Chapter 13

Cat

I love Christmas. It’s the most wonderful time of the year, songs and all.

This Christmas is different, though. I don’t feel as happy as I did all the other years.

Even when I didn’t spend Christmas with my family last year, I still felt excited and looked forward to my birthday.

This year I don’t know what I should look forward to. It’s all a little sad.

Nick sends me a text every day. Once a day, like clockwork.

I have to admit I look forward to his texts now.

At first it was hard, but it’s gotten easier as each day goes by.

It’s been three weeks now. That was the last time I saw him, at Thanksgiving.

Every day I think about him; I try not to, but I can’t stop.

He is my weakness. Hearing from him is easier than not hearing anything from him at all.

It sounds weird, but it makes not being with him a little easier.

If I reply to his text that I’m not fine, he will send me some ridiculous meme or lame joke that cracks me up. He knows how to make me laugh.

I haven’t spoken to my mother or Kate since Thanksgiving.

I make sure I speak to everyone else and drop in once a week, discreetly avoiding them.

It makes my father happy to see us all together; he’s oblivious to the discord between the women in his life.

I have to make an appearance on Christmas Day, bright and early, to have a family breakfast and open presents.

At least I know for sure Nick won’t be there.

Unfortunately, he will be at the annual Christmas charity gala.

A different charity is chosen each year, and this year it’s pediatric cancer.

His mother is on the board. My family goes almost every year.

It’s my first year back, and I’m expected to be there.

It’s also the last year they’ll be doing it on Christmas night.

“Ava, we’ve been to ten different stores today. I’m tired of shopping.”

“How could you be tired already? We haven’t gone to half of my favorite stores yet.”

“Are you kidding me? I’m going to two more stores and that’s it, three tops.”

“How are you going to find the perfect drop-dead gorgeous dress?”

“I found three already, but you vetoed all of them.”

“They didn’t do your body the justice it deserves. What kind of friend would I be if I didn’t let you go out looking like the ten you are?”

“You can be a ten, but I think I will only make it to an eight if I try hard enough.”

“Shut your mouth! You don’t know what you’re talking about. When I’m finished with you, tongues are going to wag, and people are going to talk from coast to coast about the smoking hot babe who came to the Christmas gala.”

“Wishful thinking.”

“Girl, stop selling yourself short. You wouldn’t have had two sublime specimens of men chomping at the bit to get atcha if you weren’t amazingly you.”

I get up off the couch in the store and look at the ten dresses in Ava’s hand that she picked out. All of them short, shorter, shortest and too revealing. I’m looking at them skeptically. I don’t know if I can pull any of them off.

“Ava, I’m not sure if I can wear any of those dresses.”

“Why not?”

I take one of the dresses draped over her arm and hold it up to my body in the mirror.

It’s a red, sparkly number that would make me look like a disco ball.

“You have to have a certain amount of confidence to rock one of those. I think they’re more your style.

You definitely have the confidence and body for any one of these little things. ”

“Honey, I know what all this negativity is about. You need to stop it! Cheer up. Things with Nick might not work out, but there are other men out there. And you have all the right parts in the right places to get any one of them, preferably one with money, but we’ll settle for one who can just manage to tell the damn truth while sweeping us off our feet. ”

“I don’t want another man. I might never want another man.”

“Shut your mouth again!” An exaggerated look of shock on her face, she cups her hand to her ear and throws it up in the air.

“My ears don’t want to hear such blasphemy.

” She points a finger at me. “From your lips to God’s ears, and I hope he’s not listening.

You’re going to regret those words one cold, cold, lonely night.

Thank goodness I’m here to save you from yourself. ”

“Yes, what would I do without you? O wise one with wisdom beyond her years,” I drawl sarcastically. “Tell me, how are things working out with Chris? Is the date set for the wedding day?”

“Never mind, smart ass.” She rolls her eyes at me and I smile. “Just git yourself into that dressing room and try these on.” She shoves the dresses into my hand with a little more force than is necessary and smiles sweetly. She’ll forgive me.

I try on eight dresses and we both agree it’s a disaster, one after the other.

One made me look like Little Bo Peep selling my goods.

