Page 108 of Second Pairing


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“Calm down, Boomer.”

Boomer? I was forty-three, not eighty. Or whatever age it took to be a baby boomer.

He tossed his camera into the passenger seat, started the engine, and peeled away down the street.

I didn’t relax until the SUV disappeared around the corner. When I got back to the car, both girls were watching me with wide eyes.

“Was that a photographer?” Mia asked as I opened her door.

“Yeah,” I said gently. “But he’s gone now.”

“They know where we live?” Mia’s voice cracked. “That’s like … beyond creepy.”

“Apparently.” I looked at Margot, who’d gone very pale. “You okay, mon cœur?”

She nodded, but her hands were trembling.

“Come on,” I said. “Let’s get inside. We’ve got a surprise to set up, remember?”

Inside, I made the girls swear not to text Lila about the stereo. “It has to be a surprise.”

“We won’t tell,” Mia promised. “Right, Margot?”

“I won’t say anything,” Margot said quietly. She still seemed shaken from seeing the photographer.

“Hey.” I crouched down to her level. “That man is gone. And I’m not going to let anyone scare you, okay?”

She nodded, managing a small smile. “I can’t wait to show Lila what we got her.”

“Same,” I said. “Now let’s get to work. I bet she’ll be home any minute.”

The girls helped me carry in the records and bags. I brought the turntable in last, setting it on the kitchen island.

“All right,” I said. “Where do you think we should put this?”

The girls looked around like a committee preparing for a summit.

“We can’t just plop it anywhere,” Mia said. “Mom’s kind of a perfectionist about stuff like this.”

Margot pointed toward a low cabinet against the far wall. “What about there? That seems just right.”

“Good eye,” I said. “Great spot.”

“But we should say it’s temporary,” Mia added. “She might have an idea of where she wants it.”

“Definitely temporary,” I agreed.

They helped me set everything up, and, when I placed the needle on the first record, Cécile McLorin Salvant’s voice filled the room—low and velvet-smooth.

Mia grabbed Margot’s hand. “Come on, let’s dance.”

I took photos on my phone of them twirling around the living room, giggling and breathless.

A text came through, interrupting my photography. I opened it, hoping it was Lila telling me when she’d be home.

But it was from my best friend … and others.

Dorian