do at the time."
"Come to think of it, you were kind of shy, weren't you."
"I prefer the words 'quiet confidence,'" he answered with a wink, and she smiled.
The vegetables and crabs were ready about the same time.
"Be careful, they're hot,"
he said as he handed them to her, and they sat across from each other at the small
wooden table. Then, realizing the tea was Still on the counter, Allie stood and
brought it over. After putting some vegetables and bread on their plates, Noah
added a crab, and Allie sat for a moment, staring at it.
"It looks like a bug."
"A good bug, though," he said. "Here, let me show you how it's done."
He demonstrated quickly, making it look easy, removing the meat and putting it on
her plate.
Allie crushed the legs too hard the first time and the time after that, and had to
use her fingers to get the shells away from the meat. She felt clumsy at first,
worrying that he saw every mistake, but then she realized her own insecurity. He
didn't care about things like that. He never had.
"So, whatever happened to Fin?" she asked. It took a second for him to answer.
"Fin died in the war. His destroyer was torpedoed in forty‐three."
"I'm sorry," she said. "I know he was a good friend of yours."
His voice changed, a little deeper now.
"He was. I think of him a lot these days. I especially remember the last time I saw
him. I'd come home to say good‐bye before I enlisted, and we ran into each other
again. He was a banker here, like his daddy was, and he and I spent a lot of time
together over the next week. Sometimes I think I talked him into joining. I don't
think he would have, except that I was going to."
"That's not fair," she said, sorry she'd brought up the subject.
"You're right. I just miss him, is all." "I liked him, too. He made me laugh." "He
was always good at that."
She looked at him slyly. "He had a crush on me, you know."
"I know. He told me about it."
"He did? What did he say?"
Noah shrugged. "The usual for him. That he had to fight you off with a stick. That
you chased him constantly, that sort of thing."
She laughed quietly. "Did you believe him?" "Of course," he answered, "why
wouldn't I?"
"You men always stick together," she said as she reached across the table, poking
his arm with her finger. She went on. "So, tell me everything you've been up to since
I saw you last."
They started to talk then, making up for lost time. Noah talked about leaving New
Bern, about working in the shipyard and at the scrap yard in New Jersey. He spoke
fondly of Morris Goldman and touched on the war a little, avoiding most of the
details, and told her about his father and how much he missed him. Allie talked
about going to college, painting, and her hours spent volunteering at the hospital.
She talked about her family and friends and the charities she was involved with.
Neither of them brought up anybody they had dated since they'd last seen each
other.
Even Lon was ignored, and though both of them noticed the omission, neither
mentioned it. Afterward Allie tried to remember the last time she and Lon had
talked this way.
Although he listened well and they seldom argued, he was not the type of man to
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