Authors: Barbara Dee
That's when I suddenly realize: I was onstage with Mom during one of her performances. And she knew who I was. She knew
exactly
who I was, and somehow, in some crazy way I never expected, the two of us built a scene together.
And it worked.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Probably because of the free publicity from the Mochahouse, a ton of people troop over to the lobby and say nice gushy stuff about the Thing. The best part about all this attention is that it means I get to introduce Emma to everybody. And when Mom gives her an enormous hug, I can tell she's not surprised to see her here. (And why would she be? Working on Trisha was her idea, Gram said.)
“Wasn't Marigold
spectacular
?” she shouts at Emma. “And don't you love this fantastic Thing?”
“Yes,” Emma says, laughing. “To both questions.”
Even Ethan comes over. He chats with Emma for a minute, and then says to me, “Uh, Marigold? Can I talk to you in private?”
So I tell Emma I'll be right back, and step into the nurse's office with Ethan.
“You okay?” I ask him.
“Um, yeah,” he says. “I just wanted to say you did great. And.”
“And what?” I ask.
Dead silence.
“And what?” I repeat.
He kisses me quickly. He smells like Dentyne.
“Okay, Marigold?” he asks, stepping backward.
I grin. “Yeah. Okay, Ethan.”
That night, after Dad and Mona leave, and the rest of us are back in the apartment, I put on my yellow flannel monkey pajamas, the ones I swore I'd never wear again. Kennedy offers to sleep in the living room with Gram, so Emma and I have the bedroom to ourselves. The first thing we do is our toes and fingers. Fun in the Sun has already started to chip, so I polish us both with Juicy Passionfruit. Three glossy coats, one after the other, first hers, then mine.
And we talk until two in the morning. About school and all our friends. About Ethan and Will (who Emma doesn't like as much as this new boy, Jake). About our moms. About ourselves.
When it's finally time to turn out the lights, Emma says softly from Kennedy's bed, “Mari? I'm really sorry.”
“What for?”
“You know. What happened. Giving up on our friendship.”
“It wasn't your fault,” I tell her. “I know things were really hard at your house.”
“That's not an excuse. I totally messed up, didn't I?”
She doesn't wait for an answer. “So were you incredibly mad?”
“Yeah. But not at you.” I smile. “Can I say something, Emma?”
“Uh-huh.”
“You shouldn't be so afraid of fighting, you know? Sometimes it's better than
not
fighting. As long as it ends.” Even in the dark, my nails catch the light, and I can see the tips shining. Perfect. “Anyway, I'm just glad we're over all that. I really, really missed you.”
“I missed you, too. You're still my best friend.”
“You're still mine,” I say. Then I add, “I have other friends too. Some great ones, actually.”
“Yeah, they seem nice.” She pauses. “So we're back to before?”
“No,” I say. “No, I think we're better now.”
The next morning, Mom makes us all some cinnamon muffins, and allows Gram to take Beezer out for Morning Walk. (“
Whose
dog is this?” Gram demands. Mom laughs. “Ours, I guess,” she admits.) Emma and I make plans for me spending a week with her family on Cape Cod. And we promise to talk on the phone every Saturday. At the absolute least.
Just before lunch, she and Gram leave for their bus.
“Thank you,” I say in Gram's ear. “For everything.”
“Talk to your mom,” she whispers in mine. “Tell her where I got all that fabric.”
“You think she'll remember? It was so long ago.”
“It wasn't really.” She kisses my forehead. “Talk to her, Mari. Just sit down, the two of you, and talk.”
So we do.
Get a special look at another
great book by
Barbara Dee:
I took off my flip-flops and walked into the living room, which was always the nippiest room in the house.
Francesca Pattison was sitting in what Mom calls the loveseat. I didn't really focus on her at firstâI was too busy staring at her aunt Samantha. It was one of the few times I'd seen Samantha Pattison in daylight. Mostly my sister and I had just peeked at her late at night slamming the door of a black BMW convertible, and then clattering up her driveway in noisy, high-heeled shoes. None of us could figure out why a thirty-fivish woman with no kids and an obviously amazing social life would choose to live in our nice but extremely nonamazing subdivision. Samantha Pattison was something to talk about when we needed a topic at the dinner table.
And now here she was sipping Diet Snapple with my mom, looking normal and suburban in a yellow flowered sundress and sandals. “So grateful,” I heard her saying as I plopped into a squishy armchair.
“Hi, honey. You remember our neighbor, Ms. Pattison?” Mom said, giving me a look.
“Oh, sure,” I lied, because how could I remember someone I'd never even officially met? “Hi.”
“And this is her niece Francesca.” Mom turned to where Francesca was sitting, but she wasn't there anymore. Now she was standing by our big bookshelf, pulling down book after book.
The first thing I thought about her was:
Omigod. That girl is a giant. Is she taller than Dad? I think she is.
“Your books are so BRILLIANT,” she was practically shouting.
“
Wuthering Heights
âI
love
this book! It's the most gorgeous book ever written. Can I borrow it?”
“We can borrow books from the Blanton Library,” her aunt Samantha said. “Say hello to Eva.”
“Evie,” I said automatically.
“Francesca is entering seventh grade too,” Mom said, smiling. “She's a sort of transfer student.”
“Oh, really? From where?” I asked.
“The depths of hell,” Francesca answered.
Samantha Pattison giggled, rattling her ice cubes. “You don't mean that, sugarpie.”
