At any rate, it certainly does
not look like a Tower of Light, which is the
actual name of the sculpture. I pulled in front of a parking meter and looked over
at Margo. I caught her staring into the middle distance just for a moment, her
eyes blank, looking not at the Asparagus, but past it. It was the first time I
thought something might be wrong—not my-boyfriend-is-an-ass wrong, but
really
wrong. And I should have said something. Of course. I should have said
thing after thing after thing after thing. But I only said, “May I ask why you have
taken me to the Asparagus?”
She turned her head to me and shot me a smile. Margo was so beautiful that
even her fake smiles were convincing. “We gotta check on our progress. And the
best place to do that is from the top of the SunTrust Building.”
I rolled my eyes. “Nope. No. No way. You said no breaking and entering.”
“This isn’t breaking and entering. It’s just entering, because there’s an
unlocked door.”
“Margo, that’s ridiculous. Of c—”
“I will acknowledge that over the course of the evening there has been both
breaking and entering. There was entering at Becca’s house. There was breaking
at Jase’s house. And there will be entering here. But there has never been
simultaneous breaking and entering. Theoretically, the cops could charge us with
breaking, and they could charge us with entering, but they could not charge us
with breaking
and entering. So I’ve kept my promise.”
“Surely the SunTrust Building has, like, a security guard or whatever,” I said.
“They do,” she said, unbuckling her seat belt. “Of course they do. His name
is Gus.”
We walked in through the front door. Sitting behind a broad, semicircular desk
sat a young guy with a struggling goatee wearing a Regents Security uniform.
“What’s up, Margo?” he said.
“Hey, Gus,” she answered.
“Who’s the kid?”
WE ARE THE SAME AGE! I wanted to shout, but I let Margo talk for me.
“This is my colleague, Q. Q, this is Gus.”
“What’s up, Q?” asked Gus.
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