Read The Scandalous Summer of Sissy LeBlanc Online
Authors: Loraine Despres
Tags: #Loraine Despres - Scandalous Summer of Sissy LeBlanc 356p 9780060505882 0060505885, #ISBN 0-688-17389-6, #ISBN 0-06-050588-5 (pbk.)
So there she was, standing in the cemetery with the icy rain beat-
ing on her and mud oozing up around her tennis shoes. She’d been
there over an hour, but Bourrée was nowhere in sight.
Bourrée was warming his hands in front of the gas heater.
When the bone-chilling rain started, he’d let his tree-cutting crew
go and retreated to the office of the sawmill in which he was a part
owner.
Maurice DeStephano, the mill’s manager, was pouring them
shots of whiskey and recounting a fight that had broken out at the
mill the day before. “So then this big, fat mammy comes to the door
and she yells, ‘LeRoy!’ and course LeRoy hides, ’cause she’s gotta
outweigh him by a good hundred pounds.” Maurice cracked up as
he handed Bourrée the drink. “But where does that dumb nigger
hide? Over the rotary saw!” Now Maurice was laughing so hard he
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was choking as he tried to describe the ensuing fight. Bourrée
smiled his hard, mean smile and walked over to one of the win-
dows. He made a circle in the steam and looked out. Then he
grabbed his coat. “Wait! Wait, you ain’t heard the best part.” But
Bourrée banged out the door without waiting to hear whose flesh
they’d picked out of the saw’s teeth. He’d seen Sissy emerging
through the drizzle.
He caught up with her in the parking lot and pulled her behind
his truck, where they were hidden from the office and from the men
carrying logs into the mill. “What the hell are you doing here?” He
gripped her arm hard.
“I waited for you in the cemetery as long as I could.” Her hair
was plastered to her head, and her legs under her short skirt were
chapped and gray with goose bumps. She slid her hand into his
sleeve, searching for warmth. She didn’t find it.
He pulled back, exposing her freezing hand to the elements.
“Hunting season’s over, girl. I told you that last Friday.”
“But I didn’t think that meant . . . You didn’t say anything
about . . .” Her teeth were chattering now, and tears mixed with
the rain slid down her cheeks. She wiped her eyes and left streaks of
mud on her nose. “I didn’t think we were over, too.”
“All good things must come to an end.” His voice softened. He
wiped her nose with his thumb.
His touch warmed her. He continued talking, but Sissy couldn’t
concentrate on what Bourrée said when he was touching her. She
put his hard hand to her lips and kissed it. Then she stepped in close
and slipped her hand between his legs. “Don’t you
want
me any-
more?”
A mill hand came out of the Colored Only washroom and caught
sight of them. His teeth flashed through the gloom, and Sissy heard
him chuckle. But she was beyond caring.
Bourrée yanked her hand away. “Stop it!” he growled, jerking
her back into the shadows.
T h e S c a n d a l o u s S u m m e r o f S i s s y L e B l a n c 2 0 9
She was stunned by his anger. “I just want to be with you.” It
was so simple, why didn’t he see it?
“Where? Where you gonna be with me in a little town like this?
You tell me!”
He’d always talked so brave, like he didn’t care what anybody
thought. Now he sounded like everyone else. She was swamped
with grief. It was the same feeling of sudden abandonment she’d
felt when they put Norman in the ground. “No!” she cried, tears
streaming down her cheeks.
But instead of taking her in his arms, he moved away from her.
No! She stepped forward, shaking her head. But he kept backing
away! She had to stop him. She had to make him see they belonged
together. She threw her arms around him, still sobbing. “I’ll find us
a place. I’ll find a place where we can be together.”
It was five and the mill hands were leaving. They averted their
eyes, but Sissy heard the whispers. “Mr. Bourrée’s got him some
young meat.” “Umm-hummm!” And she saw the grins they
couldn’t hide.
He held her stiffly at arm’s length and hissed, “Cut it out, girl.
I’ve got a family.”
“Why’d you take up with me, then, if you knew all along you
were going to dump me?”
