As in my other stories, the action in this one doesn't start for a while. If you're in a hurry, you may want to look elsewhere.
The snow began while I was foaming milk for my morning coffee. It fell from a windless sky and settled in perfect narrow ridges on the bare limbs of the trees outside my apartment. By the time I had showered and dressed for work, every twig and bark-wrinkle had acquired a sparkling white outline and become soft-edged and lovely.
I was already late, but I lingered by my window. The snowy street was so quiet that I could hear her heels clicking on the pavement as she passed beneath my window a few minutes later. A long, puffy down coat wrapped her from head to toe, hiding the shape of her body. Her elegant dark eyebrows were drawn tightly together, and strands of long black hair escaped from the edges of her scarf. She looked pale and freezing and achingly beautiful.
She walked by most weekday mornings β on her way to work, I supposed. Some days she'd be carrying a cup of coffee, enfolding it with both hands, trying to draw a little warmth from it. Other times she'd be late and hurrying. I'd first noticed her a month earlier, right after the first big winter storm had blown in, bringing a foot of snow and a dense overcast that didn't clear for weeks. I didn't know her name or where she lived or where she was headed every morning. I just thought of her as the snow girl.
The name seemed especially apt today. She moved rapidly down the silent street until she was only a grey silhouette, and then a vague, genderless shape merging into the snow-shrouded city.
* * *
My friend Frank called about six o'clock.
"Can you cook tonight?" he asked, an edge of panic in his voice.
"I
am
cooking tonight."
"No, I mean, can you cook for me? I've got someone coming over."
"Someone female?"
"Well, yes. I met her a few days ago and I invited her over for dinner."
"Why didn't you just ask her out? There are two hundred restaurants within a ten minute walk of your apartment."
"It's just that it's easier to get her to my place after dinner if she's already here."
I sighed. He had a point. "What time is she coming?"
"About eight."
"That's two hours from now. What have you got in the fridge?"
"Well, nothing really. I was thinking that you could pick something up on your way over."
I closed my eyes and rubbed my forehead. Frank and I had grown up together in a small upstate town, and now, almost twenty years later, we found ourselves living only a few blocks away from each other in the newly chic Brooklyn neighborhood of Cobble Hill. So what could I do?
"Okay, I'll be over in a bit. You owe me, Frank."
I packed a few pots and some other odds and ends into a gym bag and headed out. I picked up a couple of Dover sole fillets, and some leeks and French beans at the markets on Smith Street. It was going to have to be simple. The little shops where I bought the vegetables were part of my neighborhood's charm. Each was owned by a representative of a different country, as if to encourage me to try my hand at different cuisines.
Frank was tidying up when I arrived. He flashed me his trademark grin, the one that had gotten him through difficult times when his talent, diligence, or honesty had proved insufficient. It charmed women, young and old, and disarmed men who had ample reason to resent him. That smile had won him jobs over more qualified candidates and smoothed over the worst of his transgressions. Nor was I immune, though I kept trying. I skipped the pleasantries and started trimming beans, dicing shallots, and braising the leeks.
"Are you almost done?' Frank asked anxiously a few minutes later. "She'll be here soon."
I gave him a dark look and got the smile in return, toothy and charmingly lopsided as always. But tonight there were little wrinkles in the skin at the corner of his eyes, wrinkles that I couldn't remember being there in the past.
I stirred the beurre blanc sauce and didn't answer. But I
was
almost done. I poured the poaching liquid around the fish and arranged the beans.
"So tell me what to do," Frank said.
"What do you mean?"
"Well, I'm going to have to serve it somehow, right?"
I looked at him quizzically. Then I got it. "You mean that you wanted me to come here and prepare everything, but I'm not invited for dinner?"
"Well, yes, what did you think? How romantic would it be if you were around?"
I counted to ten mentally before answering, as my mother would have advised. There was simply no percentage in explaining proper behavior to Frank. "Okay, but you're going to wrap the leftovers for me. You'll notice that I bought three fillets."
"Hey, no problem."
"And I need my pots back." That seemed obvious, but I wasn't taking any chances. He'd borrowed a ski jacket from me once and then given it to Goodwill. "Tomorrow."
"Sure, drop by in the morning. I've got to leave early, but there's a key on top of the door jamb. Just let yourself in."
I thought about asking him to actually return the stuff to my apartment, but I knew that would never happen. So I just took deep breath and spent a minute explaining what to do with the fish and how to sauce the leeks.
Then he shooed me out the door. "Come on, I want her to think, well, you know ..."
"That you actually know how to cook?"
"Well, yes."
"You're an asshole, Frank."
He gave me the smile. Crow's feet. No doubt about it.
"You should say that like you mean it," he pointed out. "It's more effective."
"Whatever. Just don't overcook the fish, okay? Eight minutes, no more."
"Right, sure. Would you leave now, please?"
* * *
I spent the evening in my apartment catching up on some work while the snow drifted down in enormous flakes shaped like rowboats and the traffic sounds turned distant and indistinct.
The next morning I woke up craving an omelet. Of course I'd left the pan over at Frank's place. I sighed, threw on a jacket and trudged through the crust of new snow that had settled overnight. I felt around Frank's door jamb until I found the key. I opened the door, shuffled into the entryway and stopped dead.
Someone was in the kitchen. Not Frank; a young woman in a short satin robe. We stared at each other, both too surprised to speak for a moment. She had shoulder-length dark hair, tied back now, and pale skin and wide brown eyes.
It was the snow girl.
She recovered first. "Are you looking for Frank?"
Her voice had just the slightest hint of a Southern accent.