The Twelfth Child (24 page)

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Authors: Bette Lee Crosby

Tags: #General, #Fiction

BOOK: The Twelfth Child
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“City map?” he finally repeated.

“What street are you looking for?” Abigail asked, blatantly ignoring the map on the wall because she couldn’t bear to have him walk away.

“Oak Tree Road.”

“Oak Tree?” she echoed, but the thoughts running through her head had nothing to do with where such a location might be – she was busy taking note of the broadness of his shoulders.  Finally, after she’d stared at him for so long that a person could easily assume the question had been forgotten, she answered, “I think that might be on the far side of town, past the railroad station.”

“That sounds logical,” he said.  “What I’m looking for is a housing development that’s under construction.”     

“Oh?  Buying a house?” 

“Afraid not,” he laughed, “just here to inspect the property.”

Abigail was not usually one to pry into people’s business – when someone wanted information of one kind or another, she’d point to the appropriate reference section and that was that, no questions asked – this was different, she wasn’t ready to let this dark-haired stranger walk away.  Were it possible, she would have nailed his shoes to the floor, locked the library door and kept him prisoner.  “Why?” she asked.

He tilted his head quizzically, “Why am I inspecting the property?” 

Abigail nodded, and then leaned across the circulation desk as if she needed to be close to the source of sound to hear his answer.  She marveled at how perfectly the curve of his neck nestled into the starched collar, how on this particular day he had chosen to wear a red necktie – red, her favorite color, the color of a heart shaped valentine, the color of roses.  He told her, that he was a property inspector working for the Emigrant Savings Bank in New York City; but he could have been reciting the Pledge of Allegiance for as far as she was concerned the words didn’t matter, what mattered was the rush of warmth heating up her body, making her toes curl and her fingers itch to reach out and touch his face.  She’d already started imagining him standing before a preacher in a groom’s morning suit when she said, “you’ll need help finding Oak Tree Road, it’s
way
across town.”

 He smiled and having noticed the way Abigail had flung her body at him, asked, “I don’t suppose you’d be – ”   Before he’d finished the question, she answered, saying that it would only take a few minutes for her to close up the library.  “This early in the afternoon?” he asked, but by that time Abigail had already turned off the lights.

“I’m John Langley,” he offered as they stepped out onto the street. 

“Abigail Lannigan,” she answered and hooked her arm through his.

His car was parked at the corner of the block; he unlocked the door and she slid halfway across the seat to a spot that was closer to the driver than the door.  When he climbed in and sat beside her, she could feel the rightness of it and started trying out the sound of
Abigail Langley
in her head.

“Which way?” he asked.

Perhaps she wasn’t concentrating or perhaps it was because Abigail wanted to stretch this moment out for eternity, whichever, she directed him through every side street and roundabout route possible, and only after they’d circled through town twice, did they happen upon the spot.  “This is it,” John said when he saw the sign that read: Hanerman Homes – Better living at an affordable price. 

The only thing Abigail saw was an endless stretch of wooden framework structures.  “This is it?”

“It will be.  This is the first stage.”  He parked the car on the side of a dirt road, got out, and started walking.  She scrambled out behind him and followed along.  “You may want to wait in the car,” he said, “it’s pretty messy back here.”

“I was raised on a farm,” she answered, not wanting him to think her a limp lily, “Why, I’m capable of climbing the side of a mountain.” 

He laughed out loud, then reached back and took hold of her hand.  “I didn’t mean to infer that you
couldn’t
, I was just thinking you might not want to get your shoes dirty.”

As they walked, he counted the structures, one hundred and twelve in all.  Three times he climbed up onto the flooring platform of a particular house and each time she went along.  “See,” he’d say, pointing to a strip of framework, “that’s the living room wall and this here will be the bedroom.”  Or, when they were standing in what would someday be the hallway he’d point out a tiny closet or the kitchen.  Abigail thought for certain he was leading up to the part where one day they’d be living in one of these houses, which would be fine to start, but she was planning on three maybe four little ones, which meant they would eventually need a bigger house.

