Authors: Lisa Wingate
Tags: #FIC042000, #FIC042040, #FIC027020, #Texas—fiction
“Yeah . . . you know . . . you're right, I think,” Clay concurred, and then added, “Hey, Roger, come'ere. Come'ere, boy. What's out there, huh? You see somebody out there?” Of all things, Clay still had the goofball mutt-slash-golden retriever that was riding with him on the ill-fated bike trip. Roger traveled in a pull-behind bike trailer, the kind made for babies. He'd been an inconveniently manic houseguest in my no-dogs-allowed apartment building for a week, while Clay recovered from pneumonia. I'd come within a whisker, literally, of getting kicked out of the complex, and my Persian rug has never been the same since.
“It's just me. It's just me.” Squeezing from the bushes with one hand in the air, I surrendered without a fight. “Everybody calm down.” My suitcase wobbled over clumps of grass and loose twigs, threatening to tip over as I started toward the driveway. The casserole ladies squinted, and Mrs. Underhill took a couple of steps my way. Detaching himself from the blonde, Clay trotted down the stairs as his dog sprinted across the lawn, heading in my direction.
“Roger, hey! Roger, wait!” Clay called, and of course Roger didn't listen. He tackled me with the momentum of a linebacker, and we did a clumsy backward waltz as I tried to avoid falling over the suitcase. Roger swiped his long, lolling tongue across my mouth before I could get my balance and push him away. By the time I did, Clay had caught up.
“Heather's here,” Clay announced, in case anyone was still confused. One hand caught the dog, and one gave me a shoulder-hug, but I got the distinct impression that my brother wasn't thrilled to see me. “Hey, Sis,” he said.
The casserole ladies regarded us with curious, somewhat uncertain expressions, as we walked to the porch. A few uncomfortable greetings passed back and forth, and I was actually relieved when Mrs. Hall shoved a casserole into my hands. It was still warm on the bottom, which felt good. I remembered Mrs. Hall from the pharmacy where, after Dad's death, I'd picked up the prescriptions that were supposed to
fix
my mother, but didn't. Mrs. Hall was always nice about it. In truth, she probably wasn't supposed to be handing that stuff off to a minor, but she let me take it, always with the kind admonition that they'd be happy to deliver next time.
I set the casserole on one of the porch tables and wiped my mouth, still contemplating the gross-out factor of having been kissed by Clay's dog.
Mrs. Underhill gave me a suspicious look, then stated the obvious, “Well, Heather, my goodness, you're a wreck. Was that you outside the hardware store earlier? You didn't walk here all the way from Seattle, surely?” She batted a hand, peppering the artificially sweetened question with a sharp-edged giggle.
I did. You know, I'm on a new exercise kick, and I thought walking from Seattle would be a great way to start,
was on the tip of my tongue. Heaven help me, but Mrs. Underhill obviously still held the strings to the broken, bitter, smart-mouthed teenager I thought I'd buried years ago. Even that was disconcertingâas if she had control of me, rather than me having control of myself. “It's a long story,” I replied, instead. “Weather problems.” Let her ponder that and draw her own conclusions as to how that equated to appearing in town on foot.
She was right about one thing, though. I was a wreck. No wonder the girl who'd just put the smooch on my brother was eyeing me uncertainly. She butted Clay in the shoulder, as in,
Introduce me, already
.
Who's this Heather person?
Apparently she didn't know anything about me. Strange, considering how familiar they'd looked a few minutes ago.
Another vehicle rattled up just as Clay was about to begin the introductions. The hearse was a dead giveaway, even from the end of the drive. As it passed through the tunnel of live oaks, I recognized three people in the front seatâtwo tall, one short. Two gray heads, one sandy brown with the hair loosely pulled back, fly-away strands swirling around her face.
My mother, Uncle Herbert, and Uncle Charley. Clay waved enthusiastically, in a way that said,
Hail, hail, the gang's all here!
The hearse had barely skidded to a stop before my great uncles were grunting and creaking their way out of the car, then heading for the porch in stiff-legged shuffles. Mother, sliding over from the middle, was one step behind them.
“Well, praise the Lord and phone the saints. There she is!” Uncle Charley made a beeline toward me, outdistancing Uncle Herbert, who had to hold on to the handrail to make his way up the eight steps to the porch.
