Chapter 30 #2
Once outside I became acutely aware of my light-headedness, the wobbliness in my knees.
In a split-second decision I called a cab.
And, no, it wasn’t because I was going to start living like a spoiled rich girl who took cars everywhere now that I was all out of debt and not a criminal.
It was that it was post–rush hour—the trains would take forever and traffic would be light.
I also wanted to give myself the least opportunity to change my mind and turn back.
The investment of a $30 cab ride was as good a deterrent as I could think of.
Plus, cab rides are awesome. Except for the slight carsickness and occasional fear for your life, there is nothing like zipping through nighttime New York in a foul-smelling automobile.
To get to the Upper East Side from Williamsburg, you have to go over the Williamsburg Bridge, which isn’t quite the Brooklyn Bridge, but it’s no scrub either.
Crossing it, the view of the Manhattan skyline always made my chest feel too full, like my heart had suddenly swelled in the way of the Grinch who stole Christmas the moment he went soft.
I was a real sucker for shiny lights and tall buildings.
Tonight the sky was so black and clear, the skyscrapers looked Photoshopped against it—it was truly beautiful, and I thought to myself, This is going to be horrible, what I’m about to do.
This was going to make me feel like I wanted to die, but once it was over, I could move on.
I’d continue with my life knowing that at least I tried.
At least I fought for him. That Tina Fontana—island unto herself—was willing to do everything in her power to keep someone in her life.
My cabdriver carried on a conversation in a foreign tongue as he negotiated the FDR Drive and it dawned on me gradually: this would make two people now that I didn’t just wave off with a see ya before closing the door and plopping down in bed with Netflix and some cookies.
“Ana baneek omak!” my driver shouted, but he was addressing someone else.
When we finally turned onto Kevin’s block, it was the strangest thing—Kevin was right there, trudging alongside us up the sidewalk, with his hands dug deep into his coat pockets.
It was a moment I recognized from a thousand movies, starring Meg Ryan and her contemporaries.
Kevin was on his way to find me just as I was on my way to find him.
“Stop the car!” I yelled to my driver. “Pull over. I want to get out here.”
He did so without hesitation or a blip in his earpiece conversation. Kevin, possibly alarmed he was about to be clipped gangster style, jumped back.
I stepped out of the cab, slammed the door, and looked at him. “Where you headed?” I asked, trying to make light of the fear in his eyes.
I was on my way to find you, I was sure he was going to say.
“I was on my way to get a slice of pizza,” he actually said.
“Oh.”
Then my driver palmed his horn and cussed at me from inside the car. I needed to pay him.
So I took care of all that and once he peeled away, I returned my attention to Kevin. It was just cold enough for condensation to blow from our mouths. He didn’t move. So I went to him.
“I won’t keep you,” I said, forcing myself to look at him, not down at the sidewalk. “I just wanted to tell you in person how sorry I am. For everything.”
Kevin exhaled a deep breath that made it look like he’d been smoking an invisible cigarette. Then he knelt down and took a seat right there on the curb.
I didn’t wait for an invitation to sit beside him. “If you’re willing to hear me out—” I began, and then broke off.
Were there even words?
Tears welled in my eyes, so I closed them, but that only made the streams form faster down my face.
“I’m just so sorry,” I said, because it was all I could say. I reached for Kevin’s hand and he didn’t pull it away from me. Instead he wrapped his arm around my torso and drew me in.
He smelled like himself. And his shoulder was both soft and hard all at once. How I’d missed his shoulders.
“I shouldn’t have run out on you like that,” he said. “When you needed me most.” He hugged me tighter. “I won’t do that again, I promise.”
I let myself lean into him. There was so much I needed to say, but unlike the inappropriate moment I had chosen to blurt out that I loved him, I recognized now wasn’t the time. “Does this mean you’re willing to give me another chance?” I asked.
He kept holding me, letting his authoritative grasp speak for him. It said: a man of such decency and intelligence would never clutch so tightly to anything without value.
“If you’ll give me another chance,” he said.
I really let loose then with the crying. I couldn’t help it. I was a girl sobbing into her boyfriend’s sleeve on a public street. But only for like a minute, and then I got my shit together.
“I’ll explain the whole story from the beginning,” I said, wiping my face dry. “But please believe me when I tell you, I never intended to do anything so incredibly illegal.”
Kevin exhaled another long smoky breath. “I think I understand why you did what you did,” he said. “Don’t forget, I know what goes on at Titan and what Robert’s like. You think I haven’t had any revenge fantasies of my own?”
“No. I don’t.”
“Well don’t be so sure. I’m not as wholesome as you think.”
“Yes you are, and that’s what I love best about you.” I moved in for a kiss, but he pulled back.
“That is so not what you love best about me.”
“It is.” I placed my hands on both sides of his handsome face. “It just took losing you to make me realize it.”
Then he let me kiss him, kissing me back tenderly enough for my whole body to loosen.
After a moment, he paused and said, “I have something to tell you.”
Immediately my mind went to: He slept with some other girl while we were broken up. Already I was deliberating whether I was going to be okay with it, or if I was only going to pretend to be okay with it. Before I could decide, he said, “I quit my job today.”
“What? You quit Titan?”
He nodded. “I think I’m ready to move into public service. The nonprofit sector. Maybe I can come work for you, if you’re hiring.”
I loved this man, I truly did. And he loved me, all of me, the real me.
There was a December chill in the air, but I felt warm. Look at where I was. Look at who I’d become.
I rested my forehead on Kevin’s. “Funny enough,” I said, “I am looking for an assistant.”