Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
me. He was probably around the same age as me, but he
always treated me with the respect he showed his elderly
tenants.
“Jamal,” I said as I signed in on the visitors log. “How
many times do I have to tell you to call me Avery?”
“A few more, I guess,” he replied with a wink.
Tossing down the pen, I sighed with feigned
exaggerated irritation. “Kids today. ey just don’t listen.”
“Have a good one, Ms. King.”
I exited the elevator on the third floor and headed
down the hallway with my two grocery bags, nodding to
Mr. Schwartz and saying hello to Mrs. Rossi along the
way. Grandma had been living here for five years now, so I
knew the residents pretty well, at least well enough to say
hi and offer a friendly smile. Grandma told me there were
a lot of elderly people there who never got visitors, whose
families moved them in and then pretty much forgot about
them. e thought made me sad. No way I wanted my
grandmother to be lonely and forgotten like a pair of old
shoes. So I made sure I said hello to each and every person
I came across, whether I knew them or not.
At apartment number thirty-seven, I set down one
bag so I could knock, but Grandma pulled the door open
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Starting From Scratch
before I had a chance. Knowing she’d been waiting for me
made me all warm and mushy inside.
“Hi, Grandma,” I said as she pulled me into a hug.
“You’re too skinny,” she said, tightening her arms
around me. It was the exact same line she opened with
every time she saw me. “Don’t you eat?”
“I eat plenty, Grandma, trust me.”
I was one of the only women I knew whose
grandmother was actually taller than she was. Needless to
say, height was not something that showed up in my genes,
and I obviously didn’t inherit that from Grandma. At
about five-six, she had me by two inches. Apparently, my
mother was also a shrimp, not that I’d have any way of
knowing that, since she’d been gone since I was four. My
coloring, on the other hand, definitely came to me through
my grandmother. Her hair was now a steel gray and rich-
looking but when she was younger, it was the same auburn
shade as mine. We weren’t really traditional redheads, as we
both had fair skin but no freckles. Our hair was more like a
burnished copper, kind of rust-colored with lighter natural
highlights. My hair was definitely one of my better features
and I tended a little bit toward freakishness with it,
spending way too much on designer shampoos,
conditioners, and styling products. Grandma said the same
thing about hers, that she too used to fret a bit more than
necessary over her locks. I’d seen old pictures when her
hair was the exact shade as mine, and it was beautiful. I
also got her eyes. My mother’s were apparently hazel, but
Grandma’s were a clear green the color of a shimmering
summer lake and she’d passed them on to me.
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Georgia Beers
e scent of warm chocolate drifted through the air
and caught me by the nose. “Hey,” I scolded. “Did you bake
something without me?”
“It’s just brownies,” she said, waving her hand
dismissively as if her brownies weren’t the most awesome
confections ever. “Mr. Davidson down the hall hung a
picture for me last week, so I told him I’d make him some
in return.”
“Yeah, you watch out for Mr. Davidson. He’s got his
eye on you.” I put the grocery bags on the counter in the
small galley kitchen and took a quick peek in the oven.
“Nonsense,” Grandma said, though the slight
pinkening of her cheeks gave her away. “What did you
bring?” she asked, changing the subject as she emptied the
grocery bags. “Avery, I told you that you didn’t have to
bring me food all the time.”
“I know, but I like to.” Her nearly empty carton of
half-n-half I found in the small refrigerator made me
happy I had. I knew she felt better, felt more independent,
if she could protest a little, so I let her, knowing I’d done
the right thing.
We sat at the round table in her little dining area and
chatted, just like always. Her apartment was small but just
what she needed. She even had a little balcony off the
living room where she could sit and read on nice days. I
bought her a wicker rocker for a housewarming present
when she moved in and it sat proudly in the spring
sunshine. Parting with some of her big, heavy pieces of
furniture was probably the hardest part about moving her
from the house she’d lived in for almost fifty years. What
she’d been able to keep lent it a feel that was very similar to
her old house, homey and comfortable and neat as a pin.
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Starting From Scratch
I told her about Maddie’s bombshell as we sipped our
tea. I drank mine just like she did, with a little sugar and a
lot of cream, and we took mirror-image sips. She dabbed at
her mouth with a linen napkin and reached for the plate of
lemon cookies she’d baked the day before.
“Well, you’re very good with kids.”
I looked at her in disbelief. “Since when am I good
with kids?”
“Avery, just because somebody doesn’t want to have
their own children, it doesn’t make that person unable to
handle them. You handle them very well.”
Who were these people?
I wondered. First Maddie and
J.T., then my own grandmother, telling me how well I deal
with children and determined to turn me into some kind
of babysitter. “Well, I’m certainly not looking forward to
it.”
“But you’ll do it because you owe Maddie.”
e tone of her voice was firm enough that it made
me flash back to being twelve years old. “Yes, Grandma, I’ll
do it. I told her I would.”
“Good. Maybe it’ll be fun.”
“Maybe money will fall from the sky, too.”
e corner of her mouth quirked up and she brought
her cup to her lips in an attempt to hide it. Yeah, my
grandma was finding my situation amusing. I narrowed my
eyes at her. “I’m going to drag you to one of the games, you
know,” I threatened. “at’ll teach you to mock me.”
“Hey, if it gets these old bones out of the house and
into the sunshine, I’m all for it.” She winked at me and bit
into a lemon cookie.
I couldn’t help but laugh. “You’re evil.”
“And don’t you forget it.”
