The Matchmakers of Minnow Bay (2 page)

BOOK: The Matchmakers of Minnow Bay
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A suspicious person might think that my missing that one isolated payment was my landlord's opportunity to cash out of that particular rental investment. That evicting me for one three-week-late payment is morally iffy and, probably, telling me to leave within seven days is legally iffy as well. I try not to be a suspicious person, though.

I would also prefer not to be a homeless person. I look across the table at Renee. Her face is suddenly wide and unfamiliar to me. We have been best friends since freshman year of college, and that feels like a long time to me. We've been through a lot.

“Do you think—” I begin.

She knows right away what I am about to ask and cuts me off. “You know what I wish,” she says, and it is not a question. “I wish I could just offer you a bedroom at our house. Wouldn't that be nice? I'd love you to come stay with us for a while, God knows I could use the help with the girls. If only I had the room. Chicago real estate is so hard,” she concludes.

“I know,” I say, nodding. “It's hard.” We both turn our heads to gaze out the windows, at the snowy, windy, gray Chicago January. As bleak as it is, it is better than looking at each other.

If I were a suspicious person I would think that maybe Renee does have plenty of room for me. Room upon room upon room for me to choose from. It's just her and Nic and Natalie and Natasha in there. The girls sleep in the same room. In the same bed even. That leaves approximately thirty-five bedrooms available for guests and/or evicted oldest, best friends.

“I know the house is big compared to your apartment, but with two little kids running around it shrinks fast. We need one bedroom open at all times in case the nanny needs to stay over. That's part of our agreement with her so we can use her at night, you know. And we need the guest room with the en suite for Nic's mother to visit. I can't have her on a sofa. She's hard enough to deal with when she gets a good night's sleep.”

“I know,” I say. I do know how hard she is to cope with, how jealous and possessive she can be of Nic. Before they married, Renee and I used to refer to her as the deal-breaker. “I totally understand.”

“And we're still trying for a boy. You know. Keep your fingers crossed. And then it will be a full house.”

I cross my fingers obediently, but … a baby takes nine months to arrive. I just need a couple weeks. Does she think I'm looking for a place to crash indefinitely? Maybe if I clear that up.

“I totally understand, but I so wish it were possible, even for a very short time.” I say the words “very short time” a bit louder than necessary. “I never get to see the girls anymore. Or you. We're just all so busy. And it would be so nice to have a home base for a couple of weeks so I can find a decent apartment instead of just having to move into the next available dump I can find.”

She looks at her hands. They are showing her age, I think, uncharitably.

“Have you asked Mitchell?”

I take that as a firm no. I wish, not for the first time, that I had never dated stupid Nic Larsen, future husband of my best friend. I have not so much as been invited to dinner at their house since he made a crass but complimentary joke about the caliber of our college-era sex life. Renee was pregnant with Natasha at the time and did not take it well. Now she simply cannot keep us far enough from each other, though the idea of cheating with my best friend's husband is odious, and Nic himself is also odious.

“I don't think Mitchell is in a position…” I begin. Then I give up.

“You asked him and he said no?”

I shake my head, embarrassed. “I haven't asked him yet.”

“What? Why not?” she asks.

“I know what he'll say. He'll say that it would muddle our professional relationship,” I say softly.

Renee rolls her eyes. “This is what you get for sleeping with your boss.”

“He's not my boss, you know that. He's my gallerist. We have a partnership. And a relationship. Two separate things.”

“But not the kind of partnership or relationship where you can ask to move in with him.”

“His place is too small anyway,” I say. His place is not too small, not by a mile, but I want her to hear how ridiculous her own excuse sounded.

And maybe she does. She purses her lips, but doesn't respond to that, saying instead, “Have you tried Daniella?”

“Daniella moved to Seattle last year,” I say. “You should see her Christmas card. She loves it there.”

“Hm. I must have gotten deleted from her list.”

