Father Knows Best (19 page)

Read Father Knows Best Online

Authors: Lynda Sandoval

Tags: #Young Adult

“Which you would’ve realized long ago if you weren’t so into image.”

“I know. I get that.”

I nodded once, deciding maybe she truly did.

“Anyway, you’re right, I wouldn’t have had to make these difficult plans last year.” She squared her shoulders. “But now I do. So be it. It happened for a reason, and I’m going to learn from it. If I have a choice—and why shouldn’t I?—I want Reese and Kelly to be the little goober’s moms.”

I blurted a short laugh at the use of the word
goober
. I swear, I don’t care what Jennifer or Reese or Kelly or who-the-heck-ever named her, she’d always be Goob to me.

Dude! I was pet-naming Jennifer’s baby!

What the hell?!

Clueless to my inner turmoil, she continued with, “I just don’t know how private adoptions are set up, or I’d get the ball rolling right away. And I don’t know if Reese and Kelly being gay is going to be a roadblock.”

“I don’t know either.” Frankly, none of this had ever crossed my mind. Why would it? I was barely into year one of my first boyfriend ever and the extent of my sexual experience included some excellent making out and a little groping here and there. Weird how Jennifer’s pregnancy was forcing all of us to grow up more quickly.

“Do you think your dad would know?” she asked, chewing the corner of her lip and watching me with hopeful eyes.

I jolted. “You seriously want me to discuss this with my dad?”

Her face paled. “You think he’d go to my parents?”

“No. It’s not that. But…he’s my dad.” I crinkled my nose. “You know?” I was still trying to recover from the heinous shopping-for-my-first-bra-with-Dad debacle that had happened years earlier, not that I planned on explaining that whole traumatic incident to her, thankyouverymuch. I didn’t want to launch into the sex-and-pregnancy realm with the dude.

“Just think about it.” She glanced at her watch. “Your twenty minutes are up, Cinderella.”

I blinked at my own watch, surprised by how quickly the time had passed. Unreal. We’d actually had stuff to talk about. Hellsp—I mean, Jennifer and moi. Who’da thunk? “Crap, you’re right. Gotta blaze.” I stood and downed the rest of my coffee, then clunked the mug on the table.

“Thanks for coming,” she said. “Truly.”

“Sure. See ya.” I turned to leave, but something cosmic affected both my brain waves and my ability to just keep walking. Swiveling back, I met her curious gaze. I can’t explain what came over me, even now. Planetary whiz-bang. Tectonic plate shifting. Early onset stroke. Something. But I actually opened my trap and asked “the artist formerly known as Hellspawn,” “Um, would you ever be interested in having a girls’ night at my house? Just me, you, and Meryl? Maybe we could do it for your birthday if you don’t have plans?”

Her eyes goggled. “You’re not pimping me, are you?”

Was I? Uh…

I gulped. Backpedal, backpedal, backpedal. “No. We can’t watch movies or anything, because of Meryl’s family thing—”

“I know all about that. It’s cool how she’s never watched television or movies, even though I can’t imagine it.”

“I know. Well?”

She smiled. Like, a really bright smile. She positively beamed, truth be told, as if she were auditioning for one of those whitening toothpaste commercials. “We could just talk or do each other’s toenails or something. I can’t really reach my own toenails very well anymore, thanks to the gigantic gut, and I’m sure they look horrible.”

“Yeah, okay. Something like that.”

“We could even learn to knit,” she offered, all glowy and excited-like.

Baffled by her conversational one-eighty, I said, “Huh?”

“Oh.” A chuckle. “Kelly knits to relieve stress, and she’s been teaching me how to do it. It’s actually kind of cool and relaxing, and it would be fun to make stuff for the baby.”

Jennifer Hamilton.

Knitting.

Does. Not. Compute.

I blinked. Maybe twice. “That would be…sort of…interesting.” I was having one of those out-of-body experiences, right? Right?! Inviting Jennifer to my house, for one thing, but agreeing to knit baby stuff?