Bourrée dropped his arms and shrugged. “You looked lonely
lying there, your skirt pulled up, playing with yourself.”
Sissy hit him as hard as she could. Bourrée was primed to hit her
back, but she saw him check himself. His men were watching them,
chuckling, saying, “Man ought to be ashamed of hisself, carrying
on like that.”
Bourrée broke away. “When you get older, Sissy, you’ll learn to
take your fun where you find it,” he said and walked past her
toward the office.
She called after him, her voice raspy and hard. “This isn’t fun for
me, Bourrée!”
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“Life’s uneven,” he said as he opened the office door and went
inside.
Maurice was closing up. He gave Bourrée a peculiar look and
started to say something. Then he thought better of it. “You still
gonna be able to give me a lift?”
“Sure am,” Bourrée said, finishing his whiskey, pouring himself
another, and then pouring another for Maurice. He was waiting for
the girl to leave.
It was dark when they finally emerged. But Sissy was still there,
waiting for him in the rain, next to his truck, hidden on the driv-
er’s side. Her head was bowed. He had to push her aside to open
the door.
Sissy swung up onto the running board. Her hair was wet and
wild and falling in her face. No matter what, she couldn’t stand the
thought of him abandoning her, too. “Bourrée, don’t go! I’m sorry.
It was just . . .”
Bourrée gave her a look that would freeze a whore. Then he
turned to his partner and said, “Maurice, this here’s Hugh Thomp-
son’s girl. She’s been seeing my son.”
Maurice said something polite that made Sissy want to scream,
but she didn’t. She just stared at Bourrée with fading hope. He
spoke to her as if to a small child. “I’ll talk to Peewee, sugar. I’ll tell
him how upset you are. But you’re gonna have to let go of the
truck, you hear?”
He started the engine. The truck lurched and Sissy fell backward
into the mud. An old colored mill hand walked up and bent over
her. “You hurt?”
Sissy nodded yes, but denied it with her words: “I’m fine, thank
you, just fine.” He helped her up gently. And then after a few more
words of concern and advice and an offer to give her a lift, he piled
into an old, rickety truck with some other men. Sissy was left alone
in the dark.
T h e S c a n d a l o u s S u m m e r o f S i s s y L e B l a n c 2 1 1
The icy rain beat down on her, but she didn’t move. Her fingers
turned blue and still she didn’t move. Bourrée’s words were playing
over and over in her mind: “This here’s Hugh Thompson’s girl.
She’s been seeing my son.” Finally a bitter smile spread over her
face and Sissy knew how to take her revenge.
Peewee was hunched over his notebook drawing the circuitry
of an imaginary radio when a girl in a tight red skirt placed her butt
right on top of his hand! A deep blush spread up from his collar
over his neck and face and landed in his ears. He heard giggles and
looked up.
It was Sissy Thompson. Sissy! The popular kids were always
picking on him, but Sissy never had. She’d always been real nice,
saying hello and everything. Maybe she was on some kind of dare.
He pulled his hand out from under her, feeling the soft flesh move
as he did. Oh man! But he said only, “You’re on my paper.”
She smiled down at him and said, “Oh, I’m so sorry,” and sort of
slithered off his desk. Then she turned and leaned over. He had to
duck his eyes or he’d be looking right into her blouse! “What you
got there?” she asked.
Should he snatch up the paper and hide it? She was smiling at
him as if she meant it, but they always sucked you in like that. Of
course she’d smiled at him just the other day in the hall. And she’d
said hello that afternoon in Hopper’s Drugs.
Before he could make up his mind what to do, he was saved by
the arrival of Miss Rose, their European history teacher.
Sissy went back to her desk, rubbing her behind where his fin-
gers had been. She looked at him over her shoulder and whis-
pered, “You’ve got real nice hands.” Then she hid her face in her
book.
Jeeze! What did she mean by that?
“Turn to page eighty-four,” said Miss Rose. Peewee opened the
book, but he was looking at his hands. Nice? They were stubby and
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broad like his father’s. What was nice about them? He looked
around the room.
