The Lucky One (23 page)

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Authors: Nicholas Sparks

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BOOK: The Lucky One
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There were lots of potential problems with all of this, and the more she thought about it, the more she was convinced she had made a terrible mistake. And yet . . . she was tired of being alone. She loved Ben and she loved Nana, but spending time with Logan over the past few days had reminded her of what she was missing. She liked the walks they took after dinner, she liked the way he looked at her, and she especially liked the way he was with Ben.

Moreover, she found it ridiculously easy to imagine a life with Logan. She knew she hadn’t really known him long enough to make that kind of judgment, but she couldn’t deny her intuition.

Could he be the One?

She wouldn’t go that far. They hadn’t even been on a date yet. It was easy to idealize someone you barely knew.

Sitting up, she plumped her pillow a few times and then lay back down. Well, they’d go out once and see what happened next. She had hopes, she couldn’t deny that, but that’s where it ended. She liked him but certainly didn’t love him. Not yet, anyway.

16

Thibault

O
n Saturday evening Thibault waited on the couch, wondering if he was doing the right thing.

In another place and time, he wouldn’t have thought twice about it. He was attracted to Elizabeth, certainly. He liked her openness and intelligence, and together with her playful sense of humor, and of course her looks, he couldn’t imagine how she’d remained single as long as she had.

But it wasn’t another place and time, and nothing was normal about any of this. He’d carried her picture for more than five years. He’d searched the country for her. He’d come to Hampton and taken a job that kept him close to her. He’d befriended her grandmother, her son, and then her. Now, they were minutes away from their first date.

He’d come for a reason. He’d accepted that as soon as he’d left Colorado. He’d accepted that Victor had been right. He still wasn’t sure, however, that meeting her—becoming close to her—was it. Nor was he sure that it wasn’t.

The only thing he knew for sure was that he’d been looking forward to their evening together. The day before, he’d thought about it consistently on the drive to pick up Nana. For the first half hour on the way back to Hampton, Nana had chattered on about everything from politics to her sister’s health before turning toward him with a knowing smirk.

“So you’re going to go out with the boss’s granddaughter, huh?”

Thibault shifted on the seat. “She told you.”

“Of course she told me. But even if she hadn’t, I knew it was coming. Two young, attractive, and lonely single people? I knew it would happen as soon as I hired you.”

Thibault said nothing, and when Nana spoke again, her voice was tinged with melancholy.

“She’s as sweet as sugared watermelon,” she said. “I worry about her sometimes.”

“I know,” Thibault said.

That had been the extent of their conversation, but it told him that he had Nana’s blessing, something he knew was important given Nana’s place in Elizabeth’s life.

Now, with evening beginning to settle in, he could see Elizabeth’s car coming up the drive, the front end bouncing slightly in the potholes. She hadn’t told him anything about where they were going, other than to dress casually. He stepped out onto the porch as she pulled to a stop in front of the house. Zeus followed him, his curiosity alerted. When Elizabeth got out and stepped into the dim light of the porch, all he could do was stare.

Like him, she was wearing jeans, but the creamy blouse she wore accentuated the sun-browned tint of her skin. Her honey-colored hair swept the neckline of her sleeveless blouse, and he noted that she was wearing a trace of mascara. She looked both familiar and tantalizingly foreign.

Zeus padded down the steps, tail wagging and whining, and went to her side.

“Hey, Zeus. Did you miss me? It’s only been a day.” She stroked his back, and Zeus whined plaintively before licking at her hands. “Now
that
was a greeting,” she said, looking up at him. “How are you? Am I late?”

He tried to sound nonchalant. “I’m fine,” he said. “And you’re right on time. I’m glad you made it.”

“Did you think I wouldn’t?”

“This place is kind of hard to find.”

“Not if you’ve lived here your whole life.” She motioned toward the house. “So this is home?”

“This is it.”

“It’s nice,” she said, taking it in.

“Is it what you expected?”

“Pretty much. Solid. Efficient. Kind of hidden.”

He acknowledged her double entendre with a smile, then turned to Zeus and commanded him to stay on the porch.

He walked down the steps to join her.

“Will he be okay outside?”