I do not knit!

I took a deep, cleansing breath. “Anyway, okay. So. I’ll figure out a time and let Meryl know. She can pass it on to you. It might not be exactly on your birthday.”

“Whenever. I can’t wait. Thank you. For including me.”

“I…well…sure. It wouldn’t exactly be a logical birthday thing without you.” Dang it, I was trying, but the bonding / trusting part just wasn’t there for me yet, nor was the talking-without-sounding-challenged part. However, I’d taken a huge Meryl-esque step toward being a more forgiving person, and surprisingly, a sense of pride ballooned inside my chest.

When I caught my last glimpse of Jennifer as I left the coffee shop, I could swear her eyes glistened with tears, and that blew my mind. Mostly because it made me feel good.

Freakin’ weird, huh?

 

*

 

Two full weeks passed before I garnered the courage to (1) set into motion the insane girls’ night I’d impulsively suggested, or (2) talk to anyone about the whole private adoption process. Why I was inserting myself into this baby fiasco, I don’t know. No explanation. No excuses. But there you have it, people, absolute proof that something wiggy was going around in White Peaks that summer. Demonic possession, maybe. It was seriously as if we’d fallen into some weird “it takes a village to gestate a fetus” mode.

Stephen King could kick ass with the screenplay on this one.

And, oh, by the way, I didn’t discuss the adoption thing with my dad. Just too ick, ya know?

Instead…I asked Chloe.

Yep, Chloe. I know! What the—?

In my defense, it happened spur-of-the-moment one morning while we were restocking the brochure racks, before I’d had caffeine so I was’t actually thinking straight. I’d left the house late, counting on a cup of joe at the travel agency, but alas, our office coffee machine had gone to that great big kitchen in the sky sometime during the night, may it rest in peace.

So, no java. Sucked.

Caffeine-deprived or not, morning sunlight angled in through the front windows, all golden, shining on the crisp brochures and lulling me into a sense of safety.

And the question just popped out.

“Do you know anything about setting up a private adoption?” I asked, instantly shocked and chastising myself for the blurt. Oh well. Too late for a retraction.

“Private adoption?” One corner of her mouth quivered up. “I didn’t know you and my son were so serious.”

“Please,” I said, rolling my eyes. She’d quickly caught on to the whole snark-joke mode, which she regularly used against me. “I’m asking for a friend. Or…someone, an acquaintance. Whatever.”

Chloe laid a finger alongside her chin and looked upward. “Hmm, let me guess. Jennifer?”

I widened my eyes at her in surprise, but quickly realized, of course she’d know. Duh. It’s not like we’d had a pandemic of teenage pregnancies in White Peaks, which was one point in the town’s favor, I guess. “You can’t tell her parents. She’s just looking into options, and they’re being…well—”

“Jerks?”

I barked a laugh. “From what I’ve heard, yes.”

“I’ve met the Hamiltons,” she said, ruefully. “I can only imagine what that girl’s going through.”

Just so you know, I did want to grill her about the Evil Hamiltons, about Jennifer, about
all
of it from start to finish, but I held back. “I just promised I wouldn’t tell anyone who would run to her parents,” I explained, starting to relax. “That’s all.”

She handed me a stack of leaflets for Ibiza, Spain, which I’ve since learned is pronounced
Ih-BEE-tha
. Turns out there was some Spanish king back in the day who spoke with a lisp, and in order not to offend his royal highness (or highneth—snarf!), the whole freakin’ country started speaking with a lisp.

No, I am not lying, and I know it’s insane.

Anyway, it stuck to their native tongue like peanut butter to the roof of the mouth. That’s why Spanish Spanish and Mexican Spanish sound very different, just in case you were wondering (and I’m sure you were).

I swear, the crap people do to suck up to their royals.

After I’d slipped “Ibeetha” into its proper “thlot,” Chloe said, “Looking into adoption is a responsible thing, so I don’t see why I’d have reason to go to her parents. It’s not as if you’re telling me she’s doing Ecstasy or huffing paint. Something irresponsible and dangerous.”

