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Jack With a Twist bm-2 Page 5
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As we pull up to the front door, I see Jack standing outside, waiting for us. Even though he’s over six feet tall, he looks like a little boy against the massive fourteen foot double doors. They’re carved out of a rich mahogany that is a striking contrast to the whitewashed brick that covers the rest of the house. My father drives around the courtyard circle to pull right up to the front of the house, but then my mother complains that it is rude to park right in front of someone’s house, so we drive around the circle two or three times until my mother is happy with the placement of where my father has parked the car. Jack’s sisters and their husbands haven’t arrived yet, so there is no way to gauge where we should park. But the grounds are landscaped to the hilt, so I consider all of this driving in circles to be a nice opportunity to take a look around at the beautiful trees and sculptures adorning the property.
Hopping out of the car the moment it stops, I fly up the steps and into Jack’s arms.
“Nervous?” he whispers into my ear as we hug. I can smell his aftershave, and it goes down my spine.
“Not at all,” I say, running my fingers through his shaggy brown hair, “What do I have to be nervous about?”
“We come bearing gifts!” my father bellows, the thick Brooklyn accent of his youth ever-present, as we take off our coats in the foyer. It is a vast entranceway with a beautiful antique table as its focal point, a floral arrangement climbing four feet high in an Hermes vase right in the middle. Servants materialize from out of nowhere to whisk away our coats and then disappear just as quickly as they arrived. My high heels make more noise than I intend as I walk along the cool, ivory marble that covers the entranceway floor, and I begin walking on the balls of my feet in an effort to make less noise.
Jack’s mother, Joan, comes floating into the foyer, looking impeccable, as usual. She’s dressed in the sort of thing you’d imagine Jackie O, in her Jacqueline Kennedy years, wearing for a simple evening of entertaining at home: black high-waisted palazzo pants and a crisp white shirt with French cuffs. She’s even got her thick dark brown hair styled just like Jackie’s, shoulder length with just the right blend of subtle movement and helmet head. I can see a smile cross my mother’s lips as she winks at my father and I know that at this precise second, she is thinking that she does not have to worry about the mother of the groom upstaging the mother of the bride. You see, she has this thing about high-waisted palazzo pants. She thinks that only women who have something to hide (read: fat thighs) wear them.
She often encourages me to wear high-waisted palazzo pants.
As I kiss Joan hello, the first thing I notice is that she is wearing the pair of Manolo Blahniks that I wanted to buy last month. This realization creeps me out a bit and I wonder if there are any other strange similarities between Joan and me that will mean that Jack is a total mama’s-boy freak.
My mother is wearing a form-fitting black shift dress, her best set of pearls, and black pumps with a kitten heel. Am I the only one who didn’t get the dress-like-Jackie-O memo today? Are Jack’s sisters going to show up dressed for Camelot, too?
I, instead, am dressed like Audrey, with a big ballerina skirt and a matching wrap sweater. It makes me giggle when I see that the crimson tie that Jack’s wearing with his navy sports jacket and gray trousers matches my ensemble exactly. Not even married yet and already we think exactly alike! The meeting of the parents? For a couple like us, that’s no problem! Tonight’s going to be a piece of cake.
“You shouldn’t have,” Jack’s mother says, as she reaches out for the package my father is holding. My father and I had a huge fight regarding the package he is holding. When it comes to a hostess gift, my father seems to think that nothing says “Welcome to the family” like a nice cut of beef tenderloin. I tried explaining to him, to no avail, that giving your future in-laws raw meat was inappropriate, even if you are a kosher butcher.
In fact, giving raw meat as a gift is never appropriate in any situation, an argument which my father sharply refuted. (“It is never inappropriate to give raw meat as a gift. Never.”) I explained that there is nothing that is festive or celebratory about raw foodstuff, even if you did lovingly pick out each cut of meat. It is simply not done in polite society.
Especially when you’re going to meet your future in-laws for the first time.