“I'm sure that's not it,” I say. Though I am actually surprised Renee was ever on Daniella's list. We were all best of friends at Northwestern, but Renee and Daniella grew apart, rather passionately, after graduation. “Probably she doesn't have a list. You know her, she probably just sends the cards to whomever she saw on Facebook that day.”

Renee laughs a bit at this. “Seattle is perfect for her. Fast and cool but still removed from reality.”

I cannot help but nod. That is Daniella to a T. In college we all believed she would be the one to go all the way with her art career. Now she's a freelance graphic designer who makes a killing when she works, but doesn't work very often. She drinks a little more than seems prudent, and doesn't make art anymore, and plays weird mind games with men. Whenever I call her she is either out of breath or slurping dashi. I imagine most of her days are spent running long distances on foot to ramen noodle shops.

Renee is insightful, to sum up Daniella so well even though they probably haven't been in the same room since my last birthday party. She has always had a gift for seeing people, knowing them through and through in an instant. As a result, she always knows just what to do, which way is up.

Which is why I ask her what she thinks I should do next about housing. If she can't take me in, maybe she has a better plan.

“I think you should sue, honestly,” she says casually, sipping her flat white.

“Sue Mitchell?” My brain doesn't compute.

“Don't be ridiculous. Mitchell is the best thing that ever happened to you. I think you should sue your landlord.”

I roll my eyes. Renee is a divorce lawyer—she thinks everyone should sue for something.

“I'm willing to bet your lease clearly states you have thirty days to leave the premises—that's the law. But even beyond that, I'm not sure she
can
boot you for being late with rent one time. So either you're not telling me the truth about your payment history or she's evicting you illegally.” Renee recrosses her legs and checks her phone and then adds, “Probably it's a little of both.”

I nod, though I was telling her the general truth. I've bounced a couple of rent checks over the decade I've lived there—I'm a visual artist, for God's sakes—but none in the last two years. Other than that, I've kept up to date. It's the first bill I set money aside for whenever I get a sale.

Still, it's a moot point. “I'm not going to sue. You know that.”

Renee nods her head and rolls her eyes at me. “Good old Lily. Never one to put up a fight.”

I decide to take that as a compliment. “Any other ideas?” I ask her.

Renee pretends to think for a moment. “If you ask me, and you just did, it's time to get out of Chicago. No offense, but you can't afford it here. Not the way you live. I bet you're in credit-card debt up to your ears, or you would have paid your rent with a card advance. Am I right?”

I bite my lip. She is a
little
right.

“And what good does it do you exactly to stay here? Your apartment sucks, your day jobs always suck, and now that you've got a good relationship with a gallery you don't need to be here to schmooze with the art people anymore. Go live in the outer suburbs and see Mitchell on weekends.”

I am speechless. Stunned. Chicago is my home. I've never lived anywhere else.

I think Renee sees my face crumple up a bit, because she softens her tone and takes my hand across the table.

“Lily. Honey. You're so talented. Your art sells well, and for a lot of money, for what it is. Go somewhere you can live on that and keep making your beautiful art. Meet new people. Get your feet under you. Be a grown-up, just a little.”

“But all my friends are here,” I say. And I think,
Really, Lily?
Daniella's gone a year now. Kat, Corie, Risha, all married with children in the suburbs, their art careers waiting quietly off to one side while they live their other lives. Their
real
lives. And Renee, my best friend, actually telling me to go farther away from her than I already am.

“I know,” Renee says, nodding sympathetically. “It's hard to make a change.”

“Especially when you never wanted a change.”

Renee exhales. Puts her phone down. “Well, that's the thing about you, Lily,” she says sadly. “You never want anything to change.”

My heart sinks. I know what Renee is talking about. Not just about my decade-long residence in my crappy apartment, or the five-year stint as a barista at the Starbucks across the street, or even the way I paint the same subjects again and again, over and over, in morning light or nighttime, from the left and then the right, and then straight on again. She is talking about her and me. About how she has moved in new directions that don't include aging friendships with thirty-two-year-old fiscally unsound visual artists.

