The Distance Between Us (3 page)

BOOK: The Distance Between Us
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I roll my eyes. She pats my hand and then takes her time leaving the doll store, studying dolls as she goes.

I settle back onto the stool and read some more. When seven o’clock rolls around I glance at the stairs for what seems like the gazillionth time. My mom never came down. That’s weird. She rarely makes me stay down here alone if she’s actually here. After locking up, lowering the blinds, and turning out the lights, I grab the stack of mail and go upstairs.

The house smells amazing. Like sweet cooked carrots and mashed potatoes with gravy.

My mom is standing at the stove stirring gravy. Just as I’m about to greet her, she says, “I know. And that’s the problem.”

I realize she’s on the phone, so I head to my bedroom to put my shoes away. Halfway down the hall I hear her say, “Oh please. They don’t live here to mingle with normal society.”

She must be talking to her best friend. She doesn’t know I’ve overheard many conversations like this but I have. I kick off my shoes in my room and head back to the kitchen.

“Smells good, Mom,” I say.

She jumps and then says, “Well, Caymen just walked in. I’d better go.” She laughs at something her friend says. Her laugh is like a melodic song.

The kitchen doesn’t like two people in it at once so it constantly shoves counter edges and drawer handles into my hips and lower back. I soon abandon the idea that we can both fit, and I step around the counter to the small dining area.

“Sorry I didn’t join you downstairs,” she says after hanging up the phone. “I thought I’d make us a hot dinner. It’s been a while.”

I sit down and flip through the mail I had brought up. “Is there an occasion?”

“Nope. Just for fun.”

“Thanks, Mom.” I hold up the electricity bill in a pink envelope. I have no idea why pink is chosen for lateness. Is it really the color that announces to the world (or at least the mail carrier): “These people are irresponsible failures?” I’d think puke yellow would do a better job at that announcement. “Forty-eight-hours notice.”

“Ugh. Is that the only one?”

“Looks like it.”

“Okay. I’ll pay it online later. Just set it on the counter.”

I don’t even have to stand up to reach the counter. It’s less than an arm’s length away from the table. My mom carries over two plates of steaming food and sets one in front of me. We talk as we eat.

“Oh, Mom, I forgot to tell you about the guy who came into the store the other day.”

“Oh yeah?”

“He beckoned me.”

“I’m sure he was just trying to get your attention.”

I keep going. “Also, nobody taught him how to smile, and there was a lip curl at one point.”

“Well, I hope you kept these thoughts to yourself.” She takes a bite of her potatoes.

“No, I told him that you offered smiling lessons in the afternoon. I think he’ll be in tomorrow.”

Her eyes snap up, but she must realize I’m kidding because she lets out a sigh even though I see her trying to hide a smile.

“Mrs. Dalton was in again today.”

For this news she offers a real smile. “She was in last week, too. She gets so excited when she’s waiting for a doll.”

“I know. It’s cute.” I clear my throat and fork a swirling pattern in my potatoes before looking at my mom.

“Thanks for running the store today. I got caught up in paperwork up here.”

“It’s okay.”

“You know I appreciate you, right?”

I shrug. “It’s no big deal.”

“It is to me. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”

“I think you’d own lots of cats.”

“Really? You think I’d be a cat lady?”

I nod slowly. “Yeah. That or nutcrackers.”

“What? Nutcrackers? I don’t even like nuts.”

“You don’t have to like nuts to own lots of wide-mouthed wooden dolls.”

“So you think without you that I’d have a completely different personality and like cats and/or nutcrackers?”

Without me she’d have a completely different life. She’d have probably gone to college and got married, not been disowned by her parents. “Well, yeah. Hello. Without me in your life you’d have no humor or love. You’d be a sad, sad woman.”

She laughs again. “So true.” She places her fork on her plate and stands. “Are you done?”

“Yes.”

She picks up my plate and puts it on top of hers but not before I notice that she hardly ate anything. At the sink she quickly rinses the plates.

