“Peter, did you say something about wanting to go camping?” he said, casting Carol a defiant look. “James and I were thinking of heading for the Washington coastline this coming weekend and thought you and your mother might like to go with us.”
“We are?” James asked, delighted and surprised.
Peter’s eyes widened with excitement. “Camping? You’re inviting Mom and me to go camping?”
At the mention of the word camping, Carol opened her car door and vaulted out. Her eyes narrowed on Alex as if to declare a foul and charge him a penalty.
“Are you two free this weekend?” Alex asked with a practiced look of innocence, formally extending the invitation. The ball was in her court, and he was interested in seeing how she volleyed this one.
“Yes,” Peter shouted. “We’re interested.”
“No,” Carol said at the same moment. “We already have plans.”
“We do?” her son moaned. “Come on, Mom, Mr. Preston just offered to take us camping with him and James. What could possibly be more important than that?”
“I wanted to paint the living room.”
“What? Paint the living room? I don’t believe it.” Peter slapped his hands against his thighs and threw back his head. “You know how I feel about camping,” he whined.
“Give your mother time to think it over,” Alex urged, confident that Carol would change her mind or that Peter would do it for her. “We can talk about it tomorrow evening.”
James gave Peter the okay signal, and feeling extraordinarily proud of himself, Alex led the way to his van, handing his son the keys.
“You’re going to let me drive?” James asked, sounding more than a little stunned. “Voluntarily?”
“Count your blessings, boy, and drive.”
“Yes, sir!”
Carol was furious with Alex. He’d played a faultless game, and she had to congratulate him on his fine closing move. All day she’d primed herself for the way she was going to act when she saw him again. She’d allowed their relationship to progress much further than she’d ever intended, and it was time to cool things down.
With her mother lighting candles in church and having heart-to-heart talks with God, things had gotten completely out of hand. Angelina barely complained anymore that Alex wasn’t Catholic, and worse, not Italian. It was as if those two prerequisites no longer mattered.
What Carol hadn’t figured on was the rush of adrenaline she’d experienced when Alex pulled into the school parking lot. She swore her heart raced faster than any of the runners on the track. She’d needed every ounce of determination she possessed not to toss aside the magazine she’d planted in the car and run to him, bury her face in his chest and ask him to explain what was happening to her.
Apparently Alex had read her perfectly. He didn’t appear at all concerned about her lack of welcome. That hadn’t even fazed him. All the arguments she’d amassed had been for naught. Then at the last possible minute he’d introduced the subject of this camping trip, in what she had to admire was a brilliant move. Her chain of resistance was only as strong as the weakest link. And her weakest link was Peter.
Grudgingly she had to admire Alex.
“Mom,” Peter cried, restless as a first grader in the seat beside her. “We’re going to talk about it, aren’t we?”
“About the camping trip?”
“It’s the chance of a lifetime. The Washington coast—I’ve heard it’s fabulous—”
“We’ve got plans.”
“To paint the living room? We could do that any old time!”
“Peter, please.”
He was silent for a minute or so. The he asked, “Do you remember when I was eleven?”
Here it comes, Carol mused darkly. “I remember,” she muttered, knowing it would’ve been too much to expect him not to drag up the lowest point of her life as a mother.
“We were going camping then, too, remember?”
He said remember as though it was a dirty word, one that would get him into trouble.
“You promised me an overnight camping trip and signed us up for an outing through the Y? But when we went to the meeting you got cold feet.”
“Peter, they gave us a list of stuff we were supposed to bring, and not only did I not have half the things on the list, I didn’t even know what they were.”
“You could have asked,” Peter cried.
“It was more than that.”
“Just because we were going to hike at our own pace? They said we’d get a map. We could’ve found the camp, Mom, I know we could have.”
Carol had had visions of wandering through the woods for days on end with nothing more than a piece of paper that said she should head east—and she had the world’s worst sense of direction. If she could get lost in a shopping mall, how would she ever find her way through dense forest?
“That wasn’t the worst part,” Peter murmured. “Right there in the middle of the meeting you leaned over and asked me what it would cost to buy your way out of the trip.”
“You said you wouldn’t leave for anything less than a laser tag set,” Carol said, tormented by the unfairness of it all. The toy had been popular and expensive at the time and had cost her a pretty penny. But her son had conveniently forgotten that.
“I feel like I sold my soul that day,” Peter said with a deep sigh.
“Peter, honestly!”
“It wasn’t until then that I realized how much I was missing by not having a dad.”
The kid was perfecting the art of guilt.