Authors: Robin Gold
Perhaps Clara wanted nothing more than to remain faithful to Sebastian, and this was her way of doing so: by ignoring other men. She decided she would try to explain this to Libby during their walk.
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Serve on a real live court jury (awesome!!!)
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Eat sugar cereal & McDonald's during the week (not just on weekends!)
⢠Swim with dolphins
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Ride in a hot air balloon
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“G
ood Lord
. . . Look at the
size
of that thing,” Clara whispered.
“I know,” replied Lincoln. “I hear that all the time.”
Standing in awe as Sue's five-foot-long skull stared her down, Clara smiled. “She's incredible, Link. Absolutely incredible.”
“She sure is.” He gazed up at the 67-million-year-old fossil with similar wonder. “I never get tired of looking at her. She's from the late Cretaceous period, and if you focus on her massive jaw, you'll notice that most of her razor-sharp teeth are about twelve inches long. Which is more or less average for the T-rex.”
“Amazing
. . . And you said that you're studying her stomach?” Clara's eyes remained fixed on the mesmerizing dinosaur.
“Among other things. Recently, I've been analyzing the material believed to have been Sue's stomach contents from her last meal. It's of great scientific interest because it provides a more complete picture of the ecosystem in which she lived, and reveals secrets that wouldn't be evident from calcareous connective tissue, or
bones
âas we like to call themâalone.”
A tall, strikingly beautiful woman with scarlet lips and long, flowing black hair that was a direct contrast to her milky white skin appeared out of nowhere, sliding her arm around Lincoln's waist. “I hope you're not boring this poor, innocent woman to death.” She smiled wryly.
“Who, me?”
Lincoln gave her a quick but obviously heartfelt kiss on the mouth. “Never.”
“You must be Clara.” The woman extended her hand to greet her. “It's wonderful to finally meet you. I'm Meg.”
“Nice to meet you too,” said Clara, admiring Meg's navy, vintage-looking polka-dot dress.
“When Link told me you were stopping by on your way to dinner, I warned him not to subject you to a long, academic lecture aboutâshe deepened her voice to mimic hisâ
the exquisite preservation and invaluable scientific resource that is our dear Sue
.”
Clara grinned, impressed with Meg's impersonation, as well as her spunk. “Hey, that's not bad.”
“You know I'm only teasing, love.” Meg flashed Lincoln a dazzling smile.
Why this gorgeous woman who reminded Clara of a young Audrey Hepburn was managing the gift shopâas opposed to strutting her stuff on a professional catwalkâwas a mystery to Clara. She and Lincoln certainly made a handsome couple.
“Did he show you the
Evolving Planet
yet?” Meg asked her, referring to the museum's popular exhibit that took visitors on an awe-inspiring journey through four billion years of life on Earth, featuring an expanded dinosaur hall, including every major group and the worlds they lived in.
“He told me about it, but we decided to wait and see it with my brother, who's a huge dinosaur fan,” Clara explained. “He's a five-year-old boy trapped in a thirty-seven-year-old adult body when it comes to this sort of stuff.”
“Hmmm . . . Sounds like someone I know.” Meg arched her eyebrows and smirked at Lincoln, who, grinning, appeared altogether enchanted by her.
“Well, I look forward to giving Leo an extra special, behind-the-scenes tour,” he announced.
“Oh, he would adore that,” Clara assured him, imagining that her brother might need to be shot with a tranquilizer gun at some point during the experience. “I just hope you don't regret making that offer.”
“Nonsense,” insisted Lincoln. “Leo and I go way back. It'll be terrific to catch up with him and show him around.”
“Can you join us for dinner, Meg?” Clara felt her empty stomach begin to grumble. “I think we're going to try a new Chinese restaurant called Syn-Kow over by Wrigley Field
.
”
“I'd love to.” She smiled. “I hear their egg rolls are to die for. But I've got a book club meeting this evening.”
“Yes, tonight's book is the great
Hollywood Wives
by Jackie Collins,” Lincoln revealed.
“We're reading the classics,” explained Meg. Placing her hand under his wrist, she lifted it and glanced at his watch. “Oh dear, I'd better get back to the gift shop. I promised I'd be gone just a few minutes. Enjoy your eveningâand Clara, I hope we can all get together sometime soon.”