“Oh yes I do.”
“Why? What was wrong with your old school?” I asked.
“Everything,” Francesca said, looking right at me as if she were confessing some top secret. “They tried to suppress my spirit, but of course they failed miserably.”
The second thing I thought was:
Whoa. That girl looks incredible. I wish my hair was long and all wavy like that, and my eyes were that smoky sort of green. And I bet SHE doesn't have trouble finding a bathing suit!
The third thing was:
On the other hand, she's crazy.
“Evie, honey,” Mom said, “why don't you get yourself some lemonade, and then maybe you could take Francesca over to see Blanton Middle.”
“You mean right now?”
“Oh, that's not necessary, Mrs. Webber,” said Francesca. “I prefer not to think about school. It's not for ages, anyway.”
Mom smiled. “Actually, it's less than a week away. In Blanton we start school in late August.”
“Then we still have eons,” Francesca answered cheerfully. “But I'd absolutely love a walk, Evie, if you really wouldn't mind.”
“I wouldn't mind,” I said, looking helplessly at Mom. “It's just incredibly hot out there.”
“That's all right,” Francesca said. “I've been living in Saudi Arabia. I'm used to extreme temperatures.”
“Francesca's dad is in the oil business,” Samantha Pattison explained.
“Oh.” I knew I was supposed to be impressed by that, but I didn't even know what “the oil business” meant, exactly. I looked at Francesca. “You want some lemonade too?”
“No thanks,” she said. “I've already had three absolutely scrumptious glasses.”
Okaaaay,
I thought. I went into the kitchen and got myself a glass of ice cubes surrounded by lemonade. Grace, my school-aholic big sister, was sitting at the dining room table hunched over a book called
Acing the SAT.
She filled in a test bubble and looked up at me, grinning. “Samantha Pattison,” she said.
“I know. In broad daylight.”
“With her niece.”
“I know. Did you meet her? She seemsâ”
“Not now,” murmured Grace, raising her eyebrows.
“Are you ready, Evie?” someone said from behind me. Francesca clomped into the dining room. That's when I noticed she was wearing a normal-looking outfit (purple tank top, green shorts) but also these
pointy-toed, sparkly blue stilettos with, like, four-inch super-skinny heels.
I swear, when I saw those shoes I practically choked on an ice cube. Because I'd never seen anything like them in my entire life; I had no idea what I was supposed to think about them. It was like a quiz from one of Lily's magazines:
What's your take on Francesca's shoes?
(a) Soooo tackyâ
What was she thinking?
(b) Soooo babyishâ
Is she channeling Cinderella?
(c) Soooo weirdâ
Do they wear those things on Neptune?
(d) Soooo hotâ
I wonder if they'd fit me!
And here's the funny part: I realized I was thinking all four things at the same time. So maybe the right answer was (e) All of the above. Even if that wasn't a choice.
Now Francesca clomped over to Grace. “What are you doing?” she asked, trying to read upside down.
“Studying for the SAT,” Grace answered.
“But it's only August. Why worry about some bloody awful test before school even starts?”
Grace smiled in this superior way she has. “Well, I'm a senior in high school. Going to be. And if I want to
go to a good college, I need to take the SAT this fall.”
“How
sad
,” said Francesca. “That's why I absolutely refuse to go to college, among other reasons. Well, don't let us distract you.” Then her face brightened. “Unless you'd like to come with us? We're going for a nice long walk.”
“That's okay,” Grace said, catching my eye. “Have fun, you two.” She picked up a pencil and flipped a page in her SAT book, pretending not to laugh.
I squinted at Francesca. Even outside in the glaring sunshine she looked fantastic: her skin was a golden tan, and her hair was the color of Kraft Caramels. “So where do you want to go?” I asked, my teeth skidding on the last little slivers of ice cubes.
“Oh, you decide,” Francesca said happily. “You're the expert.”
“I am?”
“Well, you live here, don't you? Where do you go when you want to have fun?”
“I don't know. The mall, probably. When someone's mom can drive us.”
She made a face. “Where else?”
“The park. The movies. The stores on Elm.”
“Blah. Boring.”
“The ice cream placeâ”
“Ooh, ice cream,” she said, clapping her hands. “What a genius idea. Is it far?”
“Sort of. Half a mile, maybe.”
“Oh, that's nothing. I love to walk.”
I looked at her feet. “Even in those shoes? They don't look very comfortable.”
“Oh, they're not. They're bloody torture, actually. But they're so epically gorgeous, don't you think?” She took off her left shoe. I could see the side of her foot near her big toe looked pink and peely. She rubbed it, then put the shoe right back on and beamed at me. “Besides, if Mother Darling saw me wearing them, she'd go berserk. So who cares about stupid blisters.”
I didn't know what to say to that; it never occurred to me to
want
my mom to go berserk. The truth is, Mom went berserk all the time, over things like unwashed dishes and unmade beds, and I didn't exactly find it entertaining. And why did Francesca just call her own mom âMother Darling'?
She talked really, really strangely, like everything she said was in quotation marks or something.
We walked long blocks without saying very much.
The air was so hot, it was almost chewy, and I could feel the sweat trickling down my armpits, even though this morning I'd snuck some of Grace's powder-fresh deodorant. Francesca was definitely limping by now. Once or twice I saw her stop and rub her foot, but she never complained or took her shoe off again. Finally she pointed across the street. “Is that the ice cream place, Evie? It looks like heaven.”