Which is why I have a bouquet of white roses and lilies in my hand, which I place firmly in Jack’s mother’s other hand in a vain attempt to distract her from the packet of E. coli that my father has just given her.
We all hug and kiss awkwardly and make the introductions as Jack’s father, Edward, walks into the foyer. As my mother curtsies and calls Jack’s father “Your Honor,” I try to laugh and pretend that she’s joking. Since she’s not laughing herself, it’s a tough sell. Jack sees what I’m doing and begins laughing himself.
See why we’re so perfect for each other?
“So,” my father says, “open it! I have a feeling you’re going to want to open what I brought you right away.”
“How sweet,” Joan says with a smile.
“I brought flowers!” I call out, in a pathetic effort to distract Jack’s mother. But, there’s no fighting it. No matter what I do or say, she’s about to open the present.
“This is very interesting wrapping,” she says, as she puts a perfectly manicured finger underneath the tape that holds the butcher paper together.
“Don’t you want to look at the flowers first?” I say in desperation. “They’re white lilies! Your favorite!”
She looks up at me for a second, wondering, no doubt, why I’m pushing the flowers on her like one of those urchins who accost you in the streets of Paris, but the fact of the matter is that I just do not want her to open that package. There has got to be some way to distract her. Maybe I should just grab Jack and kiss him passionately and everyone will be so charmed by our young love that they will drop what they are doing (or opening, as the case may be) and forget all about my father’s hostess gift. Or maybe I could hit the fire alarm and get everyone out of the house quickly. But then I guess that sprinklers would go off and that would, like, totally mess up my hair and makeup. And, anyway, pretending to set the house on fire the first time your parents come to your future in-laws’ house is probably not the best way to make a first impression.
I turn my face away as Joan opens the package and the meat almost falls onto the floor as she looks up in horror.
Why, oh why, couldn’t I have just been orphaned at birth like other kids? Life can be so unfair sometimes.
“Oh, my goodness,” Jack’s mother says, looking somewhat faint, “it’s raw meat.”
“That’s my best cut of beef tenderloin I’ve got there for you,” my father says, beaming.
“How very kind,” Joan says, as she passes off the red slab to a servant who appears out of nowhere.
“I’ll help you get it on the barbecue,” my father suggests. “I’ve taken the liberty of pre-seasoning it, so we can toss that baby right onto the grill.”
“Thank you, Barry,” Jack’s mother says, “but the chefs have already prepared dinner for us this evening.”
“Oh,” my father says, looking like a little boy who’s been chosen last for teams during gym class.
“Anyhow,” Joan stage whispers to my father, “I’m a vegetarian.”
“You don’t say?” my father says and looks at my mother. My father doesn’t trust vegetarians. Especially vegetarians who are wearing six-hundred-dollar leather shoes.
After the dust on Tenderloingate has settled, we sit down at a mammoth table in the Solomon’s formal dining room where we learn that the main course is—gasp!—fish. My father is not pleased. (“These fancy chefs of theirs never heard of a surf and turf?”)
I’m seated next to Jack somewhere smack dab in the center of the table, with my father on one end, to the right of Jack’s mother, and my mother down on the other end, to the right of Jack’s father. My mother will later tell me on the car ride home that the
y were placed in the “seats of honor” at the table. I make a mental note to look that up for truthfulness on the Internet later.
Jack grabs my knee under the table and I giggle in his direction. As I look up, I catch Jack’s oldest sister, Patricia, watching us from across the table. I smile at her with a look that says, “Ain’t love grand?” but she averts her eyes as soon as hers meet mine.
All three of Jack’s older sisters appeared, husbands in tow, soon after my family had arrived and we’d made our way into the salon for pre-dinner drinks.
I know! Who has a salon?
