So then Michael went, 'OK,' and gestured for me to follow him, and we went into the kitchen, where Lilly was sitting, using
the granite countertop to lay out her story-boards for the episode of Lilly Tells It Like It Is she was filming the next day.
'Jeez,' she said, when she saw me. 'What happened to you? You look like you swapped outfits with the Sugar Plum Fairy.'
'I was at a ball,' I explained.
'Oh,' Lilly said, 'of course. The ball. Well, if you ask me, the Sugar Plum Fairy got the better deal. But I'm not supposed
to be here. So don't mind me.'
'We won't,' Michael assured her.
And then he did the strangest thing. He started to cook.
Seriously. He was cooking.
Well, OK, not really cooking, more like reheating. Still, he fully got out these two veggie burgers he'd gotten from Balducci's, and put them on some buns, and then put the buns on these two plates. And then he took some fries that had been in the oven on a tray and put them on to the two plates, as well. And then he got ketchup and mayo and mustard out of the fridge, along with two cans of Coke, and he put all that stuff on a tray, and then he walked out of the kitchen, and before I could ask Lilly what in the name of all that was holy was going on, he came back, picked up the two plates, and went, to me, 'Come on.'
What could I do, but follow him?
I trailed after him into the TV room, where Lilly and I had viewed so many cinematic gems for the first time, such as
Valley Girl and Bring It On and Attack of the Fifty-Foot Woman and Crossing Delancey.
And there, in front of the Moscovitzes' black leather couch, which sat in front of their thirty-two-inch Sony TV, sat two
little folding tables. On to these tables, Michael lowered the plates of food he'd prepared. They sat there, in the glow
of the Star Wars title image, which was frozen on the TV screen, obviously paused there.
'Michael,' I said, genuinely baffled. 'What is this?'
'Well, you couldn't make it to the Screening Room,' he said, looking as if he couldn't quite believe I hadn't figured it out
on my own yet. 'So I brought the Screening Room to you. Come on, let's eat. I'm starved.'
He might have been starved, but I was stunned. I stood there looking down at the veggie burgers - which smelt divine -
going, 'Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You aren't breaking up with me?'
Michael had already sat down on the couch and stuffed a few fries in his mouth. When I said that, about breaking up,
he turned around to look at me like I was demented. 'Break up with you? Why would I do that?'
'Well,' I said, starting to wonder if maybe he was right, and I really was demented. 'When I told you I couldn't make it
tonight you . . . well, you seemed kind of distant. . .'
'I wasn't distant,' Michael said. 'I was trying to figure out what we could do instead of, you know, going to the movie.'
'But then you didn't show up for lunch . . .'
'Right,' Michael said. 'I had to call and order the veggie burgers and get Maya to go to the store and get the rest of the stuff. And my dad had loaned our Star Wars DVD to a friend of his, so I had to call him and make him get it back.'
I listened in astonishment. Everyone, it seemed - Maya, the Moscovitzes' housekeeper; Lilly; even Michael's parents - had been in on Michael's scheme to recreate the Screening Room right in his own apartment.
Only I had been in ignorance of his plan. Just as he had been in ignorance of my belief that he was about to break up with me.
'Oh,' I said, beginning to feel like the world's number one biggest dork. 'So ... you don't want to break up?'
'No, I don't want to break up,' Michael said, starting to look mad now - probably the way Mr. Rochester looked when he heard Jane had been hanging out with that St. John guy. 'Mia, I love you, remember? Why would I want to break up with
you? Now come and sit down and eat before it gets cold.'
Then I wasn't beginning to feel like the world's biggest dork: I totally felt like it.
But at the same time, I felt incredibly, blissfully happy. Because Michael had said the L word! Said it right to my face!
And in a very bossy way, just like Captain Von Trapp or the Beast or Patrick Swayze!
Then Michael hit the play button on the remote, and the first chords of John Williams's brilliant Star Wars theme filled the
room. And Michael went, 'Mia, come on. Unless you want to change out of thaat dress first. Did you bring any normal clothes?'
Still, something wasn't right. Not completely.
'Do you just love me like a friend?' I asked him, trying to sound cynically amused, you know, the way Rene would, in
order to keep the truth from him - that my heart was pounding a mile a minute. 'Or are you in love with me?'
Michael was staring over the back of the couch at me. He looked like he couldn't quite believe his ears. I couldn't believe
my own. Had I really just asked him that? Just come out and asked him?
Apparently - judging from his incredulous expression, anyway - I had. I could feel myself starting to turn redder, and
redder, and redder, and redder ...
Jane Eyre would so never have asked that question.
But then again, maybe she ought to have. Because the way Michael responded made the whole embarrassment of having
had to ask completely and totally worth it. And the way he responded was, he reached out, took the tiara from me, laid it
down on the couch beside him, took both my hands in his, pulled me down, and gave me a really long kiss.
On the lips.
Of the French variety.
We missed the entire scrolling prologue to the movie, due to kissing. Then, finally, when the sound of Princess Leia's starship being fired upon roused us from our passionate embrace, Michael said, 'Of course I'm in love with you. Now come sit down and eat.'
It truly was the most romantic moment of my entire life. If I live to be as old as Grandmere, I will never be as happy as I was
at that moment. I just stood there, thrilled to pieces, for about a minute. I mean, I could barely get over it. He loved me. Not only that, he was in love with me! Michael Moscovitz is in love with me, Mia Thermopolis!
'Your burger is getting cold,' he said.
See? See how perfect we are for one another? He is so practical, while I have my head in the clouds. Has there ever been
as perfect a couple? Has there ever been as perfect a date?
We sat there, eating our veggie burgers and watching Star Wars, he in his jeans and vintage Boomtown Rats T-shirt, and
me in my Chanel ball gown. And when Ben Kenobi said, 'Obi Wan? That's a name I haven't heard in a long time,' we both went, right on cue, 'How long?' And Ben said, as he always does, 'A very long time.'
And when, just before Luke flies off to attack the Death Star, Michael put it on pause so he could go get dessert, I helped
him clear the plates.