“Oh, boy,” Abby said, sliding to the edge of her seat to hear more.
Rick chuckled. “He said he’d found a wallet on the floor. There was no one else in the bathroom, so he picked it up and rifled through it. He said it was like hitting the lottery. The damn thing was stuffed with twenty-dollar bills. So he checked the license and found out that he actually knew the guy who’d lost it. Talk about a dilemma.” Rick paused for effect.
Abby was already grinning at the possibilities.
“So Grant asked himself: If I was the one who’d lost the wallet, what would I want the person who found it to do?” Rick took another sip of beer.
“And?” Abby asked.
“After some careful consideration, Grant finally decided that he’d want himself to learn a lesson, so he kept the cash.” Rick stopped and smiled.
Abby burst into laughter. “He’s so full of it,” she said.
“And that’s exactly what I told him.” Rick said, with a shrug. “But Grant grabbed a pool stick, rolled it on the table to check whether it was warped and told me to believe whatever I wanted.” Rick took a longer sip of beer, allowing Abby the time she needed to get all the laughter out.
“Do you think it’s true?” she asked.
Rick shrugged. “With Grant, who knows?”
After an amazing meal and even more conversation, Rick excused himself to use the bathroom. Abby took the opportunity to call home.
“Hello?” Kelsie answered.
“How’s Paige?” Abby asked.
“She’s fine, Mrs. Soares, honestly. We just finished our first movie and now we’re trying to agree on the second one.”
Abby smiled, relieved. “No horror movies, right? Paige will tell you they don’t bother her, but she won’t be able to sleep for a week.”
Kelsie laughed. “Got it,” she said. “Have a good time.”
Rick escorted Abby out of the restaurant before he revealed two orchestra seat tickets for Mama Mia. “I wanted to surprise you,” he said, excitedly. “Do you like…”
Abby jumped into his arms. “I’ve always wanted to see it!”
The show was incredible. Rick and Abby were on their feet, dancing the entire time. As they exited the lavish theatre, Abby called home one last time.
“She just went in her room,” Kelsie reported.
“Everything okay?” Abby asked, intentionally vague with Rick standing beside her.
“She laughed through the entire second movie,” Kelsie reported.
“Great. Thanks.” She looked at Rick and grinned. “I’ll be home in about an hour, Kelsie, okay?”
“Take your time, Mrs. Soares.”
As Rick and Abby walked back to the car, Abby asked, “Do you think we’re enough alike?”
He chuckled. “As much as humanly possible, I suppose. It’s clear that the Lord put the eyes of a man in his head, while a woman sees more from her heart. I’m just glad He was kind enough to give me the eyesight to understand this, so I could try to see things from your perspective.”
She kissed him. “You’re learning,” she teased, “but you mean She was kind enough to give you the eyesight to understand.”
He laughed hard and kissed her back.
As if they were making up for some high school prom they had missed, they hurried back to the car to make out.
As they prepared to drive home, Abby wiped the fog from her window and laughed. “The parking lot’s empty,” she announced.
On the ride home, Rick asked, “I think finding that new job is wonderful, Abby, but what is it you want from life? I mean, really want?”
“The stars,” she whispered. “I want to walk among the stars.” It was the exact same answer she gave as a kid.
Rick stared at her. None of the important things have changed, he realized. He wanted nothing more than to give her the stars; to watch her dance in stardust. It’s unbelievable. I’ve spent my whole life in search of true love and I knew where it was all along—on Wilbur Ave where Abby and I rode our bikes. He grabbed her hand and kissed it.
A block away from Abby’s house, Rick pulled over and shut off the engine. It took ten minutes to properly say goodnight.
Abby ascended the front porch stairs elated but equally exhausted. She wasn’t used to the late hour. Through a series of long yawns, she thought about Paige and looked at her watch. “Here we go,” she said aloud, dreading her daughter’s remarks about returning home so late.
