Rule #9 (22 page)

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Authors: Sheri Duff

BOOK: Rule #9
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CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

 

My visit to the phone store takes forever and a day, and then another day. I’m number seventeen billion on the screen that hangs on the wall. My name moves up the list in slow motion. The stupid guy who checked me in spells my name wrong:
Massey
.

“It’s M-a-s-s-i-e.”

He nods but doesn’t correct it.

Idiot. His name is Jeremy. He’s skinny, boney skinny with very little facial hair. It looks like he’s trying to grow sideburns but there are chunks missing. The next teen heartthrob, he is not.

My phone is busted. There is no way to fix it. Jeremy, who is now helping me, has to call my mother in England for approval to replace the phone. This pisses her off because she’s sleeping. She’s not mad at me. She’s irritated with the cell phone company. She tells Mr. I-Can’t-Grow-Sideburns Jeremy to let me pick out a phone and to leave her alone.

“She’s not usually like that, Jimmy, but it’s the middle of the night in England, and she doesn’t do so well when she’s tired.” It’s true. My mother only flips out when she’s tired or starving. Not hungry—starving.

“Jeremy, the name’s Jeremy, not Jimmy,” he says.

I don’t respond. I stand there looking at his sideburns. If he can’t fix the spelling of my name, I don’t need to get his right, either.

“She said you could purchase any phone you wanted. Do you wanna to look at our newest smartphones?” Jeremy rubs a hand along the peach fuzz on his face. He’s not about to pass up an easy sale like this one.

“See, the thing is, Jimmy, she told
you
I could get whatever I wanted. That was her sleepy talk. Can you give me the closest phone to this?” I point to my useless phone. My mom’s due home in a couple of days. I want the latest and greatest, but I know better.

The store doesn’t have what I need in stock. Jeremy orders my replacement online. It will ship in a couple of days. He agrees to ship it to my dad’s house without another call to my mom. I think he’s scared of her. Now I’m stuck without a phone for at least two days.

After calling Gaby from the phone store to take the day off, I head back to the hospital. Benny’s sleeping now and the nurse informs me that only family can visit. “His daughter and son-in-law just left. They’ll be back later and you can talk to them about the details,” she says.

All I have to do is tell her I’m his granddaughter and I’m sure she’ll let me into see him. But I don’t. Instead I just say, “Thank you.”

On my way out of the hospital, I’m attacked by my two best friends. “Hey. What the hell?” Natalie gets up in my grill.

“Personal space.” I back up.

“I texted you a zillion and a half times. You never answered.” Vianna puts one hand on her hip and shakes her phone in her other hand.

“We want details about the attack on Wendy.” Natalie sticks her hand in my face waving me toward her.

“Um, stop!” I wave my hands in front of me. “First, my phone broke. Second, what did Wendy say I did? Third, personal space.” I draw a box in front of me with my fingers.

“That’s what we want to know. What did Wendy say? My dad called my mom. He was pretty upset,” Vianna chuckles.

“How’d that go over?” I ask.

“My mom told that fool to shut his ass and then she hung up on him,” Vianna says. And she does so without whispering and without looking around to see if anyone will hear. She doesn’t care anymore.

The three of us giggle.

“What did he say?” I ask.

“My mom wouldn’t tell me. She said it was a bunch of crap and I didn’t need to worry about it,” Vianna says.

“Well, my mom is now officially concerned that I really want to hurt my baby sister. She has set me up for counseling.” Natalie crosses her arms and glares at me.

“Don’t even go there with me. Wendy’s the crazy one who was spouting off all the crap.”

“I’m kidding. My mom told my dad he better pull his head out of his ass before she takes my brother and I away for good.” Natalie fidgets. As much crap as Natalie talks about her dad, I know she loves him. And I know she misses him. She doesn’t want her mom taking her away from anyone, not her dad and especially not Annabelle Moo-Moo.

