Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Wildflowers 05 Into the Garden

    Prev Next


      "See those two guys in the leather jackets in the booth back there," she whispered. "They were looking our way the entire time they were waiting to be seated. Any moment one of them is going to come over to say something."

      Misty gaped.

      "Don't make it so obvious," Star told her. She peered, too. "Grease balls," she decided. She smiled at Jade. "They're poor white trash, honey."

      "I know, but it's fun to see what they'll do."

      My heart started to pound because one of them did get up and start toward us. He looked like he was in his mid- twenties at least.

      "Well, now:' he said, "my buddy Carl and I were just admiring how you all get along so well. We thought now here's a group of young women who've got it together; cool, mature, good looking, fine representatives of the better sex. We were wondering if we might interest you in attending a party tonight. It's going to be great. We've got a live band and--"

      "Just a minute," Jade said. She dipped into her purse and produced a small leather-covered notepad. I held my breath. She seemed to be seriously

      considering it. Misty sat with a grin on her face and Star just stared at Jade.

      "Oh, I'm sorry," she said. "We're booked tonight. As a matter of fact, we're booked for the rest of our lives. But thanks."

      He laughed.

      "You sure?" he said.

      "What are you, deaf or stupid?" Star asked him.

      His smile faded. He looked back at his friend who was laughing at him, which made his face a darker crimson.

      "Too bad," he said. "You're missing a good time."

      Star continued to glare at him and he left the table to return to his buddy. Then Star broke the tension by laughing and so did Jade and Misty.

      "He was cute," lade confessed.

      "So's a baby rat:' Star said.

      "How do you know who's right and who's wrong for you?" I asked.

      They both looked at me.

      "You'll know," Star said. "By the time we're finished with you:'

      They laughed again. I smiled and thought, I've got real friends, finally, and ironically, all because Geraldine died and left me alone. Was it wrong for something so good to come from something so bad? I was too nervous to care and maybe that was the biggest mistake of all.

      9 Skeletons Out of the Closet

      The telephone was ringing when we entered the house. I was holding open the door so the girls could carry in all the boxes, but I managed to get to the phone in time. The girls hurried to gather around me, anxious to hear who was calling. Was it the bank again?

      "Hello?" I said, looking at them. After a moment I swallowed hard and said, "Just a minute, Doctor Marlowe."

      I put my hand over the mouthpiece.

      "She wants to talk to Geraldine. What will I do? What should I say?"

      "Tell her your mother said she has nothing to

      say to her," Jade dictated. "Go on," she urged, "and

      make it sound truthful."

      I took a breath and did what she suggested. "I'm sorry, but she won't come to the phone,

      Doctor Marlowe. She has nothing to say to you." That wasn't really a lie, I thought. She has

      nothing to say to anyone.

      "She's not doing the right thing, Cathy. You

      need your follow-up visit. There are too many loose ends," Doctor Marlowe insisted. She sounded like she wasn't going to be satisfied until she spoke to

      Geraldine.

      "I'll speak to her about it, Doctor Marlowe," I

      promised, "and call you as soon as I can."

      "You know I'm right, Cathy. We should do

      what's best for you." I thought she was going to end

      the conversation but then at the last minute she spoke

      again. "I understand you had some sort of an

      accident?"

      "I'm fine," I said, maybe too quickly because

      there was a long pause.

      "Have you seen or heard from the other girls?"

      she asked. The tone of her voice suggested that she

      already knew the answer.

      "Yes, we've been in touch with each other," I

      admitted.

      "I'm happy about that. I really do think you're

      all good for each other. Please don't let too much time

      go by before I hear from--you," she urged.

      "I won't, Doctor Marlowe. Thank you for

      calling," I said and hung up.

      "Well?" Star asked.

      "I don't know. She sounded like she believed

      me. She wants me to convince Geraldine I should

      return for a follow- up and call her soon."

      Jade looked thoughtful.

      "Cat could go back to see her, pretend she's

      convinced her mother to let her go. Maybe that would

      end it," she mused aloud.

      "Too dangerous now," Star said. "You know

      how smart Doctor Marlowe is. She'll take one look at

      Cat and know everything. She's bound to ask difficult

      questions."

      "Maybe she won't call again," Misty hoped. "We'll stall as long as we can," Jade agreed, but

      a dark cloud of concern had moved in over our

      excitement, threatening to rain reality down on our

      efforts to create an oasis of fantasy in this desert of

      hard, sad times.