Uncle Charley pushed past the casserole ladies and swept me into a meaty hug. “We just been to the sheriff's department, finding out how to report you for a missing person.”
The ladies gasped.
“Huh . . . wha . . . oof!” I stammered and grunted as Uncle Herbert moved in from behind and I was momentarily the filling in an uncle sandwich. The scents of Borax, axle grease, and musty leather flicked at my senses, pulling threads. Memories were tied to those smellsâchildhood visits to the old family farm with my father, where Uncle Charley gave me pony rides. The dark days after my father's death. My high school graduation, when all I cared about was getting away from here. I didn't want the memories that were tethered to these two old men. I wanted to leave this place and everything attached to it.
Now I felt it all pulling at me again, leaving me confused and lost.
“Heather, where in the world have you been?” My mother's admonition came from somewhere outside the circle of scents and memories. “We had a call from a man in Dallas who discovered your purse in the trash that was cleaned off of a bus, but you were nowhere to be found. We were scared to death. He said he'd FedEx the purse, by the way.”
The casserole ladies gasped and twittered and asked questions as I rushed to share the odd saga of my trip to Texas and the lost purse. No telling how big that story would get by the time it circled town a few times.
Uncle Charley brushed a sandy-sounding something off my jacket. “Looks like Roger got the besta you. Clay, you gotta teach that dog not to mug the comp'ny. He almost knocked Reverend Hay in the drink when we were takin' the lights off the restaurant after Christmas, and the UPS man is afraid to even come by here. He's been catching us at the Waterbird when we go for coffee in the mornin'.”
Uncle Charley took my shoulders and held me away from him. “Let me get a look at ya.” He pulled me into a patch of sunlight and announced to the crowd, “My cow, look at our little Heather! She growed up to be a pretty thang!”
I was too confused to be embarrassed. Clay and his dog had been in town long enough to frighten off the UPS man and help take down Christmas lights? What in the world?
Mrs. Underhill wasn't the least bit interested in admiring my growth or my natural beauty. She regarded me with the fisheye, as if some frightening life-form had invaded the casserole circle. “My word, you got on the bus with a . . . a
man
you met on the
plane
? It's a wonder he wasn't after more than your purse.”
I blurted out the first thing that came to mind. “He was a
dentist
.” As if that explained everything. “Anyway, I was never in any danger. I just forgot my purse.”
“What sort of purse?” one of the ladies asked. “Nothing expensive, I hope?”
“Land sakes, what's that matter?” Mama B snapped, then turned and hobbled toward the car. “Let's leave these folks to their reunitin'. We got more deliveries to make.”
Even the members of the Moses Lake human telegraph knew better than to refuse a direct order from Mama B. Reluctantly, they backed away, having ferreted out enough details to successfully add their own and come up with an account of my arrival in town. In closing, they offered a few sympathetic, but pointed, comments about the burden of my two widowed uncles being forced to provide for
all this company
. Then they handed over more food before following Mama B. Clay's apparent girlfriend kissed him on the cheek and whispered, “We gotta drop off a meal for a funeral.” Adding a meaningful look, she told Clay she'd see him later.
An uncomfortable silence descended on us as the crowd departed. I was conscious of everyone surreptitiously watching me and maintaining their positions, in the way members of the bomb squad might gather around a suspicious package.
My mother broke the stalemate by peeking under the foil on the CorningWare pan. “Still hot,” she said, her tone overly light and falsely cheerful. “Let's go around back and eat on the sun porch. Clay, maybe you can give Heather a ride over to Catfish Cabins after that.”
“The cabins?” I glanced at the house. Despite the presence of the funeral office, parlors, and workrooms, as well as the chapel in what had once been a grand ballroom, Harmony House was still quite large, the entire second floor and both ends of the main floor remaining in use as personal residence space. There was also the small gardener's cottage out back, which meant there was plenty of space for me to stay here. So why was Mom trying to ship me off to the rental cabins, halfway around the lake by Uncle Charley's restaurant? With no car to drive, I'd be stranded there.
Maybe that was their plan. Maybe I was being given the bum's rushâwhile they were happy not to have to report me as a missing person, they didn't want me around, either. “I thought I'd stay here.”