Alicia enters through the double doors of the hospital and propels herself toward the elevator. She halts when she sees the three of us. “I texted you last night and this morning. What’s up? You never answered me.”

“My phone broke,” I say. “Jack was supposed to text you and let you know.”

“Wait here. I need to talk to you. I’m pissed and we’re gonna settle this crap once and for all.” She looks at all of us. Her voice is deliberate. I’ve never seen such anger. Not even when she yelled at my dad.

Alicia must see the fear in my eyes because her tone changes. “It’s not you. It’s not me. It’s those crazy women that your friends have to deal with.” Alicia points to Natalie and Vianna.

“The stepmonsters?” Natalie asks.

“I can think more fitting titles, but yes, the stepmonsters. I’ll be right back. I’m going to go up and see my Papi. Can you guys wait for me?”

I nod and my friends follow my lead. Alicia punches the elevator button several times. The door finally opens. I want to go with her but it’s not my place. That’s her dad up there, not mine.

#

Alicia pulls food out of the freezer. She heats up the warm soup Benny had prepared a few nights before. The smell of the mint brings back homecoming night, it brings back the day I peeled peppers, it brings back the smell of the earth when we went to the art place. It’s like one of those slow flashbacks in the movies. I take a deep breath. I have to again remind myself this is not my father, Benny is Alicia’s father.

Alicia brought us back to the house so we could have a conversation about Natalie and Vianna’s stepmothers. I don’t know why she’s worried about us when her dad is so sick.

“So, girls. I want to hear everything. I want to know what they’ve been doing and if they’re hurting you.”

“I thought you guys were friends?” Natalie looks at Alicia, weary.

“No. I barely know them. Playing cards one night does not make me part of that little crazy group of theirs. Now, I want to know if they are hurting you.” Alicia’s says.

“Just my ego,” Natalie says, swirling the liquid with her spoon.

“She tried to hack my savings account, but my mom has that one in check,” Vianna replies.

“I miss my sister.” Natalie lets the tears fall. Something she rarely does. “I didn’t mean to hurt her. Someone had to do something, her throat was closing. I could see it in her face. I know how that feels. But I didn’t know that…” Natalie can’t compose herself enough to speak. Alicia pulls Natalie off the chair. Alicia holds her while she cries. I can’t remember the last time Natalie really let go and cried.

“None of it’s your fault. I think deep down, Stephanie knows it too,” Alicia says.

We eat. Vianna and Natalie talk. Alicia listens. They tell Alicia everything. Things even I’d forgotten about. Like the time Wendy let Vianna drive to school. Vianna had just got her permit. She let Vianna back the minivan out of the garage, and Vianna busted the mirror on the passenger’s side. It was six-thirty in the morning and Wendy went nuts screaming, waking the entire neighborhood.

Natalie told Alicia about the time she went to a family gathering of Stephanie’s. “Stephanie asked me take a photo of the family for her. More than twenty people posed for that photo, including my brother Cameron. I took a million pictures for them.”

“Were you included in any of the pictures?” Alicia asks.

“Nope,” Natalie says.

“What did your dad say?” Alicia asks.

“Nothing. I don’t think he even noticed. Whatever.” Natalie continues to swish the liquid in her bowl with the spoon.

I feel like a third wheel. But I know my friends are hurting and they need to purge the vileness out. Plus, they will no longer hate me for having the nice stepmom—or will they? I flip through a book of random facts that is sitting on the kitchen table. I’m sure it’s my dad’s, but he usually has these books in the bathroom. Okay, that
is
gross. “Did you know the can opener was invented forty-eight years after the can?”

Alicia looks at me and smiles. It looks like one of those vindictive payback smiles. It scares me a little until she says, “We’re going to pop the tops off those women.”

Alicia sends my friends home with specific instructions. “Do not say a word about your father’s wives to anyone except your mothers, and only your mothers. You three can’t talk about them, either. Don’t even text each other about them—especially don’t text each other. And nothing, I mean nothing, on any of the social networks. Got it?”