“Absolutely,” Clara replied.
“I'll leave the door unlocked for you and tell Rodrigo to let you up,” Lincoln said to Meg, kissing her ruby lips goodbye.
“Nicest
doorman in all of Chicago,” she told Clara. Then, squeezing Lincoln's hand, she sparkled. “I should be there by ten-thirty, hun.”
“O
h boy,” Clara groaned, placing her hand over her stuffed belly. “You might need to roll me out of here in a wheelbarrow. I can't have another bite.”
“Does that mean your last sparerib's up for grabs?” Lincoln eyed the succulent pork with desire.
“Go ahead. By all means.”
Reaching his chopsticks across the table, he lifted it from Clara's plate. “Thank you. And how about that dumpling?”
“Be my guest.” She gestured for him to take it.
“You know, I've tried a lot of Chinese restaurants since I've been in Chicago, and so far this one's my favorite by a long shot.”
“Me too,” Clara agreed. “I'd definitely come back here.”
“Deal.” Lincoln smiled, popping her leftover vegetable dumpling in his mouth.
After the waitress had cleared their plates, she brought them the bill and two fortune cookies, which arrived on a small green dish that was shaped like a dragon and had dry-ice smoke shooting from its nostrils.
“We have to read our fortunes out loud,” Lincoln proclaimed, removing his cookie from its plastic wrapper and snapping it in half.
Clara reached for hers.
“Mine says”âhe squinted his dark, chocolate-colored eyes a bitâ“
You are gifted at walking.”
“What?” She giggled. “What the hell kind of fortune is that?”
“A lame one,” Lincoln concurred with a chuckle. “But actually, it reminds me of something. By any chance, do you happen to have your time capsule list with you?”
“Always,” Clara confirmed.
“May I see it, please?”
“Of course.” Grabbing her purse beneath her chair, she wondered what Lincoln was up to.
He gave the listâwhich had begun to assume a crinkled and shabby appearance due to constant handlingâa swift perusal and then announced that he had a proposition for her.
“A proposition? What are you talking about?”
“Well, here's the deal,” he began. “At the beginning of May there's a 10K charity race in the city to help raise money for cancer research. It's a fantastic cause. And God knows every cent helps.” Lincoln paused, absentmindedly fiddling with his cookie wrapper. “I'm running it in Jessica's honor,” he explained. “May's the month that she passed away, so it couldn't be more fitting as far as timing goes. And I know it's something that she would have felt passionately about. Jess was a volunteer for the American Cancer Society right up until the very end.” Clearing his throat, Lincoln cast his eyes downward, as if he didn't want Clara to glimpse the shadow of melancholy in them. “I could really use a partner to help me train and stay motivated.”
Certain that there had to be some sort of misunderstanding, Clara's eyebrows lifted with genuine surprise. “Are you talking about
me
?”
“No. I'm talking about our waitress. Can you ask her if she's interested?”
Tilting her head to the side, she gave him a look. “Funny.”
“Of course
I'm talking about you. See, I was thinking that if you participate in the race as well, you could simultaneously knock two items off your list.” Lincoln looked at it again, reading aloud:
“Run a race (10K like Dad used to run? Find out what a K is!)
and
Help others through charity like Libby.”
“You do have a point,” Clara admitted reluctantly.
“By the way, a
K
is 0.62 miles.” He winked.
“And it's certainly a wonderful cause. There's no doubt about that. But, Link, in all honesty, I don't think I have the stamina to even run around the block.” Clara wasn't proud of this fact, but, regrettably, it was true. “I mean, realistically, I don't think I'm in the right kind of physical shape to be able to pull off a 10K.”
“Neither am I.” Lincoln pointed at his sides. “Look at these love handles! Meg calls them Ben & Jerry. That's why I thought that maybe,
if
you were interested, we could help each other train. You know, root each other on? And you could always bring Milk Dud along,” he persuaded. “Dogs are âgifted at walking' too.”
Clara did the math in her head. “So that equals 6.2 miles.” She passed her fortune cookie back and forth from one hand to the other, pondering the idea. “That's a lot.”
“It is.” Lincoln sipped his hot tea. “Anyway, no pressure. I figured it couldn't hurt to throw it out there.”
