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Authors: Thea Thomas

Elizabeth's Daughter

Elizabeth's Daughter
Thea Thomas
Emerson Tilman, Publishers (2012)

The big, old comforting house in the shadow of Disneyland’s fireworks that
Elizabeth, quiet and shy, has lived in her entire life, is no longer comforting
after Grandfather dies. In the wake of ongoing paranormal events, she decides to
move and leave the hauntings behind.

But they only increase as the drama unfolds around Elizabeth’s love for her
baby foster daughter the cherubic Amy, and the marriage she enters into in order
to “give Amy a family,” which tailspins into malevolence and abuse. Visitations
from Amy’s deceased mother, along with the help of Elizabeth’s remarkable new
friend, Peter, come to her aid. But Elizabeth learns that the greatest power she
has comes from inside herself.

Elizabeth’s Daughter

by

Thea Thomas

Emerson & Tilman Publishers

129 Pendleton Way

Suite 55

Washougal, WA 98671-0055

Elizabeth’s Daughter

©
Emerson & Tilman/Thea Thoma
s

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any mechanical, photographic, or electronic process, or in the form of a phonographic recording; nor may it be stored in a retrevial system, transmitted or otherwise be copied for public or private use – other than as “fair use” as brief quotations, embodied in articles or reviews, without prior written permission of the publisher.

Cover copyright © Emerson & Tilman

Elizabeth’s Daughter

Thea Thomas

Chapter I

Elizabeth took the flower wreath down from the front door. The pale pastel roses laced among the stiff black ribbon were a little wilted but still fragrant. A well-meaning neighbor put it on the door after learning Elizabeth’s Grandfather had died two days before.

  Returning to the kitchen, Elizabeth picked the living flowers from the wreath. They were short stemmed, and she set them afloat in a cut crystal bowl, deciding to leave them in the kitchen. They looked so friendly in the soft light of the antique 1930’s fixtures.

  She’d spent a lot of time, much more than usual, in the kitchen the last few days. She hadn’t realized until this moment that it was because when she stayed in the kitchen, she could pretend Grandfather sat in the front parlor, watching television, as always.

  Elizabeth climbed the back stairs to her bedroom. The house hovered over her, entirely too huge now that she lived alone. Everywhere she moved, she found the presence of Grandfather

some little item of his, a faint scent of his aftershave, or a note written on the back of an envelope, as was his habit. She’d never before realized how little of her could be found in this house, even though she’d lived here her whole life.

  She sat on her chenille bedspread, white with blue tufts of large, brightly-colored flowers, and looked down at her hands in her lap, her thin fingers intertwined.

  Thud-
thud
, came muffled from outside. Ka-ka-ka-
thud
. She rolled the window half-way up so she could hear every pop and crackle of the fireworks at Disneyland. She could feel them through the floor.  The blue, pink, silver and gold sparkling, transient lights poured from the sky.

  All her life she’d watched the fireworks. All her life their beauty and freedom had made her sad and lonely. Now the sadness mingled with the sadness of the loss of her grandfather. The colors in the sky streaked and ran together and rained with her tears. As she stared at the fireworks through her reflection in the dark glass of the window, her face appeared to change

it became more full, her hair darker and straight. She couldn’t even see her eyes for the glinting of dark-rimmed glasses, though she’d never worn glasses in her life.

  Startled, she stepped back from the window. The strangest sensation ran through her body from head to toes. A muscle in her forearm began to jump. Elizabeth moved to the bed and hugged herself. “I... must be too exhausted. I’ve got to get some good sleep.”

  She turned on all the lights in her room and slipped into a nightgown. But she couldn’t shake the image of that face

that was not her face

reflected in the window.

Chapter II

The next morning, Elizabeth opened the front door with her little push cart in hand. A errant stiff breeze caught at the door and the skirt of her house dress. While Elizabeth struggled with the heavy door, her skirt, and her cart, she happened to look across the street, and there saw Mrs. Wilmer doing precisely the same

attempting to grab onto the front door, her push cart, and the skirt of her tiny-print house dress all at the same time.