“Mom, you cooked. I’ll clean.”

“Okay, thanks, sweetie. I think I’m going to go read in bed.”

It takes me only about twenty minutes to clean up. On the way to my room I poke my head in my mom’s room to say good night. An open book lies on her chest and she’s fast asleep. She really was tired today. Maybe she had gotten up early, like she said, to work out or something then went back to sleep. I close her book, put it on her nightstand, and turn off her light.

Chapter 4

A
s I walk into the doll store the next day after school, I’m surprised to see a man standing at the counter. He’s wearing dark clothes and has a dark, shortly trimmed beard and a dark tan. Yes, there is definitely a dark theme going on. He seems to exude it, and yet my mom’s cheeks are pink and she’s smiling. When the bell on the door rings, they both look over at me.

“Hi, Caymen,” my mom says.

“Hi.”

“Well, see you around, Susan,” the strange man says.

My mom nods.

He leaves, and I say, “Who was that?” I tuck my backpack beneath the register. “Alex?”

“Who’s Alex?”

“The guy who’s supposed to pick up Mrs. Dalton’s doll.”

“Oh no, it was just a customer.”

Right. I watch him walk by the front window. A single man in his forties is a customer. I almost say as much when she says, “I’m glad you’re here. I have to run a couple things to the post office before one.” She picks up two boxes and a stack of envelopes and heads toward the back door. “Oh, and Mrs. Dalton’s doll is in the back.”

“Okay, see you later.”

The front door opens and I look up half expecting to see my mom’s “customer” walk back in, but I’m greeted by a broody Henry. I don’t know if he took a shower or if carrying a guitar case actually does make a guy appear more attractive than he is, but either way, it’s suddenly a little more apparent what Skye sees in him.

“Hey, Caveman.”

Ugh. He probably forgot my real name. “Hi, Toad. Skye’s not here.”

“I know. I was hoping I could play you a song I wrote for her. Let me know if you think she’ll like it.”

“Okay. Sure.”

He sits on the floor and takes out his guitar. He leans against a lower cabinet, stretching out and crossing his legs in front of him. The dolls on the lit glass shelves above him and the wooden cradle next to him make this look like the setting for some trippy music video. He strums a few chords then clears his throat and sings.

The song is pretty good, bordering on cheesy. The line about how without Skye he would die makes me want to laugh, but I manage to hold it in. But by the end of the song I completely understand what Skye sees in him. I’m pretty sure I’m staring at him dreamily myself. So when the sound of someone clapping breaks the after-song silence, my cheeks go hot.

Xander is standing by the front door. He looks even richer today. The look consists of perfectly styled hair, designer clothes, and Gucci leather loafers with no socks.

“Great song,” he says to Henry.

“Thanks.” Then Henry looks at me for verification.

“Yeah, it was awesome.”

He takes a breath of relief then puts his guitar away. I turn my attention to Xander.

“I’ve been sent on another errand,” he says.

“Another day where mingling with commoners helps you appreciate your life more?” I could’ve sworn I said something equivalent last time, but the offended look that takes over his face lets me know I probably only thought it before. Oh well, it was a joke anyway (sort of). If he can’t take a joke, that’s on him.

“Something like that,” he mumbles.

Henry stands up. “The Scottish doll is mine, so hands off.”

Xander holds his hands up. “Not interested.” I get the feeling Xander thinks Henry is talking about something other than a kilt-wearing doll. But since Xander is
not interested
, it doesn’t matter anyway.

Henry heads for the door. “I’m going to sing the song in our set Friday night. Come. We’re playing at Scream Shout. Ten o’clock.” Scream Shout is a dive about five blocks away where local bands play to small, mostly wasted crowds for little or no money. I tag along with Skye occasionally, but it’s not really my scene.

Xander watches him go and then turns back to me, all business. “My grandmother asked me to pick up a doll she ordered.”

“Your grandmother?” I open the book, wondering if I had missed an order.

“Katherine Dalton.”

“Mrs. Dalton is your grandma?”

