BFF* (13 page)

Read BFF* Online

Authors: Judy Blume

“What about you?” I asked.

“I'm going over to Denise's to help with the stuffing and the sweet potato pudding.”

“But, Mom … this is Dad's first night home.”

“I know, honey … but we've talked it over and he understands.”

“But, Mom …” I began again. Then I remembered that they would be alone later. “Oh, I get it,” I said, giving Mom a sly look.

“Really, Steph …” Mom said.

Dad

It was a nippy night and I shivered in my sweater as I waited outside for Dad. To keep warm I jumped in the leaves on our front lawn. I was glad it was already dark. I wouldn't want anyone to see me fooling around that way.

A car drove slowly down our street. I brushed myself off and watched, wondering if it could be Dad. It passed our house, stopped, then backed up, parking right in front. The door opened and Dad got out. I ran toward him. “Dad!” He hugged me and held me close. It felt so good to smell his special smell again, a combination of aftershave, butterscotch Life Savers and something else … something that's just him. He was wearing
his same old brown suede jacket. It felt soft and familiar against my cheek.

When we were inside the house I noticed the bald spot on the back of his head had grown, or maybe it was just the way the wind had blown his hair. Also, he had no tan. I asked him about that right away.

He said, “I'm working long hours. I don't have time to sit in the sun.”

He did look worn out. It's not good for him to be away from us, I thought. He probably has no one to cheer him up after a hard day at work.

“Didn't anybody ever tell you it's impolite to stare?” Dad said, laughing.

“What?”

“You were staring,” he said again.

“I was?”

“Yes … so now it's my turn.” He looked me over carefully. I don't know why but I suddenly felt shy. I guess it's because I'm a different person now, different than when Dad left. I hadn't even started seventh grade then. Now, I'm almost a teenager. Dad ruffled my hair.

“It's growing,” I said, self-consciously, as I touched it. “It should be long again by spring.”

“It looks fine the way it is,” Dad said.

Bruce came racing down the stairs. Dad picked him up and swung him around. Then they kind
of nuzzled and swatted each other's arms the way they do to show affection. “You look so big,” Dad told Bruce.

“I haven't grown at all,” Bruce said. “Not an inch.”

“Well, you could have fooled me.”

Mom came downstairs right behind Bruce. She and Dad hugged, but just for a minute. “How are you, Row?” Dad asked.

“I'm okay,” Mom said.

You could tell they didn't want to get started in front of us.

I was right about the sweatshirts. Dad brought one for me that said
Los Angeles, City of Angels
and one for Bruce that said
Los Angeles Dodgers
. I don't know what he brought for Mom.

Dad had never even seen my new room so I grabbed him by the hand and led him upstairs.

“Look at all these posters,” Dad said. “How come that one is on the ceiling?” He strained his neck to get a better view of Benjamin Moore.

“That one is special,” I said. “You have to lie on the bed to really see him.”

“Maybe later,” Dad said.

He didn't seem surprised that just the three of us were going out to dinner. I guess he and Mom had worked out the details over the phone. We got to sit in a booth at Onion Alley. I ordered
a calzone but I didn't eat much because Bruce and I talked non-stop through dinner. I told Dad all about Alison and how she used to live in Malibu, which she says isn't that far from Marina Del Rey, where Dad has his apartment. I told him about how she's lost her skills in math but that Rachel is going to help her get them back. I told him how well Alison and I get along and how much fun she is.

“It sounds as if you and Alison are best friends,” Dad said, picking at his veal.

“I'm best friends with Rachel
and
Alison,” I told him.

“Two best friends?” Dad asked.

“Two are better than one,” I told him.

“Two best friends means she's never off the phone,” Bruce said. “She just about lives in the pantry.”

“The pantry?” Dad looked confused.

“That's where she hides with the phone,” Bruce explained.

“If I had my
own
phone in my
own
room I wouldn't have to lock myself up in the pantry for privacy. At Crazy Eddie's you can get one for just $19.95. That's what I'd really like for my birthday.”

“I don't think it's a question of how much a phone costs,” Dad said. “I think it's more the idea of it.”

“But you'll think about it, won't you?” I asked. “For my
thirteenth
birthday?”

“I'll discuss it with Mom.”

I'll discuss it with Mom
is Dad's version of
We'll see
.

When Bruce started telling Dad about his computer teacher my mind drifted. It would be great to have my own phone. I'd get a pink one with a really long cord so I could carry it from my desk to my night table. And I'd get a name number so my friends could just dial 662-STPH, the way you can dial 662-PIES when you want to order a pizza.

“So what do you think, Steph?” Dad asked.

“What?”

“She wasn't listening,” Bruce said. “Her mind was someplace else.”

“I was talking about our weekend plans,” Dad said, “about staying at a hotel in the city. I thought we'd get out early to see the windows on Fifth Avenue. You know how crowded it gets over Thanksgiving. Then we could head up to the Museum of Natural History … and maybe to the Metropolitan … see a play on Saturday night …”

“That sounds great!” I said. “I didn't know we were going to the city for the weekend.”

“That's because you were busy daydreaming,” Bruce said.

“I wasn't daydreaming,” I told him. “I was thinking.”

