Will's pitiful stories and lies, that it had become a favorite family pastime to tell and retell the new and creative fibs he crafted. He and my mother were close, despite the small detail that she was an annoying hippie liberal who refused to affiliate with a political party and he was an annoying conservative Republican who defined himself by one. Somehow they talked weekly and even managed to be affectionate when together, although each loved viciously mocking the other to me.
Sammy spoke up. âWasn't it something about Simon's work?' he said to me. âThe Philharmonic called Simon at the very last minute to fill in for an ill musician. They gave him no choice, really. He just couldn't say no,' he blurted out before I could screw it up. He was loyal, I had to give him that.
My mother smiled first at me and then at my father. âIs that so? I thought he said something about an emergency meeting with his entertainment lawyer at their offices in New Jersey.'
Sammy flushed, immediately convinced he'd somehow gotten the story confused. Time to intervene.
âThey know Simon's not filling in for anybody, Sammy, and they know you know it, too. Don't worry, you didn't give anything away.'
âThat was sweet of you, Sammy, but I simply know my dear brother too well to believe the stories anymore. Where are they off to? Miami? The Bahamas?'
âKey West,' I said, topping off everyone's mugs.
âYou win,' my father conceded. âYour mother bet me he'd cancel at the last minute and blame it on Simon. Frankly, I'm delighted he finally moved past that tired old deadline excuse.' They both cracked up.
âWell, I'd better get dinner going,' my mother announced. âI went to the farmers' market today and got all their winter specials.'
âMay I help you?' Sammy asked. âIt's the least I can do after lying to you. Besides, it's been a while since I've been in a home kitchen â I'd really appreciate it.'
My parents peered at him curiously.
âSammy's a chef,' I said. âHe studied at the Culinary Institute of America and is planning to open his own restaurant someday.'
âReally! How interesting. Do you currently cook anywhere in the city?' my father asked.
Sammy smiled shyly, looked down, and said, âActually, I started doing Sunday brunch at Gramercy Tavern a few months ago. It's a serious crowd. It's been a really good experience.'
I felt a jolt go through me. Who was this guy?
âWell, in that case, come with me. Can you do anything interesting with zucchini?' my mother asked, linking her arm with his once he hoisted himself up from the floor cushions.
Within minutes Sammy was at the stove, while my mother sat quietly at the table, staring at him in wonderment, unable to disguise her delight.
âWhat are you making?' I asked as he drained a pot of noodles before adding a splash of olive oil. He wiped his hands on the apron my mother had provided (which read
IN ACCEPTANCE, THERE IS PEACE
) and surveyed his progress.
âWell, I thought we'd start with a pasta salad with roasted carrots, cucumbers, and pine nuts, and maybe some zucchini antipasto. Your mom said she wanted something casual for the entrée, so I was thinking of trying curried chickpea sandwiches on focaccia and a side of stuffed red peppers with rice and escarole. How does everyone feel about baked apples with freshly whipped cream and this sorbet here for dessert? I have to say, Mrs Robinson, you picked some fantastic ingredients.'
âGee, Mom, what were you planning on making?' I asked, loving the expressions on both their faces.
âCasserole,' she said, never taking her eyes off Sammy. âJust throw it all together and bake it for a few minutes, I guess.'
âWell, that sounds great, too,' Sammy was quick to say. âI'd be happy to do that if you'd prefer.'
âNo!' my father and I shouted simultaneously. âPlease continue, Sammy. This is going to be a real treat for us,' Dad said, slapping him on the back and taking a taste of the chickpea mixture with his fingers.
Dinner was amazing, of course, so good I didn't make a single nasty comment about the lack of meat or the abundance of organic food, but that was mostly because I didn't even notice. All my concerns about the potential awkwardness of Sammy sharing the table with my parents had evaporated by the time we finished our pasta salad. Sammy glowed from the constant praise everyone lavished on him, and he became chatty and happy in a way I'd never seen. Before I knew what had happened, I was clearing the table alone and my parents had sequestered Sammy back in the greenhouse and were showing him the much-dreaded naked-in-the-bathtub baby pictures and all the things I'd supposedly accomplished in my life that no one besides the people who'd given birth to you could conceivably care about. It was almost midnight when my parents finally announced they were going to bed.
âYou two are more than welcome to stay and visit, but your father and I need to get to sleep,' my mother announced, while stamping out the last stub of her clove cigarette, a treat they shared when they were in a festive mood. âBig day tomorrow.' She extended her hand to my father, which he took with a smile. âSo nice to meet you, Sammy. We just love meeting Bette's
friends
.'
Sammy leapt to his feet. âNice to meet you both as well. Thanks for having me. And good luck with the party tomorrow. It sounds great.'
âYes, well, it's a tradition, and we hope to see you there. Nighty-night,' my father said cheerily, following my mother into the house, but not before he leaned in and whispered a fervent thank-you to Sammy for allowing him one edible meal.
âThey're great,' Sammy said quietly when the door had closed. âAfter the way you described them, I was honestly expecting circus freaks. But they couldn't be more normal.'
âYeah, well, it depends on your definition of
normal,
I guess. You ready?'
âUh, sure. If you are.' He sounded hesitant.
