Read Miracle on 49th Street Online

Authors: Mike Lupica

Miracle on 49th Street (7 page)

BOOK: Miracle on 49th Street
5.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
CHAPTER 10

W
hen they had come into the lobby of Two Commonwealth, Josh Cameron had pointed to the door that he said opened into the lobby of the hotel part of the Ritz. When Molly came out of the elevator, she went through it, figuring that if Josh Cameron did care enough to follow her, he'd be looking for her out on the street.

For once in her life, she couldn't wait to get back to 1A Joyless Street.

Molly was brave, but not a total dope, so she wasn't going to run across the Public Garden alone at this time of night. She figured she'd go through the lobby, wait to see if the coast was clear on Arlington, then run over to Beacon and up to the corner of Beacon and Joy.

That was the plan, anyway, and she sprinted through the lobby toward the revolving doors.

“Whoa there, girl.”

There was a tall young guy in a suit and a tie. Dark hair. Good-looking, Molly noticed. He was wearing a little name tag that read “Thomas O'Connor, Concierge.”

“Where are you headed alone at this time of night?” he said.

“Home,” she said. “I was visiting…a friend…at Two Commonwealth.”

“What's the friend's name?”

Go with it, Molly thought.

Do anything just to get out of here.

“Can you keep a secret?” she said.

“It's practically the first thing they teach you at concierge school,” he said.

“Josh Cameron,” she said. “You can ask Lindsay the doorman. He's my uncle. Josh Cameron, I mean.”

“Really?”

“Cross my heart.”

“Well, why don't we call him?”

“No!”

Molly yelled at him the way she'd just yelled upstairs at good old Uncle Josh.

“He was doing an interview,” Molly said, the words coming out of her like a pipe had just burst. “And I told him I'd have Lindsay call me a cab. But then I got downstairs and decided it was silly to take a cab over to Joy Street—I live on Joy Street—and, well, you got me, Mr. O'Connor.”

“If Lindsay was going to call you a cab, what are you doing over on this side, then?”

“I was going to buy a candy bar, but then I remembered I forgot to ask Uncle Josh for money.” She smiled and shrugged. “My bad, all the way around.”

“Is Josh Cameron really your uncle?”

“Well, I think of him as my uncle. Him and my stepmom went to college together and are still good friends, and so we've always acted as if we're related, even though technically we're not.”

Somehow she managed not to gag on
stepmom.

Molly said, “So
please
don't get me in trouble with him.”

“There's still the matter of getting you home.”

Molly said, “Would you mind walking me? It's really not far.”

He told her to wait a second, walked over to the concierge desk, where there was another guy, older, talking on the phone.

Then Thomas O'Connor came back and said, “Let's go, kid.”

Kid sounded better coming from him.

“You can call me Molly,” Molly said.

As they were walking up Arlington, she told Thomas O'Connor she had to call her friend.

Sam answered on what Molly thought was half a ring.

“Where
are
you?” he whispered. “I've been, like, sick worried. You said you were going to call.”

“Way home,” she said. “Long story.”

“Way home from where?”

“His place.”

“What the heck happened?”

“Tell you at school. What happened with your uncle when he realized I was gone?”

“I told him you didn't want to wait and that he was busy, so you went home with the Hartnetts.”

Stevie Hartnett's uncle was the Red Sox manager, which made him a huge celebrity at school.

“But how do you know Stevie was at the game?”

“He could have been,” Sam said. There was a pause and then Sam said, “I'm under the covers, but I think my mom's coming. Quick, tell me how it went?”

“The absolute pits,” she said before hanging up.

“What?” Thomas said when she put the phone away.

“What what?”

“What was the absolute pits?”

“The game.”

“You got to go to the Celtics game?”

“Yeah.”

“And that's a bad thing?”

“Like I told my friend, it's a long story.”

“So I should stop being nosy.”

“That would be good,” Molly said.

She felt so tired all of a sudden, it was as if she had just played a whole basketball game herself.

