Authors: Elizabeth Scott
Tags: #Teenage girls, #Fiction, #Love & Romance, #Best Friends, #Dating & Sex, #Shopping malls, #Realistic fiction, #Schools, #Family Relationships, #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Family problems, #School & Education, #Popularity, #Family Life, #Family & Relationships, #Marriage & Divorce, #Friendship, #First person narratives, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #General, #Interpersonal Relations, #Dating (Social Customs), #High schools
"I don't think you're a freak," he said, and then he kissed me again.
"So what do you think I am?" I said when we separated.
He laughed. "I just think you're you."
"That doesn't really answer the question."
"I think you're stubborn and smart and sort of bossy and beautiful," he said.
"I'm not stubborn or bossy." He thought I was beautiful! ME! "You're right. You're obstinate and occasionally domineering."
"You're not funny," I said, trying not to laugh. I did anyway.
"You have a nice laugh too," he said, and kissed me again. This time we didn't separate until his phone beeped.
"Sorry," he said, pulling away and flipping it open. He grinned when he saw the screen, and then held it out toward me.
I will keep doing this until you call and say
you're on your way home.
Mom
"I love how she signed it, like I wouldn't know who it's from," he said.
"I can't believe she spelled everything out."
"She's psychotic about that stuff," he said. "Back before my dad left, she was working on a degree in literature. I have to hide all my English papers from her. Hey, is that your grandmother?"
I looked out the window and groaned. Grandma was looking at us from the kitchen window, her orange silk bathrobe shining brighter than the kitchen light. "I should go before she comes out and starts talking about your teeth again."
"So, next time should I show up with my dental x-rays?"
"Who says there's going to be a next time?"
"Who says there won't?"
I was silent for a moment. I liked the thought of him coming over again. I liked the thought of having another night like tonight again. "The ten-second rule is still in place, you know, so now we have another date," he said.
"Really?"
"If you want," he said, looking at me so intensely I really had no choice but to kiss him.
So I did.
I expected Grandma to pounce on me as soon as
I came inside, especially since I'd seen her in the kitchen, but the house was quiet and dark when I walked in, and Grandma's door was closed, no light shining out from underneath it. There was a light on in Mom and Dad's room though, but they didn't say anything when I knocked, and if they were awake, they weren't talking to each other.
So, free from discussing where I'd been with anyone, I went to bed. I was more than happy to, because I wanted to think about Will and everything that had happened tonight forever. Especially those last few minutes in the car. They had been amazing. The whole evening had been . . . It had felt like the kind of night that could change your life.
I fell asleep happy, with the promise of seeing Will again tomorrow burning warm inside me.
I woke up with a start right before my alarm was supposed to go off and heard a muted thump out in the hall.
"Dad?" Todd said, and there was something in his voice, a mix of bewilderment and panic, that made me tense. Todd didn't panic. Not ever.
"Sorry," Dad said, and his voice was flat, empty of his usual enthusiasm. "I didn't mean to bump into you like that. I'm a little distracted."
"Dad--"
"We'll talk later, okay? I'll come see you at work."
Their voices faded as the two of them headed toward the living room. I got up, threw on some clothes, and cautiously opened my door. Peering out into the hall, I saw that Grandma's room was empty, and wondered where she was.
That's when the shouting started.
"This is not a punishment!" Mom yelled, and I wondered what Grandma had done to make her so mad. No wonder Dad sounded so strange. He didn't like Grandma, but he really hated it when Mom got angry enough to yell.
"You guys, what's going on?" Todd said, and he sounded more panicked than he had before.
"Ask your mother," Dad said, and although he wasn't yelling, he was talking louder than he usually did. "She's the one who's decided I'm not fit to live with anymore!" Those last few words did come out as a yell. I froze for a moment, stunned by what he'd just said--and by how he'd said it--and then I ran to the living room.
"That's not what I said," Mom said as I came in. She and Dad were standing on opposite sides of the room, Dad by the hallway that led to the front door and Mom by the sofa, one hand braced on the handle of the sliding glass door that looked out onto our backyard. Grandma was sitting in the recliner, and Todd was in the middle of the room, looking back and forth at everyone.