We have nothing left to talk about.

“No, you're right,” I say lightly, but I take back my hand. “I'm working on it. And now there will be change, no matter what, right?” I say in a falsely chipper voice. “Who knows what the future holds?”

But Renee only raises her eyebrows. It is as though she is saying, “I know what it holds. And I am not impressed.”

*   *   *

The Helms gallery was, for a brief time, my favorite place in Logan Square. Now it feels like the principal's office. It is sandwiched between a taxidermy shop and a bespoke handbag designer, and, because of Mitchell Helms's particular brand of high/low taste, it seems to actually tie the two neighbors together. I text Mitchell when I'm five minutes away so he knows to expect me. He tells me to come straight upstairs.

Upstairs is an iron spiral staircase in the middle of the second gallery that leads to a little glassed-in loft where Mitchell oversees his kingdom. Downstairs there are assorted staff members to greet me, but after the most cursory of hellos, I climb up the stairs, clang, clang, clang, and surface at the foot of his large chrome and glass drafting desk. When he turns toward me, I feel that
thing,
that thing I always feel around Mitchell. Renee calls it chemistry, but I know it as something else. I feel like I am wearing too-high heels and a too-short skirt and a too-sheer blouse. The effect is at once intoxicating and uncomfortable.

“Lily,” he says on an exhale. He has this way of saying my name like he invented it. My imaginary heels grow higher. Then he looks me over and says, “You're empty-handed.”

Inwardly I cringe. I have been avoiding, at all costs, letting Mitchell discover how stagnant my painting has become over the last few months. Every two or three weeks I've been dusting off something old from my stash and passing it off as a new work. But I haven't even done that lately. When was the last time I showed him something “new”? It must have been before Christmas.

“Nothing?” he asks me, a little sadly.

“Nothing,” I admit. “I'm sorry, Mitchell.” His eyes look genuinely concerned. I think he must know something is wrong. For a moment, just a fleeting one, I consider trying to tell him about how I've been painting the same thing for the last six months, over and over again, unable to get it quite right. Sometimes I have gotten lucky and made something I like, and sometimes I have even given something to Mitchell to sell. But mostly I am treading the same waters over and over again, day in and day out.

“Lily, don't apologize to me. This is how it works. Sometimes inspiration comes, sometimes it doesn't.”

I exhale. He's right, of course. It's never how it's worked for me before, but nothing has really been the same for me since my art started to sell. Maybe I just need to tune out some of the pressure.

“The only thing is,” Mitchell continues, “people are asking.”

Or, maybe I need more pressure.

“I don't want a long fallow period to depress your stock.”

Mitchell is always talking about my artwork like it's an offering on the Dow Jones. I cannot imagine trying to do what he does—to balance some kind of business acumen with the tastes and whims of buyers and the egos and frailty of the artists. As a particularly frail artist myself, I don't know what I would do without him.

“Something new is coming,” I lie. Then I remember why I'm here. “However. I'm having a little issue with my studio. It isn't helping the situation. I have a favor to ask.”

“Hm?” Mitchell steps out from behind his desk at last. He towers over me at six foot something. My imaginary heels are starting to totter. “Wait,” he says. “Come here. I forgot to give you something.”

For a moment I dare to hope he's got some kind of check for me. Maybe I lost track of a quarterly payment? Forgot to cash something from months ago? But when I get closer he puts his arms around me, pulls me in for a quick peck, and then goes back for a real kiss that I feel up and down my spinal column like a cold wind off Lake Michigan. When he pulls back he shakes his head at me and says, “I can never get over the way you smell. Like cured acrylics and candy.”

“I need to stay with you for a week,” I blurt out. “I'm being evicted.”

Mitchell drops his hands from my arms. “How can that be?”

I don't care to explain the whole situation. “It's complicated. I, um, I have to be out in a week.”

“Well…” He waits a long time. I can see the wheels turning as he goes shopping for an excuse. “Of course you can stay with me,” he says.

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