“That's enough!” Dad said. “All that matters is that we have a good time together. And that means no fighting.”

“We hardly ever fight anymore,” Bruce told Dad.

“Well, that's good news,” Dad said.

I wished I could call Rachel and Alison that minute and tell them about our plans, but Alison had already left for Sadie Wishnik's and Rachel had gone to her aunt's house, in New Hampshire.

As soon as we got home Bruce ran for the bathroom. Dr. Klaff says he has a small bladder. So if he drinks a lot he has to pee a lot. And he had two glasses of water plus a Coke at dinner. Dad says when he was a kid he had the same problem.

“See you tomorrow,” Dad said, kissing my cheek.

“What do you mean, tomorrow?” I asked.

“I'm driving down to the city now. I've got a meeting first thing in the morning.”

“You've got a meeting on Thanksgiving morning?”

“Yes,” Dad said, “a breakfast meeting. It's the only time we could get together. But I'll be back in plenty of time for dinner.”

“What about Mom?” I asked.

“What about her?”

“She's going to be so disappointed. You two haven't seen each other since summer.”

“Did she tell you that?”

“Not exactly,” I said.

“She knows about my meeting,” Dad said. “And she's going to be busy with Thanksgiving dinner.”

“Not that busy!”

“Don't worry about it … okay?” Dad kissed me again, this time on top of my head. “I'll be here tomorrow by two, at the latest.”

Bruce had a nightmare that night. I heard him calling for Mom. I heard Mom padding down the hall to his room. I heard her talking softly to him. I guess I must have fallen right back asleep because when I opened my eyes again it was morning and I could smell the turkey roasting.

T-Day

Dad drove Carla and Katie up from the city. They got here before two, just as Dad had promised. Carla is tall and thin with wispy blonde hair. She wears suede and leather clothes, even in summer, and silver jewelry.

“Stephanie … look at you!” she said. Her voice was breathy, making her sound as if she'd just run around the block. “Aren't you something!” When she hugged me I could smell her perfume. Then she reached into her bag for a Kleenex and blew her nose. Mom says Carla developed allergies right after her husband died. She sneezes all year round.

“Can I help in the kitchen?” Carla asked Mom.

“Everything's ready,” Mom said, wiping her hands on her jeans, “except me.”

“I'll keep you company while you get dressed,” Carla said.

“Will you watch the turkey, Steve?” Mom asked. “It needs basting every fifteen minutes.”

“No problem,” Dad said.

“Come on,” Bruce said, grabbing Dad's hand and dragging him toward the den. “The game's on …”

Katie stood watching as everyone went off in different directions. She's small for eight, with chubby pink cheeks. She reminds me of a Cabbage Patch Kid. “You want to see my room?” I asked her.

“Sure.”

We went upstairs. “This is nice,” Katie said, looking around. “I like your posters. How come that one's on the ceiling?”

“That's my boyfriend,” I told her.

“What's his name?”

“Benjamin.”

“That's a nice name. How old is he?”

“Seventeen.”

“That's really old. Are you going steady?”

“Yes, but my family doesn't know so don't say anything, okay?”

“Okay.”

I took a deck of cards out of my desk drawer. “I'll teach you to play Spit.”

“I already know how.”

“You do?” That surprised me because I had never heard of the game until Alison taught me. “You want to play?” I asked her.

“Sure,” she said.

Katie was really fast. She beat me twice before the rest of our guests arrived. They all came at once.

Aunt Robin and her live-in, Scott, brought their poodle, Enchilada. Gran Lola calls Enchilada her granddog. Aunt Robin and Scott are investment bankers. Their hobby is money. That's all they ever talk about. So they were extremely interested when I told Gran Lola and Papa Jack about my three stocks and how I came to choose them. “I picked Jiffy Lube because I liked the name, Revlon because Mom uses their makeup and Reebok because everybody wants to wear their shoes. So far I'm doing all right.”

Uncle Richard, who is married to Aunt Denise, said that from his experience with the stock market, my reasons for choosing Revlon, Jiffy Lube and Reebok seemed as good as any.

At four we sat down to dinner. Everyone oohed and aahed as Mom carried in the turkey and set it in front of Dad. Then she took her seat at the opposite end of the table.

“Breast or leg?” Dad asked each of us as he carved the turkey.

“Breast!” Bruce called out and he and Katie started laughing.

“Oh, to be ten again,” Cousin Stanley said, sighing, as if he were ninety years old instead of nineteen.

Papa Jack took his ulcer medicine before he ate anything.

After the main course Howard burped three times. “An excellent meal,” he said, patting his middle.

During dessert a piece of pumpkin pie fell to the floor. Enchilada gobbled it up. I don't know if anyone besides me noticed. But a few minutes later Enchilada threw up on Bruce's shoe. Bruce took it personally. “These are my only shoes,” he said. “What am I supposed to wear to school on Monday? If I wear these all the kids will hold their noses and say,
Yuck … barf!”

“Take them off and put them in the laundry room,” Mom said. When Bruce didn't move she added, “Hurry up!”

Aunt Robin took Enchilada outside, just in case, while Scott cleaned up under the table. “You'd be better off with a baby,” Gran Lola said, when Aunt Robin came back. “A baby isn't any more trouble than that dog.”

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