No, that would have been the whole drinking and sleeping around thing, which was “game over” for Jennifer. She’d been there, done that, hence my question. “Okay. So? Private adoption?” Nudge, nudge. And people said I got off track.

“As a matter of fact, I do know a bit about it.”

“You do?” I asked, both thrilled and surprised that I’d hit pay dirt right away. “How?”

“I have a close friend who went through one. It was an open adoption, too,” she said, as if I would fully understand.

Um, yeah. Seventeen here! Clueless! “Meaning?”

“That they still have regular contact with the B-mom. Birth mother,” she explained, when I obviously looked confused. She handed me a stack of Phuket brochures.

Shut up, okay? I mean, I snort-laughed until I almost peed my pants, too, the first time I saw it, too, but it’s a really popular resort in Thailand and it’s not even pronounced like that. (Makes for some excellent travel comedy, though: “Where do you want to go on vacation?” “I don’t know, Phuket.” “Fine! We won’t go anywhere!” Har!)

Phuket—read:
Poo-khet
, not
Fuk-it
(if you want to, that is—I certainly pronounce it
Fuk-it
in my own head)—was devastated by that giant tsunami a while back, but it’s rebuilding its tourism trade.

Anywhoo, I slipped Phuket (shut up) into its place as excitement bubbled inside me that I’d found a viable adoption source in Chloe. Maybe she should change her name to Google.

Google Sebring.

Uh, never mind. Sounds like a clown, and sorry, but clowns are kill-you-in-your-sleep creepy to me.

“That’s exactly the kind of stuff Jennifer needs to know. I’m pretty sure she’d want that, too. An open adoption.” I leaned closer and lowered my volume. “She knows the potential parents very well.”

Chloe stood, grimacing as if she were sore.

No way was I going to ask her what whazzup, because—as had become a semi-regular, back-and-forth habit—she had spent the night at our house last night. Get my drift?

She saw me watching her, though. “Spinning class yesterday,” she explained, thankfully evicting the evil parental sex thoughts from my brain.

“Ah. I’ve always wanted to try spinning.” I stood, too.

“You should come with me some time. We can groan and complain together.”

I’d walked right into that one, huh? Dude, I was just making conversation! I didn’t comment on her invitation.

She wrapped her arm around my shoulder and leaned in. “I think you’re an amazing girl to be helping Jennifer, all things considered—”

“I’m not really helping her.”

“Oh,” Chloe said, with a small smile, “you’d be surprised.”

Again, no comment from me, because I couldn’t think of what to say. Why was I regressing into such a big “duh” communicator? I used to have a quippy comment at the ready at all times, locked and loaded, like an old-timey gunslinger.

“Tell you what,” Chloe said. “I’m on the brink of a raging caffeine headache, and I suspect you are, too.”

“I fell over the brink twenty minutes ago.”

“Perfect. Let’s head down to the Mountain Lion and get a latte. I’ll tell you everything I know about private adoption, and you can pass it on. Of course, I’d be happy to talk to Jennifer, too.”

“Really?” Excellent insta-plan. Hook Jennifer up with Chloe, and back my way out of the picture completely. Plus, an espresso jolt right at that moment sounded like the best thing ev-er. Let’s face it, I’d maintained my composure through Ih-BEE-tha and Fuk-it, but if Chloe handed me those new quilting tour brochures from Intercourse, Pennsylvania, I was going to lose it for sure. My maturity level had a definite time limit, and—oh yeah—it had been reached. “Sweet,” I said. “Let me get my purse.”

Other books

Never Too Late for Love by Warren Adler
The Persian Boy by Mary Renault
The Magnificent Century by Costain, Thomas B.
High Cotton by Darryl Pinckney
The Price We Pay by Alora Kate
The far side of the world by Patrick O'Brian
From Across the Ancient Waters by Michael Phillips