Jack’s sisters weren’t really what I thought they would be—I envisioned them grabbing me and pulling me aside and showing me the room Jack grew up in. No doubt, in our excitement about the families coming together, we would all jump on his bed and start giggling like schoolgirls as they regaled me with funny stories about Jack’s childhood. Tales of braces and first kisses and awkward haircuts and hijinks at various family bar mitzvahs. Isn’t that what siblings are for? Being an only child myself, I really had no idea, but I could imagine. Growing up, the closest I’d ever come to a sibling was the life-sized Barbie head that my mother bought me when I was five. But I thought that Jack’s sisters and I would be immediately on our way to being best friends forever and sisters for life.
Instead, Jack’s sisters came in and greeted me with firm handshakes, clipped smiles and formal introductions to their respective husbands. It was as if I was on a job interview at a law firm, except at most of the firms I’d interviewed at, the partners were much warmer or, at the very least, pretended to be.
Meeting all of Jack’s sisters and brothers-in-law was such a blur that I didn’t quite catch all of the brothers-in-laws’ names, and not just because the names are all nearly identical: Adam, Alan and Aaron. This was because, just as I was being introduced to the various brothers-in-law, Jack’s father poured champagne for a toast with my parents, and I was panicked at the mere thought of my mother drinking the happy juice. I didn’t want her to embarrass me in any way (more so than usual, I mean), and I especially didn’t want her to start bragging about my new big case. In addition to the fact that the case was highly super secret, I hadn’t even had a chance yet to tell Jack about it or about the fact that because of it, I now needed a new wedding dress. Although maybe my mother wouldn’t spill the beans because she was too embarrassed to admit even to her mah-jongg friends that Monique wouldn’t be designing my dress anymore. (Me: “Just tell them that we didn’t want to spend so much.” My mom: “I will do no such thing!” Prompt hang-up of the phone for effect.)
Also, the three brothers-in-law all bear an uncanny resemblance to each other, from their receding hairlines to their pastel Loro Piana cable sweaters to their black Gucci loafers, so I really can’t be held responsible for remembering who’s who. Now, I know what you’re thinking—why didn’t I simply study some pictures before I came here? See, that’s the thing. I did study pictures of all of the siblings, or siblings-in-law, as the case may be, but all Jack really had were the various wedding photos of each couple. The eldest, Patricia, is now forty-five years old and got married seventeen years ago, so you can only imagine how different her husband looks now. The middle sister, Elizabeth (not Liz, mind you, it’s Elizabeth), is forty-two years old, and got married ten years ago. Lisa, the youngest at thirty-nine, got married three years ago, but by that time, all of the guys were already beginning to morph into each other. Lisa’s husband did have more hair on his wedding day, but by now, he just looks like the other two. Apparently, being married to a Solomon sister makes all of your hair…well, you know where I’m going with this one. Don’t make me say it.
And don’t think that I could identify them by their various married names. As I was informed by Jack’s mother one night during dinner at Park Avenue Café, the Solomon sisters do not change their names.
I did manage to work out a positively brilliant system for identifying them, though: I numbered them according to the birth order of the sister they were married to and then memorized what color sweater they were each wearing. So: brother-in-law #1—Adam, in the pale yellow Loro Piana, belongs with Patricia, Jack’s eldest sister; brother-in-law #2—Alan, in the light pink Loro Piana, belongs with Elizabeth, the middle sis; and brother-in-law #3—Aaron, in the baby blue Loro Piana, goes with Lisa, the youngest.
“So, have you two given any thought to a wedding date?” brother-in-law #1 asks. He’s Adam, and he goes with Patricia. It makes sense that Adam is #1 since Adam and Eve were the first man and woman. See how well my system works? Although, he looks closer to his late thirties than his mid-forties. Was it that #1 goes with the youngest sister and #3 goes with the eldest? Now that I think about it, maybe Aaron was supposed to be #1 since Hank Aaron holds the all-time Major League Baseball record for home runs. (And I know you’re thinking that Barry Bonds is now #1 in terms of home runs, but Jack says that for real baseball fans, that doesn’t count.)
