Julie walked over to Chase and showed her a business card for Bart Fender. It seemed he was selling diet supplements on the side.
“Why do I want this?” Chase asked.
“There, on the other side. He wrote down Dillon Yardley’s hospital room number. He said she would like some visitors.”
“I thought she was in a coma.”
“Me, too. It was strange.” Julie turned to talk to another classmate.
Then it happened, the thing Chase dreaded. Heading toward her was Eddie Heath.
FOUR
“Chase, you look fantastic.”
She glanced around, but there was no retreat. She was next to the wall that held the folded bleachers.
“I mean it. You’re a sight for sore eyes.”
She smiled politely and lied. “It’s good to see you, too.”
This jerk had dumped her a week before senior prom and she had ended up spending prom night in the corner with the other single girls, without a corsage on her wrist, watching him dance with the homecoming queen all night. Here she was without a date fourteen years later, too.
She had liked dating Eddie. After all, he was a star football
The truth was, she’d had a crush on him for years before and was floating on a cloud the whole time they dated. Until he shoved her off the cloud and sent her crashing to the dirt.
“I’ve thought a lot about you over the years,” he said.
There was no reply to that. She wouldn’t admit she thought of him from time to time, too.
“I can’t believe how badly I treated you.” He grabbed her hand.
She froze. Sparks shot up her arm and hit her square in the heart. Nothing like this had ever happened with Mike Ramos. Her lips parted. She suddenly longed to kiss Eddie Heath.
Maybe because he had matured early, he had never gotten very tall. He had made his way onto the basketball team by being an excellent player. Now he tended toward short and stocky, but, oh my goodness, he still had all those rippling muscles. And those bedroom eyes.
“Can I make it up to you sometime?”
“Uh . . . when?” Yes, yes, you can. Anytime.
“Tell you what. Here’s my number.” He let go of her hand and Chase felt like the lights had gone out. Her shoulders sagged.
Eddie wrote his cell number on the back of a business card and handed it to her.
“You’re . . . the owner of this place?”
“Yep, all mine.”
The card had the words “Health from the Heath Bar” embossed in shiny green letters, with “Edward Heath, Proprietor” beneath.
“What exactly is it?”
“A health food bar.”
“I guess we both own bars, then.”
Chase realized she had never had business cards made. “Come by some time and I’ll show you our place.”
“Our?”
“I own the business with my partner, Anna Larson.” She told him where Bar None was located.
Eddie flashed her a brilliant smile. “It’s a deal. Give me a call.”
Deal, she thought, weak in the knees.
• • •
“Am I forgiven?” Mike walked backward in front of Chase and Quincy. “I really had forgotten all about the convention. And it’s one of those things that I had to go to.”
Chase bent to Quincy’s level. “Do you think this harness is too tight?” Right this moment she didn’t want to talk about him standing her up. She woke up thinking about Eddie Heath, after all.
“It’s supposed to be snug,” the veterinarian said.
Chase was also a bit cranky because she didn’t actually want to walk Quincy in a harness. She was only doing it to get Anna off her back. She’d been harping on it for a long time. Anna thought Quincy should get some fresh air, but not by running off, as he usually did. She thought that if he got out on a nice leashed walk, he wouldn’t want to escape so much. Chase doubted that.
However, Mike Ramos, as Quincy’s vet, supported Anna. So Chase finally gave in, bought a cat harness at the pet store, returned it because it was too small, bought another one, and was now taking her cat on his maiden stroll. It was Sunday, the morning after the reunion, so Mike wasn’t working. Chase’s shop was open, but Anna had urged her to take the walk with Mike, knowing how upset she had been that she had to go alone to the gathering.
Chase took off her gloves and fiddled with the buckles a bit, not wanting the harness to be so tight on Quincy, then stood up and continued toward Marcy Park. They wended their way west on SE Seventh Street.
“Did you have a good time?” Mike asked. “You went with Julie, right?”
“Julie and Jay. I felt like a third wheel, if you want to know.” Their breath puffed clouds in the below-freezing air. The brilliant sun made the day crisp and bright, even though its warmth couldn’t be felt this time of year.
“But were some people you wanted to see there?”
“Yes, and some I didn’t.” And one person I thought I didn’t want to see, but really did—Eddie Heath. She wouldn’t mention Eddie, though.