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Authors: Lee Lynch

BOOK: Beggar of Love
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Angela’s candy store. It felt like an amusement park, or the circus. She got those same tingly feelings deep down, although she knew perfectly well she was too old for the cap guns and tiny military figures the Tabors sold, and she’d stopped considering ice-cream sodas to be the summit of her desires. Still, the candy store had always been a treat in childhood and now Angela was there, and Angela was better than a million cap guns. Sexy Angela was her fantasy figure; laughing Angela was her ice-cream soda. She gripped the brass door handle, warm from the sunny spring Saturday afternoon, and peered through the glass, nerves jingling. No sign of Angela.

“Amelia,” cried Mr. Tabor at the sight of her. He knew she hated being called Amelia, but he always accompanied his gaffe with a loving bear hug. “Mister Taborrrr,” she’d croon in return, smacking his back like guys did. He probably thought he was another father to her, this stocky little redheaded guy with his bibbed apron and hairy arms. His welcome embarrassed her, since she couldn’t remember her own father hugging her and never quite knew what to do with her body.

Mrs. Tabor was suspicious of her, she thought, although she bowed to Mrs. Tabor, jollied her along when she made jokes, hugged her hello and good-bye and laughed anytime Mrs. Tabor said something funny. Mrs. Tabor was always inspecting her up and down like Jefferson might have forgotten to put on a blouse or wet her pants or something. It was probably the floppy dungarees Jefferson wore and the plaid Western-style blouses Emmy allowed because she thought they were cute. She tore off her dresses and skirts every chance she got. She felt stupid, unprotected in a big round skirt, unable to run, to sit comfortably, to fend off boys. The dungarees were getting a little worse for the wear, with the bike grease behind the left leg and the grass stains she couldn’t scrub out of the knee. But Grandpa Jefferson had made the mistake of giving her the pair she asked for on her birthday, and he hadn’t heard the last of that from Grandmother and Emmy. He wouldn’t likely give her another pair. He was the one who bought her the bike and took the flak for that too.

“Got a boyfriend yet, Jefferson?” Mrs. Tabor asked.

The way Angela’s Mom ritually asked that gave Jefferson the creeps. “What would I do with one of those?” she would joke, giving her the big old smile that always won over her friends’ moms.

“Ooh-la-la,” Mrs. Tabor cried, fanning herself, as if her ribald hints would make the prospect tempting for Jefferson.

“Your usual?” Mr. Tabor asked while his wife went back to sweeping.

“If you would. Please.” Jefferson settled in with her black coffee and cherry Danish until Angela heard her voice or name or sensed her presence and came to ask her into the back.

“You could serve off that floor, Mrs. T,” Jefferson always said, to butter up Angela’s neatnik mother.

Mrs. Tabor looked around the almost-empty shop and whispered, “Some of them I think would feel like they were home with the cigarette butts in the coffee cups and the chewing gum under the seats. Don’t ask me to dinner at their houses.”

“You’d come to my place?”

“The grand Jeffersons’ house?”

“No, mine, when I get out of school.”

“I thought you were going to college too, like my foolish Angela.”

“After that school.”

“Sure. But you’ll have your hands full without visitors,” Mrs. Tabor warned in a teasing singsong voice so like and unlike Angela’s. “Feeding your husband, maybe a little angel on the way.”

She laughed. “You have such wonderful dreams for me, Mrs. T,” she lied. “Maybe I’ll be an old maid. Or maybe I’ll enlist in the WAVES. See the world.”

“Stop that talk,” Asta Tabor hissed, her expression annoyed. “You’re a pretty girl. You’ll marry.” Angela had told her that Mrs. Tabor hoped Jefferson would introduce Angela to marriageable boys from Dutchess Academy.

