It was a warm June evening three days after graduation. It was to be their last night together in their rented apartment on Spring Street.
Tomorrow, Abilene and Harris would be heading north to Portland where they intended to share an apartment while she embarked on her graduate studies in English literature. Helen would be going home to Coos Bay, where she planned to stay with her parents through the summer. Cora and Tony would embark for Denver to pursue teaching credentials. Vivian and Finley would be travelling together to Los Angeles, Vivian to seek out jobs as an actress and model, Finley to study filmmaking at the Institute for Creative Cinema which had accepted her application on the strength of her ‘Mess Hall’ videotape.
As Abilene sipped her champagne, she felt a lump in her throat. She was glad to be moving on, excited by what lay ahead. But God, she would miss her friends.
‘We’ve got to stay in touch,’ she said.
‘Yeah,’ Helen said. ‘You’re the best friends I’ve ever had. I don’t know what I’m gonna do…’ Her voice broke.
Abilene squeezed her shoulder. ‘You’ll do fine.’
‘I’ll miss you all so much.’
‘Hey, let’s not get all weepy,’ Finley said. ‘This ain’t a wake, for Christsake.’
‘I know, I know, but…’
‘Here’s to all the great times we’ve had,’ Cora said, hoisting her glass again.
‘They’re all over,’ Helen muttered. ‘We’ll probably never see each other again.’
‘Sure we will,’ Abilene told her. ‘Hell, you’re gonna come to my wedding, aren’t you?’
‘Hickok, you’re such an optimist.’
‘We’ll get married one of these days. And all of you’d better show up.’
‘There’ll be plenty of chances to get together,’ Cora said, nodding at Helen.
‘It won’t be the same.’
‘Everything changes,’ Abilene said.
From the hurt look on Helen’s face, that wasn’t what she wanted to hear.
‘I mean, that’s life. But the changes don’t have to be bad. There’s no law that says we can’t visit each other from time to time and…’
‘I’ve got an idea,’ Vivian said. She’d been sitting in silence, staring into her drink.
‘Hold it,’ Finley said. ‘We’d better jot this down for posterity. Better yet…’ She hopped up from her cushion on the floor, hurried across the room, and snatched her video camera off the dining table.
‘Give it a break,’ Cora protested.
‘No, come on,’ Vivian said. ‘We aren’t dressed.’
‘Sure you are. Unlike the first time I taped you.’
‘You’ve gotten rid of that, haven’t you?’ Abilene asked. ‘Surely you jest.’ She raised the viewfinder to her eye and started taping. ‘Just act natural, babes. You look great. What was your big idea, Viv?’
Vivian, in a sheer black nightgown, frowned at the lens and covered her breasts with the arm that wasn’t busy holding her champagne glass.
‘Don’t worry. Nobody’ll ever see it but us.’
‘So you say,’ Cora remarked. She wore only an oversized T-shirt.
Helen, sitting on a sofa and dressed in a low-cut nightie, reached out and grabbed a corduroy pillow and clutched it to her chest.
Later, she’d packed the pajamas in her overnight bag and he’d laughed. She’d had them ever since.
Finley, wandering about the room and taping everyone from different angles, said, ‘One of these days, we’ll get together and watch all this stuff and have a few laughs.’
‘Sure,’ Helen muttered.
‘Which brings us to my idea,’ Vivian said. ‘Remember? My idea?’
Finley zoomed in on her. ‘Spit it out.’
‘Well…’
Finley turned the camera away to catch Cora.
Cora, on her knees, scurried about the floor and poured more champagne into all the glasses.
Vivian waited until hers was full. She took a drink, then said, ‘Anyway. You know that play,
‘A movie,’ Finley corrected, swinging the camera toward Vivian.
‘It was a play first.’
‘I haven’t seen it,’ Helen said.
‘You wouldn’t have liked it,’ Abilene told her. ‘Nobody gets chopped up.’
Helen almost smiled.
‘Anyway,’ Vivian continued, ‘it’s about this man and woman who fall in love. They can’t marry each other, so they meet at a certain place once each year.
‘Hence the title,’ Finley said.
‘No matter what’s going on in their regular lives, they always show up and spend this one weekend together. Anyway, here’s the thing. We could do something like that.’
A smile spread across Helen’s face. ‘Hey, that’d be neat.’
‘That’s a great idea! ’ Cora blurted.
‘Yeah!’ Abilene said. ‘We’d have to really do it, though.’
‘Yeah,’ Cora agreed. ‘No matter what. Jobs, families. Nothing can get in the way. Once a year, we meet somewhere. Just the five of us.’
‘Right,’ Vivian said. ‘No husbands, no loverboys, none of that.’
‘They’d put a cramp in our style,’ Cora said.
Helen laughed.
‘We’ll watch all the old tapes of our adventures,’ Finley said.
‘Whoa! ’ Abilene gasped. ‘In that case, no husbands for sure! ’