"I asked you to make a choice," Mom continued, her voice shaking now. "You did, and it's a choice I'm not comfortable with, so I think it's best if we . . if we live apart for a while."
"Since when?" Dad said. "You've never doubted me before. But now," he glared at Grandma, "you've suddenly decided things aren't working? I know your mother gave you money, Sharon, but you don't owe her--"
"Suddenly?" Mom said. "This hasn't been sudden. I begged you not to cash in all your retirement money. I begged you not to buy so many Perfect You products, or to at least wait until you sold some of what you had. I begged you not to make the children work for you. I begged you not to throw that party. I begged you not to buy that ad. And you know what, Steve? You did what you wanted anyway. What I said--what I thought--it wasn't important to you at all."
"How can you say that? You and Kate and Todd are my life!"
"Are we? Then why didn't you listen when I told you we had no money? Why did you ignore the budget I begged you to stick to? Why did you choose to throw away our home--our home, Steve--for goddamned vitamins?"
"I can't believe you're saying this," Dad said. "It isn't . . . none of this is fair. If you'd only-
-why can't you--?"
"Don't you dare try to blame my child for this," Grandma snapped. "You chose to throw away your retirement money, you chose to ignore everything Sharon said. She showed me the credit card bills, you know, and how you could buy expensive coffee and worthless video games during this time . . I admit I never thought you were right for my daughter, Steve, but I certainly never thought you'd be cruel enough to wreck her life like this."
"Damn you, I haven't wrecked anything!" Dad said, and we all froze. Seeing him mad was a million times worse than all his fake smiles because it was so clear he was falling apart.
"Look," he said, staring at Mom, his voice softer now, pleading, "I've got it all figured out. We'll rent the house I told you about, the one that needs a little work, and we'll save as much as we can. After a few months of that, plus Todd's paychecks from the coffee place and the money your mother's given you, we'll be able to move somewhere nicer.
And then, once business picks up, we'll have just enough to live on and we can use Todd's paychecks to help pay down our debt."
"No," Mom said, at the same time Todd said, "What?"
"I've sacrificed enough for you, Steve," Mom said. "I got a second job. I stretched money as far as I could while you kept spending it, and I am not going to live in a falling-down house and let my son pay off our debt. It's not right. We deserve better." "I just think that if we all help each other out for a little while longer--"
"Hold on," Todd said, and turned to Dad. "Did I hear you right? You want me to give you my paychecks?"
"Not forever. Just until we get things together. It's for the family, Todd. Your mom and I did what we had to in order to send you to college and now--"
"Hey you had money to send me to college," Todd said.
"We didn't--"
"You did. Mom told me about it."
Dad shot Mom a hurt look, and Grandma sat up straighter, her eyes darting from Todd to Mom.
"Look, I feel bad that you guys had problems," Todd said, "but Dad, I took the job at the coffee place to save up enough to move out on my own. Not to--not to support you."
He swallowed. "I mean . . I want to help, okay? But I don't want to take care of you."
"But that's not what I'm saying," Dad said.
"But it's what you're asking," Todd said, and looked at Mom, turning away from Dad.
"I'm going to work now," he told her. "Call me if you need anything."
"Todd," Dad said, but Todd just shook his head and walked out.
It was so quiet after he left. Horrible, deadly quiet. I looked at Grandma and was startled to see there were tears in her eyes.
"Is this it?" Dad said, breaking the silence. He was staring at Mom, looking broken. "You really want me to go?"
"No, but I . . I need you to grow up," Mom said. "And I hope that time apart will help you--" "Grow up?" Dad said. "This isn't you, Sharon. I know it isn't. You sound like your mother."
Mom flinched. "I'm not saying you have to give up your Perfect You business, Steve. You can still do it part-time. I just. . . I need you to get a job. A real one."
"But I have a real job," Dad said. "And it's--I'm living my dream, Sharon. My whole life, I've wanted to do something that makes me happy, and I have that now. Please don't ask me to give it up."
"I don't make you happy? Our life isn't enough for you?"
"Of course you make me happy. It's always been you and me, hasn't it? And I know the two of us, together, can do anything. Things will turn around, Sharon. Just trust in that.
Trust in me."
"I can't," Mom whispered, and Dad staggered back like she'd hit him.
"Why did you do this?" he said, turning to Grandma. "Why did you have to ruin things?"
