The Golden Couple(55)
Come on, I think impatiently. How is Marissa going to fix her marriage if she can’t even manage to connect with her husband for a few minutes this week? It’s Wednesday, and I’m seeing the Bishops tomorrow night. If the two of them haven’t even been in a room together, it’ll be tougher to make progress in our session.
Marissa’s creative and thoughtful—I saw evidence of those qualities in her artfully arranged boutique, and in her social media posts, such as the Instagram snapshot of the Scary Berries she made for Bennett’s class Halloween party (strawberries decorated to look like pumpkins, ghosts, and monsters that must have taken a ridiculous amount of time to construct).
She needs to channel some of that ingenuity into this assignment.
What about a surprise visit to his office? I type. Bring him a special treat before you pick up Bennett.
Three dots indicate she’s replying. But the message doesn’t come through until Romeo and I are partway down the block.
The text that finally appears is a single word: okay. It makes me wonder what she erased before hitting SEND.
I pull Romeo away from the staring match he’s conducting with a squirrel, deciding that while Marissa visits her husband, I’ll pay a surprise visit of my own.
* * *
A few hours later, I walk down the sidewalk toward Coco, passing the same man on a bench Marissa walked by the other morning. He holds up a sign that makes me smile: SAVING UP TO BUY A BABY GIFT FOR HARRY AND MEGHAN.
I tuck a few dollars in his cup and continue, pausing in front of Coco to take in the charming window display: two mannequins appearing to enjoy a luxurious-looking picnic. Instead of pulling open the door, I peer through the glass. Polly is there—alone, just as I’d hoped. She’s standing in the middle of the store, staring at herself in a wall mirror as she ties a silky floral scarf around her neck. She frowns, unties the scarf, and reties it, this time a bit off-center.
It’s exactly how Marissa wore her scarf yesterday.
I watch as Polly gives her reflection a satisfied nod.
She must feel my eyes on her because she spins around. I immediately pull open the door, causing the bell to jingle.
Polly greets me with a wide smile. “Hi! Welcome to…” She squints. “Avery?”
She memorized my name—just as I did hers the moment I wrote it on my yellow notepad during my third session with the Bishops.
“How are you?” I walk deeper into Coco. No customers are milling around—just like the last time I visited—and for a moment, I wonder how Marissa turns a profit.
“I’m good, thanks. Um, Marissa isn’t here. She had to run out for a bit.”
“Oh, no worries. I just stopped by because I left my sunglasses here yesterday.”
“Are you sure?”
“Almost positive. Mind if I look around?” I don’t wait for permission as I glance behind the counter where customers are rung up, my eyes scanning the shelves, which hold tissue paper, bags imprinted with Coco’s logo, and glossy white boxes. “So, how long have you worked here?”
“Oh, just about a month.”
“Where are you from?”
“Um, Georgia originally.” She’s clearly uncomfortable with my intrusion—I see her flinch when I pull open a drawer that contains scissors, tape, and other odds and ends—but she doesn’t try to interfere. The air of authority I’ve put on is suppressing her desire to stop me.
“Hmm? No accent?” I move to a table and shift aside a mannequin head, wondering if it’s the one that frightened Polly on the night she slept at the shop.
“I only lived there until I was nine. Then my family moved to Milwaukee.”
I catch sight of the three-digit price tag on a simple woven bracelet. Now I get how Marissa turns a profit.
“What made you move to the East Coast?”
“School. I went to American University.”
“Ah.” I reply. Polly is too close to me; I can see the tiny freckles on her nose. I flash to the way she stood next to Matthew yesterday. At the time I read a strange intimacy into their body language, but now I’m wondering if she’s just someone who doesn’t get the concept of personal space.
I keep peppering her with questions while I examine the room.
Polly finally asserts herself. “I’m happy to scour the store for you, but maybe you left your sunglasses somewhere else?”
I give her a wide, innocent smile. “Let me just check this last area. So, have you always been interested in retail?”
“Uh, well, I’m—”
I finally hear the noise I’ve been waiting for: the jingle that means the front door is opening.
“Hell-o!” a woman calls out in a cheerful voice. “Marissa? Polly?” She steps into view, and it’s almost comical to watch the struggle play out on Polly’s face: she needs to greet the customer, but she doesn’t want to leave my side.
“I’m just going to use the restroom,” I tell Polly, walking toward a door that I assume leads into the private area of the shop. “Then I’ll get out of your hair.” I can’t resist adding, “Cute scarf, by the way.”
Polly finally detaches from me to do her job, and I swiftly survey the small back room. It’s filled with UPS boxes and racks of clothes and a long table with two chairs. On the wall are several hooks. A coat is hanging from one, with a leather purse looped beside it.