Significant Others

Read Significant Others Online

Authors: Marilyn Baron

Tags: #women's fiction, #Contemporary, #mainstream, #christmas

Table of Contents

Significant Others

Copyright

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Chapter One: The Jesus Tree

Chapter Two: The Shrine

Chapter Three: Swimming with the Sharks,

Chapter Four: A Chicken in Every Freezer

Chapter Five: The Silent Bullfrog

Chapter Six: The Boss from Hell

Chapter Seven: Swing Dancers

Chapter Eight: Déjà vu

Chapter Nine: The Q-Tip Brigade

Chapter Ten: Love Letters

Chapter Eleven: Flyboys

Chapter Twelve: Something’s Wrong with Mom

Chapter Thirteen: The Confrontation

Chapter Fourteen: Facing the Music

Chapter Fifteen: Reunions

Chapter Sixteen: My Son Has a Million Questions

Chapter Seventeen: I’m No Prince Charming

Chapter Eighteen: Second Chances

Chapter Nineteen: The Most Important Things

Chapter Twenty: The Gift

A word about the author...

Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

Also available from The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

Significant
Others

by

Marilyn Baron

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

Significant Others

COPYRIGHT © 2013 by Marilyn Baron

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

Contact Information: [email protected]

Cover Art by
Kim Mendoza

The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

PO Box 708

Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

Publishing History

First Mainstream Edition, 2013

Print ISBN 978-1-62830-110-6

Digital ISBN 978-1-62830-111-3

Published in the United States of America

Dedication

I would like to dedicate this book to my mother,

Lorraine Meyers,

who lives in a retirement community in South Florida much like Millennium Gardens.

And to my father,

George Meyers,

who was her significant other for 63 years.

Thanks, Dad, for your bomber missions,

which I’ve incorporated into this story.

And to my wonderful husband,

Steve,

who is
my
significant other.

Acknowledgments

I would like to thank all of my mother’s lovely friends for sharing their stories of love and second chances. Thanks also to Jana Feldman Kreisberg, who shared her wonderful stories of the fabulous mother-daughter realtor team (Jana and her mother, Natalie Feldman). And to Claudia Phelps for filling me in on the life of a realtor.

And a special thank you to my wonderful and versatile editor, Nan Swanson, with The Wild Rose Press, Inc., who can edit in any genre and has worked with me on a variety of novels—from historical and romantic thriller to romantic suspense with paranormal elements, and now Women’s Fiction.

Chapter One: The Jesus Tree

One Week Before Christmas

Atlanta, Georgia

When my brother Donny called to tell me our mother had seen the image of Jesus in a live oak tree on the golf course behind her retirement condo in Boca Raton, I knew I had to make a pilgrimage to Millennium Gardens to answer her cry for help.

It’s not that I’m particularly religious, but there were two major problems with this sighting. One, my mother is Jewish, so she had no business seeing Jesus in a live oak tree or any other place. Two, it was the first anniversary of my father’s death and she probably wasn’t thinking straight.

For the past year, my mother had managed to avoid making some important decisions about the disposition of Palladino Properties, our family’s residential real estate firm in Atlanta. In her grief, Dee Dee Palladino, the other half of our award-winning mother-daughter real estate team, had all but deserted me.

Dad’s death not only left a hollow place in my heart, it left a gap in the business that was threatening to become a sinkhole. And my mother’s extended absence was aggravating the situation. I’d done my best since the funeral to keep an eye on her. But with my busy schedule, and the fact that I worked and lived in Atlanta and she had taken up residence in Florida, my best didn’t even come close to being good enough.

My brother was not doing much better. Donny, who used to play baseball for the Miami Kingfishers, bought the condo at Millennium Gardens in Boca for Mom after Dad died so she could be near her sister, our Aunt Helene, who also lived in The Gardens. He used it as a home away from home when he was in Miami making fan appearances and fulfilling his endorsement obligations.

The trouble was, my mother liked being near Aunt Helene so much that she’d stayed on for the past year, leaving Donny and me to run Palladino Properties alone. And my brother, who had agreed to help me out after Dad died, was not pulling his weight. All the time he spent with my mother was time away from the business, which had put an even greater strain on me and my marriage.

Mom still hadn’t come to grips with my father’s death. Otherwise she wouldn’t have chosen to stay in a two-bedroom condo in Boca when she had a spacious home in Atlanta, one she hadn’t stepped foot in since my Dad passed away. I knew she couldn’t face that empty house alone. So I’d given her a deadline. I was determined to bring her home by Christmas. I needed her to come back to work at Palladino Properties, and she needed work to take her mind off my father.

But she hardly needed an artificial deadline when a real one was looming. The generous offer she’d received from billionaire investor Hammond Reddekker to acquire the family business was set to expire on Christmas Day.

Suddenly, she’d come to the conclusion—the wrong conclusion—that she had to sell the business to Hammond Reddekker. Mr. Big-Deal Hammond Reddekker wanted to change the name of my father’s company, which meant Palladino Properties would disappear forever. I was determined to make sure my mother walked away from that deal, to preserve my father’s name and legacy and guarantee that Donny and I and my daughter, Hannah, who would hopefully join Palladino Properties when she graduated college, would always have a place in the family business.

No one, not even one of the richest men in the country, was going to swallow up my father’s company.

If I didn’t change my mother’s mind, my father’s entire life’s work would vanish. And for what? A few dollars? Well, actually more than a few
million
dollars, but that would leave nothing tangible behind. Except me. And Hannah. So it was up to me to stop the sale and bring my mother back home to Atlanta, where she belonged.

After making my airline reservation to Ft. Lauderdale, I called my brother to let him know what time my flight would arrive the next day.

