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The Bookish Life of Nina Hill: The bookish read you need this summer!

Page 13

by Abbi Waxman


  Whistle! Squawk!

  Nina and the guy from Menace glared at each other. Whistle! Squawk! Whistle! Squawk!

  Howard held up his hand. “Rock–Paper–Scissors.”

  Nina threw rock. Menace threw paper. Crowing, he yelled: “Hufflepuff! Slytherin! Ravenclaw! Gryffindor!”

  “Keep your hair on,” muttered Nina, annoyed at herself for throwing rock. Scissors is always the better choice.

  “OK, the scores are Menace, five; Book ’Em, four. Last question: Who wrote The Metamorphosis, first published in 1915?”

  Nina confidently blew the whistle. “Kafka.” Howard hesitated. “Franz Kafka,” she said, irritated at him. He hesitated again. “Franz Ferdinand Kafka.” She was totally winging the middle name, but she was willing to bet Howard knew even less about Kafka than she did.

  He nodded, then said, “And for a bonus point, name the creepy movie where Jeff Goldblum turns into a fly.”

  “The Fly,” shouted the Menace guy.

  “That’s correct. The teams stand level at six each.”

  There was an uproar. “Wait!” said Nina. “That’s totally unfair! That film isn’t even based on Kafka’s book. The guy turns into a cockroach, not a fly; it’s a movie, not a book; and besides . . .”

  “Sorry, my decision is final.” Howard was firm, although he was backing away slightly from Nina’s pointing finger. Then, as Leah and Lauren turned up to join the fray, he took another step back and suddenly sat in the lap of a woman who couldn’t get out of the way fast enough. Drinks were spilled. Shells were split as pistachios skittered across the floor. People leaped to their feet and skidded on the nuts. There was falling. There was cursing. Menace to Sobriety showed up in force, and, twenty seconds later, so did security.

  Half a minute later, standing outside the bar, Carter sighed. “Nina, why is it always you that gets us banned?”

  She looked at him, still mad. “It wasn’t even a book question!” She shook beer from her sleeve and several pistachios flew out. “It’s the principle! If you don’t stand for something . . .”

  “You’ll fall for anything?”

  She turned around. Tom was standing there, shrugging on his jacket. “I thought you might need a ride home.” He grinned. “You seemed a little . . . heated.”

  “Well,” said Nina, “I’m supposed to be getting a ride with Leah . . .” She looked around. Down the street, she could see Leah and the others disappearing around a corner. “Oh.”

  Thirteen

  In which we learn a little more about Tom.

  Nina sat next to Tom as he drove her home, and, again, she smelled sawdust.

  “Are you a carpenter?” she asked, the alcohol making her a little unguarded. “You smell of wood.” She leaned toward him and sniffed theatrically.

  He laughed. “Sort of.”

  Nina frowned at him. “Well, do you carpent, or not?”

  “I don’t think that’s even a verb.”

  “It should be. Why isn’t it?” She threw herself back in the seat. “I carpent, you carpent, he or she carpents . . .”

  He shot her a glance, then went back to looking at the road. “Do you drink a lot?”

  She shook her head. “No. I really shouldn’t drink at all; I’m hopeless at it. I get drunk right away, then hungover two hours later. I don’t do it well.”

  He laughed. “So, not a boozer, then, that’s what you’re saying?”

  She shook her head. “I usually end up crying.”

  “Wow. Then yeah, you should stick to soda.” He flicked on the indicator, and Nina tapped her toes in time to the click.

  “Soda makes me fart.” Then she closed her mouth tightly and promised herself she wouldn’t say anything else. Possibly ever.

  “Well, plain water it is, then.” He looked sideways at her. “Not that there’s anything wrong with farting.”

  She kept her promise and said nothing. Instead, she stared out of the window, noticing the usual things: homeless people waking up after a day of sleeping in order to be alert during the more dangerous night. Hipsters who dressed like the homeless people but with better shoes, crowding around doorways, or waiting for ride-share cars, looking up and down from their phones, reading license plates with more attention than they ever had in their lives before. Bodegas and liquor stores lit up like Christmas, their lights pooling on the damp and sticky sidewalks out front. Then they entered the residential part of Larchmont, where the streetlights were desirably vintage, but few and far between.

