“Pauline, what the fuckâ¦?”
“Shut up and listen,” she said. “I've been rehearsing this speech all the way in from the island.”
I nodded. What else could I do?
“Jake Minello has been crazy about you his entire life.” I started to protest but she held up her hand. “Shut
up,
Bess. He's even still got that stupid tattoo.”
“What, the Rocky Beach one?”
“You're such a dumbass,” Pauline said. “Rocky B isn't for Rocky Beach, even if that's what he told you. Remember how we were all so obsessed with the Rocky movies back then? The guys liked the gore and we girls talked about how they were so deep but really we just wanted to look at Sly's body.”
“I remember,” I said, still clueless.
“Rocky stands for Stalloneâinside the heart in Jake's tattoo. That's you. Stallone. And just in case there's any doubt, he stuck the âB' in for Bess.”
“You're crazy,” I said. She just sat there. “He told you this?”
“Yeah. Ask Angie. She knows.”
“But we were just kids.”
“So why hasn't he had it sanded off?” Pauline asked.
“A dozen good reasons. It would hurt, for instance.”
Pauline sighed. “You will always be his one true love.”
Oh, man, I thought. Here we go with the soap-opera stuff.
“I knew it when I moved in with him,” she went on, “but I figured it was never going to work out with you. You were with David and he was resigned. So what the hell, I figured since he was never going to get his dream, I'd make him happier than most, and I think I have.”
I was speechless. “I don't see how you know this. Has he said anything?”
“Jake never says anything. But I know. Trust me.”
I thought about her antennae. It was hard to argue.
“I'm not over losing David.”
“That's going to take a lifetime, honey. But it doesn't mean you don't love Jake.” She reached across the table and took my hands. “Listen to me. David was the love of your life, but Jake is your destiny.”
“How do you think those things up, Pauline?”
“It's the truth. And take it from me, you stand in the way of destiny, you wind up as roadkill.”
We sat holding hands across the table. “Assuming you're right about Jake's feelings⦔ I said.
She rolled her eyes at me.
“Then what about you, Pauls?”
“Look, I'm not saying this is the easiest thing I've ever done, but this is how it was supposed to come out. I'll be all right.”
“I can't stand for you to be sad.”
“Don't feel sorry for me.” She kissed my hand, put it back on my side of the table, and signaled the waiter. “My story isn't over,” she said. “I promise.”
“No, you are
not
paying for this,” I said, grabbing the check. Pauline was in a big hurry to put on her coat and stuck her arm in the wrong hole. I could see she was close to losing it but when I stood and reached for her, she waved me off.
“Gotta go,” she croaked. I stood out in front of the restaurant and watched her walk down Seventh Avenue toward Penn Station. Every now and then, she'd stop to dig a tissue out of her pocket. I couldn't bear to think what her face looked like.
After that, I went into a kind of paralysis. I mean, what was I supposed to do, call up Jake and ask him for a date? Also, I couldn't stop thinking about Pauline. She'd left a message on my machine that she'd moved into an apartment in Riverhead. I called her several times after that, but our conversations were mainly me asking if she was all right and her reassuring me that she was fine. What I was still waiting to hear was, I'm over him. My heart is not broken.
Jake phoned one Sunday in early March. “Hey, Stallone, feel like a little trip to the country?” he asked.
“Sure,” I said.
“What?”
“I said
sure
.” but I was gagging on a huge lump of nerves that had established squatting rights in my throat. Hey, Bess, this is Jake we're talking about, not the frigging pope, I told myself. But under the circumstances, it felt like an audience with His Eminence might be a breeze compared to an afternoon with my old buddy Mister Minello.
“Can Phillip drive you to my house?” he asked.
“I'll take the train,” I said. Phillip had been too much a part of my life with David to include him in this weirdness. “Is the two-forty okay?”
“I'll pick you up at the station.”
“Bye.” I knew I sounded like I'd swallowed a gym sock but Jake wasn't exactly normal either: There was a funny wrinkled quality in his voice, like it needed to be smoothed out.
I had an hour on the train to think about seeing him but my brain was in a jumble. My blood had heated up to about two hundred degrees. I caught hell from the old guy across the aisle because I kept having to open my window until I cooled down enough not to faint.
I saw him on the platform when we pulled in. Hands in pockets, jacket collar pulled up, jeans torn at one knee. I wondered what his heart was doing, that good heart, because mine was revved up like an Aston Martin. I stepped out of the train and straight into his arms. He kissed me, a long tender one. When we came up for air, nobody was left on the platform and the train was long gone.
“What the fuck is going on here?” I asked him.
His eyes looked like blue jewels. “I've been asking myself that question for twenty-two years,” he said.
“Exactly?”
“We were eight, in Betsy Smilowitz's basement.”
“The birthday party we all got caught playing sex games.”
“That's the one.” Jake put his arm around me and we started walking. “I can't answer for you, Stallone.”
“Do you ⦠how's Pauline?” I didn't even know if he was in touch with her, but I had to ask.
