“That’s so kind,” said Anna. “And I’ve always been told you’re a no-nonsense kind of person.”
“Oh, I am!” Matilda said, as Jake asked the waiter for whatever they were having. “But only in the office. That’s my secret. They’d call me the Jackal, but the nickname’s already taken. It’s not that I love to fight, per se; I just love to fight for my clients. Because I love my clients. And in this case, I’m happy to say, I also love their brand-new spouses.” She lifted her glass to the two of them. “I am so delighted, Anna. I don’t know where you came from, but I’m glad you’re here.”
The two of them clinked. Jake lifted his water to join them.
“She comes from Idaho,” he said helpfully. “A small town—”
“Yeah, very boring,” said Anna, touching his leg under the table. “I wish I’d grown up in Seattle, like you. The minute I got there, for college, I was just so …
“And the
“And the
“Not to mention the music, if you were into that,” Matilda said. “Which I wasn’t. I could never rock a flannel shirt. But there was real excitement around it.”
“And the water. And the ferries. And the sunsets over the harbor.”
The two of them looked at each other, evidently sharing a single rapturous moment.
“Tell me about you, Anna,” Jake’s agent said, and for most of the evening they talked about her years on Whidbey, and then at the radio station, where she’d made it her mission to get
“I’ll get in touch with him tomorrow,” Anna confirmed. “I’ve been reading his books since college. This is a thrill.”
“He’d be unbelievably lucky to get you. And you won’t put up with his mansplaining.”
Anna grinned. “Thanks to Randy Johnson, king of mansplainers, I will not.”
It was not unpleasant, listening to the two of them, but it was also novel. This dinner was the first time since he’d met Matilda, three years earlier, that the sole or at least disproportionately dominant topic of their conversation wasn’t Jacob Finch Bonner. Only when it was time for dessert did Matilda appear to remember he was there, and she marked this recognition by asking when revisions on the new novel would be done.
“Soon,” said Jake, immediately wishing they could go back to talking about Seattle.
“He’s working his tail off,” Anna said. “I can tell, every day when I get home. He’s so stressed out.”
“Well, given everything, I’m not surprised,” said Matilda.
Anna turned to him with a quizzical expression.
“Second novels,” he said shortly. “I mean, fourth novels, technically, but since no one ever heard of me before
“No, no,” Matilda said, wordlessly accepting her coffee from the waiter. “Don’t think about that. If I could only get my clients to stop worrying about their careers they’d write twice as many books and be a lot happier in general. You wouldn’t believe how much therapy there is in these relationships,” she said, directing this to Anna as if Jake—the subject of the theoretical therapy—were not right there at the table with them. “I’m not licensed! I took Intro Psych at Princeton, and I kid you not, that was the extent of my training. But the fragile egos I’m apparently responsible for! I mean, not your husband, but some of them … if they send me something to read and I don’t get back to them for a few days because it’s five hundred pages long or it’s the weekend or I happen to have other clients who are in the middle of auctions or winning the National Book Award or leaving their spouses and running off with their research assistants, God forbid! They’re on the phone to me with a knife at the wrist. Of course,” she said, perhaps hearing herself, “I adore my clients. Every one of them, even the tough ones, but some people make things so hard for themselves.
Anna nodded sagely. “I know how tough it must have been in the beginning, for Jake. Before you were involved and
“Thanks, honey,” said Jake. He felt as if he was interrupting them.
“I’m proud of him too. Especially these last months.”
Again, Anna turned to him with a confused look.
“Oh, it’s all fine,” he heard himself say. “It’ll pass.”
“I told you so,” Matilda said.
“I’ll get the book done. And then I’ll write another book.”