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Georgia Beers
1
at night, I spent hours online researching tee-ball,
how to play it, and how to coach it. Shockingly, I found a
handful of websites on the subject, as well as a couple
books, which I put in orders for. I wasn’t sure exactly how
they would help, but I held out hope anyway. If I was going
to do this, I wanted to do it right. Or at least make the
attempt.
I sifted through Maddie’s notes. What I found most
interesting was that she made some observations along the
margins that had to do with not worrying about winning
or losing. e line that made me laugh said, “e kids don’t
really care if they win or lose, they just want to learn to
play and have a little fun. Let the score roll off.” I made
myself a mental note to ask her if she’d gotten a little too
wrapped up in the number of runs during her first season
as a coach, because I knew first hand how competitive
Maddie could be. At the same time, it gave me pause. I
liked to win just as much as the next girl. I took my red
pen and wrote in big letters at the top of one page:
TEACH THEM HOW TO PLAY. From the blurbs on
the various websites I’d checked out as well as Maddie’s
notes, that was going to be the thing to remember. And as
the coach of these oh-so-young children, that was my job.
Maddie was scheduled for surgery the next morning,
so I called to wish her luck and get the details of where
she’d be so I could visit later. She confirmed the time and
place for practice on Wednesday and said she’d have J.T.
zip to the room they used as an office and e-mail me the
list of names for the kids on the team.
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Starting From Scratch
I took a deep breath as the e-mail arrived, and I
scanned the list of twelve names. Five girls and seven boys.
Eight five-year-olds and four six-year-olds. And they were
counting on me to teach them how to play ball.
I dropped my head into my hands and groaned loudly.
Steve lifted his head from my reading chair and regarded
me with curious brown eyes. en I got up and headed
downstairs to do what I always did when I was stressed out
and nervous.
I made cookies.
25
CHAPTER THREE
ey’re five-year-olds. ey’re kids, for Christ’s sake. Relax.
I said it over and over again in my head, but the nerves
were still there and I felt like somebody was shooting
billiards in the pit of my stomach. I’d gotten to the field a
little early—Tyrell was far too amused by the fact that I
was actually doing this and kicked me out of the office a
full half hour earlier than usual. J.T. had dropped by the
office parking lot the day before and transferred all
Maddie’s supplies to the trunk of my car, so I had
everything I needed.
I’d decided that one large benefit to tee-ball was that I
didn’t really have to pitch, and therefore the chances of me
getting nailed in the face with a line drive by some kid who
was on track to be the next Barry Bonds were pretty slim. I
hauled out the bases and Maddie’s pre-cut twine and set
them up, making the infield a little smaller than actual size
for the time being. Five-year-olds had short legs.
e tee was made of heavy duty plastic, as were the
bats, and we would use plastic balls as well. e idea was to
get the kids used to the rules and the feel of the game, not
to overwhelm them with heavy equipment. It was sort of
glorified whiffle ball, not that any of these little tykes
would have any idea what that was.
Georgia Beers
I was swigging from my water bottle and running
through the list of names again when the first car pulled
up and two kids got out. A minivan pulled up a few
seconds later, followed by another. I glanced at my watch.
Five forty-five on the dot. Nice. ese would be the kids
that were punctual, I suspected.
Once the seventh member of my team appeared, I
decided I wasn’t going to bother trying to learn their last
names. First names were hard enough, especially
considering I had two Brittanys, a Samuel not Sam, a
Mikey, and a Mikki. By six o’clock, the last kid showed up,
a little boy named Max. His mom followed him from their
Lexus and was chatting on her cell phone as she took a
seat in the bleachers with the one other mom and one
other dad who’d also decided to stick around for practice.
(Maddie hadn’t mentioned the possibility of spectators on
my first day and I was not happy about them…I felt I
didn’t really need anybody over the age of six to see that I
had no idea what I was doing.)
“Okay, guys. Okay.” I raised my voice to get the
attention of all of them. “Let’s have a seat right here.” I
waited until they all grabbed some grass between home
and the pitcher’s mound and then I took roll call. “All
right, first things first. It’s going to take me a while to
remember your names. I’m old, like your parents, so my
memory stinks.” at got a little chuckle out of them,
which was kind of cool. “So, you’re going to have to help
me out until I get used to you, all right?”
ere were nods all around and one little blond girl
(Isabella?) raised her hand. When I pointed to her, she
asked, “What do we call you?”
“at’s a good question. Coach is just fine.”
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Starting From Scratch
“Coach what?”
Hmm. Another good question. Avery seemed kind of
a weird name to expect them to remember. “How about
Coach King? Does that work for you guys?”
“A king is a boy.” Okay, so the little blond girl was a
smarty-pants.
“at’s true,” I said to her. “But it’s also my last name,
so it makes sense.”
“Oh.” She shrugged and that was the end of that,
apparently. Deceptively easy, I suspected.
Keeping their attention turned out to be the hardest
part. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the majority of
them knew some of the basic rules of the game—which
bases were which, for example—so I decided to get right
into hitting, thinking that if I spent a short amount of time
on the boring details and most of the time on actual
participation, it would all work out. I also crossed my
fingers and toes, figuring it couldn’t hurt.
I set them up in the field using the imaginary line in
tee-ball that I’d read about in Maddie’s notes as well as
online. It meant that the fielders all stood back beyond an
invisible forty-foot arc from home plate that ran from first
base to third. is was a safety measure so nobody got
blasted by a ball right off the tee. Plus, it helped the kids