It Had to Be You (28 page)

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Authors: Susan Elizabeth Phillips

BOOK: It Had to Be You
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Taking another swig, he stroked the gun in his lap and listened to the crowd call out his name.

Hardesty!

Hardesty!

Hardesty!

 
15
 
P
hoebe slid back the curtain she had been peering through as Dan pulled his Ferrari into the drive at precisely noon on Saturday. Her stomach quivered like a teenager’s on her first date. She went to the bottom of the stairs and called up to Molly. “Dan’s here. Let’s go.”

“I don’t want to.”

“I understand that, but you’re coming with us anyway. I need a dog sitter.”

“That’s just an excuse, and you know it. You could leave Pooh here with me.”

“She needs some exercise. Stop stalling, Molly. Just give it a chance. It’s a beautiful day, and we’ll have fun.” She wanted her words to come true, but she knew it was more likely that she and Dan would have an argument. She was hoping Molly’s presence would act as a buffer.

The story of Dan’s suspension had broken in Tuesday morning’s papers, and both she and Ron had been hounded by reporters all week. Some of the press had even managed to locate Dan at his vacation home in Alabama. Dan and Ron had issued separate statements, neither of them substantive, and she had finally been forced to take the NFL commissioner’s phone call. Needless to say, he wasn’t happy with her. On the positive side, the suspension had squashed rumors about her affair with Dan.

Molly appeared at the top of the stairs wearing one of her new pairs of jeans, a plaid, oxford collar blouse, and a scowl. Phoebe had thought about calling Dan to let him know she was bringing Molly along, but something had held her back, maybe the intensity of her desire to hear his voice.

Molly had pulled her hair back to show off the small gold studs in her newly pierced earlobes. Phoebe was delighted that she had also somehow managed to talk Molly into a shorter, breezier cut, so that her hair no longer overpowered her small features. She thought Molly looked darling, but her sister refused to accept any of Phoebe’s compliments.

“It’s not fair,” Molly complained. “I don’t know why you’re making me do this.”

“Because I’m mean and heartless.”

The day was warm, and Phoebe was wearing a pair of pleated khaki shorts with a daffodil yellow blouse, matching socks, and white canvas Keds. Just before she picked up Pooh, she plunked a floppy-brimmed straw hat on her head, positioning the sassy pink silk rose that held up the brim exactly in the center.

“That hat’s stupid.”

“Thanks for the vote of confidence, Molly. A lady always likes to know she’s looking her best.”

Molly’s eyes dropped. “I just think you should look your age, that’s all.”

Ignoring that ego-booster, she opened the front door. Dan was coming up the walk in a pair of faded jeans and white T-shirt, with a black and red Chicago Bulls’ hat on his head. She reminded herself that she had met any number of men more physically beautiful. His nose wasn’t entirely straight, his jaw was too square, and he was too muscular. But everything about him touched a hidden source of warmth inside her. She felt a connection with him that she couldn’t explain, and she didn’t like to remember how many times she’d thought of him during the week.

He greeted her with that drop-dead grin of his and stepped inside, while she busied herself scolding a yipping Pooh, who was twitching ecstatically in her arms in an effort to get to him.

“Quiet, Pooh, you’re being obnoxious. Molly, would you get her leash?”

Pooh’s pink tongue lapped and her eyes filled with adoration as she regarded Dan. He contemplated her warily.

“Tell me this is a bad dream, and you’re not planning on bringing that major embarrassment with us.”

“I’ve invited Molly along to watch her. We can take my car. I hope you don’t mind.”

He smiled at Molly. “Not at all.”

Relieved, she stepped outside.

Molly’s mulish expression made it obvious she wasn’t happy, but Dan acted as if he didn’t notice. “It’s a good thing you could come with us, Miz Molly. You’ll be able to keep that Chinese hors d’oeuvre away from me.”

Molly forgot to look sullen. “Don’t you like Pooh?”

“Can’t stand her.” He began leading both of them to the Cadillac Phoebe’d left at the curb.

Molly was so shocked that she quickened her steps to pull abreast of him. “Why? Don’t you like dogs?”

“’Course I do. Shepherds, labs, collies. Real dogs.”

“Pooh is a real dog.”

“She’s a sissy dog, is what she is. A man spends too much time with a dog like that, next thing you know he’s eating quiche and singing soprano.”