After paying Kelsie nearly twice the agreed upon price and walking her out, Abby stepped into the kitchen to find only one bouquet of flowers on the table. She looked in the sink. The second vase was sitting there, empty. “Oh, Paige,” she said, and opened the trash can lid. Paige’s bouquet was buried beneath a crumpled pizza box and a half dozen hardened pizza crusts.
Abby’s face was burning red when she looked up to find Paige scowling at her. Looks like I’m not the only one overwhelmed with emotion, Abby realized.
“Have fun?” Paige asked, her tone carrying the sharpness of a disappointed parent.
“I did,” Abby answered, honestly—but she’d shared too much information and knew it. As if she were facing her nine-year old mother, she held her breath and felt her heart skip a beat.
“Good,” Paige said, “at least one of us did.” She stormed out of the kitchen, marched down the hall and slammed her bedroom door behind her.
Abby hurried in after her. “We talked about this, babe,” she said, taking a seat beside Paige on the bed. “Please don’t be upset. I like Richard. I do. But he’s no threat to you…to us. You have to believe that.” She stroked her hair. “I breathe for you, ya know. Always have, always will.”
Paige looked up from her bed, and sighed.
“Do you believe that?” Abby asked. “…that you’re the most important person in the world to me?”
It took a moment, but Paige finally nodded.
“Good. Then what do you say we forget about bed times tonight, make a big bowl of popcorn and catch a late movie together?”
Paige wiped her swollen eyes and started to get up. “Another movie?” she said, but her voice was lighter; relieved. “Fine.”
Wilbur Avenue
As children, Rick Giles and Abby Gerwitz planted romantic seeds that would unexpectedly blossom later in their lives – a story told in the novel Pressed Pennies. In this novelette featuring the characters from Pressed Pennies, after a magical summer Abby and the neighborhood gang receive some very bad news. Richard’s dad has accepted a new job and the Giles family is moving away. Abby is devastated because she’s losing the person who might be more important to her at this stage in her life than anyone else. As a final gift to Richard’s friends, Jim Giles takes the kids to Lincoln Park, an amusement park that hosts a day of unforgettable memories. The experiences they share there will resonate deep into their lives.
*
As children, Rick and Abby planted romantic seeds that would unexpectedly blossom later in their lives—in the novel, Pressed Pennies. After a magical summer, Abby and the neighborhood gang receive some very bad news. Richard’s dad has accepted a new job and the Giles family is moving away. Abby is devastated. As a final gift to Richard’s friends, Jim Giles takes the kids to Lincoln Park, an amusement park that hosts a day of unforgettable memories.
The brief excerpt I’ve selected is a glimpse of young Rick and Abby—and their friends—having one last adventure at Lincoln Park; the perfect place to cultivate puppy love.
*
The Carousel was more romantic than thrilling. Hand-painted panels along the outside roof depicted murals of yesteryears, while hundreds of mirrors and clear light bulbs decorated the inside. Though the majestic carousel had lions and tigers mixed in, horses posed in various positions were the coveted prize. As a brass bell sounded the beginning, each of them searched out the grandest horse. Abby hoped Richard would choose the double-seated Chariot. He didn’t. He looked at her and then over at Grant and Vinny’s grinning faces before
he grabbed a horse. A moment later, the sweet notes of a calliope and the beat of a marching band set them off on their course. It was long and boring—even for Abby—but from the smile on her face it was perfect for Tracy.
To redeem his childish sense of honor, Grant pressured Vinny into jumping off the Carousel before it came to a complete stop. At a sprint, they headed toward the Flying Cages. Once the ride stopped, Abby and Richard followed—to watch.
This test of strength and endurance usually catered to adult men. The idea was to stand upright within the heavy steel cage, and work its weight back and forth by pushing against the padded bars at the front and back. Each time Grant and Vinny pushed, the cage climbed higher toward the top in a circular motion. If enough momentum was gained, the riders were able to muscle their weight and the weight of the cage right over the top, and keep going. There’s no way Grant and Vinny are ever going to make it to the top, Abby thought. Men twice their size can’t get the cages to go all the way around.