“Why does that surprise you so much?”

I close my open mouth.
Because Mrs. Dalton is sweet and down-to-earth and amazing. . . . You take yourself too seriously, have perfectly manicured nails, and line your clothes with money
(or at least that’s the excuse I give him for such good posture). “I just had no idea.”

“So I guess she never talks about her brilliant grandson?”

“I just thought she was sending Alex in.”

“I am Alex.”

Oh. Duh. Xander. As in Alexander. “So do you go by Alex or Xander?”

He gets an arrogant smirk on his face like I had Googled him or something.

“Your credit card,” I say, reminding him he had used it last time he was in.

“Oh. Yes, I go by Xander, but my grandparents call me Alex. I’m named after my grandpa so you know how that goes.”

I have no idea how that goes. “Yeah, totally.”

“So, Susan’s daughter . . .” He leans his elbows on the counter, looks at a small wooden apple a customer gave us years ago, and starts spinning it like a top. “Do you have my doll?”

I laugh a little at how that sounds. “Yes, I do. Give me one minute.” I retrieve the box from the back room and bring it to the counter. It surprises me that my mom hasn’t opened it to inspect the doll. Sometimes they come cracked or broken, and the service we use is responsible for that. I grab a box cutter from a silver cup next to the register and cut the packing tape. “Just let me make sure she hasn’t had any limbs amputated on her journey.”

“Okay.”

I remove the doll box from the shipping box, only displacing a few packing peanuts in the process, and carefully open it.

“‘Mandy,’” he says, reading her name off the lid.

“Mandy’s in good shape. Your grandma will be happy. I guess she’s for your sister?”

“No. My cousin. Scarlett. That doll looks a lot like her. It’s a little creepy.”

“Your cousin wears lacy socks and knit dresses?”

“Well, no. But the hair . . . and my cousin definitely has that sly look in her eyes.”

“So your cousin has a black bob and is looking for trouble?”

“Exactly.”

I slide the box across the counter to him. “Tell your grandmother hi for me.”

“And she’ll know who ‘me’ is?”

“Doesn’t everybody?”

“Everybody but me, it seems.” He takes out his phone and pushes a few buttons.

“What are you doing?” I ask.

“I’m telling my grandma you say hi.”

I roll my eyes. “That’s cheating.”

“I didn’t realize we were playing a game.” He offers me his first smile of the day, and I’m suddenly glad he keeps that thing put away. It’s more disarming than any weapon. “Hi, Grammy. I got your doll. . . . Yes, a young lady at the store helped me with it. She told me to tell you hi. . . . No, not Susan.”

I laugh out loud.

“Her daughter. Dark hair, green eyes.”

I look down, surprised he knows the color of my eyes. His are brown with gold flecks. Not that I’ve noticed.

“Sixteen . . . ish?” He widens his eyes, asking if he guessed right. I shake my head no. “Seventeen?”

And a half.

“Caymen?” He raises his eyebrows at me. I shrug my shoulders. “Well, Caymen says hi. . . . Sweet? I don’t know about sweet, but she’s something.” He’s quiet for a while. “I
am
being nice. You should tell
her
to be nice. She wouldn’t even tell me her name. . . . No, not because I’m being mean.”

I love Mrs. Dalton.

I write down in the book the date and time the special order was picked up. Then for some reason I add the “ander” on the end of the “Alex” I had written before. I close the book and put it beneath the counter. He’s still listening intently to something his grandma is saying. He meets my eyes at one point and then holds up a finger. He reaches into his pocket and pulls out his wallet and a credit card without even looking at it.

“She already paid,” I whisper.

He nods and puts it away.

His grandma says something that makes him smile. The smile. What is it about that smile anyway? Maybe it’s his perfectly straight and white teeth that make it so amazing. But it’s more than that. It’s a little crooked, one side going up more than the other. And once in a while his top teeth bite his bottom lip. It’s a very unguarded smile, unlike the rest of his appearance, which is a fortress.

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