      "I'm getting started on the redecorating," Misty

      declared. "I refuse to let anything depress me." She attacked the project with her characteristic

      explosion of energy. Before long, we were all

      contributing in one way or another. Star and Jade

      rearranged furniture in the living room while I

      hobbled along beside Misty and helped her hang

      pictures and posters. She also set up the new CD

      player and the speakers. While we worked, we

      listened to the new CD's we bought and for the first time ever, rock music flowed through this house. Whenever Jade and Star passed Misty and me in the hallway, they were singing and dancing, and before long, we were all in the hallway, even me with my

      cast, singing, swinging, and swaying to the rhythms "I can't wait for our first party!" Misty cried. "Who will we invite?" I wondered aloud. "We'll be careful and take great care about who

      we choose," Jade said. "We should discuss every

      suggestion and make a rule we all have to accept

      anyone someone suggests, okay?"

      "How are we going to do that?" Star asked. "I

      don't know your friends and you don't know mine." "We'll talk about them and do the best we can,"

      Jade insisted.

      "Let's not worry so much about everything,"

      Misty piped up. "Let's just have fun for a change." "Hmm," Star grunted. She looked at me and

      then shook her head. "Don't worry about Doctor

      Marlowe; don't worry about the bank. Don't worry

      about this and don't worry about that. Maybe we

      should be calling ourselves the OWW's then, Orphans

      Without Worries."

      Misty laughed. Star looked at Jade and then

      they both laughed, too. It was good; it was good to hear that sound in this house, a sound so alien to my home, I was always taken by surprise whenever I

      heard it here.

      Our work continued. On the way back from the

      mall, we had stopped at a house and garden supply

      store where Star chose some plants and bushes to

      cover the grave while Misty and Jade picked out the

      paint for my room. We bought all the rollers and pans,

      too. Then Misty said we should think about painting

      the hallways as well. We talked about doing

      something with the house lighting. Geraldine always

      kept it dim, the fixtures loaded with low wattage bulbs

      to save on energy costs. Misty wanted us to buy some

      tinted bulbs, but Star thought it wou
    ld make the house

      look too much like a bordello. In the end we agreed

      on a lighter shade of blue for the hallways and Misty,

      who seemed inexhinstible, decided to start on that

      while Star went out back to finish dressing up

      Geraldine's grave with the plants and bushes we had

      purchased. We were going to hang my new curtains,

      too, before the end of the day.

      Jade was the first to grow tired of the work and

      began to complain about being hungry so we planned

      what we would order in from the nearest Chinese

      restaurant. Then they each called home to say they were staying at my house for dinner. Only Star's Granny was actually home to receive the call. Jade's mother was at a dinner meeting already and Misty's mother had left word with her answering service that

      she was going to a movie with one of her girlfriends. "I thought you were getting permission to stay

      with her overnight anyway," Star reminded Misty. "I was. I mean I will. I thought it would be

      easier to ask from here and not have to answer any

      questions about it," she explained.

      'Well, Granny said I can stay for dinner," Star

      declared, and then looked to me, "but only if you

      promise to come to our house for one of her homecooked meals. I told her you would and she said

      tomorrow night. One thing about my granny, she

      doesn't dwell in the world of fluff. None of this 'we'll

      do lunch or dinner' stuff. If you say you will, she pins

      you down to being real. You can stay over, too," she

      added.

      Jade and Misty both nodded with looks in their

      eyes that told me how much they wished they lived in

      Granny's world rather than their own.

      "Do you have anything to drink here?" Jade

      suddenly asked. It was as if just the suggestion of

      something dark and unpleasant had to be kept out any

      way possible.

      Misty's eyes widened. She looked clownish.

      Her cheeks had dabs of blue paint on them and there

      was a streak under her chin.

      "Yeah, something to drink. That's a real good

      idea," she seconded.

      "Drink? You mean, alcohol?" I asked Jade. "I know you have milk and cookies," Jade

      quipped.

      "Oh. I think there's some liquor in the pantry," I

      said. "I don't know what it is. My father was the only

      one who drank it."

      Jade went to look and returned with the report

      that we had half a bottle of vodka and nearly a full

      bottle of gin. She had the vodka in hand.

      "I'll make everyone screwdrivers," she

      announced, "and we'll relax before dinner."

      Misty went to wash up and I called in our

      dinner order, putting it on the charge card. All the

      shopping, the work, the music, and laughs really had

      made me feel better. Not once during the day had I

      had a chance to relive the night before. As long as we

      kept occupied and excited, we didn't dwell on what

      we had done and what it all meant. Bigger questions

      like how would we manage to continue all this once school had begun again and we were all occupied with our own little worlds didn't even come up. For now, we were all on a roller coaster and no one wanted to

      do or say anything that might bring us to a dead stop. After Misty returned from cleaning her hands

      and face, we gathered in the rearranged living room. I

      had to admit it looked brighter and gave the

      impression of being bigger by not separating the

      chairs as far from the sofa. We pulled the curtains

      fully open and let in the twilight, which threw a hazy

      glow of pink and yellow over the otherwise dull

      brown walls. Star and Jade sat on the sofa while Misty

      and I chose the easy chairs. It was when we had

      stopped and relaxed that we all began to feel the

      fatigue settle in. We sat there quietly for a few

      moments, sipping the drinks. I didn't taste the vodka,

      but I knew from my previous bad experience of

      drinking rum and Cokes that it can sneak up on you. "Did you read any more of your real mother's

      letters to you?" Jade asked me.