Contemplating Jessica and how much she obviously meant to Lincoln, Clara could only imagine the symbolic significance this charity race held for him. She had no doubt that if the proverbial table was turned and she was running a race in Sebastian's honor, Lincoln would support her. He was the sort of man who'd go out and buy matching team t-shirts and possibly even twin sweatbands with a corny message on them. It occurred to Clara that perhaps he needed more than a training partner. Perhaps what Lincoln really needed was a friend who could relate to what he was going through, someone who knew firsthand the indescribable sort of devastating emotional loss that had become a permanent part of his everyday lifeânot pronounced or glaring in the forefront, but rather quietly existing deep in the background, like an ever-present scab that at any moment could be yanked off a wound that never quite heals.
Studying Lincoln, Clara recognized the heavyhearted flicker of grief in his eyes. She knew that look all too well. She felt it in her gut. And for the first time in almost a year, she was able to feel pain that was not her own. Striking her all at once, it made her want to weep. But, instead, Clara placed her hand on top of Lincoln's, smiled, and softly declared, “I'm in.”
He appeared taken aback. “YouâYou are?”
“I am,” Clara reiterated in a stronger voice. “But, I want to make one thing clear.”
“What's that?”
“I'm not doing this because it's on my time capsule list.”
“You're not?” Now Lincoln sounded
really
surprised.
“Nope.”
“Oookay.” He seemed leery. “Then, if I may ask, why
are
you doing it?”
Clara grinned, pausing before she answered. “For Jessica Foster.”
At first, Lincoln just looked at her without saying a word. And then, swallowing hard, he nodded and smiled gratefully, whispering, “Thank you.”
“But
you
”âClara pointed at himâ“are in charge of the training part.”
“You've got yourself a deal.”
Sitting at a table for two by the window at Syn-Kow, with the entire wait staff clapping their hands and singing a Chinese version of
Happy Birthday
to a mortified-looking diner nearby with a sparkler in his green tea ice cream, they shook on it.
“Okay. My turn.” Clara cracked open her fortune cookie, wondering what the hell she'd just gotten herself into. She had no idea how she was going to make it through this race without requiring CPR. Just thinking about it gave her a side stitch! But she knew how much her friend needed her.
“What's it say?” pressed Lincoln.
“Let's see . . .” She unfolded the little rectangular piece of paper, reading, “
One old friend is better than two new ones.
”
“Can't argue with that one,” Lincoln agreed, looking at her. “Now how come you get something meaningful and I'm a
gifted walker
?”
Clara forced a small smile. But suddenly, she was far away, lost in her own thoughts.
“Hey . . . You okay?”
“Yeah.” She sighed, rereading her fortune. “This just made me think of my best friend in Boston who I'm kind of on the outs with. It's nothing, really.”
“Why are you on the outs?”
Clara, visibly saddened by this fact, shook her head. “Oh, it's a long, complicated story. Suffice to say, it's all my fault. And the crappy part is I didn't even realize it until it was too late.”
“Well, I've got plenty of time.” Lincoln stretched his long legs, leaning back in his chair.
“Are you sure?” Clara double-checked, thinking better of it. “You have to be sick and tired of listening to me drone
on
and
on
like a broken record about
woe is me
.”
“Woe is
not
you,” he assured her, threatening, “Would you rather hear my latest dinosaur joke?”
“So, as I was saying about
Tabitha,
” Clara replied instantly.
Summarizing their decade-long relationship, she explained how she essentially dropped off the face of the planet after her fiancé's accident. “It's not like I
wanted
my friendship with Tabitha to suffer. I can't tell you how wonderful she was to me after the accident. Not a day went by that she didn't call, or stop by my house to check on me. She always included me in her plans and extended countless invitations my way. Of course, I rejected them all.” Clara rolled her eyes. “Tabitha couldn't have been more supportive, Link. But I was such an emotional wreck I just couldn't handle being around other people. Not even my closest friend. So I pushed her away. Again, and again, and again. Until she finally reached her breaking point.” Clara described their tense quarrel shortly before Thanksgiving in which Tabitha, near tears, had stated that whether or not Clara was in mourning, this was no way to treat an acquaintance, let alone her supposed best friend. “Oh, and by the way?” Tabitha had sniffled, “I'm engaged. In case you care.” Clara hadn't even been aware that Tabitha was dating anyone special, despite her friend's regular mention of Max.