each waiting for the other one to make the first move.
“That’s true,” David conceded finally.
Ella nodded with relief, though she felt a slight flush of shame at her audacity, because at that moment
she had another idea, a bolder one.
“Yes, it is awfully early. In fact,” she said, “why don’t I go
now?”
The thought of going to Boston tomorrow morning and having breakfast with Aziz was enough to make
her heart beat faster. Yet she
wanted to see Aziz right away, now rather than tomorrow, which all of a
sudden felt too far away. It was almost a two-hour drive from her house to Boston, but she didn’t mind.
He had come all the way from Amsterdam for her. She could certainly drive two hours.
“I could be in Boston before ten tonight. And tomorrow I could be at the agency early enough to see
Michelle before the meeting.”
A shadow of agony crossed David’s face. It seemed an eternity before he could say anything. In that
long moment, his eyes were the eyes of a man who had neither the strength nor the emotion left in him to
stop his wife from going to another man.
“I can drive to Boston tonight, and stay in our apartment,” Ella said, seemingly to her children but in
truth only to David. That was her way of assuring her husband there
would be no physical contact
between her and whomever he assumed she was going to meet.
David rose from his chair with a glass of wine in his hand. Giving a sweeping gesture in the direction
of the door, he smiled at Ella with assurance and added, a bit too eagerly, “All right, honey, if that’s what
you want, you should go now.”
“But, Mom, I thought you were going to help me with math this evening,” Avi objected.
Ella felt her face burn. “I know, dear. Why don’t we do that tomorrow?”
“Oh, let her go.” Orly turned to her brother teasingly. “You don’t need your mama by your side all the
time. When are you going to grow up?”
Avi frowned but said nothing further, Orly was supportive, Jeannette didn’t care one way or the other,
and just like that, Ella grabbed her cell phone and dashed upstairs. As soon as she closed the bedroom
door, she threw herself onto the bed and text-messaged Aziz.
I can’t believe you’re here. I’ll be at the Onyx in two hours.
She stared at her phone in growing panic as she watched her message being sent. What was she doing?
But there was no time to think. If she was going to regret this evening, which she suspected she might, she
could regret it later. Now she needed to hurry. It took her twenty minutes to jump into the shower, blow-
dry her hair, brush her teeth, choose a dress, take it off, try another dress, then another, comb her hair, put
on some makeup, look for the small earrings Grandma Ruth had given her on her eighteenth birthday, and
change her dress again.
Taking in a deep breath, she put on some perfume. Eternity by Calvin Klein. The bottle had been
waiting in the bathroom cabinet for ages. David had never been fond of perfume. He said women should
smell
like women, not like vanilla beans or cinnamon sticks. But European men might have a different
take on this, Ella assumed. Wasn’t perfume a big thing in Europe?
When she was done, she inspected the woman in the mirror. Why hadn’t he told her he was coming? If
she’d known, she would have gone to a hairdresser, gotten a manicure, had a facial, and perhaps tried a
new hairstyle. What if Aziz didn’t like her? What if there was no chemistry between them and he regretted
coming all the way to Boston?
All at once she came to her senses. Why did she want to change her looks? What difference would it
make whether there was chemistry between them or not? Any adventure with this man was bound to be