“He’ll be fine. He won’t move.”

“But we’ll be gone for hours.”

“I know.”

“Amazing.”

“It seems that way. But dogs don’t have much sense of time. In a minute, he won’t remember anything other than the fact that he’s supposed to stay. But he won’t know why.”

“How did you learn so much about dogs and training?” Elizabeth asked, curious.

“Mainly books.”

“You read?”

He sounded amused. “Yes. Surprised?”

“I am. It’s hard to tote books when you’re walking across the country.”

“Not if you don’t keep them when you finish.”

They reached the car, and when Thibault started toward the driver’s side to open the door for her, she shook her head. “I might have asked you out, but I’m going to make you drive.”

“And here I thought I was going out with a liberated woman,” he protested.

“I am a liberated woman. But you’ll drive. And pick up the check.”

He laughed as he walked her back around to the other side. Once he was settled behind the wheel, she peeked toward the porch. Zeus seemed confused about what was happening, and she heard him whining again.

“He sounds sad.”

“He probably is. We’re seldom apart.”

“Mean man,” she scolded him.

He smiled at her playful tone as he slipped the car into reverse. “Should I head downtown?”

“Nope,” she said. “We’re getting out of town tonight. Just go to the main highway and head toward the coast. We’re not going to the beach, but there’s a good place on the way. I’ll let you know when we’re getting close to the next turn.”

Thibault did as she said, driving quiet roads in the deepening twilight. They reached the highway in a few minutes, and as the car picked up speed, the trees on either side began to blur. Shadows stretched across the road, darkening the car’s interior.

“So tell me about Zeus,” she said.

“What do you want to know?”

“Whatever you want to tell me. Something I wouldn’t know.”

He could have said,
I bought him because a woman in a photograph owned a German shepherd,
but he didn’t. Instead he said, “I bought Zeus in Germany. I flew out there and picked him from the litter myself.”

“Really?”

He nodded. “The shepherd in Germany is like the bald eagle in America. It’s a symbol of national pride, and breeders take their work very seriously. I wanted a dog with strong, working bloodlines, and if that’s what you want, you’ll usually find the best dogs in Germany. Zeus comes from a long line of Schutzhund competitors and champions.”

“What’s that?’”

“In Schutzhund, the dogs are tested not only in obedience, but in tracking and protection. And the competition is intense. Usually it lasts two days, and as a rule, the winners tend to be the most intelligent and trainable dogs of all. And since Zeus comes from a long line of competitors and champions, he’s been bred for both those things.”

“And you did all the training,” she said, sounding impressed.

“Since he was six months old. When we walked from Colorado, I worked with him every day.”

“He’s an incredible animal. You could always give him to Ben, you know. He’d probably love it.”

Thibault said nothing.

She noticed his expression and slid closer to him. “I was kidding. I wouldn’t take your dog from you.”

Thibault felt the continuing warmth of her body radiate down his side.

“If you don’t mind my asking, how did Ben react when you told him you were going out with me tonight?” he asked.

“He was fine with it. He and Nana were already planning to watch videos. They’d talked on the phone about having a movie night earlier in the week. Made a date and everything.”

“Do they do that a lot?”

“They used to do it all the time, but this is the first time since she had her stroke. I know Ben was really excited about it. Nana makes popcorn and usually lets him stay up extra late.”

“Unlike his mom, of course.”

“Of course.” She smiled. “What did you end up doing today?”

“Catching up around the house. Cleaning, laundry, shopping, that kind of thing.”

She raised an eyebrow. “I’m impressed. You’re a real domestic animal. Can you bounce a quarter on your bedspread after you make it?”

“Of course.”

“You’ll have to teach Ben how to do that.”

“If you’d like.”

Outside, the first stars were beginning to emerge, and the car’s headlights swept the curves of the road.

“Where exactly are we going?” Thibault asked.

“Do you like crabs?”

“Love ’em.”

“That’s a good start. How about shag dancing?”

“I don’t even know what that is.”

“Well, let’s just say you’re going to have to learn quick.”