Molly regarded him uncertainly. “That’s a joke, isn’t it?”

Dan’s eyes twinkled. “Of course it’s not a joke. You think I’d joke about something so serious.” He turned to Phoebe and held out his hand. “Pass over the keys, honey lamb. There are certain things a man still does better than a woman, and driving a car is one of them.”

Phoebe rolled her eyes as she gave him the keys to the Cadillac. “Today’s going to be a living history lesson for you, Mol, on life in the fifties. You’ll get to spend time with a man who’s managed to miss an entire social movement.”

Dan grinned as he unlocked the driver’s door and reached inside to flip the automatic locks. “Climb in, ladies. I’d open the doors for you, but I don’t want to be accused of holding back anybody’s liberation.”

Phoebe smiled as she passed Pooh to Molly, then slid beneath the wheel to the passenger side of the front seat. As they pulled away from the curb, she turned toward the back. “If he takes us out to eat, Molly, order the most expensive thing on the menu. In the fifties, the men always paid.”

“Dang,” Dan grumbled. “Now you’re playin’ hardball.”

Naperville was an old Illinois farm town that had grown into the largest city in DuPage County, with a population over ninety thousand. Intelligent city planning had made it into a showplace. There was plenty of parkland and a well-maintained historic district of shady streets, lovely gardens, and old homes. The town’s small crown jewel was its Riverwalk, a park built along the section of the DuPage River that wound through the downtown area. It featured brick pathways, a covered bridge, a small amphitheater for outdoor concerts, and a fishing pond. At one end an old gravel quarry had been converted into a large public beach.

Dan left the car in a small lot on the edge of the festivities, and the three of them followed the brick sidewalk toward the crowd that had gathered beneath the trees. Every September the Riverwalk served as a picturesque setting for area artisans, a place where painters, sculptors, jewelers, and glassblowers could exhibit their work. Brightly colored pennants snapped in the warm breeze, and the beautifully mounted exhibits of paintings, ceramics, and glassware made splashes of color along the riverbank.

It was an affluent crowd. Young couples pushed expensive strollers or carried well-fed babies in sturdy backpacks, while older adults in the brightly colored clothes they’d worn to the golf course that morning strolled between the exhibits. The teenagers’ faces had been treated by expensive dermatologists, and thousands of dollars worth of orthodontics straightened their teeth. A sprinkling of African-Americans, Hispanics, and Asians, all well-dressed and prosperous looking, mingled with the crowd.

Phoebe felt as if she’d stumbled into the center of the American dream, a place where poverty and ethnic strife had been held at bay. She knew the city had its troubles, but for someone who had spent the last seven years in Manhattan, those troubles seemed small. There were full stomachs here and a sense of connection with others rare in a society that had become increasingly disconnected. Was it wrong, she wondered, to wish every community in America clean streets, unarmed citizens, families with 2.4 children, and a flotilla of Chevy Broncos filling its parking lots?

She decided that Dan must have read her mind when his steps slowed beside her. “I guess this is just about as good as it gets.”

“I guess so.”

“Sure is different from the place where I grew up.”

“Yes, I imagine it is.”

Molly had gone ahead of them with Pooh, who was tossing her ears and prancing on her leash to show off for the crowd. Dan slipped on a pair of Ray-Bans and pulled the Bulls’ hat lower on his head. “This is about the best I can do for a disguise. Not that it’s going to work. Especially with you in that hat.”

“What’s wrong with my hat?” Phoebe put her hand to the silk rose holding up the floppy brim.

“Not a thing. Matter of fact, I like it. It’s just that we were going to have a pretty hard time looking anonymous anyway, and that hat makes it even harder.”

She saw his point. “Maybe this outing wasn’t such a good idea.”

“It’s a great idea. Now the press won’t know what to think about us. I personally like the idea of thumbing our noses at all of them.”

In front of them Molly tugged sharply on Pooh’s leash and came to a sudden stop. “I want to go.”

“We just got here,” Phoebe pointed out

“I don’t care. I told you I didn’t want to come.”

Phoebe noticed Molly glancing toward a group of teenage girls sitting on the grassy slope just ahead. “Are those girls friends of yours?”

“They’re bitches. They’re all Pom Poms and they think they’re better than everybody else. I hate them.”

