Page 14 - Sweet Embraceable You: Coffee-House Stories
P. 14

2                                             Jack Fritscher

             All of San Francisco and here we sit.” She tugged at the light fold of
             dark tricot falling down from her throat. “We come here so often.
             I’m suffocating.” She ground out the cigarette. “Must we always
             come here?”
                 “Where were you?” Cameron asked.
                 She looked at him.
                 He looked at her.
                 “I had a reception of my own to attend,” she said. “Stop trying
             to make me obedient.”
                 “Simple, isn’t it?” He knocked down neat the last of his scotch.
                 “Simple? What is? For godsake, do you need such a big bush
             to beat around?”
                 The waiter hovered for a moment. He served Ada. He served
             Cameron. He disappeared.
                 “Cheers,” Cameron said.
                 “To what.” Ada said it flat. “Our one-thousandth visit to this
             bar?”
                 “Bistro. This bistro,” Cameron said. “Remember? You picked
             me up here.”
                 “Correction,” Ada said, lifting her glass. “I met you here. I
             picked you up later.”
                 “You love this place. We’re old faces here.”
                 “Being an old face anywhere is something I don’t love.”
                 Cameron lifted the single candle. His hands cupped the warm
             glassful of wax through the white plastic mesh. He lifted the waver-
             ing light to Ada’s face. “An old face, Ada, you’ll never be.”
                 She began to melt in tenderness to him, but caught herself.
             Was he joking? “You could be fatal to me,” she said. “So lay off the
             mood swings.”
                 Cameron lowered the candle to the table. “Well?” he said.
                 “That’s a deep subject.”
                 “You’re so sophisticated for a professor’s wife.”
                 She glared at him. She had her own degree, her own teaching
             certificate, her own car, what had been—before he moved in—her


                     ©Jack Fritscher, Ph.D., All Rights Reserved
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