Time Off for Good Behavior (22 page)

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Authors: Lani Diane Rich

BOOK: Time Off for Good Behavior
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Yeah, sorry about that. I just needed some time to get my head together. But I think I

m better now. I think I

ve hit on what I

ve been doing wrong, which is pretty much everything.

I rambled at the speed of light. S
he crossed her legs and stared me down.


Then I guess you

ll be okay if I talk to you about Walter?

she asked.

I froze at the sound of his name. Although I had been thinking about him, weaving him into my hopeful vision of the future as I examined my past
, the sound of his name cut a swath through my gut, and I deflated a little.


I saw him today,

she said.

He

s worried about you.

I looked at her.

Did you tell him I was here?

My throat tightened just talking about Walter.

Elizabeth shook her head.

No
. I told him I

d talked to you and that you were okay.


Thanks,

I said softly. I lay back across the bed, my feet tapping nervously on the floor. We both stared at the ceiling.


You gonna tell me what happened with you two?

she asked.


Not now,

I said,
still staring.

I have too much to do.


Like what?

she asked.

I turned to face her.

You got any more of those sticky notes?

Elizabeth nodded and excused herself, returning five minutes later with two Diet Cokes, some markers, and two packages of stick
y notes. She pulled one marker cap off using her teeth and let out a garbled

Let

s get cracking.


What do I do?

She scribbled on a sticky note and held it up for me. It said

Get a job.

She spit the pen cap onto the floor and pulled the note off the pa
d, slapping it on my wall.


A reinvention of self is half commonsense planning and half blindly following out-of-nowhere hunches,

she said.

First, we do free form. Just write anything that comes to mind that you might want to improve about yourself.


I
don

t have that kind of time,

I said.


Let me finish. Then, when you

re done, evaluate what you

ve written. You

ll see some patterns develop. Then you whittle it down to about ten things you really need to do. You do them and boom

you

re a brand-spankin
’-
new Wanda.

I stared at her.

And this worked for you?

She shrugged.

I

m a work in progress. Get writing, girl.

It was after eleven when we stopped, sitting Indian-style on the floor, surrounded by scrunched-up notes, staring at a wall speckled with squ
are, sticky, yellow directives that were supposedly going to change my life.


Am I crazy for wanting to do this?

I asked.


We don

t like the term
crazy
,

she said.

I grabbed a pillow and threw it at her. We were quiet for a moment, then Elizabeth spoke up
again.

I wish you wouldn

t wait to talk to Walter. He

s really worried about you, you know.


Can

t. Gotta go one step at a time. If he doesn

t want me when I

m done, then I

ll have to live with that. But if he takes me back now, I

ll never do this. And
I need to do this.

I sat forward and looked at her. She was staring at the wall of sticky notes.

Promise me you won

t say anything to him. Just that I

m okay and he shouldn

t worry. Please, Elizabeth.


Okay. You

ve got my word.

She sighed.

So what are
you going to do first?


I don

t know,

I said, my eyes grazing over the wall of tasks.

It

s kind of overwhelming. Maybe you should pick one at random for me?


Sure.

She pulled herself onto the bed, covered her eyes, and grabbed a sticky note off the w
all. I stood up and took it from her.


This one should be easy,

I said, laughing and showing it to her. She cocked her head to read it at an angle.


Get a job
,

she read.

Looks like you

ve got a big day tomorrow.

I smiled.

Looks like.

She got up and g
ave me a hug.

Blueberry pancakes. Six-thirty. You

re not there, I

m coming in after your ass, and I promise it won

t be pretty.

 

Chapter Seven

 


Kids, this is Wanda. She

s going to be staying in the apartment over the garage for a while.

I nodded at the
children and gave a grunt to the effect of,

Good morning.

I

m not a big morning person.

Elizabeth put the pancakes on the table, and the kids descended on them like vultures. Alex was a hair-in-the-eyes teenager; I

d place him at about fifteen. Based on
his T-shirt, jacket, and backpack, he had something of a Nike obsession. He seemed the quiet, contemplative type. Kacey, a pixieish pre-teen with brown hair and the brightest blue eyes I

d ever seen, looked to be about twelve. She was not so quiet.


I lik
e Avril Lavigne and Justin Timberlake. Do you like Justin Timberlake?

she asked. Elizabeth put a cup of coffee in front of me, God bless her.


Leave Wanda alone, Kace,

she said, sitting down next to me.

She

s not used to being up this early in the morni
ng.


Even if I did like Justin Timberlake, I wouldn

t admit to it,

I said, reviving slowly as the caffeine blasted the sleep out of my veins.


What

s

Wham!

?

she asked. I looked down at my T-shirt, where George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley gave cracked,
ironed-on smiles.

I lifted my coffee and took another sip.

You

re better off not knowing.


The blond one

s kinda cute,

she said with a shrug. I gave her points for generosity.

Elizabeth waved her hands at the kids.

Hurry up; eat. You

ll miss the bus,
and I don

t have time to take you in.

The kids inhaled their breakfasts and gave their mother swift kisses before heading out the door. I watched them go, then leaned over to Elizabeth.


Did I just see a soldering iron hanging out of Kacey

s backpack?

I
asked.

Elizabeth smiled.

She

s doing some kind of presentation at school. Kacey

s an engineering wunderkind. To date, she

s fixed the VCR, the clock on the coffeemaker, and my electric toothbrush. My biggest fear is she

ll grow up to be a Hooters girl.

I
nodded, thinking of my mother and how she must have felt watching all my potential strapping itself to the back of George

s motorcycle.


So you got a big day?

I asked, finishing my coffee and starting in on the pancakes.


Yeah,

she said.

I

m going down
to the radio station.


Radio station?

I asked.

She leaned forward, her voice quiet and excited.

I didn

t want to say anything because I didn

t want to jinx it, but I

m pitching a radio show.

She giggled. And she hadn

t cursed once all morning. I

d bee
n too self-obsessed to notice the change in her until now.


No way,

I said, a stab of jealousy hitting me. I was the one with the wall full of sticky notes staring me down at night, and Elizabeth was the one whose life was changing.
No fair! No fair!
my i
nner child whined.

She laughed.

I started being straight with my clients about a week or so ago. You have no idea what it

s done for me. I can breathe again.

Good for her.

Did any of them leave you?

She shrugged.

One or two. Good riddance. But one of
my clients referred me to her friend who is the promotions manager at that new all-talk AM station. We

re meeting today to discuss me having my own show.


Holy crap,

I said, stabbing at my pancakes, willing my inner child to mature to the level of at lea
st an inner preteen.

That

s great.

I hoped I sounded sincere, because part of me was. The part that was not a big baby and a rotten friend, that is.


I really have you to thank,

she said after a moment of silence.


I didn

t tell you anything you didn

t
already know.


No,

she said,

but you saw me standing on the ledge and you pushed me over. Thanks.

We looked at each other. It was a nice moment and at the same time a little uncomfortable. Our friendship had been forged on the ground of each of us bein
g bitter and angry. This change in Elizabeth might upset that balance.

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