When they got to Joyless Street, she pointed to show him how close 1A was to the corner. Thomas asked if she had a key, and she said she did. He said he'd wait until she was inside. She told him he didn't have to. He said it was a service that the concierge provided at the Ritz every time the concierge made a new friend.

“Nice to meet you,” he said, putting out his hand.

“Same,” Molly said.

At least somebody was nice to her tonight.

Molly got inside, quietly shut the big front door, and hoped Barbara was asleep on the couch, which is the way her television watching usually ended when she tried to stay up late. She liked to joke that she didn't watch David Letterman nearly as often as he watched her.

Barbara was asleep, snoring slightly, a blanket over her, the television on, a book on her chest.

Molly just left her there and tiptoed up the stairs, not wanting to wake anybody and have to lie about how getting to see the Celtics in person had been the grandest night of her entire life.

When she got inside her room, she pulled the yellow baseball cap Josh Cameron had been wearing from her back pocket, the cap she'd swiped when she got out of his car.

Sam always made fun of how much she liked those high-tech crime shows, saying that she couldn't possibly understand what they were all talking about when they were looking through their microscopes.

He was partly right.

Molly didn't actually know what DNA stood for, but she understood how it worked.

Even if all you had was somebody's hair.

CHAPTER 11

T
hey had worked it out with Barbara that Sam could come over after school on Monday, Monday being the day Barbara took Kimmy out to Wellesley. Wellesley was where Barbara had discovered the most exclusive, absolutely fabulous piano teacher in town.

Sam usually only came over when Kimmy wasn't around. They didn't get along.

She called him Yoda, from the
Star Wars
movies. He told her he would give her a nickname that reflected her lack of intelligence, but it would be pointless, since she wouldn't get it anyway.

But they weren't talking about Kimmy on the bus ride home—they were talking about DNA, which Sam had been checking out on the Internet.

“It should stand for Do Not Ask,” he said.

“Why?” Molly said.

“As in, don't even ask how we're going to get him and you tested.”

“You always say that we can figure anything out if we put our heads together,” Molly said.

“Mols,” he said, “it's not like getting a flu shot.”

“We'll think of something. We always do.”

“But say we pull it off,” Sam said. “The way this guy is acting, are you sure you still want him for your dad?”

“I'll cross that bridge when I come to it.”

“If we don't want to throw him off one first.”

As usual, the bus let them off at the bottom of Mount Vernon Street, just up Charles Street from their favorite pizza place in the entire universe, Upper Crust. It was easier, not nearly as steep, to walk up Beacon to her house. But Molly liked Mount Vernon better, with its quiet shade and what looked like alleys but were really narrow streets with names like Cedar Lane Way. And off Mount Vernon was Louisburg Square, which by now she knew was as cool an address as anybody could have in Boston.

But that's not why Molly liked what she called the Square. She liked it because, more than any little corner of Boston she'd seen so far, it reminded her the most of where she'd lived in London, on Lennox Gardens.

Back when she still had her mom and everything in her world was going to work out the way it was supposed to.

“Tell me again why we have to go this way,” Sam said. “It's like Heartbreak Hill in the Boston Marathon.”

“Because it's pretty,” Molly said. “And it's good exercise. I won't even ask you to carry my basketball for me.”

She had her ball under her arm. There had been tryouts that day for the seventh-grade girls team, and Sam had convinced her to give it a shot, even though she had never played a day of organized ball in her life. So on Saturday they had gone over to City Sports on Boylston and Molly had bought her first basketball.

When Sam had asked her on the bus how tryouts had gone, she had said, “Fine.”

Which wasn't entirely true.

The tryouts had been conducted during gym class. By the time they scrimmaged at the end of class, it was clear that Molly was the best one out there.

“You gonna be one of those players who carries the ball with them wherever they go?” Sam said.

“Coach said I should work on dribbling with my left hand. I'm a little weak there,” she said.

“I'm the one feeling weak,” Sam said.

