The Golden Couple(53)
Marissa has to admit that Polly is a good sales associate; her memory for detail is impressive.
One would think Polly had a lot of experience in retail, but when Marissa hired her, Polly’s résumé listed only one sales job, at an Anthropologie in Bethesda. Her other position had been as a nanny for a family with three girls in Potomac.
So why did Polly’s roommate think Marissa was Polly’s boss at a real estate company? Her roommate could have muddied the details—there was the loud Grateful Dead music and the aroma of pot wafting from the house—but still, the inconsistency nags at Marissa.
After Polly finishes ringing up her customer, Marissa approaches and puts a hand on Polly’s back, feeling the sharp edge of her shoulder blade.
“I’m sorry,” Marissa begins.
“No.” Polly spins around to face Marissa. Her fair complexion is mottled with red splotches, and she can barely meet Marissa’s eyes. “I’m the one who should be apologizing! I lied to you. I don’t really have a mouse problem.”
Marissa feigns surprise. “Oh?”
Polly traces an invisible line across the wood floor with the tip of her shoe. “The truth is, it’s boy trouble. My roommate, Keith…”
Was Keith the one who shouted, Is it the pizza guy? Marissa wonders.
“Long story short, I like him. But he’s not into me. He has this new girlfriend and I—I just needed a few nights away.”
Marissa nods. When she was Polly’s age, she was on the cusp of being engaged to Matthew, but she recalls the angst her friends felt over guys back then.
“Why didn’t you tell me the truth?” Marissa asks quietly.
“I guess I was embarrassed.” Polly swallows hard. “I mean, you’ve probably never been rejected by anyone. Look at you! You’ve got this gorgeous husband and a secret admirer.”
Not so secret, Marissa thinks, her stomach clenching. How is it that Polly can have Marissa softening in sympathy, then tensing in annoyance a moment later? She and Polly simply don’t gel; they never have.
Marissa clears her throat, then adds, as if it were an afterthought, “Polly? Your roommate said something strange.… She mentioned she thought you worked at a real estate company?”
Polly shakes her head. “Yeah, she gets a little confused sometimes, especially when she parties.… She’s thinking of a place I temped at for a couple weeks.”
Marissa supposes Polly’s explanation makes sense.
“So we’re good?”
Marissa nods. “We are.”
One task on her to-do list is complete, so Marissa heads to the back room to research stationery distributors. Several customers have recently asked if Coco has cards to go along with the gifts they have purchased. Marissa scrolls through various websites, bookmarking a few possibilities. She sends emails to the suppliers, inquiring about pricing and availability, then considers Avery’s instruction to think of a genuine compliment for Matthew. It shouldn’t be hard to do, but Marissa wants her words to come from the heart. The catch is, with Matthew working late all week, when will she find the right moment to deliver them?
She texts Avery about her dilemma and is reading Avery’s reply when Polly pokes in her head. “Hey, I just had a thought! I wonder if you checked the security camera footage if you could see who left that note.”
Drop it! Marissa wants to yell. “I already looked yesterday. It was too dark to see anyone clearly.”
Now they’re even, Marissa thinks. She and Polly have each lied to the other.
“Okay, although I wonder…?”
Before Polly can say another word, Marissa interjects, “Hey, you know what would be really helpful? Could you run out and get us some more packing tape? Maybe grab us a couple coffees, too—my treat.”
Marissa craves the caffeine—she was too rushed to gulp more than a few sips this morning, and her head still feels a little foggy—but she craves a break from Polly even more desperately.
As soon as Polly exits the store, Marissa begins riffling through the files in her desk trying to find the paperwork for the alarm system she had installed years ago. She’d completely forgotten about the system until Polly had brought it up.
As with most discussions involving technology, Marissa zoned out while the nice man conducting the installation explained the system to her in mind-numbing detail. She’s never once looked at Coco’s video footage, and she can’t even recall the name of the alarm company. After sifting through files containing her company’s taxes, vendor bills, and inspirational tear sheets, she finally finds the Visionex manual in a thick folder labeled Miscellaneous, which serves as a catchall for all the papers Marissa suspects she will never look at again, but feels as if she should save.
The red-and-black logo seems familiar, and Marissa thinks she recalls seeing the app on her phone, sandwiched between Bennett’s Angry Birds and Minecraft game apps. Sure enough, it’s there, and she easily logs on using their family’s catchall password, the four numbers on a phone’s keypad that correspond to the name of Bennett’s gecko, Sam B (B for “Bishop”). The app is surprisingly user-friendly. All she has to do is select the date and scroll through the footage. She starts with Monday at 6:00 P.M.—closing time for the shop—and leans back in her chair as she stares at the image of Coco’s front door.