As they waited for the boys to finish their failed attempt, Abby, Richard and Tracy took a seat on a nearby bench to do some people watching. Lincoln Park was the perfect melting pot. From every walk of life, people came in droves to experience the thrill rides and crooked games of chance.
Panting and soaked in sweat, Vinny and Grant returned and offered their excuses, taking turns playing the blame game. “Vinny wasn’t even trying,” Grant complained.
“Yeah right, Grant,” Vinny barked, “you’re the one who wanted to quit just as we got started.”
No one doubted it and everyone laughed—everyone but Grant.
The Carousel and Flying Cages bought time from facing certain illness. But unfortunately not enough, Abby realized.
The Round Up was a twisted invention designed for the brave of heart. The five of them stood back and watched for a minute.
It looked like a UFO turned sideways, red and yellow lights spinning out of control, human screams escaping from within. Essentially, each rider stood upright while the ride spun in circles so fast that gravity sucked them flush to its steel cage.
“Let’s do it!” Grant egged them on.
There was a pause.
“You big chickens,” he said.
Everyone—even Tracy—jumped in line. Lunch is definitely getting recycled this time, Abby thought.
Starting at a tilt, the ride lifted vertically until each of their bodies was parallel to the blurry ground beneath them. Richard pulled his wallet from his pocket and held on tight. Two minutes later, the world was one big smudge. What a mistake! Abby thought. Before the ride came to a stop, Grant was projectile vomiting. Only the irony of it made the others feel better. Through the queasiness, Tracy’s smile returned. “You okay, Grant?” she asked, while the others giggled at her rare display of sarcasm.
Grant could only moan. “Go ahead, keep laughing,” he muttered, “I’ll get you back.”
Another vote was taken. “Okay, Grant,” Richard said, “even though you don’t deserve it, we’ll give you a break and play some more of the games.” The first signs of relief appeared in Grant’s handsome pasty face.
The penny arcade beckoned with a game called Fascination. Each player rolled small balls under a plate of glass and into holes to form straight or diagonal lines. Though winners were paid in coupons to be redeemed for prizes or cash, each game cost ten cents and proved much too rich for the gang’s young blood. Instead, they settled for skeeball and the newest video games.
At the end of the arcade, Richard, Abby and Tracy squirt streams of water into a row of clowns’ mouths until the first balloon broke. While Tracy won herself a small polar bear, Grant and Vinny abandoned “the game for little kids,” and hurried off to race the remote control cars at the park’s miniature speedway.
With fresh and disgusting memories of Grant’s recycled lunch, the gang passed The Scambler and waited in line at the Ferris Wheel. The wait wasn’t long. From their swaying car, Abby and Richard were able to see all the rides along the midway and looming above them all was the giant roller coaster. To the right, they could also see cars traveling down Route Six, glimpses of the real world and a reminder that six o’clock was quickly approaching.
“This has been a really fun day,” Abby said.
“Yeah, definitely,” Richard agreed.
“I’ll have to thank your dad when he picks us up.”
“For what?” Richard asked, sarcastically. “…making me move?”
“No,” Abby said, and instinctively grabbed for his arm. “Not at all.”
Richard shook his head and looked away, obviously struggling with his emotions.
“I’m sure if your dad didn’t get promoted, he’d never make you leave Wilbur Ave.,” she said.
“Yeah,” he said, avoiding eye contact.
Sitting at the top of the world, the wind whistled past them and rocked the car back and forth. Abby gasped and clenched the bar tight.
“You okay?” Richard asked, looking her in the eye again.
Abby nodded, her knuckles turning white. “Yeah…at least I will be once the ride starts moving again.”
Richard grinned and slid closer to her. In one quick movement, he threw his arm around her and gave her shoulder a squeeze. “Relax,” he whispered. “The ride will be over soon. We’ll be fine.”