It meant he was tired after one block. Molly never seemed to get tired. When everybody else was dragging at gym, she was still fresh. The other night, the NESN woman interviewing Josh Cameron had said something to him about how he looked fresher at the end of the game than he did at the beginning, and Molly had thought to herself, Well, maybe we have one thing in common.

“If I want exercise, I'll go to the fridge and get us a snack when we get to your house.”

“It's not my house.”

“Figure of speech.”

Molly said, “You complain every time we make this walk.”

“You'd be sad if I didn't,” he said. “Admit it.”

“Not as much as you think,” Molly said, and laughed.

Sam made her laugh. He made her laugh even when she didn't feel like laughing, when she didn't think anything was funny or that anything would be funny ever again. Like when the subject of Josh Cameron came up.

Josh Cameron.

She wondered if she would ever think of him as her father.

By the time they made the right turn on Joy, Molly was telling Sam not to complain anymore so that he could conserve energy.

“Just let me say one more thing,” he said.

“No,” Molly said.

“Okay, then,” he said. “Don't check out who's waiting in the alley.”

Oh, my God.

Josh Cameron.

There was a small black woman with him. She had a beret on her head and a smile on her round face that almost seemed too wide for the alley where they were standing, the one you had to walk through to get to the front door at 1A Joyless. She was wearing a short topcoat and a dress underneath it and white high-topped basketball shoes. She was short and looked even shorter standing next to Josh Cameron.

To Josh the black woman said, “This her?”

Pointing at Molly, still smiling.

When he didn't say anything, she said, “This has to be her.”

She walked over and started to put out her hand, then decided to give Molly a hug instead.

“I'm Mattie,” she said. “The nice one in the house.”

Molly pushed back from her. “Were you there the other night?”

Mattie shook her head. “I was still away, visiting my sister. Didn't get back until the next morning, and he was already off to the airport. He didn't tell me about it till today. Now here we are.”

She turned around to Josh Cameron and said, “You got anything to say, now that we
are
here?”

Talking to him like she was talking to a child.

“I was just waiting for you to stop and then I was going to start.”

“I'm stopped.”

“Hello, Molly,” Josh said.

“Ex
cuse
me?” Mattie said to him.

“Mattie,” he said. “Let me do this my way. And, by the way, remind me again: Do you work for me, or do I work for you?”

Mattie turned to Molly. “Let him do things his way,” she said, as if he wasn't even there. “On account of he's doing so good with you, doing things his way.”

“I can actually speak for myself,” Josh said.

“No,” Mattie said, “you can't. Not like a normal person would speak to people. Which is why you brought me with you.” Ignoring him again, she said to Molly, “He's actually got people to do everything for him except play basketball. Maybe that's why he even needs someone to say ‘I'm sorry' for him.”

“I was getting to that, if you'd give me a chance,” he said.

“Then get to it,” Mattie said.

“I'm sorry,” Josh said.

“Really,” Molly said.

A little too sarcastic. Anytime he was in the area, it was getting to be a reflex with Molly, like when somebody tapped you on your knee.

It was perfect, if you thought about it.

A reflex jerk.

“Really,” he said.

He was wearing a knit cap pulled down pretty close to his eyes, maybe to use as some kind of disguise. And he wore his leather jacket. He reached into the inside pocket of it now and pulled out her mom's letter. Somehow he had managed to smooth it out since tossing it in the wastebasket.

“I should have come after you the other night,” he said. “And then we had to go to Atlanta over the weekend.”

The Celtics had played their second game of the season on the road, Molly knew, beating the Hawks by eight.

“It's easier with you just reading about you in the paper,” she said.

“Uh, Mols,” Sam said.

Josh seemed to notice him for the first time. “Wait a second,” he said. “I know you. You're the kid from the parking lot the other night.”

Sam walked over and put out his hand. “Sam Bloom,” he said.

Josh shook his hand carefully, Molly thought, as if he still didn't trust him. “Her partner in crime,” Josh said.

