Relative Happiness (4 page)

Read Relative Happiness Online

Authors: Lesley Crewe

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Domestic Life, #Genre Fiction, #Family Life, #FIC019000, #book

The first time she took him back to the theatre, everyone was glad to see him, especially Donalda.

“Did you find a place to kip, Adrian?” Donalda always tried to impress people with her Coronation Street dialect.

“Yes, I'm staying with Lexie.”

Oh, the look she gave. Lexie loved it—nothing made her day more than irritating Donalda. And Donalda was determined to get her back, she could tell. Sometimes Lexie wanted to shake her, because she was talented and fun, when she wanted to be, but she sabotaged everyone who came near her. It wore Lexie out.

Donalda had obviously decided to make Lexie's day as miserable as possible. As they sat in a circle and discussed the third act, Donalda spoke up.

“I think we should change the ending.”

Lexie hit her knee with a rolled up script. “What are you talking about? How can we change the ending if the ending has to end the way it ends? It's called
Murder by Mother
. It ends with a murder. By a mother.”

“How come I always play the one who gets killed?”

Lexie shrugged.

“Come to think of it, every time I get killed in the play, you happen to be the murderer. You've choked me, dropped me down a well, electrocuted me in a bathtub and beaten me with a rolling pin.”

“Coincidence, I'm sure.” Lexie glanced at Susan, who refused to look back.

“Well, next time we do a play, I better have the lead role.”

“Fine. But just to warn you, we're doing
Frankenstein
.”

Lexie thought that would be the end of it, but it wasn't. Both Todds couldn't make rehearsal so Donalda asked Adrian if he'd read through the scene with her. It was the love scene, Lexie realized too late.

Adrian said he didn't mind. They walked on stage and went through their lines. Donalda was so melodramatic Adrian looked a little worried. He read his part with growing apprehension. Donalda continued her advance across the stage and suddenly threw herself on him. She grabbed his neck, pulled him down and kissed him with as much passion as she could muster.

She hung off him. His arms were out to the sides in an attempt to balance them both so they wouldn't crash to the floor. She stayed attached to his lips. When she finally came up for air, Adrian managed to get some leverage and shake her off.

“Was it good for you?”

“I've never experienced anything like it.”

Donalda threw Lexie a look. Adrian threw her one too. His said “get me out of here.”

The sun was barely up and Lexie was still in her pyjamas when she hung up the phone and fell into her old, beat-up chair by the fire. It was her personal life preserver, a comfortable nest on days like this.

Adrian thumped down the stairs and smiled at her as he walked past the open doors of the living-room. She heard the fridge open.

“Adrian?”

“Mmm?”

“Remind me to kill myself on Thursday.”

She heard the fridge door close. A moment later he returned with a glass of milk.

“Have some consideration, Lexie. I just got here. You wouldn't leave me already, would you?”

“It's all about you, isn't it?” Lexie gave him a smirk. “You've haven't been here long enough to know what a soap opera my life is. That was my mother. When you meet her, it will become abundantly clear why I must jump off the nearest cliff ASAP.”

“I haven't met anyone. Am I a secret?”

“I'm doing you a favour. You'll meet them all in good time. And when you do, don't come crying to me about it.”

He sat on the floor pillow by the fireplace, next to Sophie, patting her thick coat. “What did your mom want?”

She sank deeper into her chair. “It's half price to join Weight Watchers this week. She calls me at 7:00 a.m. to tell me this.” She glanced at him. “Is your mother a lunatic?”

He shook his head. “No. Sorry.”

She twisted her hair around her finger. “Wonderful. You could lie to me. I wouldn't know the difference.”

Adrian put his glass on the nearest book. “I'd like to meet your mother.”

“They do know you're here. I did tell them about you.”

“What did they say?”

The phone rang and saved her from answering.

“Get that and say I'm not here. Please.”

“You shouldn't be afraid of your mother. She's your mother.” Adrian reached for the phone. “She can't drag you to this weight loss thing if you don't want to go.”

“That's for sure, I'd give her a hernia.”

“Hello? Yes, this is Adrian. Well, thank you. I hope we do too. No, I'm sorry, Lexie isn't in. She just ran out to get more cat food for Sophie. You're right, she is gigantic.”

Lexie threw a pillow at him.

“I'll be sure to tell her you called. Yes. That would be great. Thanks. Goodbye.”

Adrian hung up the phone. “That was your mom, obviously, and she sounded awfully nice—and perfectly ordinary.”

Lexie pouted. “She is nice. When she's not being a pain in the…”

A pillow hit her.

Every morning when Lexie went to work, Adrian told her what he had planned for the day. He still wanted to sightsee, thought he might volunteer at the food bank. He'd pick up her groceries and do any odd jobs that needed doing. If it snowed, he'd shovel the driveway, or he'd chop wood for the fire.

