On his way back to the table, Theo passed Mr. Delacroix. “Bye, Delacroix,” Theo called, but Mr. Delacroix did not reply. “Where is he going?”
“To get investors.”
“Right this moment? It’s New Year’s Day.”
I shrugged.
Theo set the drinks on the table. “We are doing this, then?” Theo clinked his glass to mine, and then he leaned across the table to kiss me.
“Whoa, Theo,” I said, pulling away.
“What?”
“Last night was last night, and this morning is this morning.”
Theo took a drink. “As you like,” he said. “Let’s go eat. The club doesn’t open for hours, and I am sick to death of macaroni and peas.”
Toro Supper Club was in a ground-floor apartment in a housing project in Washington Heights. A leather-skinned gentleman with a jet-black curly mustache poked his head out the window and called, “Theo, my man! Good to see you!”
“Dali, I brought Anya with me!” Theo yelled from the street.
“It’s freezing out there,” Dali said. “Come inside.”
Dali greeted Theo by kissing him on both his cheeks. “Anya,” Dali said, “I am an admirer of your club, but Theo didn’t say you were such a beauty.”
For New Year’s, the supper club was serving breakfast, brunch, or maybe it was indeed a late supper for those who hadn’t yet made it home from the prior evening’s merriments. The scent emanating from the kitchen was familiar. It only took me a moment to place it. “Theo, how in the world did you find out how to get mole in Manhattan?” I asked.
“Mole contains cacao, and Granja supplies it,” Theo said. “Besides, I am very popular in this city.”
The restaurant only had three tables, and two of them were filled by the time we walked in. There were blue-and-white-checked tablecloths and votive candles in blue glass holders. A dried rose with a bent neck stood in a vase by the fireplace.
The mole was perhaps not quite as good as it had been at Granja Mañana, but it was close. The flavor was delicious and spicy. My eyes began to water.
“Anya,” Theo said, “you are crying. You really must have been starving.”
“It’s the heat. I’ll be fine.” I waved my hand in front of my face. “I like the heat.”
I ate three more bowls. I hadn’t realized how hungry I was. Theo laughed at me as I sat and contemplated whether to go on to a fourth bowl.
“I can’t do it,” I said finally. I pushed the bowl away and tried not to belch. I was so warm and satisfied; I barely knew what to do with myself.
We couldn’t get a cab, so we walked the long way back to the club. It took hours, but we were young and strong and had the time to spare.
“It’s not the safest walk,” I warned him. “But it’s daytime, and I do have my machete.”
By the time we reached the southernmost side of Central Park, it had begun to snow. I was a little cold, so when Theo put his arm over my shoulder, I let him.
“Theo,” I said guiltily, “aren’t we better as friends?”
“Who says we will not be friends because we kiss each other in the park every now and again?”
I leaned in to kiss him but then I stopped myself. “You need to know: I don’t love you that way.”
“What does it matter? I do not love you either. Let us have some fun together. I like you. You like me. No one has to say A-M-O-R or anything estúpido like that. We are both good-looking and alone. So why not?”
Why not indeed?
My breath probably stunk of chicken mole, but what difference did it make? Theo didn’t worship me. He didn’t think I was a princess. That is to say, he knew my breath did not always taste of mint chewing gum and cinnamon. I leaned over and kissed him hard. It is nice, on occasion, to kiss someone because he is cute and because it is fun and because it feels so good.
VIII
I ACQUIRE TWO ADDITIONAL ROOMMATES
IN THE MONTHS SINCE SCARLET had had her baby, I’d seen her only a handful of times. Though she had attended the opening of my club, she’d left early, before any of the fun started. She had missed my New Year’s party because she’d spent the holiday with Gable’s parents. In an attempt to be a good godparent, I’d gone to Midnight Mass with her and Felix. But that was it. We didn’t have school to keep us together, and she lived a lot farther away than she used to—sixty-two more blocks.
A couple of days after Easter, I found her sitting on the couch in my living room with Felix in her arms. She looked the same, pretty as ever, though she was skinnier than she had been before she’d had the baby. A fine wrinkle had taken up residency between her eyebrows. “Gable’s gone,” she said. “His parents blame me, and I can’t stay there anymore.”
“Where did Gable go?” I asked.
“I don’t know,” she said. “We were fighting constantly. He hated his job at the hospital. His parents had been pressuring us to get married, but neither of us wanted to do it. And now he’s gone.”
“Scarlet, I’m sorry.” I was sorry for Felix, if not particularly for Scarlet. I was sorry about the situation, but I wasn’t surprised. Given enough time, Gable Arsley always managed to live up to his last name.
“Could we stay here for a little while? I don’t want to live with my parents, and I can’t be at Gable’s with his mother hating me so much.”
“Of course you can stay here.” Though truthfully, there were a lot of people currently in residence at my apartment: Noriko, Leo, Theo, and Natty when she was home. “You can use Natty’s room while she’s away.”
“Also, I need to find work. I’ve been auditioning for plays a little bit. I’ve come close to getting cast a couple of times—”
“Scarlet! That’s great.”
“But with Gable gone, I know I can’t afford to wait around anymore. I need to figure out how to make money now.” She made a face. “I hate to ask, but would you give me a job at the club? A hostess or a waitress or whatever. I know I’m not qualified for anything else. If I had a job with tips and flexible hours, I could still audition now and then.”
I sat down next to Scarlet. I was still awkward around Felix, but he climbed into my lap anyway.
“Good,” Scarlet said. “Sit on your godmother. You’re getting too heavy for me, Felix.”
“Hi, Felix,” I said.
“Hi,” he said.
“Oh, he’s talking now,” I said. “Hi,” I said again.
He waved and laughed at me.
“The club can definitely take on another waitress, but won’t that be weird for you? I mean, I wish I had something better to offer you.”
“There aren’t exactly a ton of jobs in this city, and I’m not proud. I can’t afford to be.”
“Who will watch Felix while you’re at work? I’m not here a lot.”
“No, I would never ask you to do that. My father can. Dad always tries to help. It’s really my mother who disapproves of me, which is why I can’t live there either.”
“I’ll go back to Gable’s apartment with you to get your stuff and Felix’s, if you want.”
She laughed. “I’m about to sound terrible. I know I’ve already asked you for so much. But would you … would you mind going alone? I don’t want to bring Felix back to Gable’s parents’ place. Everyone is so upset. I don’t want him in the middle.”
At that moment, Theo came into the living room. “I will watch the baby,” he said, “and then you both will go.” He must have been eavesdropping.
He walked over to the couch and scooped up Felix from my lap. “See. Los niños, they love me.” Felix was grabbing Theo’s mustache, which he had grown in the months since he’d moved to New York.