“We're like the Hardy boys,” Sam said. “Except she's not a boy.”

Mattie said to Sam, “Son, why don't you and I go set on the front steps and let them talk while I let you talk as much as you want to me.”

Before Sam could answer, Mattie took him by the arm and walked him to the front stoop.

“Anyway,” Josh said, “Thomas told me where you live, and when I told Mattie the story—”

“You thought you'd stop by.”

“You really do sound like her.”

“Mattie?”

“Your mom.”

Molly put out her hand. “I'd like her letter back, please.”

“Not before we talk about it.”

“The other day,” Molly said, “I had to bribe you with that letter just to get you to talk to me.”

He smiled.

“I'll give you the letter back if you give me fifteen minutes,” he said.

He was wearing an old gray sweatshirt under the leather jacket, jeans with holes in the knees, work boots. He said they could take a walk. Molly wanted to know how they could do that without people bothering them.

“Sometimes I can walk all around town when I look like this,” he said. “The difference between me and other people is that I just can't stop.” He nodded at her. “You gonna bring that with you in case we find a hoop?”

Molly had forgotten the basketball under her arm.

She started to go give the ball to Sam, and Josh said, “Nah, bring it. I know this place a couple of blocks away.”

“You want me to come with you, in case you start forgetting to act like a human being?” Mattie said from the steps.

“I'm pretty sure I can take it from here,” Josh said.

“I may walk down to that Starbucks that looks like the First National Bank of Starbucks,” Mattie said. “Call me on my cell when you're ready to go home. I'll meet you back here.”

As Molly and Josh started walking toward Mount Vernon Street, Molly looked back at Mattie.

Who just winked at her.

Somehow walking in Beacon Hill with him dressed like he was, stocking cap pulled down tight, looking like a bit of a slob, didn't cause a riot.

There were never a lot of people on the narrow streets once you got up here. Molly had noticed that from the start. It was like a cut-off-from-the-rest-of-the-world world. When there was a lot of traffic noise, you were surprised. Molly could imagine what it was like up here before there were even cars. This was an old part of Boston that hadn't gotten torn down like the old Garden.

They walked in silence for a while, as if neither one of them knew how to start the conversation.

He pointed finally to one of the big old brownstones at the end of Louisburg Square. “I was in that one,” he said, “after I signed my first contract. Third year in the league.”

She didn't say anything right away. She was trying to figure out why he was different today than the other times, or if he was just different because Mattie was with him.

“What are you doing here?” she said.

Just came out with it. People who didn't know Molly thought she was shy, especially now that she was the new kid in school, something she'd never been before. But most of the time she just acted shy and quiet because she wanted to be left alone.

“You get right to it, don't you?”

“That's not an answer.”

He pointed at what looked like a little alley down to their left. Molly had passed it a bunch of times without paying any attention. Collins Walk, the street sign said.

“There's a hoop tucked around a corner at the end of there,” he said. “C'mon.”

“So why are you here?” Molly said.

“Are you always this tough?”

Molly said, “You would be, too, if you were me.”

“Yeah,” Josh Cameron said, “I guess I would be.”

They walked down Collins Walk and made a right, and there it was, a basket that looked to be the right height to Molly. There was a free-throw line painted in green and the key-shaped lane they had on real courts. It wasn't even a half-court, but there was enough room to shoot around.

“There used to be some kids who lived in this house right here,” he said. “I think they moved away. I'm not sure how many people even in the neighborhood know the court's still here.”

Molly said, “Listen—”

He put up a hand. “I'm here because I felt rotten about crumpling up the letter and making you cry,” he said. “I'm not that bad a guy.”

BOOK: Miracle on 49th Street
5.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

All The Time You Need by Melissa Mayhue
Inhuman by Kat Falls
Coach: The Pat Burns Story by Dimanno, Rosie
An Indecent Proposition by WILDES, EMMA
The Windvale Sprites by Crook, Mackenzie
Uncaged by John Sandford, Michele Cook