She Had Only $4 At Boston’s Finest Restaurant. Then He Stood Up-rosocute

Clare Donovan had four dollars in her purse, a navy dress that had belonged to someone richer, and one hour of foolish courage left in her body.

The dress had come from the Wallace family donation pile, folded in tissue paper that smelled faintly of cedar and perfume.

Her mother had brought it home after finishing the upstairs bedrooms and said, with the cautious softness of a woman afraid to make promises, that it might fit if the waist was taken in.

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Clare had spent two nights fixing the hem under a lamp while her mother slept in the next room with swollen hands.

She did not tell her mother why she needed it.

She only said Ridgeway Academy had a dinner thing, which was close enough to a lie to hurt but far enough from one to survive.

By 6:45 p.m., Clare reached The Harbor Room with her hair tied back, her shoes rubbed raw at both heels, and the four one-dollar bills folded flat inside the small pocket of her purse.

The restaurant sat near the Boston waterfront, all polished windows and brass door handles, the kind of place where even the hostess seemed to know which families belonged before anyone gave a name.

Clare gave Chase Fletcher’s name because that was the name on the reservation.

For one week, that name had been the warmest and most frightening thing in her life.

Chase had leaned over after American history and asked whether she had ever been to The Harbor Room.

He had smiled when she said no.

Then he had said he should change that.

Clare knew better than to trust a sentence like that from a boy who moved through Ridgeway as if every hallway had been built for him.

She knew the difference between kindness and attention.

She also knew that lonely people sometimes mistake attention for weather changing.

So she said yes.

She sat alone at a two-person table near the center of the room, close enough to the fireplace to feel heat against her knees and close enough to the door to see every person who entered.

The waiter came once, then twice, then a third time.

Each time, Clare ordered only tap water.

Each time, she said her party was coming.

At the table by the fireplace, Nathan Harrington saw everything.

Nathan knew Clare from Ridgeway Academy, though they had never spoken beyond the accidental manners of hallway life.

He knew she was the scholarship girl who arrived early, left late, and carried books with slips of paper sticking out like she had built private maps through them.

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