  They pulled up outside the guesthouse. She’d left the reading light on next to her armchair, and the glow was inviting. Part of her wished she’d stayed home tonight, because now her head hurt and she hadn’t even won the trivia contest. She sighed.

  “Nice pad,” said Tom.

  “Thanks.” She was fumbling with the door handle, something that normally didn’t give her any trouble. Tom leaned across and opened it for her, pushing the door all the way open.

  “Do you need help finding your keys?” He was teasing her.

  She looked at him and shook her head. “I think not.” Something occurred to her. “Wait, did you desert your team? Weren’t you up in the next round?”

  “Yeah.” Tom shrugged. “Without your team to play against, all the challenge was gone.”

  She frowned. “And did your teammates see it that way?”

  He nodded. “They don’t take it very seriously.” It had been Lisa who’d pushed him out the door to see if Nina needed a ride home, but he didn’t think he needed to mention that. “Besides, I’m sure QuizDick will reschedule it.”

  “OK then.” She told her legs to swing around and get out of the car, but they weren’t having it. She frowned and made them do it—jeez, who was in charge of this bus, anyway? Once out and standing, she swayed a little, and then Tom got out and was right there, holding her arm.

  “You really aren’t good at drinking, are you?” he said, smiling.

  She looked up at him. “Do you read books?”

  He frowned. “Sure. Occasionally.”

  “Good books?”

  “Well, books I think are good.”

  “Have you read Jane Austen?”

  “No.”

  “Kurt Vonnegut?”

  “No.”

  “Truman Capote?”

  “No.” His face was blank, but she could see he was getting vaguely irritated by this line of questioning.

  “Harry Potter?” She was desperate.

  “When I was a kid, of course.”

  “Do you know which house you’re in?”

  “No. I’m not a total nerd.”

  She swayed again, and suddenly leaned up into him, turning her face up, so there was really nothing he could do except kiss her.

  Which he did. Lightly, but properly.

  “Do you want to come in?” she said, once they’d separated.

  “Are you sure I’m welcome? I haven’t done the required reading.”

  She nodded and stretched up on her toes again, pulling him back down. His arm was tight around her waist, he was kissing her deeply, but then he pulled away and shook his head.

  “No. I don’t take advantage of tipsy book snobs. It’s a rule.”

  “It is?” Nina was confused. “Who said?”

  “Me.” He turned her gently around and pointed her toward the house. “Go on, I’ll make sure you get there in one piece.”

  She walked into her house, managing the stairs pretty well, actually, and once inside went to the window and opened it. He was still in the driveway.

  “Hi,” she said.

  He grinned up at her. “Hello.”

  “Shall I let down my hair?”

  He shook his head. “It’s not long enough to reach me, for one thing, and secondly, I never understood why that was a good idea. Why not cut the hair into lengths, braid them into ropes, and create an actual ladder? It wouldn’t be that hard.”

  “But it would be less romantic. And a much shorter story.”


  He shrugged. “Yeah, but it would be pretty hard core of what’s-her-name to create a hair ladder and escape, right?”

  “Rapunzel?”

  “If you say so.” He turned to leave but paused and looked back up at her, haloed in the reading light. “I’d like to see you again.”

  Nina inclined her head regally. “I’m prepared to consider it.”

  “Don’t overwhelm me with enthusiasm.”

  “OK.”

  “Bye, then.” He climbed into the car and pulled away, waving out of the window.

  “Bye, then,” said Nina, watching his lights fade away. Then she went inside and closed the window.

  “Phil,” she said to the cat, who was back-and-forthing on the floor, waiting to be fed, “I think I met someone.”

  “That’s fantastic,” said the cat. “I’m hungry.”

  As Tom drove away, he pulled out his phone and called his older brother, Richard.

  “I think I met someone,” he said, as soon as he heard his brother answer.