Once he’d finished writing up his notes, John asked if he might take Abigail to dinner to repay her kindness.  “Why, of course,” she answered but told him that they’d have to first stop by her apartment so she could change her muddy shoes.

 

T
hat evening they went to the Tivoli, a restaurant so fine the waiters were required to dress in silk tuxedos and carry dainty linen towels across their arm to scoop away a droplet of wine if it lingered on the lip of the bottle.  The moment Abigail stepped across the threshold, she wished she’d taken the time to polish her fingernails, maybe freshen her make up and change her dress as well – it would have taken half-a-minute at most, yet she’d rushed out the door wearing a cotton frock that now seemed downright dowdy.  “Oh dear,” she sighed.

The waiter seated them side by side on a banquette, then brought a bottle of champagne and filled both glasses.  Abigail had not had champagne since the close of Club Lucky, so it spiraled to her head and caused her to flirt in the most outrageous manner.  While John was explaining how the Emigrant Bank lent money to developers all along the eastern seaboard, she hooked her foot around his ankle and as he elaborated on how this building of moderately priced homes was the wave of the future, she pressed her thigh against his.  At the mere mention of the fact that he expected to be in Richmond on a regular basis, she smiled and tilted her face upward in such a way that it appeared a heartbeat shy of an invitation to press his lips to hers. 

Minutes later, he moved closer and wrapped his arm around her shoulder. 

Abigail knew this was what she’d been waiting for, she knew just as Gloria had known the day Fred Bailey walked into ChickenCastle, and she shivered at the thought.

“You chilly?” he asked

“Not at all,” she answered, settling into the crook of his arm.

 

A
t the end of the evening they kissed goodnight outside the apartment; the kiss, sweet and lingering, remained on Abigail’s lips long after she’d stepped inside and closed the door.  It was the kind of kiss, she told herself, that only came about once you’d found your own true love.  Squinting into the mirror as she washed her face, angling a glance at the reflection until it came back just the way she wanted, Abigail could imagine the silver slick of soap to be a bridal veil dropped down over her face.

She slipped beneath the sheet, in a dreamlike state before her head hit the pillow; moments later she was fast asleep, floating on a heart-shaped cloud.  She’d fallen into bed hoping to dream of the day she and John would be married, but that’s not what happened.  Instead they were at a train station, she was waiting for him to bend and kiss her but a puff of black smoke rolled across his face and although she could sense he was there she could no longer see him..  Suddenly she spotted his figure moving toward the train; she grabbed onto the sleeve of his jacket and pleaded with him not to leave.  For a moment he stopped and turned to her, then as the train started to move, he jumped aboard. 
You’ve always known I’m a traveling man
, he shouted back, then he slid into a seat alongside a window and waved goodbye.  Only then did she notice that every other window of the train was filled with babies, waving their chubby little hands and crying out
goodbye, mama
.  Abigail heard herself scream as the train pulled away and left her standing on the platform with tears streaming down her face and a ripped off patch of tweed jacket in her hand.

Abigail woke with a start, her gown soaked with perspiration and her heart galloping at a thousand beats per minute.  It took her a full minute to grab hold of herself and come to the realization that it had been nothing more than a dream.  No, she thought, not a dream, a nightmare!  But it was enough to set her thinking about the fact that John had kissed her, then turned and walked away, saying nothing about when they might be together again.  Maybe he’d never come back, never even call.  He’d have no further need of the city map now, so he’d move on to some other town, some other map, some other librarian. 