  Except Mrs. Wilmer was seventy-five years old. Elizabeth stopped. She let the wind fling the door open against the house and her push cart escaped like a puppy, scampering to the corner of the porch while her skirt buffeted about her knees.

  Everything, she thought, the door, my cart, even my
clothes
, everything is trying to get free.

  Ignoring the push cart, she went back into the house and pulled the door shut. Then she tip-toed into Grandfather’s somber study and stole to the serious, dark monolith of his desk. Even though Grandfather would not come in and ask her what she was doing at his desk, her stomach clinched, her hand shook as she slid open the middle drawer and picked up the car keys.

  She left the study and continued resolutely out the back door, then into the garage, trying not to think about the last time she’d driven. But she couldn’t help it

she saw herself two months ago driving into the garage, the last time she brought Grandfather home from the hospital.

  She refused to linger on that memory, turning her thoughts to the fact that she’d almost never driven anywhere alone in her life, and she’d certainly never driven Grandfather’s car without him present. She put the key in the ignition, turned it. The engine kicked over a couple times, then fell silent.

  “What’s wrong with you, old timer?” She tried again. Again it ground and quit.

  Elizabeth got out of the car, pacing around it. Then she climbed back in, staring at the steering wheel, thinking. “Ah-ha, the battery! The car’s been sitting a long time.” She waited a couple minutes, then turned the key again. It kicked over three times instead of twice.

  She got out of the car again and strolled around the garage, contemplating the tools hung neatly on the walls. Every other Saturday Ralph-the-gardener came and clipped and snipped and mowed the front yard, the back yard and the side yards to neat and trim perfection. He had a truck full of his own equipment, but from time to time Elizabeth had seen him sharpening and tending to Grandfather’s tools. Suddenly Elizabeth understood Ralph’s affection for these antique tools. Even though she couldn’t guess the function of half of them, they were beautiful, each hanging in silent repose, waiting to do its job. How much more beautiful they must be to Ralph, who knew which chore each one made easier in a time before noisy riding mowers, blowers and weed whackers.

  Elizabeth got in the car again and turned the key. The engine kicked and started. “What a clever car!” Elizabeth patted the dash, feeling very accomplished herself.

  She drove the two-and-a-half blocks to the store. Yes, she told herself, it was silly to drive two-and-a-half blocks. But this particular drive, the first of her independent life, had nothing to do with the two-and-a-half blocks, or the groceries.

  As she pushed a grocery cart up and down the aisles, she noticed other young women about her age. They wore T-shirts and shorts or form-fitting jeans. Their hair shone bright with natural colors, and quite a few unnatural colors, long and straight or short-short exotic cuts. And these young women wore make-up.

  She looked at the mirror overhead at the end of the aisle–a stranger, a virtual recluse, in this sea of modern chic at the local grocery store. She studied herself, bemused

dressed in an over-sized small-print house dress, hair in stiff little curls. She didn’t even know when she’d last seen her lipstick

the sum total of her cosmetics

a sample left by an Avon lady.

  As she pushed her cart past the paperbacks and periodicals she stopped before
Mademoiselle
. She’d always wondered what might be secreted between its covers. If ever Grandfather’s disapproving spirit intended to make itself known, this had to be the moment. But she didn’t feel him over her shoulder as she picked up the magazine and put it in her cart. She moved purposefully to the packaged cosmetics and added a compact, mascara and a lipstick, ‘Mauve’s Twilight,’ to the
Mademoiselle
.

  Feeling guilty and tremendously pleased, she continued her circuit around the store, gathering breakfast cereal, vegetables, bread, milk, some peanut butter, jelly, cans of soup. In the last month of being alone she’d discovered that she didn’t like to cook. Now, once in a while she’d make herself a sandwich and maybe open a can of soup, but she’d decided that cooking for one was simply boring.

