“Oh.” That meant her aunt was sleeping with a Fontana. “But you must be—”
“Don’t go there, kid, or I’ll call your mother on you.”
Sixty, Temple was thinking. Her mother was way past sixty, like sixty-three. Kit was either there or almost there. She was cool, yes, and didn’t act her age. Just like the Fontanas.
Oh.
“So what’s going on with you?” Kit asked, pouring more coffee.
Kit’s eyes were wide open now. She had a pretty square face with strong, camera-loving features: sharp jaw, small nose, high cheekbones, deep-set eyes. She looked, with her attractively faded reddish hair tousled and her glasses off, maybe . . . forty-something.
More like Temple’s big sister than her aunt.
“Not much lately,” Temple admitted after sipping straight black bitter coffee. She was too listless for some reason this afternoon to rustle up the fake sugar and watery milk that usually adulterated her morning coffee. “Max and I don’t seem able to coordinate our schedules these days.”
“Maybe more than bad timing is the problem. What about Mr. New Bed upstairs?”
Temple groaned. “I don’t know.”
“What don’t you know? You don’t really dig him? He has bad habits, like cleaning his toenails with a beer opener? I would think an ex-priest would be incapable of being unfaithful, but then I would have left my kiddies with one before the headlines came out.”
“None of that, Kit. There’s nothing wrong with him.”
“Nothing? He’s a saint?”
“Almost. Well, his faith might force him to have kids.”
“Faith equals force. You gotta love it.”
“I guess that’s it. Faith is important to him. He’s working his way through what kind of life he can live with it.”
“And you come second.”
Temple stirred her coffee so not in need of stirring with a nearby fork while she thought. Not so much thought, but worked out her emotions. “Doesn’t look like it. Looks like I could call the shots. And that’s a lot of responsibility. Who wants to supplant the Virgin Mary?”
“No modern woman. Doomed to lose all she cared about and be married to a eunuch.”
“You are so irreverent. Do you work at it?”
“Daily, my dear. It’s a requirement for living in New York City. So. Matt sounds serious. What are you going to do about Max? He’s not chopped liver either.”
“I don’t know! But Max hasn’t come up with the M word lately, and Matt has. That means I’m running out of time. I have to give Matt an answer.”
“You don’t have to but it would be merciful.” Kit sighed. “Got a little flavoring for this coffee? It’s seven P.M. in Manhattan.”
“What goes with coffee?”
“During a major-life-decision discussion like this, anything eighty proof.”
Temple pawed through her lower cabinets until she brought out the battered bottle of Old Crow. She poured some in her aunt’s mug, then more when ordered to. She kept her own mug alcohol free.
“Okay.” Kit took a long swallow, then spoke, her slightly husky voice so like Temple’s. She was really more like Temple’s mother than Karen.
Temple now understood that had always rankled her mother. Things ran in families: talents, voice quality, looks. Sometimes in just the wrong members of the family.
“You have to,” Kit said, “find and follow your heart. Which direction is it going?”
“Both! Honestly, Kit. I was crazy in love with Max. Then he vanished for a year for pretty good reasons. That gave me just enough time to really get to know Matt. He was playing catch-up with life. I know what he feels for me started because I helped him when Max was gone. But . . . he’s all caught up now, and he wants an answer. He wants me.”
“And—?”
“It’s mutual but I still love Max. I don’t get it. How can I feel this way?”
“You’re such a chick out of the shell here.”
“I’m thirty, for God’s sake. I should know what I want and what I want to do.”
Here Kit laughed uproariously, and she’d only had one swallow so far of the doctored coffee.
“You think you will ever know exactly what you want? Let me clue you in, Niece. Thirty. I’m almost twice that . . . no, I won’t get more specific. None of your business.
“Want to know what issues I’m dealing with? For one thing, all the men my age are facing prostate problems.”
“Mom has mentioned that some men—”
“All men. Cancer is just the poisonous icing on an unpalatable cake. The aging dough is . . . how shall I say it to a tender blossom of thirty? Well, the songwriter Leonard Cohen said it best, ‘I ache in the places I used to play.’ ”
When Temple remained stunned and speechless, Kit shrugged. “I guess you have to hear it in his own post-midlife growl. Anyway, a younger man makes a lot of sense to an aging single woman. And I haven’t told you what starts happening to women at forty or so.”
“Forty!” Temple felt her jaw drop. That was only a decade away.
Kit leaned closer. “Your mother didn’t tell you?”
Temple leaned closer and reached for the bottle of Old Crow. “They don’t talk about things like this in Minnesota. At least not to me.”
“Peri-menopause,” Kit intoned as if naming some hideous harpy from a Greek tragedy.
“I’ve heard about menopause, but this peri-thing . . .”
“No one tells you it starts in your forties. First, you feel as frisky as a sex kitten. But that’s just a last gasp. Then, you hit the dry period, then the hot and sweaty and sleepless period, only you have nothing really good to do while you’re lying awake all that time. Then, the earlier ‘symptoms’ settle in for a nice long stay, and you hit the emotional roller-coaster period. And no one can stand to be around you. And then you have no periods. And then you’re over the hill and sixty is looming.”
Temple saw Sixty Looming. She saw far ahead on the road of life over the daily hills and dales to a big sign by the side of the highway: sixty miles per hour. The speed limit. All she could do. And her oil was dry, her air-conditioning was inoperative, her ragtop had turned gray . . . and that was only thirty years away.
She looked back down the highway as far as she could see. There was a tiny sign. She’d made the trip this far in the blink of an eye . . . she looked ahead. She would hit sixty in a blink as rapid and unexpected.
She eyed her aunt, who nodded soberly.
“On the other hand,” Kit said, “there are vitamin supplements that are claimed to be effective, and a younger man can work wonders.”
In her mind, Temple deserted her car, her darling zippy new little red Miata, and ran screaming down the highway.
But . . . which way?
Little Black Dress
The Circle Ritz’s sole elevator ground through its rare, mysterious movements in the middle of the night like a cranky architectural bowel. This was past the middle of the night. Past two A.M.
Temple thought of the timeline documentaries PBS liked to present: if all human history was a clock and it was one minute to midnight, we, the people, would not even exist. Dinosaurs would rule the earth. As if dinosaurs had ever had political ambitions.
On the other hand, all politicians had dinosaur tendencies.
She next heard the slow approach of footsteps on parquet flooring, a dull tick-tock, tick-tock, like a clock. Her heart was off beat, pounding triple time.
A shadow filled the opening to the short hall that led to the unit’s front door. The covered light by the door was an old friend to her by now; she’d been here for more than half an hour, but the light was new and blinding to anyone who emerged from the main circular hall. Even a resident.
The shadow had stopped to try to figure out what, or who, she was. The shadow was a bit wary. She bet its heart had speeded up too, but not enough to match hers.