My mother wasn’t the only one who’d been acting strange lately. My brother had been borderline secretive in the past few months...ever since my father died, really. Stanley Palladino wasn’t Donny’s biological father, but they had been as close as any father and son could be. Donny was definitely hiding something. Probably something he wasn’t telling me about our mother.

“Have you seen the tree?” I asked, biting my bottom lip as I haphazardly stuffed my carry-on bag with some lightweight clothes. It seemed somehow incongruous to watch the gathering winter clouds outside my window when my bedroom was scattered with bathing suits and outfits suitable for the stifling heat of Boca. Who had time for swimming anyway, when there was work to be done?

“Of course I’ve seen it, Honey,” he answered.

“And could you see Him? Jesus, I mean?” I made a final walk-through of my walk-in closet, snagging my favorite silver sandals off the shelf.

“Touchdown Jesus,” Donny replied.

“Touchdown Jesus?”

“His hands are in the air in a victory sign.”

“You see sports in everything,” I said. “It’s almost Christmas. We need to have Mom packed and out of Millennium Gardens by then, in time to make the Reynolds closing. Otherwise we’ll be celebrating the holidays down in Boca.” What was the difference, really? Christmas would be like any other day, even though it
was
my birthday. I had nothing to celebrate this year and neither did my mother. This year didn’t even feel like Christmas.

Of course, Christmas in Boca Raton, Florida, was hardly traditional. It never snowed in Boca. There were no ice storms like we had in Atlanta. The only signs that Christmas was in the air were the non-denominational holiday light displays hanging from the lamp posts that lined Boca’s wide boulevards. And the reindeer, gaily wrapped gifts, starfish and jellyfish, sand dollars, shells, and stylized stars they depicted couldn’t be claimed by any religion.

“When Barbara looked at the tree from a different angle, she thought it looked like Abraham Lincoln,” my brother continued.

“Oh,” I said, bewildered, not knowing what to make of this troubling new development. Donny’s wife Barbara was a high-powered divorce attorney, known and feared in legal circles (and in our family circle) as “Barbara the Barracuda.” These were intelligent, practical people, not normally given to flights of fancy.

“Jackson thinks it looks like a rabbit, and the twins see Mr. Potato Head. But it’s a definite face.”

Eight-year-old Jackson, Donny and Barbara’s midlife surprise, and his teenage twin sisters—Hayden and Taylor—were just kids, so who could blame them for imagining they saw Mr. Potato Head or wanting to pull a rabbit out of a hat.

The conversation stalled.

“Donny, what aren’t you telling me? Is something wrong with Mom?”

“It depends on what you mean by wrong. She’s—”

“She’s what?”

“She’s getting Bat Mitzvahed.”

“Bat Mitzvahed?” I knew I wasn’t hearing Donny correctly.

“She’s, um, become more religious since Dad died, and, well, she’s decided to have a Bat Mitzvah.”

“Bat Mitzvahs are for thirteen-year-olds. Hannah had a Bat Mitzvah. Hayden and Taylor had Bat Mitzvahs. Donny, that’s crazy. Women in their seventies don’t have Bat Mitzvahs.”

“Well, she’s never had one before, so—”

“Most women her age get facelifts. My mother is getting Bat Mitzvahed?”

“I don’t think it’s crazy at all,” Donny said. “I think it’s nice. It’s giving her something to do. And she’s not the oldest one in her class. There are two men in their eighties and one woman who’s 94. But don’t tell her I told you. It’s supposed to be a surprise.”

“I’m surprised, all right. Do I have to buy a Bat Mitzvah dress?”

“If you want, I guess. Barbara’s getting a new dress.”

I smacked my wrist against my forehead. “It’s a good thing I’m coming into town.”

A low, vibrating sound rumbled under the bras still stacked on my bed.

“Hey, my BlackBerry® is buzzing. I’ve got to go. I’m expecting some news on the Lake Lanier listing.”

“You’re still using a BlackBerry? When are you going to upgrade to an iPhone?”

“No time,” I stated.

After we said our goodbyes and I checked my message, I called my mother and broached the subject of the tree, NOT the Bat Mitzvah.

“So, Mom,” I began casually, wondering how I would approach her, before I gave up the pretense of delicacy and succumbed to my habit of hurtling right to the point. “Donny says you saw Jesus in a live oak tree on the golf course at Millennium Gardens.”

“That’s right,” she answered, as if seeing Jesus was a normal, everyday occurrence. “I called Mrs. Kane from 401—she’s Catholic—and she came down to see it. She couldn’t actually see Jesus, but she said it reminded her of the time she saw the Shroud of Turin. Then she turned to me, crossed herself, and whispered, ‘Oh, Dee Dee, this is very important. You’re blessed.’

“Mrs. Kane thinks I should take a picture and sell it on eBay, like that woman who saw an image of The Virgin Mary on a potato chip, but I want to keep it quiet,” my mother whispered into the telephone.

“Well, then maybe you shouldn’t have told the town crier,” I couldn’t help pointing out.

“She promised not to tell anyone.”

“Let’s hope she doesn’t. You shouldn’t be spreading this around.”
Until you’ve had a thorough psychiatric workup.

“Mrs. Rubin in 415 thinks the face in the tree looks more like a bearded rabbi carrying a Torah.”

Oh, so it was a non-denominational holy tree
.

“Honey, did I mention that two of the tree branches overlap in the shape of a cross?”

“No, I don’t think so,” I said evenly. The situation was even worse than I thought. My mother was either going to have to convert or be institutionalized.

“If people find out, they’re going to be flocking here, especially at Christmastime,” my mother added. “I don’t want to start a riot or turn Millennium Gardens into a circus.”

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