I nodded, likeOf course. “Marching bands and walrus mustaches.”
Jake stroked his beard.
It was good to remember that night now, in the face of the looming bar mitzvah: The memory of it was something I hadn’t realized I’d held on to so tenderly. It had been fun. We had been friends. I suspected not that many women could look back on their first time so fondly, and I decided right then that I’d always be grateful for that one night, if nothing else.
“His mom worked for Planned Parenthood and he still knocked your friend up?”
I looked over. “Yep.”
“He was an idiot.”
“It was probably just a birth control malfunction.”
“Not for knocking her up. For cheating on you in the first place.”
Hearing that felt surprisingly good. I turned to meet Jake’s eyes. “Thanks.”
“Anybody who takes that kind of luck for granted deserves what he gets.”
I rubbed my eyes. “He got what he wanted.”
But Jake shook his head. “Nope.”
I frowned. “Nope?”
Jake shrugged. “Because you’re that kind of girl.”
“What kind?”
“The kind you never get over.”
I looked away.
Jake didn’t. “And now he’s invited you to the bastard’s bar mitzvah.”
“I don’t think people say ‘bastard’ anymore.”
“You know what I mean.”
“I think the baby wasn’t even technically a bastard, either, because of the shotgun wedding.”
“And you agreed to go.”
I nodded. “But then, as soon as I did, I regretted it.”
“Why?”
“Because now I have togo.”
Jake took a long, assessing look at me. “You’re going to surprise yourself and have a great time,” he declared. “I dare you to steal the ice sculpture.”
“All I want to do,” I said, “is go back to GiGi’s and watch bad television and take like three showers a day and eat ice cream straight from the carton. I don’t want to put on heels, or Spanx, or an underwire bra.”
Jake yawned. “I hear you, sister.”
I yawned, too. We’d talked too long. My elk-induced adrenaline had dissipated without my noticing it, and by the time it hit me that I was tired, I was so far past tired, I was downright sleepy. I looked over, my eyes only half open. “Maybe that was too much information about my underthings.”
“No such thing,” he said, closing his eyes.