Vianna and Natalie’s eyebrows point in.

“Trust me,” Alicia says.

They do, and so do I.

Alicia walks my friends to the door. Then she confronts me at the bottom of the stairs as I take a step toward my room. “Okay, Massie, now for you and me.”

Crap. Just when I think I can trust her. I want to run away. I really don’t want to talk anymore. I’m tired and I want to take a nap.

Alicia tilts her head toward the living room. I follow. Because that damn choice thing is back, and the only choice she gives me is, “You first or me?”

“You.” I don’t know where she’s going with this. I always do better once I understand the argument. It gives me time to form a rebuttal.

“I think it would be good if we had some ground rules.” She lifts a single piece of paper from the coffee table. She’s armed. This isn’t going to be a fair battle. She grabs a gardening magazine from the table and places the white sheet over it. She writes while she speaks. With a pen.

“Number 1. I’m not your mother. I know you have a fantastic mom. For me to try and replace her would be the most ridiculous thing imaginable.” She makes eye contact, “Do you agree?”

I nod.

“Number 2. I’m not your friend. You have great friends.” She looks up at me again.

I don’t move but she must see the agreement in my eyes. She leaves it at that. But now I don’t know what to do. I wasn’t ready for this.

“Number 3. I need to understand that you love your dad and that you’re afraid I’m trying to take him away.” She doesn’t look at me this time. She continues to write while she talks.

“Number 4. I know that you’re hurt and wish your parents were back together. I’ve ruined that forever. That probably pisses you off. I can accept that. I’m sorry. Your mom’s too good for your dad. He hurt her in a way that she could not forgive, but that’s our stuff—not yours. Actually that’s their stuff. It’s not even mine. Know that I’ll give you time to work through this, and I’ll try to be understanding.”

“Number 5. My dad and I crowded in on your world. Not only do you have to share your dad with me but my dad’s always hanging out and I know that at times he can ramble on. We’ll both try to give you more space without him forcing the title of granddaughter on you.”

I shake my head. Hard. “Can I talk?” I ask.

“Yes, of course,” Alicia says. She stops writing and sets the paper and magazine down. I have her full attention.

“I love your dad. He gets me.” A lump forms in my throat. Tears trickle down my cheeks. I allow them to flow. My heart aches. Not the way it does for a boy. It feels like someone’s twisting it, ringing out the moisture my heart needs to survive. “He doesn’t try to change me. He doesn’t expect anything from me. He accepts me the way I am. When I’m mad, he lets me be mad. When I’m sad, he knows what to say. When I want to be left alone, he leaves me be. The only other person who knows me that well is my mom.”

“He is about the most perfect Papi ever,” she says, her pupils drowning because the dam hasn’t broken yet.

“Now he is,” I correct her.

The dam breaks. The salt water flows down her cheeks. “He told you, didn’t he?”

I can’t talk. I nod my head.

“He still feels guilty. He’s never gone on with his life because of her. I forgave him a long time ago. I only want him to move on, find happiness and love. He needs to forgive himself. He needs to love again.”

Benny’s dragon.

“He knows.” I can’t explain to Alicia and really there’s no need. She knows her father better than I ever will and for that I’m jealous, which is ridiculous, considering the circumstances.

“So my rules. I pick up the paper. Number 1. I will…” I say.

“Stop.” She lifts her hand. “You only have one rule, Massie, and that is to work through this change the best you can. You’re a nice girl. You’re a good girl. There’s been too much change in your life, too fast. I only ask that you try not to see me as the enemy because I’m really not. I’m on your side.”

Alicia takes the paper away from me. She signs her name to the paper and gently lays it in my lap. The only rules written are the ones for her to follow. I cross out what I don’t like in rule number five, which is all of it:

 

Rules for Alicia

1. I’m not Massie’s mother. She has one.

2. I will not push myself on Massie. She has friends.

3. I will not take Joel away from Massie. A daughter needs her daddy. I know this from experience. I’m the grownup and I will act like one.

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