Forty minutes later, Thibault pulled to a stop in front of a place that looked to have once been a warehouse. Elizabeth had directed him to the industrial section of downtown Wilmington, and they had parked in front of a three-story structure with aged wide-plank siding. There was little to differentiate it from the neighboring buildings other than the nearly hundred cars parked in the lot and a small wooden walkway that led around the building, stringed with inexpensive strands of white Christmas tree lights.

“What’s this place called?”

“Shagging for Crabs.”

“Original. But I’m having a hard time visualizing this as a major tourist attraction.”

“It’s not—it’s strictly for locals. One of my friends from college told me about it, and I’ve always wanted to go.”

“You’ve never been here?”

“No,” she said. “But I’ve heard it’s a lot of fun.”

With that, she headed up the creaking walkway. Straight ahead, the river sparkled, as if lit from below. The sound of music from inside grew steadily louder. When they opened the door, the music broke over them like a wave, and the smell of crabs and butter filled the air. Thibault paused to take it all in.

The massive building’s interior was crude and unadorned. The front half was jammed with dozens of picnic tables covered with red-and-white plastic tablecloths that appeared stapled to the wood. Tables were packed and rowdy, and Thibault saw waitresses unloading buckets of crabs onto tables everywhere. Small pitchers of melted butter sat in the center, with smaller bowls in front of diners. Everyone wore plastic bibs, cracking crabs from the communal buckets and eating with their fingers. Beer seemed to be the drink of choice.

Directly ahead of them, on the side that bordered the river, was a long bar—if it could be called that. It seemed to be nothing more than discarded driftwood stacked atop wooden barrels. People milled around three deep. On the opposite side of the building was what seemed to be the kitchen. What caught his eye mostly was the stage located at the far end of the building, where Thibault saw a band playing “My Girl” by the Temptations. At least a hundred people were dancing in front of the stage, following the prescribed steps of a dance he wasn’t familiar with.

“Wow,” he shouted over the din.

A thin, fortyish woman with red hair and an apron approached them. “Hey there,” she drawled. “Food or dancing?”

“Both,” Elizabeth answered.

“First names?”

They glanced at each other. “Elizabeth . . . ,” he said.

“And Logan,” she finished.

The woman jotted down their names on a pad of paper. “Now, last question. Fun or family?”

Elizabeth looked lost. “Excuse me?”

The woman snapped her gum. “You haven’t been here before, have you?”

“No.”

“It’s like this. You’re going to have to share a table. That’s how it works here. Everyone shares. Now, you can either request fun, which means you want a table with a lot of energy, or you can ask for family, which is usually a little quieter. Now, I can’t guarantee how your table is, of course. I just ask the question. So, what’ll it be? Family or fun?”

Elizabeth and Thibault faced each other again and came to the same conclusion.

“Fun,” they said in unison.

They ended up at a table with six students from UNC Wilmington. The waitress introduced them as Matt, Sarah, Tim, Allison, Megan, and Steve, and the students each raised their bottles in turn and announced in unison: “Hey, Elizabeth! Hey, Logan! We have crabs!”

Thibault stifled a laugh at the play on words—crab was slang for something undescribable picked up during sexual encounters, which was obviously the point—but was flummoxed when he saw them staring at him expectantly.

The waitress whispered, “You’re supposed to say, ‘We want crabs, especially if we can get them with you.’”

This time he did laugh, along with Elizabeth, before saying the words, playing along with the ritual everyone observed here.

They sat opposite each other. Elizabeth ended up sitting next to Steve, who didn’t hide the fact that he found her extremely attractive, while Thibault sat next to Megan, who showed no interest in him whatsoever because she was far more interested in Matt.

A plump, harried waitress rushed by, barely pausing to call out, “More crabs?”

“You can give me crabs anytime,” the students replied in chorus. All around them, Thibault heard the same response over and over. The alternative response, which he also heard, was, “I can’t believe you gave me crabs!” which seemed to signify that no more were needed. It reminded him of
The Rocky Horror Picture Show,
where regulars knew all the official responses and newcomers learned them on the fly.

The food was first-rate. The menu featured only a single item, prepared a single way, and every bucket came with extra napkins and bibs. Crab pieces were tossed into the center of the table—a tradition—and every now and then, teenagers in aprons came by to scoop them up.

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