âWell, I figured you'd want to get home, but I'm totally up for hanging out if you are,' I said, holding my breath the entire time.
He appeared to think about this for a minute and then said, âHow do you feel about hitting the Starlight?'
It was official: he was perfect.
I exhaled. âGreat call. It's only the best diner on earth. Do you love it as much as I do?'
âMore. I used to go there by myself in high school, if you can even believe how humiliating that is. I'd just sit there with a book or a magazine and a cup of coffee. It broke my heart when the original wart lady left.'
The Starlight had been the epicenter of our high school social life, the place I'd spent the better part of my teenage years, hanging out with my friends who, like me, weren't quite pretty or cool enough to be considered popular, but who could still confidently claim superiority over the dorks and losers (mostly the horrifyingly antisocial math and computer types) who unwillingly occupied the rungs beneath us. The social hierarchy was strictly maintained: the cool kids monopolized the smoking section, the severely socially challenged played video games at the two booths all the way in the back, and my crowd (assorted hippies, alternative punk kids, and the socially striving who hadn't quite made the big leagues yet) held the half-dozen tables and the entire counter space in between. The guys would sit in one booth, smoking and discussing â quite suavely, and with the strong suggestion of expertise â whether they'd sacrifice blow jobs or sex if forced to decide at gunpoint, as we, their loyal girlfriends (who weren't doing much more than kissing any of them), gulped coffee and analyzed in great detail which of the girls at school had the best clothes, chest, and boyfriend. Starlight was the Poughkeepsie version of Central Perk, only slightly stickier and with fluorescent lights, brown vinyl booths, and a waitstaff where each employee, incredibly, possessed either a sprouting facial wart or a missing finger. I loved the way some people remain devoted to their childhood bedrooms or summer-vacation spots, and I returned, like a homing pigeon, every time I went back to town. The idea of Sammy there alone made me sad and nostalgic.
We settled into the least sticky booth we could find and pretended to examine the plastic menus, which hadn't changed in decades. Even though I was stuffed, I debated between cinnamon toast and fries and then decided that carb-loading was acceptable outside the Manhattan city limits and got both. Sammy ordered a cup of regular coffee. One of my favorite waitresses, the woman with the longest hair of all growing from the wart near her lip, had snorted when he'd asked for skim milk instead of cream, and the two were now involved in some sort of glaring contest across the room.
We sipped coffee and chatted and picked at the food.
âYou never mentioned you were doing brunch at Gramercy Tavern. I'd love to come by.'
âYeah, well, you never mentioned that you were salutatorian of your class. Or that you won the Martin Luther King Award for cross-cultural community service.'
I laughed. âBoy, they didn't miss a thing, did they? I thought it was lucky you graduated three years before me so you wouldn't remember any of that stuff, but I should've known better.'
The waitress refilled Sammy's mug and let a little of the coffee splash for good measure.
âThey're proud of you, Bette. I think that's so nice.'
âThey
were
proud of me. It's different now. I don't think my newfound ability to draw celebs to Bungalow 8 and get written about in gossip columns was exactly what they had in mind for me.'
He smiled sadly. âEveryone makes compromises, you know? Doesn't mean you're any different from the person you were back then.'
The way he said it made me want to believe it. âCan we get out of here?' I asked, motioning for the check, which, regardless of how many people were in the party or what was ordered, always amounted to exactly three dollars per person. âI think I need to conserve my energy for tomorrow's festivities, which I'm hoping to convince you to attend. â¦'
He left a twenty-dollar bill on the table (âTo make up for all the nights I left really shitty tips after sitting here for hours') and put his hand on my back to direct me out. We detoured long enough for him to win me a small stuffed pig from the claw game in the foyer â the one that sat just past the rotating pie display. I hugged it to me and he told me it was the best two bucks in quarters he'd ever spent. The ten-mile drive to his house was quiet, and I realized that in all the years I lived in Poughkeepsie, I'd never been to this part of town. We were both contemplative, with none of the chitchat or joking or confiding that we'd shared during the past nine hours we'd spent together â nine hours that felt like five minutes. I pulled into the short, unpaved driveway of a small, tidy Colonial-style home and put the car in park.
âI had a great time tonight. Today, tonight, the whole thing. Thanks for the ride and for dinner â all of it.' He didn't look like he was in any rush to get out of the car, and I finally allowed myself to entertain the idea that he might just kiss me. Any Harlequin novel would've surely pointed out how the electricity crackled between us.
âAre you serious? I should be thanking you! You're the one who kept us from enduring an entire night of vicious food poisoning, you know,' I blurted out. Then I tucked my hands underneath my knees to keep them from shaking.
And then he was climbing out. Just like that. He simply opened the door and grabbed his duffel from the backseat and waved, mumbling something about calling me tomorrow. The disappointment stung like a slap to the face, and I put the car in reverse as quickly as possible, needing to leave before I started crying.
Why on earth would you think he's even remotely interested in you?
I asked myself, going back over the night in my head.
He needed a ride and you offered him one and he was nothing except perfectly friendly. It's your own delusion and you need to get over it immediately before you make a complete ass of yourself.
As I turned to back out of the gravelly driveway, I saw a figure approaching the car.