"I didn't," Grandma said. "You did. Didn't you listen to a word Sharon said? Or are you completely incapable of hearing anything other than yourself?"
"Mother, please," Mom said, her voice cracking.
"Me? You're accusing me of not hearing Sharon?" Dad said. "You sent her away when she was a child, like she was a gift you could return, and now you sit there and try to tell me that I--"
"Stop it," I said, and then said it again, louder, shouting, and Mom and Dad and Grandma stared at me like they'd never seen me before. I don't think they'd even noticed I was there.
"See," Dad said to Grandma. "Look at what you've done to Kate. Honey, go get in the car and we'll go to the mall in a minute."
"Me?" Grandma said. "Kate, darling, come over here and sit on the sofa and rest for a bit. You don't have to go anywhere."
"Both of you stop it," Mom said, glaring at Dad and Grandma. "Kate, please go to your room and I'll come talk to you in a bit, okay?"
"No," I said. "I'm sick of listening to all of you." And then I walked past them, grabbing a pair of shoes as I went outside. I heard their voices, raised again, as I slammed the front door closed behind me, but I didn't stop to listen.
I didn't want to hear anything they had to say.
I sort of wanted someone to come after me, if only to tell me that everything would be okay or at least as okay as things could be when you woke up and found out your parents were splitting up, but no one did. I stopped at the end of our street for a second, waiting, but no one else was around, and the front door to our house was still closed.
I kept walking, trying to think of something I could do. Some way I could fix things. But there was nothing. I wished I could talk to someone, that I could tell Will what had happened.
I could call him. Go home, lock myself in my room, and call him. Except I'd have to deal with my parents and Grandma, plus Will was probably on his way to work already.
Also, I was pretty sure that everything I wanted to say wasn't the kind of thing you went around telling someone after only one date.
I still wanted to call him, though. But how would I even start the conversation? "Hey, I had a great time last night, and by the way, I got up this morning and my mom asked my dad to move out. How are you?"
No, I couldn't call him. At least not with that as my opening line. But I . . I could ask Anna what to do. I could tell her every terrible thing that had just happened. After all, we were talking again.
When I got to her house she was outside, setting up a couple of lawn chairs in her front yard.
"Hey," I said. "What are you doing?"
She looked up and blinked, clearly surprised to see me, and then she moved away from the chairs and came toward me. "What's wrong?"
"Dad's moving out," I said, and my voice came out faint and wobbly.
"Oh, Kate," Anna said, and wrapped one arm around my shoulders the way she used to whenever I got upset about something, and led me inside.
"How did you know something happened?" I asked as we walked in and she was shutting the door, careful to close it quietly.
"Well, your hair is, um, a little messier than usual," she said, grinning. "Plus you looked about the same when you found out Todd was moving back in, remember?"
"Except then I was mad and now--" I said, my voice cracking as I wandered around her living room, touching the
top of the chairs I'd sat in so often, the side of the sofa I'd lain on to watch television.
"Here," Anna said, nudging me with one hip and handing me the cordless phone she and her mom had always kept on their coffee table. "Call your mom."
"I don't want to."
"You said that last time too, but remember how she showed up here, totally furious because you hadn't called?"
I nodded and took the phone.
Grandma answered before the first ring had even finished. "Hello?"
"Hi, Grandma, it's Kate."
"Darling, where are you?"
"I'm at Anna's. What's--is everything okay with Mom and Dad?"
"I'm glad you called to let us know where you are," she said, and her voice was softer now, soothing. "Your father has already left for work but he's going to pick you up after school tomorrow so the two of you can talk about what's going on. That's all right with you, isn't it?"
"Dad's left?"
"I have to go now, darling. Your mother is very upset. Please come home before dark, and call if you need a ride."
"Upset? What do you mean, upset? Is she--wait a minute, is that Mom crying?" I froze, sure that was the sound I heard in the background.
"I--well, yes, darling, she is crying." Her voice got fainter for a moment, like she'd turned away from the phone. "Sharon, sweetheart, she could hear you, and I'm not going to lie to her. What? Darling, you don't have to do this now--" Her voice came back over the line strong and clear. "Kate, I have to go. Don't forget to call if you need a ride."