  Indulging in one last whim, she grabbed up a two-liter bottle of Dr. Pepper, her special secret. She loved Dr. Pepper. Back at the car she stowed the groceries on the floor behind the driver’s seat. Then, because only the milk was perishable, she decided to go all out with this freedom idea and go for a drive.

  Driving up Tustin Avenue and then down Main Street without goal, she became certain that men were looking at her. It didn’t make sense, she thought, who cared about a mousy woman in an old car? Ridiculous! But as she paused at a red light, two cute young men a couple lanes over were unquestionably looking right at her, nodding and talking animatedly.

  She glanced down self-consciously and discovered to her horror that her gas tank registered below empty. She pulled into the first filling station she came to, got out of the car and went into the Quik-Mart-Gas-Up.

  “Forty dollars on number five, please.” She handed cash to the boy behind the counter.

  “That your fifty-six?” the boy asked.

  “My what?” Elizabeth asked.

  “The fifty-six, the mint condition fifty-six.”

  Elizabeth continued to stand with her hand extended, wondering what the boy was talking about.

  The big man with the beer belly and a six-pack in line behind her spoke up. “Yeah. It’s a beaut, huh?”

  “What?” Elizabeth tried again to dispel her confusion.

  “The fifty-six,” the boy said again, “the one with the wide white walls.”

  “Ha-
HA!
” the big man behind her seemed almost to explode. “Funny, kid! The one with the wide white walls. HA-ha-ha.”

  Elizabeth turned and looked at him as if he were speaking a foreign language. “Your Chevy, lady,” the big man gestured toward her car. “The one with the wide white walls... get it?”

  Elizabeth shook her head slightly.

  “A car like that, you know, it’s like, if you had an elephant out there and someone asked, is that your elephant, the one with the tusks... you know. Like as if there’s a lot of elephants... see?”

  “Oh,” Elizabeth said. “Well, yes, that’s my car.” She hated getting gas, she decided. “That’s my elephant,” she added, walking out the door.

  As she walked to the car, she replayed the conversation, then she put it together with all the men who seemed to be looking at her as she drove around. Well, that explained
that!
But she still didn’t understand if the attention was because the car was admirable or... a white and turquoise elephant in the street.

  “ ‘Scuse me,” the beer-bellied man said, deferential, approaching Elizabeth as she struggled with the gas cap.

  “Yes?” she said, wrenching the gas cap off. She did
not
want him to ask her if she needed help.

  “I’m wondering if... if your car might be for sale?”

  “You
like
it?” Elizabeth asked.

  “I just said it’s a beaut, didn’t I?”

  “I didn’t know if you were serious, or....”

  “Serious, of course. A refurbished fifty-six in mint condition. Yeah. Absolutely serious.”

  “Well, I’m sorry,” Elizabeth said, “It’s not refurbished.”

  “No?” The man’s expression took on disbelief.

  “No. This is its original condition.”

  “Wow,” he said reverently. “That’s amazing. Would you be interested in selling it?”

  “Oh, I don’t think so.”

  “No? Too bad. Would you mind... could I just peek at the interior?”

  “Well, I suppose,” Elizabeth said, not knowing what else to say.

  He poked his head in the door. Elizabeth replaced the gas nozzle and screwed the gas cap back on. She came around to the driver’s side of the car, trying hard not to think about how embarrassed she felt. His muffled voice came back out to her.

  “Wow... ‘s great. Lookit... no holes... clean’s... whistle.” He backed out of the car and turned to Elizabeth. “I suppose you’re going to tell me that’s actual mileage?”

  “Well, everything on the gauges is just... what is.”

  A car behind them honked. Elizabeth jumped. “Oh, goodness,” she said, “how
rude
of me.” She worked her way around the large man, slunk into the driver’s seat and started the car. As she pulled away she nodded with a small polite smile at the big man.

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