“Oh . . . Well, it's sort of . . . crowded. . . .” Mom hedged as furtive glances darted between the relatives. “Uncle Charley has been living here for a while now, since Uncle Herb shouldn't be alone. It's somewhat crowded with Clay and me in the house, too, and now the mess of getting ready for the estate sale. The place really is a disasâ”
“I can bunk out back in the gardener's cottage.” I didn't wait for her to finish. I wasn't about to let them warehouse me off-site while they continued with whatever they were doing. I'd never seen a group of people looking so culpable. I was going to be on them
like fleas on a back-porch hound
, as Uncle Herb's Mennonite housekeeper, Ruth, used to say.
Glancing at the house momentarily, I wondered what had happened to Ruth. During those terrible months of my senior year, she was the one who'd saved me. She hadn't tried to convince me to snap out of it, or stop skulking around in black T-shirts and too much makeup, or keep a stiff upper lip, like Uncle Herb and Aunt Esther had. Nor had she echoed the geriatric pastor of Lakeshore Community Church, telling me how much God still loved me. Ruth just baked cookies, washed laundry, and occasionally laid a comforting hand on my shoulder as she passed by in her old-fashioned-looking dresses and sweaters, and a hair covering, as was typical of many of the Mennonite residents upriver in Gnadenfeld.
Uncle Herb rubbed the back of his neck, glancing toward the backyard and then toward my mother, his brows lifting in a way that seemed to say,
Uh-oh . . . Now what do we do?
“Well . . . but . . . Blaine Underhill has things stored out there,” Mother shrugged, dismissing my suggestion. “Signs and whatnot. He's running for county commissioner.”
There was that name again.
Blaine Underhill
. Why was my family suddenly so tight with the Underhills? I'd never before in my life seen my mother speak the Underhill name without sneering.
“I don't mind,” I pressed, calling their bluff, but there was also a painful little pinprick inside me. Nobody was happy to have me here. “All I need is a bed and enough space to put my suitcase, and maybe a plate of casserole. Why is the benevolence committee bringing food by here, anyway?”
Mom shrugged, her lip curling slightly, flashing an eyetooth. “Oh, you know those women. They're always looking for an excuse to take a casserole somewhere and stick their noses in.”
“Stick their nose into what?” The attention of the church ladies was never completely for naught. They believed in Christian charity, with a purpose.
Mom flipped a hand through the air. “Who knows? Heather, don't you think you'd be more comfortable at the Catfish Cabins? The gardener's cottage is a mess.”
The sting of rejection put me back in my high-school shoes, when no one other than Ruth seemed to want me around.
I will not let them get to me
.
I will not.
“No. I'll be fine here. I don't plan to stay long. As soon as we get the hitch in this real estate deal taken care of, I'm gone.”
And never coming back. Ever. You won't see me darkening your doorstep anymore.
“In fact, since we're all here, why don't we go on inside and hash it out? What's this malarkey about a competing offer on the properties? When did this come up and who made the offer?”
As if there really is one.
Mother rolled her eyes. “Really, Heather. You've barely arrived, and all you can talk about is business? Let's have something to eat on the sun porch. The man who found your purse said he'd try to get it to FedEx today. You're stuck here until it arrives, anyway. You can't fly without identification. I think you're safe taking a little time for family niceties.”
Irritation crawled over me on sharp little legs, digging in claws. A snappy retort was on the tip of my tongue,
Who are you to lecture me about family anything?
Squeezing my lips tightly over my teeth, I fought to keep the venom at bay.
Uncle Charley, looking embarrassed, nudged Uncle Herbert and started toward the front walk. “Well, I'm starved. Let's head around the back way. No sense traipsing through the house.”
I was conscious of more covert glances and a collective holding of breath, but I'd also caught the scent of casserole, and I was hungry, weary, and lost. Every muscle in my body seemed to be liquefying. The afternoon had started to cool, and I just wanted to sit down someplace warm, so I followed the uncs and the casseroles off the porch. Clay grabbed my suitcase and walked along behind me as Uncle Charley talked over his shoulder, pointing out the growth in various trees, a new rose bush on the corner, an old lamppost that had been removed after it became too unstable, and other things he thought might have changed since I'd last seen the place.