Chapter Nine #2

was the dream. Now it seems like there will always be a missing

piece—a fucking crucial, Rory-shaped piece—no matter what I do

academically or professionally.

Get over it.

Yeah, sure. Will

do, I lie to myself.

I slip my phone in my

pocket and start walking west. I avoid the taxi line that really

only exists for tourists too inexperienced to know that there are

countless cabs available with no line if they just walk a couple

blocks away from the chaos of Penn Station. I hail one within

minutes and head uptown to meet Thea.

I arrive at the building

just after nine. She's waiting in the modern, minimalist lobby,

chatting up the doorman. That's Thea, always making conversation

with strangers, and I bet she'll know his kids' names and birthdays

by the time we actually move into the apartment.

I can feel her excitement

as she greets me, and it stokes my own. I've only been here once,

right after my Uncle Kelly bought the place, when it was completely

empty and bare. Now Thea and my Aunt Nikki have spent a lot of time

furnishing and decorating, and it's move-in ready. She's annoyingly

eager to show it to me, but it's endearing, and I feed into her

mood by overselling my anticipation.

"You're gonna love your

room, Sammy. Honestly. It's so boyish. The-"

"Boyish?" What am I?

Eight?

Thea rolls her eyes.

"Excuse me," her

tone drips with sarcasm, "I meant manly, macho, so very masculine." Her voice drops

an octave as she tries to imitate the depth of mine and I

laugh.

"That's better," I tell

her.

I knew the apartment would

be nice, but I'm not expecting just how nice. It seems somehow even

bigger furnished. And it's stunning. Contemporary, rich in color

and fabric, but not overly done. It's not unlike how I would

picture an ideal hotel suite. The foyer has nothing more than a

brushed chrome lighting fixture and a console table with a beveled

mirror. The living room is done up in taupes and blues, with a

simple chocolate sofa set facing a gigantic flat screen

television.

Thea's bedroom—the

master—is designed just like she is. Subtly feminine, but also

minimalist. She is one girl you could never describe as high

maintenance. And that's one of the many things I've always loved

about my cousin. The room is a light, sea-foam green with beige and

silver bedding and accents, a mirrored dresser, and an antique

looking wrought iron chandelier.

We spend barely a minute

in her room before she drags me down the hall to show me what she's

done with mine. It's the second bedroom, but in a luxury apartment

like this, it's nearly as big as the master, and also includes an

en suite bathroom. And it's done perfectly. The walls are a pale

gray, the decor and bedding stark white with deep blue accents. It

is, in fact, boyish, or masculine, whatever.

Against the back wall sits

a king size sleigh bed with weathered, natural wood head and foot

boards. I turn to find Thea smirking like the Cheshire Cat, overly

pleased with herself, and deservedly so. She smiles up at me,

waiting for the praise she has no doubt she's owed. I muss her

hair, which she hates, but I love her grump-face as she sets her

red curls back in place, not that they end up any less wild after

she fixes it.

"It's perfect, Thee," I

finally concede. Her grin grows and she holds up her palm for our

signature high five, which I give her with an eye roll of my

own.

We make our way through

the rest of the apartment more slowly, and I let her go on about

the vendors and designers she selected, and the flatware and china

in the kitchen, until she finally notices the snide look on my

face. But she only smiles wryly all over again, because we both

know I'm full of shit, faking my disinterest.

Do I have an inherent

interest in these things? No. Certainly not. But I want to be an

hotelier one day myself, which we both know very well, and so I

take in everything from the interior design to the stemware,

considering what would be both chic and neutral, ideal for a trendy

boutique hotel.

We talk about her father's

upcoming project and how excited we both are to be involved. Thea

will get to help with the finishes and decor, and in doing so will

be working closely with one of the world's top interior designers

in the hospitality industry. Another opportunity no college

freshman deserves, and we are both insanely grateful and eager to

be a part of it.

When we're done touring

our finished apartment, and commiserating over the ridiculousness

of living in such a lavish place when our peers will be in tiny

freshman dorms, I walk Thea east where she'll meet her mom at

Bergdorf Goodman, and then I head down to Fifty Fifth and

Madison.

I don't even need to think

where I'm headed. My legs know the direction from muscle memory.

I've walked it hundreds of times. Came here all the time as a kid.

