“So, what do you think?” Julie asked after a moment.
“About?”
“Is Dickie Byrd running for office?”
“Why else would he call an impromptu class reunion?” Chase said. “It’s fourteen years since we graduated. He couldn’t wait for fifteen?”
“Still, we have to go.”
“Well, yah. We bought new outfits.” Chase had gotten out her outfit again in the morning and re-examined it. She still liked it. They both bought jacket dresses. Julie’s had a short, flouncy, flirty skirt that matched her favorite silk scarf, while Chase’s was a bit longer with a draped-front jacket. The sale rack at Macy’s had been a gold mine. When you went shopping with Julie, you got results. That woman was a shopper.
“Didn’t he run for mayor of Minneapolis recently?” Julie asked.
A pair of mallards floated past, in the middle of the river, avoiding the ice beginning to form at the shoreline. Chase wondered what they were still doing in Minnesota. Maybe they hung out at a hot spring somewhere for the winter.
“Three years ago,” Chase said. “He lost by a lot, as I recall. I’ll bet ten dollars he’s going to run again next time.”
“I won’t bet against that, but I’ll bet you twenty he loses again.” Julie grinned.
Chase’s cell phone trilled. Julie raised her eyebrows and Chase shrugged to show she didn’t know who was calling. “Yes?”
“This is Ron North, Chase. Remember me?” The voice was unfamiliar. A man’s voice, but not very deep. An image of a skinny, sweaty guy was forming.
She frowned. His face was back there in the nether part of her brain, but out of reach. “I’m sorry—”
“Reporter for the Herald Gopher.”
“Okay.” She subscribed to that paper, but couldn’t remember seeing his name in it.
“Hey, we went to Hammond High together. I worked for the school paper then.”
Chase had worked for the school paper, but didn’t recall that Ron North had. At first. She dug a little further into her memories. Now she had him. A small, thin, wiry, nervous guy.
“Oh. Yes?” Why was he calling her?
“I was wondering. I got a idea for a article.” An idea for an article, she corrected him mentally. “I’d like to do a piece called ‘Local Girl Makes Good.’ You got that shop, right? That bakery?”
“I co-own the Bar None. It’s a dessert bar shop. That’s the only thing we bake.”
“Hey, don’t sell yourself short. Those’re good. So, what do you say?”
“To what?” She frowned and shook her head at Julie, who probably thought Chase was fending off a cable salesman.
“I’ll come by, do an interview, snap some shots. Get you in the paper.”
“When?”
“I’ll let you know. Talk to you later.”
With that, he was gone. “That was odd.” She told Julie about the call.
“I remember him well. Don’t you?” Julie made a sour face. Her hands, shaking her handlebars, sent tremors through her bike. “He had the most annoying crush on me. I couldn’t get rid of him for the longest time.”
“Oh, was he the stalker guy? How could I forget?”
“I’ll never forget.” Julie glanced at her watch. “Gotta get back.” She turned her bike and jumped onto the seat.
“Me, too.”
Chase remembered Ron clearly now. Julie had been greatly disturbed by the persistent, annoying, unwanted attention. She had started staying in at night, not socializing. Then, suddenly, he had switched his obsession to someone else and Julie had started living again.
• • •
An hour later Chase was showered and opening up the Bar None. The shop was busy in December and got busier the closer they came to the holidays. It was three weeks until Christmas. The tinkling bell on the front door got a workout all morning.
The two salesclerks worked in the front, Anna baked in the kitchen, and Chase worked in the office on orders and payments. When Chase finished up her computer work midmorning, she went out front to help.
“Chase, how are you?”
It was that reedy, young-sounding, male voice. She was surprised to see Ron North in the shop.
“Did we set a time?” She was sure they hadn’t.
“I had an errand across the street and saw, hey, here was your store.” He dug a notebook and pencil out of his jacket pocket and propped his skinny hip on one of the small display tables, dislodging a stack of dessert bar boxes.
Chase jumped to catch them before they hit the floor.
“Oh, sorry.” He fiddled with the pencil between two fingers, then dug a few peanuts out of his pocket and tossed them into his mouth.
She was recalling more bits and pieces about him. She remembered how he had always made her nervous when he was hanging around Julie. He was full of tics and usually sweaty. She remembered now that he had been on the school newspaper staff until he had to leave because of his grades. The smell of peanuts emanating from him triggered her memory, too. He had always reeked of peanuts.
As she restacked the boxes he continued. “How about that article? ‘Local Girl Makes Good’? Looks like you have a nice place going here. You own it, right?”
“I’m the co-owner,” Chase answered cautiously. “Anna Larson owns the Bar None with me.” She wasn’t sure she wanted Ron North to do an article on her. She glanced around at the full shop. “This isn’t a good time to chat, Ron. Maybe another time?”
“Sure, sure. I’ll just walk around and get some local flavor. Get it? Flavor?”
Chase gave him a wan smile and nodded, then moved on to people who were interested in buying dessert bars.
A young couple stood frowning at the display case while Mallory was busy taking money from two college coeds for two boxes of Margarita Cheesecake Bars. Chase explained what some of the ingredients were in several types of bars, keeping track of Ron North out of the corner of her eye. She hoped he wouldn’t knock any more boxes down.
He strolled beside the pink shelves on the sidewall filled with boxes and bumped another table, but not hard enough to topple the stack of boxes. She couldn’t figure out what he was doing. He wasn’t, she was sure, interested in buying, and she had told him she couldn’t talk. Maybe he was waiting for a lull in business? Good luck, she thought. It might stay like this until six.
Chase’s next surprise was seeing Dickie and Monique Byrd walk into the store.
“Charity Oliver,” Dickie boomed, sticking out his hand.
At the moment, she wasn’t waiting on any customers. She shook his outstretched hand, soft and dry, wondering if he had looked her up in the yearbook immediately before dropping in. If he remembered her, he’d call her Chase. No one called her Charity except Anna.
“Maybe we don’t need to have a reunion if everyone is going to come into my shop,” Chase said, using a smile and a tilt of her head to soften her words. “Ron North is here, too.”
“Ho, ho, ho!” Dickie sounded like Santa Claus.
“Monique, nice to see you again.” Chase reached to shake his wife’s hand since he wasn’t going to acknowledge that she was there. The woman kept her hands to herself and stared at Chase’s. That’s a little odd, Chase thought. Chase peeked at her own hand in case it was covered in dough or powdered sugar. That wouldn’t have surprised her, but it seemed clean.
Ron was inching toward the front door.
“I wondered if you could do me a big favor,” Dickie said. “Mona, give Charity a poster.”
Chase remembered that Monique had been called Mona in school. Sometimes she was called Mona the Mouth because she talked so much. Chattered on and on about nothing. It seemed she had gotten over that. Or maybe she couldn’t get a word in with Dickie running off at the mouth like he did.
Monique caught sight of Ron North and flinched, her eyes wide and frightened for a split second. Ron seemed to sneer at her, then threw open the door and left. Monique returned her attention to them, completely composed. She dipped into the large, heavy-looking bag she carried and pulled out a roll of paper. She unfurled what proved to be an eleven-by-seventeen-inch poster, which she handed to Chase, being careful not to touch hands or fingers.