The red sequined one did make me look like a disco ball; you could spot me from two miles down.

The next one I tried on was a pink frothy thing with way too much going on.

I don’t know why I stepped out of the dressing room.

“What do you think about this one, Ava?”

“Lord have mercy!” Ava takes one look at it and starts cracking up in the middle of the store as loud as she can be. Loud. “Honey, you look like a crackhead ballerina in a three-ring circus. Take it off, immediately!”

I look down at myself and laugh too. “You picked it out.”

“Darling, I am so sorry I did that to you. My deepest apologies, even I’m wrong when it comes to my fashion at times. That dress is god awful. It should be a crime to waste good material on something like that.”

“I know, right?”

“In my defense, I didn’t pick that out, the sales lady handed it to you. That’s why I dismissed her.”

I go back in the dressing room to change again. Ava knocks on the door.

“Cat?”

“I’m coming out; I don’t think this one will do either, Ava.”

“Take it off.”

“You haven’t seen it yet.”

“I don’t have to. I found the perfect dress for you.”

She puts it over the door. I take one look at it, and I think she might be right.

“It’s gorgeous, right?”

“I think this might be the one, Ava.”

“I know it’s the one,” she says enthusiastically.

When I put it on, it fits like a glove. I turn around and look in the mirror, and it’s me.

I look fabulous. I can’t believe it! I found my birthday Christmas gala dress.

It says all three in one. I step out of the dressing room, and I know this dress is the one when I see the expression on Ava’s face.

“Cat, you look…this is your dress. It looks like it was tailor-made for you. People are really going to talk.”

“You don’t think it’s too revealing in the back?”

“Of course not. You look like a golden goddess. Like you’re surrounded by golden fairy dust. Turn around.”

I spin around for her once and show her the back.

“This plunging back is everything! Scandalously tasteful.” She squeals. “A hint of ‘come get me’ from the back, but spin around to the front and it says ‘don’t touch, I’m a lady.’ We’ll take it! I love the drama.”

“I know you do.” I say with a laugh, going back into the dressing room and change.

It’s three days before Christmas. Where did the time go?

It seems like December first was last week.

I have so much to do still; including finishing my Christmas shopping.

I tried to beat the Christmas rush this year but I couldn’t.

You always think you have more time than you actually do.

The only person I have a gift for is Sophie; I brought her a Keurig.

She’ll love it. Who knew QVC had such great stuff?

It’s Ava’s favorite channel. I’m not ashamed to say we’ve done some of our best bonding over four easy payments of Dooney & Bourke.

I finally left the house last night to go somewhere other than work.

It was time for me to get out and have some fun instead of being locked away like a nun.

Those were Ava’s words. We went to the Taco Bar in downtown Brooklyn.

The food was good and so were the drinks.

I made sure to stay away from the tequila.

We met Chloe there, and you know it could have turned out to be a wild night, but it didn’t.

That was a surprise, since halfway through our girls’ night out, Matt showed up.

That was a shocker but it shouldn’t have been.

He called me when I was leaving the house, and I told him where we were going.

I wasn’t upset though. It was nice seeing him and hanging out.

It was a hilarious and fun night. We all stayed mostly sober, we laughed a lot, and I even made plans to hang out with Matt after Christmas. A fun night was had by all.

The next day the house is filled with all things Christmas.

Too bad when I look at our Christmas tree, all I can think about is the tree Nick and I decorated together.

My birthday is in two days. I usually go all out with shopping, decorating and carols blasting, but I can’t find my Christmas spirit.

The only time I find myself feeling truly warm and fuzzy is when I hear the ding on my phone at the same time every day.

I didn’t realize until yesterday when he sent me a text at the end of the day, instead of in the middle of the day, how much I looked forward to hearing from him.

“Cat, have you seen my silver-and-black stilettos?”

I stop playing with my phone and get up off the couch. I wasn’t doing anything on it. I was hoping Nick would send me another text, but I guess not. Ava was right when she said I would need a man on those cold, cold, lonely nights. My problem is the only man I want I can’t have.

“Cat! My airplane is going to leave without me if you don’t help me find them.”

“I know exactly where they are.”

“Well, where are they?”

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