“The only way we can understand the war in Europe today is to
understand the past.” Miss Rose pulled down a historical map of
Europe. Everybody was hunched over their notebooks taking furi-
ous notes. Miss Rose pointed to the middle of the map and started
talking about the Holy Roman Empire. Peewee put the hand that
had been under Sissy up to his nose and inhaled. He didn’t smell
anything special, so he sniffed the paper.
He was leaning over it when Sissy turned around. He whipped it
away and hid it under the desk.
She smiled and bit her lips.
He was in for it now. He didn’t know what that smile meant, but
it couldn’t mean anything good.
When the bell rang, he took his time packing up his books. He
figured if he dawdled just long enough, they’d have to go to their
next class and he’d still have time to make his.
But when he walked into the hall, she was there, surrounded by
what looked like the whole cheerleading squad. He tried to make a
dash for it, but she detached herself from the group and hurried
after him.
“Hey, Peewee, wait up.”
“I gotta go to class.” He kept his head down and his books
clutched to his body. She had to run after him.
She couldn’t believe it. She was running down the hall after Pee-
wee LeBlanc! “Now, you just stop it!” she called and was gratified
to have him stop. Boys were sure a lot easier than men. She ought
to make that a rule, but she forgot all about the Southern Belle’s
Handbook when he turned and she looked right into Bourrée’s
eyes. The swamp of misery she’d sunk into and tried to banish with
her outrageous flirting was everywhere. A lump grew in her throat
that made her voice sound all husky and hesitant. “I just wanted to
ask you to come over to the house tonight and study with me.”
“I don’t think so.”
T h e S c a n d a l o u s S u m m e r o f S i s s y L e B l a n c 2 1 3
Peewee LeBlanc turning down Sissy Thompson! She couldn’t let
that happen. “Please, you’ve just got to help me.”
“Why me?”
She gazed into those pale blue eyes and said, “Because I think
you’re really smart.” He looked at her as if she were crazy, so she
went on very fast. “I know you’ve always been real quiet in class,
but that’s ’cause you’re shy.” No boy she knew could resist flattery
like that. “Come on, say you will. I’m going to flunk the test if I
don’t get some help.”
He looked like a rabbit sniffing a trap. “I don’t think I can.”
“Peewee!” A look of annoyance crossed her face. The boy was a
real drip. But then she quickly bent her head and looked up at him
through her lashes. “I’ll tell you what. I’ll be home studying at
seven-thirty with a whole pot of coffee. And if you don’t come, I’ll
be forced to drink it all by myself and by ten I’ll have a tizzy fit and
it’ll be your fault.”
“Well . . .” he said as the second bell rang.
“Say you’ll come.”
“I gotta go.” He sped off to his next class.
“I’ll be waiting, seven-thirty,” she called after him.
Sissy turned and saw Amy Lou Hopper giving her a look. Don’t
worry, Sissy thought. I’ll send him back to you when I’m done with
him, and he’ll be as good as new. Better. He may even have the
nerve to ask you out.
Doreen and Betty Ruth came up to Sissy in home ec class
while she was stirring her slime stew. Miss Loretta, their teacher,
had gotten it into her head to teach the girls to cook what she called
in her high-pitched, fluttery voice “indigenous foods.” And then
some fool farmer had donated okra. Well, she’d cook it, thought
Sissy, but she wouldn’t eat it.
Doreen stuck her head near the pot. “Owww, your slime smells
even worse than my slime.”
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“If the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach, who do you
think we’re gonna catch with this?” asked Betty Ruth.
“I’ll bet old Peewee LeBlanc would eat it if Sissy fed it to him,”
said Doreen, giggling.
“What you doing with him, anyway?” Betty Ruth asked.
“I’m gonna save him,” said Sissy, throwing a shake of Tabasco
into the pot for Miss Loretta’s benefit, so they’d look like they were
doing something.
“Uh-huh,” said Doreen. “That’ll be the day.”
“He’s not so bad. He’s just shy and doesn’t know how to dress,
that’s all.” She thought of his hands, those short, stubby hands. “I