He didn't answer right away. I figured he was remembering a bunch of bad days. “She met someone this week, another teacher,” he said finally. “She'll be okay.” Spoken like a man who consistently underestimates his unique and wonderful self.
Then he kissed me again. I knew he was trying to remind me that things were not the same between us. We weren't old pals anymore, and life had dealt us both some ugly blows. When something sweet and good was offered, you'd damn well better reach out and grab it. All of it was in that kiss and I got the point. Finally he started propelling me up his driveway instead of the front walk.
“Where are we going?” I asked him.
“To the garage.”
“What for?”
“You'll see.” There was that wrinkled sound again. He was hiding something inside his voice but I knew he wasn't going to tell me a thing until he was ready.
We stopped at the garage door, which was pulled shut. I could feel the tension in his arm.
“You're a nervous wreck, Jake. What's in the garage? There better not be a surprise party or something. You know I hate those things and it's not my birthday ⦔ I had to stop and think. No, it wasn't my birthday.
“Shut up, Stallone.”
Jake's pickup truck was parked in front of the door. He squeezed around it and reached down for the handle. “Cover your eyes,” he said.
“Oh, for Christ's sake,” I said, but I did as he said. I heard the door slide up. “Okay? Now? Can I look?”
“Yes,” Jake said.
I opened my eyes, and there in the middle of Jake's garage on a square of old blue carpet stood Amadoofus.
I closed my eyes. Then I opened them again. Then I blinked a couple of times to make sure I wasn't seeing things. There it was, a jigsaw version of the old piano, with hairline cracks covering almost every square inch, but it was Amadoofus all right.
“Oh, Jake,” I said. “Oh, Jake.”
He strolled over and pressed down a key. “Took me a while,” he said.
“I can't. I can't believe it.” I ran my hands over every inch. “How did you? It was totally shattered. You took it away in your truck.”
“Yeah, but I got to the dump and I just couldn't do it. So I turned around and brought it all back here. It was a good project. I learned a lot about how pianos are put together.” He put his finger into a gap on the keyboard. “There's just this one piece I couldn't find.”
“Middle C. It's in my safe-deposit box. Jake. Oh, Jake.”
“You said that.”
I put my arms around him. “Nobody ever had such a perfect friend.”
He didn't look so happy.
“But that's okay, Jake,” I said. “It's good that we've been friends forever.”
“First.”
“Yeah, I mean before.”
“Before what, Bess?”
I was so used to the “Stallone” treatment, it always freaked me out on those rare occasions when he called me Bess. It felt very sexy. In fact, all of a sudden I was feeling pretty sexy in general.
“It's kind of chilly out here,” I said, leaning back in his arms.
“You need to put some of that weight back,” he said. “I've got doughnuts.”
I followed him inside the house, but when we went into the kitchen, I said, “Jake, I'm actually not all that hungry.”
He kissed me again, and then again for good measure.
“Let's go in here for a while,” he said, leading me toward the bedroom.
Jake unbuttoned my sweater, very slowly, letting his knuckles brush lightly against my breasts. When did this old buddy of mine learn to be so maddeningly tantalizing?
“Do you ever wear a bra?” he asked.
“Now and then,” I said, letting my sweater drop to the floor. “Take this off,” I said, unzipping his sweatshirt. His flesh felt smooth and warm against me.
“I wish we could bring Amadoofus with us,” I said.
“Let's not get carried away,” Jake said.
But I did get carried away, and so did he. I felt the need to explain. “I want you to know it can actually take me longer than two minutes,” I said.
“You'll have to prove it,” he said.
“Maybe I should take my socks off for the next round.”
He moved down to the end of the bed and peeled them off. Then he put my toes in his mouth one by one. That was one I'd forgotten about. It made me a little wild. But even so, this time it did take longer, mainly because there were other people in bed with usâDavid and Pauline and even my baby, who would have been a toddler by now. As usual, Jake knew.
“I'm sorry,” I said. “I guess I'm still not over everything.” I didn't want to say David's name.
“I don't expect that,” Jake said. “Not now. Not ever.”
I had to kiss him again for that.
“Pauline's here, too,” I said.
“Not for me,” Jake said. “You were always in this bed, no matter what other body was lying here.”
“Don't you think it's kind of ridiculous, us two old cronies from the sandbox?”
“No,” he said.
The funny thing was, even with everybody else hanging around in here, I still had the feeling of being exactly where I belonged and even that David and Pauline and my little girl agreed with me.
Jake gave me the keys to the place, and the following week I came back out with a suitcase so we could have a sleepover before I had to fly off to Belgium. I brought the middle C for Amadoofus. Jake slipped it into place and set up a heater before he left for work so I wouldn't freeze to death in the garage before he got back.