      "No. I was too tired last night."

      "What did she tell you in the first letter besides

      the stuff about your trust fund?"

      "Not that much," I said. "She made it sound like

      she wasn't in love with her husband, Grandpa Franklin. She said she arranged for Geraldine to adopt me so that I would be close to her always, to keep me

      in the family."

      "Some family," Star muttered.

      "She found another letter in Geraldine's

      pocketbook today, too," Jade told Star and Misty, who

      sipped their drinks and looked at me with interest.

      "An apology or something, right?"

      "Yes," I said. I reached into my pocket and

      produced the letter. "She doesn't say exactly who my

      real father is, but she suggests Geraldine loved him

      and maybe wanted him to be her husband?'

      "So it was probably someone younger than your

      real mother if Geraldine was interested in him too,"

      Jade conjectured.

      "Maybe?' Star said. "Though Geraldine could

      have been in love with someone's grandfather, too, the

      way she thought."

      "Actually, the letter suggests that my real father

      was older than Geraldine," I added,

      "Do you think your father's name is in the other

      letters then?" Misty asked.

      I shrugged.

      "How can you be so calm about it? Don't you

      want to know who he is?" she asked.

      "Sure she does," Jade answered for me, "but

      you should know from our experiences at Doctor

      Marlowe's that we don't just rush headlong into any of

      this. It's too traumatic."

      "But maybe when she finds out, she can go to

      him and maybe he'll want her to move in with him

      and be his daughter finally," Misty said in her dreamy

      tone of voice again. Actually, it sounded more like

      something she wished for herself.

      Star shook her head.

      "You do live in Never-Never Land, don't you?

      That's the last thing her real father wants to happen.

      He's probably got his own family and wife and how

      do you think they'll feel learning about Cathy, huh?" "Oh," Misty said. Then she smiled. "So what?

      We're here now. You don't need anyone else. Still,"

      she said after a moment, "if it was me who didn't

      know who my real father was and I had a chance to

      find out, I'd be very excited and anxious to do it. I

      wouldn't wait."

      "Cat isn't you," Star said. "So shut up about it

      already." Misty looked glum for a moment and then

      brightened. "Let's talk about our first party. When

      should we have it?" she asked.

      "We're having it now?' Star said.

      "No, I mean with boys," Misty insisted. Star looked at Jade.

      "Not until we've got everything the way we

      want it," Jade said, as if it was the most obvious fact

      of all. "When the time comes, we'll tell whomever we

      all decide to invite that Cathy's mother has gone away

      for the day and we have the house."

      "We don't want to invite too many people," Star

      cautioned, "and we better be sure no one makes it

      sound
    like an open party or we'll get all sorts of

      riffraff."

      "Let's just invite boys. Four of them," Jade

      suggested. "Who needs any more competition, not

      that I'm afraid of it or anything."

      Star laughed and drank some more of her

      screwdriver. "I'm not! It's just ... not prudent to invite

      other girls at this time," Jade insisted.

      "Prudent? I like that. What do you think, Cat?

      Should we just invite boys?" she teased. "Is that

      prudent?"

      "I don't know?' I said. "You girls know about

      the only party I ever went to, really, and you know

      what happened to me," I said, gazing at my drink. They nodded, all looking both sad and angry

      for me as they recalled the story I had told them at the group therapy session. I had been given too much rum and Coke to drink and some boys had taken advantage and groped me while girls I thought were my friends

      looked on and laughed.

      "Nothing like that is going to happen here," Star

      assured me. "We won't let it."

      "That's right," Jade insisted. "We'll always look

      out for each other!'

      I smiled. I really did feel safer now, even safer

      with them than I had felt with Geraldine. And that's

      what family was supposed to do for you, I thought,

      make you feel secure, let you know that there are

      people who care about you and want to protect you

      and love you. We'd be friends forever and ever, and

      there was nothing I wouldn't do for them and nothing

      they wouldn't do for me. It wasn't just the vodka that

      made me feel warm and comfortable now. It was their

      smiles and their laughter and their promises. We could believe in the promises we made to

      each other easier than those our parents made to us.

      Because we were all veterans of disappointment, we

      knew how painful it would be to disappoint each

      other. What better guarantees were there than the ones

      born out of mutual pain and respect?

      "To the OWP's," Misty cried, holding up her glass as if she could read my very thoughts. "One for

      all and all for one!"

      "To the OWP's," we joined, and drank down

      our drinks.

      Jade started to prepare another for all of us as

      the dinner arrived. We were just beginning to feel

      very good and be happy. The best was yet to come, I

      thought. My friends had helped me bury all my

      disappointments, forever and ever.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025