At first the odd jobs were done promptly, but after awhile he forgot. She didn't like to mention it because it wasn't important. It was just curious.

Then she noticed something. She started to look for it and sure enough it was true. Adrian was always on the beach, which was madness at this time of year. He wandered close to the shore, a lonely spectacle.

She started to knit Adrian a sweater. The wind had to chill his bones on his solitary sojourns, and she wanted him to be warm.

One night, as she sat in her chair knitting, Adrian lay in front of the fire with a book. She glanced at him and realized he was just staring into the fire.

He suddenly looked around. “Lex?”

“Yeah?”

“What's it like to grow up in the same place your whole life?”

She counted the stitches on her needle before she answered him. “Boring.”

“No really, I want to know.”

She put down her wool. “It was fun. I played with my sisters and cousins. I have lots of them.”

“What did you do?”

She looked into the fire and smiled. “God. What didn't we do? Went to the cottage in the summer and lived in our bathing suits. Built forts, played baseball, got into fights.”

“Fights?”

She laughed, “Mostly with my cousin Jimmy. Now there was a brat. He and my sister Beth were constantly at each others' throats. We'd play cards on rainy days and Beth would accuse him of cheating and he'd say prove it and she'd jump across the table every time, scattering cards and glasses of pop. She'd grab him and the two of them would fall backwards out of the chair. I can see her yet, fifty pounds soaking wet and pigtails flying. But she was always right. No, you never told Beth to prove something. Because she would.”

Adrian grinned and looked back into the fire. So did Lexie. Memories swirled around as she gazed into the flames. Whenever she thought of her childhood, she always remembered the night she was let in on the family secret and was shown the moon through the coat sleeve.

The summer she turned twelve, she was considered old enough to know. The night it happened, she was beside herself. She wasn't sure why this was so exciting. She wasn't old enough to guess.

The adults escorted Lexie into the backyard. Her older cousins were allowed to come too. The younger ones were warned to stay indoors and away from windows.

Her father told her to lie down on the grass. As she did, she shivered, even in the warm evening air. The grass felt damp and unfamiliar. He put a coat sleeve over her face and told her to look up and see if she could see the moon.

Nothing happened at first. She thought she could see a star, but it might have been her imagination. It was dark and hot. She was suffocating. She strained to see something.

That's when it hit her. It was a big shock.

Her father poured a small glass of water down the sleeve. She didn't know what it was at first. She grabbed the coat and threw it away. She coughed and spit. She was mad.

“What did you do that for?”

Everyone laughed and patted her on the back. Oh, no. The big secret donned on her. That's all it was. She couldn't believe she'd been hoodwinked her whole life. Once she got over the humiliation, the fun started. Her sisters begged to know the secret, but she wouldn't tell. Oh, the power it gave her.

When she sat on the porch swing that night and looked at the moon, her father came out and sat beside her. He told her she was a good sport and that he'd let her in on a little secret: When it happened to her cousin Jimmy, he cried like a baby and sulked in the garage for twenty minutes. She snuggled up against her dad. He always knew just what to say.

She was about to tell Adrian about it, when he said, “I wish I had one home I could point to and say, that's where I grew up.”

He seemed sad.

“Listen, Adrian. Living in the same town all your life has its advantages. People know who you are, but it's not always so wonderful.”

“What do you mean?”

“If you have a secret, it's hard to keep. If you're labelled a kook, a kook you'll remain until your dying day. You can't re-invent yourself. You'll always be the girl who wasn't popular in high school.”

She looked away. She hadn't meant to say so much.

“Were you that girl?”

She shrugged. “I had three beautiful sisters in the same school.”

“You think you're not beautiful?”

Her mouth went dry. “Well, hardly.”

“What's your idea of beauty then?”

“Can we please stop this stupid conversation?”

“No. I want to know. What is beautiful to you?”

She rolled her eyes. “I don't know. Being thinner?”

“Beauty is warmth, Lexie.” He watched her as he spoke. “It's comfort and peace. It's safety and caring. It's everything you are.”

She felt tears behind her eyes. She didn't want him to see. She couldn't go there so she picked up her knitting. “Well, thank you kind sir.” She turned the tables on him. “What's it like to grow up everywhere?”

He didn't answer her at first. She could tell he was annoyed. “Have you ever noticed when I try to compliment you, you either shut up or shut down?”

“Which is it? You can't have it both ways.”

He sighed and put his arms behind his head. “You're impossible.”

“Answer the question.”

“It was difficult,” he admitted. “I hated being the new kid. To say goodbye to my friends and start over. My brother thrived on new adventures, and my little sister spent so much of her life in ballet school, she wasn't affected.” He stroked Sophie's fur. “The only reason I didn't go crazy was my mother. She was always there for me. She's beautiful.”

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