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"Your roommate from college? The big-deal lawyer? I didn't know you were still friends."

"Well, we're not really. I haven't talked to her in years, but I remember reading in the alumni magazine that she lives in Cambridge. Her note said she was teaching at Harvard now, and by a stroke of luck, I caught her in her office."

"God, this is embarrassing, but does she know of an apartment?" Julie asked hopefully.

"Well, no. But she insisted that you come and stay with her until you can find a suitable alternative. Her son Matthew is on his way to pick you up. I gave her the address. She says you are not in a good part of town, and it's a good thing it's only four o'clock and not getting dark. He'll be driving a blue Volvo and should be there any minute."

"OK. Matt. Dangerous town. Blue Volvo. If I get into the wrong car and get myself murdered and dumped in an alley, I want you to know how much I love you. And don't look in the third drawer of my desk."

"That's not funny. Anyway, Matthew goes to MIT. Some sort of physics major. Or was it math? Can you believe that? With Erin's genes, I shouldn't be surprised she'd have a genius son."

"I'm sure he's incredibly cool. Just the word physics already has me hot and bothered."

"I'm not running an escort service here, Julie. I'm trying to get you somewhere safe where I will not worry myself silly about you."

"Yes, Mother. I will find another Boston-based dating service online." Julie stood up and smoothed the front of her top. She faced the street, relieved to at least be able to stand expectantly waiting for a ride rather than attempting to look anything but misplaced. "When was the last time you even talked to Erin?"

"Years ago. We've only spoken a handful of times since graduation. Every now and then I hear something about her. The friends you make in college are friends you'll have for life, even if you don't talk for years at a time. You'll see."

A dark car slowed and pulled to a stop, double-parking in front of Julie. "Mom, I have to go. I think this Matt character is here."

"Are you sure it's him?"

Julie peered into the car as the window lowered. "I see a maniacal-looking guy with brightly-colored candy in one hand, and he's waving a bloody sickle with the other. Oh! He's beckoning me to the car. This must be my ride."

"Julie, stop it!" her mother ordered. "You have no idea how I feel, knowing that my only child is stranded in Boston. I wish I were there with you. Make sure it's Matthew. Ask to see his license."

"I'll be sure to do that. I'll call if I make it to the house. I love you, Mom."

"I love you, too, honey. I'm so sorry about this mess. Thank Erin for me, and I'll talk to you both later."

Julie hung up and looked hopefully at the guy rounding the car and walking toward her. "Matt?"

"I'm guessing by the suitcases that you must be Julie? Or else I'm about to kidnap the wrong girl." He smiled softly and reached out to shake her hand.

He was tall, at least six feet, with dirty blond hair that hung over his eyes. His pale skin told Julie that he hadn't seen much sun this past summer, and a peek at his T-shirt gave a clue why. The shirt, tucked into his ill-fitting jeans read, Nietzsche Is My Homeboy. Clearly, he was not a run-with-the-in-crowd kind of guy, and she suspected that he'd been holed up in the library all summer. But he was kind enough to drop whatever he'd been doing to come and get her. Besides, Julie had her geeky moments herself - though she wasn't dumb enough to announce them on a T-shirt. She hid them. The way any socially skilled person would.

"Thank you so much for picking me up. I really didn't know what I was going to do. I hope I'm not putting you too much out of your way?" Julie helped Matt load her bags into the trunk of the Volvo and then slid into the front seat. The September sun had heated up the car, and Julie automatically fanned her shirt, trying to get some air flowing across her skin.

"No problem. Sorry it's so hot. The AC doesn't work in this car, and no one's bothered to get it fixed. It's not a long drive, though." Matt turned the key to start the car, and a blast of sputtering noises had Julie fearing a longer stay on this now hated street. "Don't worry. It always does this when I try to start it so soon after turning it off. Just a little more gas... There we go!"

Julie glimpsed at herself in the passenger-side mirror. She looked undeniably haggard. And sweaty. And not sweaty in a way that could be construed as glistening. She ran a finger under each eye, wiping away the brown eyeliner that had started to smear, and quickly tried to smooth out her bangs that were beginning to curl. Her highlighted brown hair was not faring well in this humidity. She wasn't about to whip out a compact and pat powder over the dusting of freckles that ran across her nose, but she would have preferred to make a better first impression when she showed up to crash at the Watkins'.

Matt yanked the wheel to the right, narrowly avoiding a speeding car that cut him off. "Welcome to Boston, known primarily for its vehicular aggression."

"I'm loving it already. Between being ripped off, now broke, without permanent housing, and about to start college, I'm really off to a good start here, huh?" Julie smiled weakly, leaned her head against the window frame, and took in the breeze.

"It could be worse. You could be living at home like I do. And you will love Boston. Any major city has its drawbacks, but Boston is a great place to go to school, so once you get everything straightened out, you will be fine. You're starting at Whitney?"

"Yeah. It's not exactly MIT, though," she said with a teasing smile. "I'm sure Literature 101 can't compete with, what? Adoration of Differential Equations?"

Matt laughed. "Close. That was last year. This year it's Obsessive Devotion to Fourier Analysis Theory and Applications. And my personal favorite, Quantum Physics II: Romantic Entanglements of Energy and Matter."Julie turned her head to Matt. "You're a double major? Physics and math? Jesus..."