This would be so much easier with name tags. Or if the proper brother-in-law was seated next to the appropriate sister. The Solomons do this strange table seating thing where you don’t actually sit with the person you came with. Jack and I are the only couple seated next to each other, and that’s just because this dinner is meant to celebrate our engagement. Everyone else is scattered about, with no regard whatsoever as to who goes with who. Jack’s mother said something about us all talking to each other and not to the same person we talk to every day, or some such nonsense like that.
“Mimi and I were just discussing the wedding date before we sat down to dinner,” my father says. Yes, my mother’s name is Miriam, but my father calls her Mimi. How embarrassing.
“Edward’s docket generally is lightest in winter,” Jack’s mother says.
“Jack and I were thinking spring,” I say, looking at Jack and squeezing his leg under the table. “Maybe April?”
“Lots of new appeals in spring,” Patricia says, “not the best time of year for a wedding in this family. Adam and I got married in February.” I wait for Patricia to look to her husband as she mentions him, thus putting my system back on track, but she doesn’t.
“That sounds beautiful,” my mother says, ever the people pleaser, “but since so much of my family will be flying in from Miami for the wedding, we really can’t take the risk that there’d be snow and they won’t be able to get here for the big day.”
“That’s unfortunate,” Jack’s mother says. Unfortunate? My mother looks immediately at me and I look at Jack. Jack looks down into his halibut and pretends he didn’t just hear his mother say that. Or that it didn’t really mean anything. Before meeting me, Jack had been engaged to a woman for three and a half years without ever having set a wedding date. You’d think his parents would be more appreciative of the fact that I’ve at least nailed their son down to a season.
“March could work,” brother-in-law #3 says, mouth full of salmon, “March is part spring, part winter.”
“Sometimes there’s still snow in March,” brother-in-law #1 says, as he motions to a servant for more wine to be poured.
“No, there’s not, Adam,” Elizabeth says, looking at light-blue Loro Piana. My system would be back on track, but for the fact that I’m not a hundred percent sure whether she actually just said Adam, or if she may have said Aaron instead. Or Alan, for that matter.
“Sometimes there is, Elizabeth,” Lisa says. “April sounds great, Brooke.”
“How is he going to have a wedding in April,” brother-in-law #2 says, nodding his head in the direction of Jack’s father, “when he’s working like an animal on his caseload?”
“Maybe he doesn’t have to work like an animal,” Elizabeth says, looking at her father. Edward clears his throat loudly.
“No, Adam’s right,” I say, trying to be diplomatic, “we can do March if that would work best.”
“I’m Aaron,” brother-in-law #1 says.
“Didn’t I say that?” I say, taking a huge gulp of w
ine.
“Yes,” Jack says, putting his arm around the back of my chair and brushing his fingers against my shoulder, “that’s what she said.”
“Anyway,” brother-in-law # 3 interjects, “the date is usually influenced by the venue. You have to pick from the dates that your venue has available.”
“That’s not going to be a problem,” my father says.
“It’s not?” Joan asks, taking a sip of wine.
“Our rabbi is so happy to see our BB getting married that they’ll do anything we ask. They’re even going to give us a huge discount on the reception room at the temple,” my father proudly tells Jack’s dad. Bragging about the discounts he brokers is one of my father’s greatest pleasures in life. “And, of course, I’ll be supplying all of the meat—my best cuts, of course—so we’ve got the venue and the catering covered.”
“A temple?” Jack’s father says. His voice is big and strong and everyone seems to notice at the same time that this is the first word he’s uttered during this entire debate. Which only makes his few words that much more powerful and scary. I can tell that this is a strategy he uses with attorneys in his courtroom—lying in wait until you’re ready to pounce and make your word gospel. Which, if you’re an appellate court judge, is pretty much any time you speak. I look at Jack and he’s still got his head down in his plate. Man, he must really love his halibut. “Joan and I were thinking about a New York City hotel wedding. Weren’t we, dear?”