  “Hi, Tom,” replied his brother, wryly. “How are you? It’s nighttime—did you notice?”

  “I’m freaking out,” Tom said. “That’s why I’m calling.”

  “If you only met someone, why freak out yet? Keep your powder dry for when you’ve slept with her a few times and she reveals herself to be a total lunatic and you have to work out how to get away from her. Then you can freak out.”

  Tom said, “Look, you and I are not the same person. I try to find out their mental status before I sleep with them.”

  His brother’s voice was sarcastic. “Really? What about Annika?”

  “That was an exception. Every rule needs an exception.”

  “But not every woman requires a restraining order.”

  “She had beautiful hair.”

  “She did. Until she shaved it off and mailed it to you.”

  Tom realized he wasn’t paying attention to driving at all and pulled over. “This girl is different.”

  He could hear his brother sigh. “Tell me.”

  “She works in a bookstore.”

  “Employed is good. Literate is good.”

  “She is small and has hair the color of a chestnut.”

  “Oh dear, you’re already waxing lyrical. So, she’s a redhead?”

  “No, a brunette, but with reddish hints. Like when Amelia used to henna her hair.”

  “And does this girl henna her hair?”

  “No, that’s the color it is.”

  “Amelia used to say it was her natural hair color, too.”

  Tom frowned. “Look, what our sister did is irrelevant. Nina has reddy-browny hair, and her eyes are hazel, and she’s gorgeous and small.”

  “You already said small. Is she under four feet?” He paused. “Are you preparing me for someone who’ll need a booster seat at dinner?”

  “No, but she’s smaller than, say, Rachel.”

  Rachel was Richard’s fiancée. “Rachel’s five foot nine; she’s not small at all.” Richard’s voice was amused. “Not that there would be anything wrong with you dating someone who needed a booster seat as long as they weren’t an actual child. Good things come in small packages, right?”

  Tom made a frustrated noise. “Richard, she’s regular height, she’s pretty, and I don’t really know why I’m even telling you about her. She’s really smart, probably too smart for me.”

  “That’s good. You’ve had a tendency to date women who are too nice.” He coughed. “Or totally insane.”

  “Her name is Nina.”

  “You told me that. Did you sleep together?”

  “No. We kissed, she invited me in, but I said no.”

  “Why?”

  “She was a little bit drunk. Not a lot, but a bit.”

  “Oh yeah. I remember your ridiculously firm stance on that. So, what are you going to do now?”

  “I’ll go see her at work and ask her out.” He hadn’t realized he had a plan, but apparently he did.

  His brother laughed. “Great. Are you coming to dinner this weekend? I want you to meet Rachel’s family. It’s ridiculous you guys haven’t met yet.”

  “I agree. But seeing as you met Rachel and decided to marry her in the space of, like, a month, we’re all scrambling to keep up.”

  “I guess instant attraction is a family failing.”

  “Better than a cleft palate.”

  “Is that genetic?”

  “No idea. Google it. I’ll see if I can come this weekend. I’ll try.”

  “All right. Good luck with the girl. I hope she isn’t an insane stalker like the last one.”

  “You’re hilarious.”

  “So my future wife tells me.”

  “Presumably only when you take your pants off.”

  “And now you’re a comedian. Bye, Tom.”

  Tom said good-bye and hung up, smiling. Then he noticed he’d pulled over in front of a donut place, so he went in and got himself a cruller. He was, after all, a man of action.

  Fourteen

  In which Nina learns even more about her family.

  Despite Nina’s fervent hope that the Reynolds family was going away, never to return, she was pleased when Peter reached out to her again.

  “You don’t have to like all of us,” he said. “But I think you and I should be friends, even if it’s only because we each need someone to talk about paper goods with.” He cleared his throat. “Or is that, ‘We need someone with whom to discuss paper goods’?”

  Nina grinned. He’d called her while she was on her way to work the morning after the trivia debacle, and she’d been happy to see his name pop up on her phone.

