Sofia looked at Lyric, who continued to be only mildly interested in the conversation. “That’s incredibly generous, but I’m sure your husband wouldn’t be happy about me monopolizing your time in the middle of his campaign.”
“Matt isn’t here,” Alesha said tersely. “And I think it’s an excellent idea. Another Black woman curating, and this one with actual ties to the community.” She glanced at Lyric. “An upgrade, if you ask me.”
Lyric’s smile finally faded, and Sofia’s eye twitched. Rachel pressed her lips together to suppress a laugh.
“It’ll be a tight deadline,” Sofia said, focusing on Rachel. “The pieces are still in the planning stages, and the artist is Circe Gavin. Have you heard of her? She’s incredibly in demand and can be a bit… eccentric. But with your experience, I’m sure you can handle it.”
“Of course I’ve heard of Circe,” Rachel said, with a smug chuckle that made her hate herself a little. She made a mental note to google the name later. “The timeline won’t be a problem. I’ll make it my top priority.”
Sofia squeezed Rachel’s hands again, tighter this time. A warning. “I’m sure you will. Now if you’ll excuse me. I think my husband has a speech planned.”
Lyric drifted away once Sofia left. Alesha tried to grab Rachel’s arm again but pulled back when she flinched. Her aunt looked worried. As if she had the right.
“Watch yourself,” Alesha said. “Sofia Cárdenas is a venomous snake. Be careful she doesn’t bite you.”
Nathan’s mother once told him that she could always tell when it was time to leave a party by how much the temperature had risen in the room. The longer people talked and the more they drank, the more stifling it would get. Make an exit as soon as you started to feel uncomfortable, because, according to Sofia, “that’s when it doesn’t feel like a party anymore.” Using her logic, Nathan should have left five minutes after he’d arrived. Then the fight with Joe never would have happened.
He was typing out an apology as he walked through the foyer and nearly ran into someone’s back. His father turned around and looked surprised to see him. Beto wore his usual black tux with a green tie that matched Sofia’s dress. He glanced down at Nathan’s clothes, checking for anything offensive. “We’re about to do the toast. You boys should stand with us.”
The crowd had migrated to where his mother stood on the stairs. She stared down at their upturned faces, like royalty greeting her adoring subjects.
“I can’t stay,” Nathan said. “But tell her I said happy anniversary.”
Beto fell silent, and Nathan knew what would come next. An insult. Cold ambivalence. Whatever it was, he’d take it. He was too raw from arguing with Joe to do anything else.
“Nathaniel,” Beto said. He stepped closer and lowered his voice. “What I said at dinner. I shouldn’t have—” He grimaced and frowned, frustrated. “I want more for you. I always thought it would happen sooner, I guess. Before I…” Beto looked away, toward Sofia. “She looks good, doesn’t she? Stuff like this makes her shine.” His eyes softened. “Like the sun.”
Nathan studied his father’s face. He tried to see past Beto’s wistful smile to the motive behind his confession. Was it guilt? Regret? Nathan would take anything that wasn’t disappointment.
Beto clapped a hand on Nathan’s shoulder and gently squeezed. Then he left to join his wife. Nathan spun blindly in the opposite direction, into a nearby hallway. He caught a glimpse of a woman slipping into his mother’s office, then stopped short and locked eyes with Matt Abbott.
Matt seemed scrawnier in person than in his photos, with ruddy skin and wire-rim glasses that made him look like someone who spent most of his time bathed in the blue light of a computer monitor. This was the guy who had Rachel falling apart at the drive-in and beating up washers at the laundromat? This guy, with a cowlick in his hair.
“Hey there uh…” Matt’s eyes drifted to Nathan’s chest, briefly searching, and then flicked back up again. “Young man. Will you leave an empty tray out here for dirty glasses?” Matt pointed to a spot on the floor next to Sofia’s library. “My friend and I would rather not be disturbed.”
Nathan was tempted to ask how he’d done it. How did this pompous hobbit persuade a woman like Rachel to be his wife? But Matt’s eyes were bloodshot and boozy, like he’d already started whatever private party he intended to have behind closed doors. Nathan nodded and said, “No problem,” so he could leave. Matt raised his glasses and strolled toward the office with the awkward swagger of an incel who was finally about to get laid.