The kid had put on ten or fifteen pounds since they’d first met, and no longer made Alan want to shout, Someone administer a sandwich stat! Most of it was muscle from hard riding as a bike messenger, a gig that Link had kept up right through the cold winter, dressing up like a gore-tex Martian in tights and ski goggles and a fleece that showed hints of purple beneath its skin of crusted road salt and pollution.
Andrew had noticed the girls in the Market and at Kurt’s shop noticing Link, whose spring wardrobe showed off all that new muscle to new effect, and gathered from the various hurt looks and sulks from the various girls that Link was getting more ass than a toilet-seat.
Her brother spent the winter turning into the kind of stud that she’d figured out how to avoid before she finished high school, and it pained her to see the hordes of dumb-bunnies making goo-goo eyes at him.
That would be a good second sentence for his story.
“You okay, Abby?” Link said, looking concerned. Albert realized that he’d been on another planet for a moment there.
“Sorry, just fell down a rabbit hole,” he said, flapping his arms comically. “I was writing “—felt good to say that—"and I’m in a bit of a, how you say, creative fog.”
Link took a step back. “I don’t want to disturb you,” he said.
But for all that, she still approved his outfits before he left the house, refusing to let him succumb to the ephemeral awful trendiness of mesh-back caps and too-tight boy-scout jamboree shirts. Instead, she put him into slightly fitted cotton shirts that emphasized his long lean belly and his broad shoulders.
“Don’t sweat it. I could use a break. Come in and have a drink or something.” He checked the yellowing face of the tick-tock clock he kept on the mantelpiece and saw that it was just past noon. “Past lunchtime, that means that it’s okay to crack a beer. You want a beer?”
And for all that, her brother still managed to come home looking like some kind of frat-rat pussy-hound, the kind of boy she’d always hoped he wouldn’t be.