  “I don’t think it matters. I know you’re not supposed to end a sentence with a preposition, but I think it’s acceptable between friends.”

  “Or relatives?”

  “Or relatives. I will even allow split infinitives.”

  He laughed. “To actually permit the laws of grammar to literally be suspended?”

  She winced. “Ouch, that’s enough. It hurts more than I thought it would.”

  Peter’s tone changed. “I’m sorry about Lydia. After you left the meeting, Sarky basically told her she can’t force you to take a paternity test, and that as far as the law was concerned, she didn’t have a leg to stand on. She didn’t have anyone on her side except her mom and Grandma Alice, so in the end she stormed out.” He sighed. “Your existence was a bit of a shock, but I thought Archie was the one who was going to get upset.”

  “He seemed somewhat irritated when we met, but a cheese sandwich made it all better.”

  “It usually does. Anyway, Archie is pretty distracted right now, what with the baby.”

  “He has a baby?”

  “Not yet. You didn’t notice how pregnant Becca was? I guess she didn’t stand up. Their little boy is two, and the new one is due any minute. I don’t think he’s thinking all that much about his father.”

  But Peter was wrong.

  When Nina came out of work at the end of the day, Archie Reynolds was standing in the street waiting for her. Even after only meeting him twice, it was a pleasure to see his face. Her brother. Her older brother. Better late than never, she supposed.

  He half smiled at her. “Hi, sis.”

  She went to shake his hand and then realized that was dumb and hugged him. This was a benefit of family she’d never thought of: more hugging. Once her nanny Louise had moved away, there wasn’t really anyone around she could just, you know, hug on to. Her friends hugged her when they said hello or good-bye, but it wasn’t like she could scooch up next to Polly in the store and lean on her for twenty minutes. She stepped away from Archie and realized she was related to someone she wouldn’t have picked out of a lineup two weeks earlier. Presumably, she would get used to it. Most commonplace things started out strange: Electric light! Running water! Watching ALL the episodes one after the other!

  In turn, Archie looked at her closely, seeing elements of his f
ather’s face in hers, wondering if it would ever not seem strange that he’d actually been in this bookstore many times without noticing those same similarities. He must have seen Nina before; there had been a stretch in his son’s early life when they’d come to Knight’s once or twice a month, after the weekend farmers’ market. He may have talked to her, certainly smiled at her, purchased books from her, without ever even thinking about her for more than a moment or two. How many people do we encounter every day who might be related to us, or simply people who might have become the best friends we ever had, or our second spouses, or the agents of our destruction, if we only spent more than seconds with them? He realized he was staring.

  “It’s weird, right?” Nina had been staring at him, too. “This whole thing is really a bit upsetting.”

  Archie nodded. “It is. I wanted to talk to you. Are you rushing off somewhere?”

  She had been on her way to yoga class, but any excuse not to feel inflexible and clumsy was welcome. And to be fair, she was only going so when she got to book club later on she could say she’d been to yoga and feel OK eating as many cookies or cupcakes as she wanted. She shook her head. “No, not at all. Do you want to get coffee?” She pointed across the street. “We could go back to our usual spot.”

  “Excellent.” Archie turned to cross the street. He pulled open the door of the café and said, “By the way, our whole family should be bowing our heads in shame for letting Lydia bully you like that yesterday.” He held the door for her. “I’m sorry.”

  “It’s OK,” said Nina. “Is Lydia always like that?”

  “Aggressive and ridiculous?” He laughed. “Yeah, pretty much. She’s not mellowing with age, that’s for sure.”

  They sat down at the same table.

  Vanessa wasn’t working that day, but Nina waved at Andi, another waitress she liked a lot. Andi grinned at her and brought over a menu.

  “You don’t need this, obviously, as you probably know it better than I do, but maybe your friend . . . ?”

  “I think just coffee, thanks.” Archie was still finding it hard not to stare at Nina.

  “Me too,” said Nina.

  Archie cleared his throat. “You know, if things had been different, we would have grown up together. You’re only a couple of months younger than me. Why didn’t your mother want us to know each other?”

 

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