โHow are you so good at pinball?โ Henry demands as she racks up points.
Addie isnโt sure. The truth is, sheโs never played before, and itโs taken her a few times to get the hang of the game, but now sheโs found her stride.
โIโm a fast learner,โ she says, just before the ball slips between her paddles.
โHIGH SCORE!โย announces the game in a mechanical drone. โWell done,โ calls Henry over the noise. โBetter own your victory.โ
The screen flashes, waiting for her to enter her name. Addie hesitates. โLike this,โ he says, showing her how to toggle the red box between the
letters. He steps aside, but when she tries, the cursor doesnโt move. The light just flashes over the letterย A,ย mocking.
โIt doesnโt matter,โ she says, backing away, but Henry steps in.
โNew machines, vintage problems.โ He bumps it with his hip, and the square goes solid around theย A. โThere we go.โ
Heโs about to step aside, but Addie catches his arm. โEnter my name while I grab the next round.โ
Itโs easier now that the place is full. She swipes a couple of beers from the edge of the counter, weaves back through the crowd before the bartender even turns around. And when she returns, drinks in hand, the first things she sees are the letters, flashing in bright red on the screen.
ADI.
โI didnโt know how to spell your name,โ he says.
And itโs wrong, but it doesnโt even matter; nothing matters but those three letters, glowing back at her, almost like a stamp, a signature.
โSwap,โ says Henry, hands resting on her hips as he guides her over to his machine. โLetโs see if I can beat that score.โ
She holds her breath and hopes that no one ever will.
They play until they run out of quarters and beer, until the place is too crowded for comfort, until they truly canโt hear each other over the ring and clash of the games and the shouts of the other people, and then they spill out of the dark arcade. They go back through the too-bright laundromat, and then out onto the street, still bubbling with energy.
Itโs dark out now, the sky overhead a low canopy of dense gray clouds, promising rain, and Henry shoves his hands in his pockets, looks up and down the street. โWhat now?โ
โYou want me to choose?โ
โThis is an equal opportunity date,โ he says, rocking from heel to toe. โI provided the first chapter. Itโs your turn.โ
Addie hums to herself, looking around, summoning a mental picture of the neighborhood.
โGood thing I found my wallet,โ she says, patting her pocket. She didnโt, of course, but she did liberate a few twenties from the illustratorโs kitchen drawer before she left that morning. Judging by the recent profile of him inย The Times,ย and the reported size of his latest book deal, Gerald wonโt miss it.
โThis way.โ Addie takes off down the sidewalk.
โHow far are we going?โ he asks fifteen minutes later, when theyโre still walking.
โI thought you were a New Yorker,โ she teases.
But his strides are long enough to match her speed, and five minutes later they round the corner, and there it is. The Nitehawk lights up the darkening street, white bulbs tracing patterns on the brick faรงade, the wordย CINEMAย picked out in red neon light across its front.
Addie has been to every movie theater in Brooklyn, the massive multiplexes with their stadium seats and the indie gems with worn-out sofas, has witnessed every mixture of new releases and nostalgia.
And the Nitehawk is one of her favorites.
She scans the board, buys two tickets to a showing ofย North by Northwest,ย since Henry says heโs never seen it, then takes his hand and leads them down the hall into the dark.
There are little tables between each seat with plastic menus and slips of paper to write your order on. Sheโs never been able to order anything, of courseโthe pencil marks dissolve, the waiter forgets about her as soon as he is out of sightโso she leans in to watch Henry fill out their card, thrilled by the simple potential of the act.
The previews ramble on as the seats fill up around them, and Henry takes her hand, their fingers lacing together like links in a chain. She glances over at him, painted in the low theater light. Black curls. High cheekbones. The cupidโs bow of his mouth. The flicker of resemblance.
It is hardly the first time sheโs seen Luc echoed in a human face. โYouโre staring,โ whispers Henry under the sound of the previews.
Addie blinks. โSorry.โ She shakes her head. โYou look like someone I used to know.โ
โSomeone you liked, I hope.โ
โNot really.โ He shoots her a look of mock affront, and Addie almost laughs. โIt was more complicated than that.โ
โLove, then?โ
She shakes her head. โNoโฆโ But her delivery is slower, less emphatic. โBut he was very nice to look at.โ
Henry laughs as the lights dim, and the movie starts.
A different waiter appears, crouching low as he delivers their food, and she plucks fries from the plate one by one, sinking into the comfort of the film. She glances over to see if Henryโs enjoying himself, but heโs not even looking at the screen. His face, all energy and light an hour before, is a rictus of tension. One knee bounces restlessly.
She leans in, whispers. โYou donโt like it?โ
Henry flashes a hollow smile. โItโs fine,โ he says, shifting in his seat. โJust a little slow.โ
Itโs Hitchcock,ย she wants to say, but instead she whispers, โItโs worth it, I promise.โ
Henry twists toward her, brow folding. โYouโve already seen it?โ Of course Addie has seen it.
First, in 1959, at a theater in Los Angeles, and then in the โ70s, a double feature with his last film,ย Family Plot,ย and then again, a few years back, right in Greenwich Village, during a retrospective. Hitchcock has a way of being resurrected, fed back into the cinema system at regular intervals.
โYeah,โ she whispers back. โBut I donโt mind.โ
Henry says nothing, but he clearly does mind. His knee goes back to bouncing, and a few minutes later heโs up and out of the seat, walking out into the lobby.
โHenry,โ she calls, confused. โWhat is it? Whatโs wrong?โ
She catches up with him as he throws open the theater door and steps out onto the curb. โSorry,โ he mumbles. โNeeded some air.โ
But thatโs obviously not it. Heโs pacing. โTalk to me.โ
His steps slow. โI just wish youโd told me.โ โTold you what?โ
โThat youโd already seen it.โ
โButย youย hadnโt,โ she says. โAnd I didnโt mind seeing it again. I like seeing things again.โ
โI donโt,โ he snaps, and then deflates. โIโm sorry.โ He shakes his head. โIโm sorry. This isnโt your problem.โ He runs his hands through his hair. โI justโโ He shakes his head, and turns to look at her, green eyes glassy in the dark. โDo you ever feel like youโre running out of time?โ
Addie blinks and it is three hundred years ago and she is back on her knees on the forest floor, hands driving down into the mossy earth as the church bells ring behind her.
โI donโt mean in that normal,ย time fliesย way,โ Henryโs saying. โI mean feeling like its surging by so fast, and you try to reach out and grab it, you try to hold on, but it just keeps rushing away. And every second, thereโs a little less time, and a little less air, and sometimes when Iโm sitting still, I start to think about it, and when I think about it, I canโt breathe. I have to get up. I have to move.โ
He has his arms wrapped around himself, fingers digging into his ribs.
Itโs been a long time since Addie felt that kind of urgency, but she remembers it well, remembers the fear, so heavy she thought it might crush her.
Blink and half your life is gone.
I do not want to die as Iโve lived.
Born and buried in the same ten-meter plot.
Addie reaches out and grabs his arm. โCome on,โ she says, pulling him down the street. โLetโs go.โ
โWhere?โ he asks, and her hand drops to his, and holds on tight. โTo find you something new.โ