Any day we had off from school, weekends my dad worked through,

sometimes even after school when he worked late.

I liked him at work. He

didn't drink there. And he was the best version of himself. The one

who had a sincere interest in my day, who bragged about my academic

and athletic achievements to colleagues, who occasionally even

cared what I thought.

When he drank it was

almost as if he was a completely different person. And there was

nothing likeable about that man. It's honestly part of the reason I

was relieved that he asked to meet at his office, during a workday.

It's not that I think he'd lay a hand on me now, but the violence

wasn't the only reason I couldn't stand that version of my

dad.

That person was

thoughtless and cruel. He didn't give a shit about the people

around him, least of all his family.

I walk briskly, though

every cell in my body wants to delay. I'm not looking forward to

this meeting, though I am looking forward to what I hope it will

accomplish, and I can only pray that at the end of the upcoming

hour, Rory will be a little closer to safety, if unknowingly

so.

I head into the sprawling

marble lobby and check in with security. They scan my ID, have me

step in front of the desk-mounted camera, and in less than a minute

I'm handed a Visitor's sticker with a black and white pixelated

photo of my face, as well as Mason, Goldberg, & Caplan—45th

Floor, printed across the front. I fold it over and shove it into

my pocket, and head through the security turnstile.

The call button for the

elevator is already lit, and I barely wait a few seconds before I

shuffle into one of the eight cars along with the six or so other

suits, both male and female, who thin out as they disembark on the

multiple stops.

I'm the only one left when

I exit on one of the three floors that houses my father's law firm.

I've rarely ever exited here, on the main reception floor—I've

always headed straight up to 47 where his private assistant, Sue,

sits like a sentinel at his reception desk, managing his

appointments and ushering clients.

I don't know the

receptionist at the main desk. She's either been hired in the past

five years or I just never had occasion to meet her. But then

again, there's nothing memorable about her either, so it's possible

I've met her in passing. She's one of those people who are just

plain. Not plain as in ugly, just literally plain. Short, mousy

brown hair, eyes so bland you wouldn't even recall their color

unless you were looking directly at her, and indeterminably

middle-aged. She could be in her forties or fifties, and something

tells me she's looked this way for decades.

She smiles in recognition

as soon as I tell her my name, and her demeanor shifts from that of

a poised professional to borderline sycophantic.

It's so nice to finally

meet you, Mr. Caplan! Can I get you anything? Some coffee? Tea? You

look just like your father! Such a pleasure to have you

here!

I force a faint smile and

nod vaguely, decline her offer of refreshments, and I forget her

name before she even tells me that my father is expecting me and I

can head right up.

Now Sue was a different

story. Ageless in the precise opposite way, with flawless skin as

dark as night, so wrinkle-free that if you told me she was a

vampire I would probably believe you. Her hair was ever changing,

with a new style or wig almost monthly, and a warmth and sincerity

in her deep brown eyes that elicited a rare kind of comfort and

ease. It was her smile that stood out the most, though. Freely

offered and big enough to take up half her face, it's one of those

smiles that was just inherently contagious.

She's tall as a tree, and

though sweet as she could be, she had a strength about her that

inexorably drew me to her as a kid. In retrospect, it probably had

something to do with the contrast with how I saw my mother—weak,

fragile… a victim. Though I know now how incredibly unfair that

was. That, in fact, my mother is one of the strongest women I've

ever known—a mother who thrust herself into alcohol-fueled, raging

fists so that they would not land on me instead, and I inwardly

reproach my younger self for seeing things in such childish way,

even if I was only a child then, after all.

It makes me think of Rory,

of how she sees herself as weak despite the fact that she embodies

a courage and fortitude one would never expect in an

eighteen-year-old girl. Or most grown men, for that matter.

Especially considering everything she's been through.

I smile inwardly. Sue

would love Rory, I'm sure of it. And I bet Rory would like her

right back.

She isn't at her post when

I arrive in my father's office suite, and I take a moment to look

around. Nostalgia floods my bones and it's both wistful and eerie.

The decor has been updated, but it's all very much as I remember

it. I suspect Sue is either fetching something for my father, or in

the restroom. Otherwise she would be sitting in her usual place,

another fixture, in my mind more permanent to this office than the

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