Abby’s fear was suddenly challenged by the excitement of Richard’s firm embrace. She glanced to her side and smiled at him. This feels so good, she thought, but I wish he’d just kiss me already.
Richard returned her smile and was just starting to move closer to her when the ride started up again and they descended toward the earth. “See,” he said, “I told you we’d be okay.” But he never removed his arm from her shoulder.
They were nearly to the bottom when Abby blurted, “We’ll still stay in touch, right, Richard?”
He looked at her again and his eyes filled. “Of course,” he said, his words muffled. “I’d never be able to say goodbye to you, Abby.”
Abby sighed at his sincerity, while her own eyes filled. A moment later, the ride operator was lifting the bar from their laps and helping them off the ride. Not yet…please, she thought, but the ride was over—and so was Richard’s hug.
Once Vinny and Tracy climbed out of their car, Richard addressed all of them. “You guys ready?” he asked.
They cringed. A few nods later, they faced south and marched the length of the midway—past Kiddie Land with its WhirlyBird helicopters, Mother Goose ride and boats that went round and round in four inches of murky water. The moment of truth had finally arrived.
The Comet, or giant roller coaster, was a rite of passage and the greatest test of courage for children in southeastern New England. Standing in the middle of the midway, with the Kiddie Coaster and Mini golf course on the right and the giant coaster on the left, the only real decision of the day needed to be made. “I’ll watch the stuffed animals,” Tracy said, and plopped down on a green bench with no intention of going anywhere. The rest of them looked at each other. While little kiddies chased each other in circles on The Flying Jets—raising and lowering their planes but never getting an inch closer—the decision was made. The time had come to take the risk and overcome their fear. “Let’s do it!”
Abby stepped up to the wooden cutout of a boy who warned that each rider had to be his height to ride. Drats! She’d made it. I’m finally tall enough. As the gang stepped in line, others filled in behind them. More fear took hold. We’re trapped, she thought. With sweaty palms, Abby took a few steps closer. As it shot its latest riders up and down its steep hills, the rickety wooden coaster creaked and complained. Each step took Abby deeper into a war that was being waged between her heart and mind. Everything inside her begged her legs to flee. Her pride, however, held on—though just barely. People screamed on the ride. This is supposed to be fun? she thought.
Before long, she and the boys stepped up to the final platform’s worn boards. Thousands, maybe even millions, have come be
fore us and survived, she realized. It was no consolation. Her mind raced, and she recalled her mom and Richard’s dad speak of those who rode the coaster with reverence and respect. She swallowed hard and took another step forward. She wanted that respect.
As they stood before the tracks, the car fired down the home stretch and screeched to a sudden stop. Everyone’s faces were white. The passengers climbed out on unsure legs and Abby swallowed hard again. It was time to get aboard. Richard went first and though she followed, she felt like crying. “Good luck,” she joked.
“Same to you,” he replied, and then pulled the safety bar across their laps.
A kind-looking, old gentleman wearing a soft hat and chewing on a cigar approached. As he bent to tug on the safety bar, Abby’s frightened eyes searched for his help. He winked once and offered a grin that said everything was going to be fine. He walked slowly and with purpose to his podium. With one last look at the cars, he pushed a button that caused the train to belch out a steam of air. He then pulled on a long handle and the cars began to coast forward. White knuckles threatened to crush the safety bar. There was time for a brief prayer and then the hyperventilating began.
Through a short patch of forest, the cars rounded the first bend. A huge, steel chain grabbed the front car and jerked it violently into control. There was a brief, merciful pause, and then the cars began to ascend slowly toward heaven, the chain clicking off each final moment of life. The sky was blue, spotted with a few marshmallow clouds. Abby’s body felt numb. Her mind rushed from primitive panic all the way to surreal acceptance. Perhaps shock had already set in. She gave one quick look toward Richard, her riding companion, and fake smiles were exchanged. At the top, the cars paused briefly again. This time it felt cruel.
The Thursday Night Club Page 12