I sat there at the keyboard just messing around and before I knew it I was playing the Bach Prelude in C major. I felt like it was my own private memorial to David and that I was telling him that I'd heard what he was trying to say on my answering machine. Finally, after all the months of grief, I thought I understood. Just like he'd helped me up every time I fell on my butt onstage and sat me back down at the piano and told me I could do it, he was saying with every sweet, singing note, “Yes, it's sad. I know you'll miss me. But you have to move on. And when you play especially well, you'll think of me because I'm in the music. I am the music, and as long as you keep playing you will never, ever lose me.”
I finished the Prelude. Then I dropped the cracked and battered lid, laid my head down on it, and stretched my arms out to hug that old piano. It wasn't exactly like holding Jake, or David either, but I have to say, at that particular moment, it felt damn close.
The completion of this book would have been impossible without the kind assistance of many people, including Mark George, Gino Rafaeli, Harold Schonberg, Jerome Lowenthal, Jean Bernard Pommier, Patty Kopec, Cipa Dichter, Francoise Davis Mallow, Tony Regna, Blake Rowe, Fouad Salloum, Delana Thomsen, Gino Francesconi, Richard Clark, Cindy Belt, Jim Murray, Jacob Lateiner, Alexei Kuznetsoff, and most especially the generous and gifted Sandra Shapiro. I am indebted to my invaluable agent, Andrea Cirillo, and to the Ballantine team, especially Shauna Summers, Charlotte Herschet, Linda Marrow, Kim Hovey, and Gina Centrello. And thanks as always to Barry, Ben, and Sarah, who fill my life with music.
Sometimes love is worth risking everything. A
New York Times
bestseller.
“What a beautiful book! Readers will be haunted, as I am, by the characters who become so real and come to matter so much. I loved it.” - Danielle Steel, author of
First Sight
and
Matters of the Heart
Sharlie Converse is twenty-six with a vivid and romantic interior life. Born with a heart defect that has defeated an army of specialists, she has lived her short life from moment to moment. Everything that matters most to herâcolor, excitement, adventureâis forbidden except in her imaginings and in the secret yearningss that she has long accepted will never be made real.
Until, on a cross town bus packed with Christmas shoppers, she falls into Brian Morgan's arms. And Sharlie, whom love can kill, must make the agonizing choice: to risk her life by loving or never really to live at all.
A poignant and provocative romance about a remarkable leap of faith.
“A novel of soaring spirit, steadfast love, and the willingness to reach for dreams ⦠A wonderful book ⦠filled with hope and faith.” - Luanne Rice, author of
The Lemon Orchard
Anna Bolles is a born athlete whose life was irrevocably changed after a multiple sclerosis diagnosis five years ago. Anna fills her days with the vibrancy of life in New York City, teaching at a private school, but shutting the door on any possible romance. Until Joe Malone enters her life.
A businessman, pilot, and amateur photographer, Joe Malone has it all â except happiness. He sees far more in Anna than just her MS diagnosis, and takes Anna on a roller coaster of love, hope, and hanging on.
Dissatisfied in her life, a housewife returns to the passion she had put aside, and discovers a new one as well.
“A living, breathing portrait of a truly contemporary woman ⦠a lovely read.” Barbara Taylor Bradford, author of
Secrets from the Past
and
A Woman of Substance
After seventeen years of marriage, Maggie Hollander should have it all. Her husband, Matthew, still loves her deeply, and two irrepressible children complete the picture-perfect family in their elegant New York apartment. But at thirty-eight, Maggie has questions about herself that grow deeper and more disturbing. Once a promising artist, she decides to return to art class in search of answers. It is there that she meets a sculptor who rekindles her talent, and her passion. David Golden will expose Maggie to a tenderness that is as liberating as it is dangerous, and will carry her toward an unforeseen choice.
An unlikely romance struggles in the face of dueling dreams, from New York Times bestselling author Sally Mandel.
“Mandel has a gift for true and incisive dialogue; she searches her characters probingly and captures them in a phrase precisely. These are people to enjoy and even to love.” -
Publisher's Weekly
Headstrong and beautiful Quinn Mallory makes the impulsive decision to offer herself as the first prize in a college contest. Will Ingraham applies in verse, and wins the prize. Their personalities couldn't be more different, but a true love blossoms between them that, they believe, will last forever. Until Quinn's dreams of a career in the big city collide with Will's longing for a quiet life together in his Idaho homeâleaving Quinn to choose between the life she wants and the man she loves, and neither choice feeling like the right one.
The triumphant return of
New York Times
bestselling author Sally Mandel presents an intimate multigenerational portrait of the troubles and triumphs of a 20th century family.
Lily Adams is the animating spirit of those around her, even in her twilight years. Perhaps none is more touched by her presence than her granddaughter, Amy, whom Lily saves from a teenage crisis. The family saga of three generations of the Adams clan is filled with crises of identity and the pains of romance, with Lily's presence profoundly felt throughout.
Take Me Back
focuses precisely, poignantly, and sometimes painfully, on the spaces between us, emphasizing the impact we can have on the lives of those around us, even in the mere echo of ourselves after we have gone.