She sobbed and wailed until the sound of anguish filled the room and spilled out into the airshaft.  A neighbor called across that he was trying to sleep and banged down his window, but Abigail continued to cry.  When the wailing eased off to a steady flow of sniffles, she started to shiver like a person who’d been hauled up from a frozen lake.  In the middle of July, on a night so warm that every window in the building was left open, she took a wool blanket and covered herself.  She buried her face in the pillow and curled her body into a ball of desperation.  “I should have changed my dress,” she sobbed, “worn something with glitter.”  She told herself that she was the picture of plainness and it was no wonder he’d not fallen in love with her.  She bolted to a sitting position and raised her hands in an airborne gesture, “No man can love a woman like me,” she shouted, “I’m a
librarian!
”  Someone across the airway called out that it was three o’clock in the morning and two more windows slammed closed.  Again drenched in perspiration, she threw off the covers and stripped away her gown.  Before the sun peered over the horizon, Abigail had washed herself down with ice water twice, drank three cups of tea with honey, one cup of warm milk and a half glass of whiskey, but not once did she again close her eyes.

By morning her eyes were swollen, dark as an overripe plum, and there was a red blotch of hives circling the side of her face.  Even though the temperature was forecasted to hit ninety-five degrees by mid-afternoon, she pulled on a black dress with long sleeves and did not bother to add a single speck of jewelry.  She drank a glass of water for breakfast, then stuck an apple in the pocket of her skirt and left for work.  The desolate drag of her feet gave Abigail the look of mourner as she shuffled along in the rising heat. 

Arriving at the library fifteen minutes after the scheduled opening time, she unlocked the door, then went and sat behind the circulation desk – not filing, or cataloguing, not stacking books or stamping overdue notices, but just sitting.  Although her brow was slick with perspiration, she didn’t remember to turn on the fan until well after ten-thirty.  And, even after she finally did turn on the fan, she neglected to turn on the overhead lights, so from the outside the library appeared to be closed.

About one-thirty a boy of fourteen or so, poked open the door and called out, “Anybody here?”

“I’m here,” Abigail answered in a weary voice.  “You need a book?”

“No ma’am, I got a delivery.”  He pushed his way through the door with a large bouquet of red roses.  “Miss Abigail Lannigan?”

She nodded and he handed her the bouquet.  “For me?” she exclaimed.

“You’re Abigail Lannigan, right?”

She reached out and took hold of the roses; in the center of the bouquet was a folded note.  With the roses nestled in the crook of her arm, she started fishing through her purse.  “Wait a minute,” she said, “I’ll get you a tip.” 

“The man already gave me fifty cents.”

“What man?”

“The man standing out there.”  The boy pointed to the far corner of the street. 

Abigail stretched her neck and followed the line of the boy’s finger – she could see someone standing there, someone who looked to be the size and build of John Langley, but with the sun behind him she couldn’t for the life of her make out the face.  “What did he say?” she asked.

The boy shrugged.  “Nothin’ much.  Just I should bring these to you.”

“Was he tall?  Dark hair?  Very handsome?”

“I think he had brown hair,” the boy started backing away.

“Very handsome?”

“Handsome?  He was old as my dad!”  The boy inched further back. 

With a trembling hand Abigail pulled the note from the bouquet, by the time she started to read the boy had fled out the door.

Dear Abigail,

 

I hope you are not hiding out in a darkened library to avoid
me. I greatly enjoyed your company last evening and would
love it if you would join me for dinner again tonight.
If the answer is yes, please turn on the light.
Fondly yours,
John Langley

 

Abigail darted across the floor and clicked on the interior lights, every one of them, including the far back reference room which had been closed off for the past six months.  After that she turned on the outside lights, despite the fact that the sun was shining bright enough to blister a person’s eyeball.  Lastly, she switched on the flagpole light.  “That should do it,” she sighed.  

When the glass door swung open Abigail caught sight of her reflection.  “Oh no!” she screamed.

“But,” John stuttered, “you
did
turn the lights on.”

“Of course I turned them on, but look at me, I’m a fright.”

“Not a fright,” he laughed, “a bit tired, maybe.”

Abigail was not about to tell how she’d worried herself into a frenzy – a thing such as that would make her seem all the more pathetic – so, she said,  “Someone in the apartment building kept carrying on all night long, the most God-awful noise, why I couldn’t sleep a wink.”

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