Contessa (46 page)

Read Contessa Online

Authors: Lori L. Otto

Tags: #Fiction, #Coming of Age


I think so,

I agree.


Did he give you anything for Christmas?


Not tonight. We

re going to wait until he comes here on Wednesday.

I think the tattoo was a good detail to leave out.


Wednesday?


Well, we

re leaving Thursday morning for the lake house, so I thought I could see him Wednesday instead.


I don

t see a problem with that. You should invite him out to help us with the cookies that morning. Your dad

s got a court date with Brandon, so he won

t be around until the afternoon. We could use an extra cookie decorator since we

re baking for three different hospitals this year.


I thought Kelly was helping us.


She is, she

s baking for four other ones. That

s all she could handle, with all of her holiday orders.


Oh. Well, I

ll invite him.


We can just make a day out of it. It

ll be fun. He can bring his brothers, too, if he wants.


Okay, I

ll tell him. I think I

m going to head down to bed, Mom. Do you need anything?


Nope, I

m set to work for a few more hours. I

m glad you had a good time.


Thanks, Mom. See you in the morning.

CHAPTER
9

After half a week of doing holiday-related events and activities with my family, I

m more than excited for Wednesday to come along so I can see Jon again. With the weather clear and people off work on holiday, Mom lets me take my car to pick up Jon myself. It doesn

t hurt that Dad

s away with my cousin, Brandon, right now. I think he

s known this day would come, but is likely happy he isn

t here to see me take my first drive alone.


This is pretty hot, Liv,

Jon says as he gets into my car.

My girl driving solo in an awesome sports car. You

ll have to let me drive it someday.


Do you have a license?

My girl.
I keep hearing it echo in my head, and can

t stop smiling.


I do. Mom had a car briefly last year. We

ll have to take it out of the city to see what it

s really made of,

he says with a smile.

I bet this car can go pretty fast.


I

ve heard it can, but I

ve never seen it for myself.


So. Cookie decorating?

he starts as I carefully pull away from the curb. His eyes are attuned to the road, very much like my dad

s when we

d practice driving together.


Yeah. It

s a yearly thing. We do it for the children

s hospitals, but we always keep a few behind for ourselves. We

ll send some home with you, I

m sure. Just because your brothers couldn

t come doesn

t mean they should be deprived of our cookies.


It

s my Aunt Kelly

s recipe. She owns a bakery, so you know they

re good. This is a major undertaking, though. We

re talking hundreds of cookies.


Hundreds?


Yeah.


I

m not sure I have the right skill sets for this.


Oh, yes you do. I

ve seen your intricate little sketches. I

m worried you

ll be stuck spending too much time on yours.


That

s probably a valid concern.

I nod to his backpack when we

re at a
stoplight
.

Did you bring along homework?


Even I take a break from homework, Liv. There may be presents in here.


Oooh, plural?


Well, I had no idea what to get your parents. My uncle is a bartender. He gave me some decent wine. Your mom drinks wine, right?


She drinks cheap wine,

I tell him.

And Dad drinks the best scotch money can buy.


Well, maybe the decent wine will be a happy medium for both of them, then,

he says, unfazed.


I

m sure they

ll appreciate it. You didn

t need to get them anything.


I know.


I got your brother this really cool wooden car set. I saw it when I was shopping with Max. I know your brother likes cars.


Oh, he

ll totally love that. But again–


I know, I know. I just want to impress them, Olivia.


They

re already impressed.


I know, but I want to be accepted.


So you

re buying their love.

I challenge him playfully.


Well, they haven

t been as quick to love me as you have.


Well, they haven

t known you since they were eight, like I have.


Technically, I met them before I met you, you know.


Technically, yeah. But they don

t know you like I do.

I release my hand from the wheel and take his into mine. He kisses the back of it, but then promptly returns it to the steering wheel.


Ten and two,

he says.


Ten and two,

I repeat, rolling my eyes.

My mom and brother are already at work in the kitchen when we come in.


Holy...

Jon says as he glances over our tree and all the gifts.


Those are my entire family

s gifts: aunts, uncles, grandparents, cousins, you name it. It looks like a lot, but we have a pretty big family.


Wow, I

ve never,

He shakes his head, staring in shock. He finally unzips his bag and starts to place his four gifts under the tree: two bottles of wine, one medium-sized box for my brother, and a small one for me. He glances at a few of the other gifts.

Liv, I saw your name on ten just in that general vicinity.


I don

t count them.


That

s a lot.


We really like Christmas around here.


I can see that.

He takes my hand and pulls me into him, giving me a quick unsupervised kiss.

I don

t know how many more of those we

ll get today.


We can test it out with my mom.


I don

t know,

he says, unsure.

I shrug my shoulders and lead him into the kitchen.


Merry Christmas, Jon!

Mom says, her hands already covered in flour.


Merry Christmas, Emi. The decorations are unbelievable. It

s like a winter wonderland in here.


We love Christmas.


That

s what Olivia

s told me,

he says. I think it

s the first time he

s called me by my given name in front of either of my parents. My mom

s eyebrows raise, but she just smiles at him and nods.


We met Livvy on Christmas Eve. One of the best days of our lives.


Awww,

I say mockingly to my mother. She glares at me, her eyes narrowed, but I can tell she

s not angry by the dimples she can

t hide when she smiles.


No brothers today, Jon?


My brothers turn into puppets with blue fur around cookies, so unless you just needed help eating them, I didn

t think they

d be of much use today. I left them at the Y.


Well, we

ll need help eating them later. Make sure you take some home for them. They need to leave some out for Santa, anyway,

she says. I watch her nervously, afraid she

ll let on that she knows about their sparse Christmas last year, but she doesn

t.


Right, I

ll make sure they do.


The first batch is ready for decorating, Liv. There

s already icing and stuff on the table, if you want to take these pans over and get started.


Yes, ma

am,

I tell her with a smile.


I

ll get them,

Jon offers, bringing all of the cookies to the table.

Are there specific things you like on the cookies? Do you have ground-rules? How long can I spend on one cookie?

He teases my mother.


No blood and guts,

she says.


Well, I didn

t see that one coming,

Jon responds.


Oh, we didn

t either, but then Livvy brought us some zombie gingerbread men a few years ago.


You what?


I was experimenting,

I explain, picking up a reindeer and adding some brown icing to it.


Yes, we took all of the good cookies to the hospitals, and we were stuck eating the zombies that year. Some were missing limbs... a few had head wounds.

Other books

Children of the Archbishop by Norman Collins
Dames Don’t Care by Peter Cheyney
Divergent Thinking by Leah Wilson
Banging the Superhero by Rebecca Royce
A Dog-Gone Christmas by Leslie O'Kane
Legend of the Sorcerer by Donna Kauffman
The Demolishers by Donald Hamilton
Deserter by Mike Shepherd