“All the more reason to hold up your head.” Dan slipped off his sunglasses and studied the group for a moment. “Come on, Miz Molly. Let’s show ’em what you’re made of.” He took Pooh’s leash and passed it over. “Phoebe, hold on to your little rat. Miz Molly and me have a job to do.”

Phoebe was too worried about Molly to take Dan to task for calling Pooh a rat. She watched as he drew her sister toward the girls. It was obvious she didn’t want to go any closer, but Dan wouldn’t release her. Only when he pulled off his cap did she see what he was up to. Next to Bobby Tom and Jim Biederot, his was the most recognizable face in DuPage County, and he obviously intended to let Molly use him to impress the girls from her school.

But as Phoebe walked up the slope to get closer to the girls, she saw that Mr. Big Shot had overestimated himself. While males might recognize him, these teenage girls were definitely not football fans.

“Your daddy wouldn’t happen to be Tim Reynolds, the realtor, would he?” she heard Dan ask a gum-chewing nymphet with long hair and mall bangs.

“Nuh-uh,” the girl replied, more interested in the contents of her purse than exchanging pleasantries with the terror of the gridiron.

“Nice try,” Phoebe murmured under her breath as she pulled up behind him. And then, more loudly, “Hi, girls. I’m Molly’s sister.”

The girls looked from Phoebe to Molly. “I thought she was your mother,” an overly made-up redhead said.

Dan snickered.

Ignoring him, she searched her mind for a topic of conversation while Molly stared miserably at her feet. “How’s school going so far this year?”

“Okay,” one of them mumbled. Another slipped the headset to her Walkman over her ears. The girls ignored Molly to scan the crowd for more worthy peers.

Phoebe tried again. “Molly said most of the teachers are nice.”

“Yeah.”

“I guess.” The redhead got to her feet. “Let’s go, Kelly. This is boring.”

Phoebe glanced at Dan. This had been his idea, and it was a disaster. But instead of looking repentant, he seemed distinctly pleased with himself.

“It sure has been nice to meet you girls. Now y’all have a good time today, y’hear?”

The girls looked at him as if he were a Martian and began to move down the slope toward a group of boys coming along the path.

“You didn’t exactly wow them,” she pointed out.

He slipped his sunglasses in his T-shirt pocket. “Just you wait, honey lamb. I’ve been impressing females all my life, and I know what I’m doing.”

Molly’s face was crimson with embarrassment, and she looked as if she were ready to break into tears. “I told you I didn’t want to come! I hate this! And I hate you!” She started to rush away, but before she could leave, Dan shot out his arm and pulled her to his side.

“Not so fast, Miz Molly. We’re just getting to the good part.”

Phoebe immediately saw the cause of Molly’s increasing distress. Approaching the group of girls was a gang of four boys, their baseball hats turned backward, oversized T-shirts hanging nearly to the bottoms of their shorts, tongues flapping on big black sneakers.

“Dan, let her go. You’ve embarrassed her enough.”

“I’ve got half a mind to leave the two of you to your own pitiful devices, except I’m not that cruel.”

The girls were calling out the boys’ names, and at the same time trying to look aloof. The boys jabbed each other in the ribs. One of them gave a loud belch that was obviously intended to impress.

And then they saw Dan.

Their mouths dropped, and for several moments they seemed to have lost the power of movement. The girls, chattering and tossing their hair, had surrounded them, but the boys paid no attention. Their eyes were riveted on the Stars’ coach.

And Dan’s eyes were riveted on Molly. He grinned at her and chucked her chin. “Now smile, Miz Molly, and act like you don’t have a care in the world.”

Molly saw what was happening. She swallowed hard as the boys all turned her way.

“Do you know any of them?” Dan asked quietly, keeping his eyes on her.

“The one with the long hair has the locker next to mine.”

Phoebe remembered Molly’s reference to the cute boy who made guitar noises.

“All right, now. You just lift your hand and give him a little wave.”

Molly looked panicked. “I can’t do that.”

“Right now he’s a lot more nervous than you are. Do what I say.”

Dan had been a leader of men since he’d thrown his first football, and an insecure teenage girl was no match for him. Molly gave a short, jerky wave before her arm dropped back to her side and her cheeks turned crimson.

It was all the encouragement the boys needed. Led by Molly’s locker neighbor, they rushed forward.

“I stand in awe,” Phoebe whispered to Dan.

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