To herself Jefferson said, I’ll marry your daughter. It was hard to like Mrs. Tabor, and she enjoyed a small perverse satisfaction in defying her, but Angela’s father was a different story. She always felt a trickle of hope that Angela’s father knew she loved Angela, knew it and was glad somewhere inside. Looking at Damek Tabor, though, with his compact energy, his quick wit, his constant sunniness, she could see the innocence in his eyes. He didn’t know. She felt empty at the thought. At all the trust this man placed in the world, in her, when behind his back she was touching his daughter in ways that would horrify him. She would die before getting careless and revealing what they did.

If Angela didn’t hear Jefferson arrive, Mr. Tabor would call, “Angel!” into the back of the store when he saw Jefferson come through the door.

She pictured Angela putting down her algebra homework, a hair’s breadth from solving a problem, and blowing air from her pursed lips in exasperation. She wouldn’t know if he was calling her for help or because someone was there to see her. Jefferson had rushed through the problems, not caring if they were right or wrong. Her class wouldn’t graduate tomorrow. Who could be serious about algebra homework now? Her parents would be disappointed in her grades, but she didn’t want good grades. Angela wouldn’t be able to afford a fancy college. Jefferson planned to do well enough to get in where Angie did. They would room together.

Kids swarmed the candy store. Mr. Tabor moved swiftly back and forth behind the counter in his short-legged, bouncing way. He had originally bought the store so his parents would have an income. With his father, Hiram, sick and needing full-time care from his mother, he had sold his own thriving rivet factory in the Bronx to be near them. He told Jefferson that he thought Angela’s prospects would be better up here, away from the city. He wore his apron over brown baggy trousers and a plaid shirt that was frayed and gray at the cuffs. She checked the clock. The Saturday-afternoon matinee at the Cliffs Theater had gotten out. No wonder kids were everywhere.

“Angel, serve for me, will you? Your mother’s by your Aunt Rose.”

Angela tied on an apron and went behind the counter, rolling her eyes at Jefferson. “That wedding dress is taking longer than the New York Central in a snow storm,” she said.

Mr. Tabor explained to Jefferson, “She’s Asta’s only relative in America, four years old when we came over. It’s a big deal.”

“Mister Tay-bore,” called a little kid with an accent.

Like Angela, Dutchess was a mix of nationalities, a community that called to people who, if rich, built summer or year-round homes, and if not rich, had enough ambition to get out of the city and establish a tenuous toehold in a better place to bring up the kids. The Tabors had always lived behind their businesses and gone without so Mr. Tabor could buy the little bits of land he wanted, and now his investments were paying off.

Angela’s mother had returned from Aunt Rose’s and now came out of the back room, tying a floral-patterned apron around a pink, blue, and white plaid housedress. She worked in slippers to accommodate the swelling of her feet after a few hours of standing.

“Okay, okay,” Asta Tabor cried. “Ragamuffins, scram.” She grabbed a circular tray and marched along the counter, inspecting glasses. “Empty? You want more? No? Then go on home. These people want their peace and quiet,” she told the kids, indicating Mr. O’Mear’s booth and the other adults who had made their way more slowly than the children to the soda fountain.

“So beautiful, your Aunt Rose,” she told Angela. “But not as beautiful as you’ll be on your wedding day.”

Jefferson could feel Angela cringe as she watched the children dawdle in front of the store. It was suddenly too quiet inside and she dreaded the words she knew tormented Angela.

“It will be different for you. When I married Damek, over there, it was midnight. My mother cried like I was dying. My father looked like he would burn your father to cinders with his eyes. The priest was shaking like a leaf, afraid he’d be caught with this refugee, afraid God would strike him down for marrying me to an apostate, although Damek Tabor had been studying with him, hidden in the goat shed, since our first kiss.” Her mother stroked Angela’s short hair. “On your wedding day the bells will ring, the sun will shine, the whole town will be invited.”

“Meanwhile my teachers would like me to get back to my homework,” she said. “I can hear them in the back room.”

“Asta Tabor and her big dream,” said Angela, drawing closed the curtains that separated the living area from the store. “If she’d only had one or two more daughters to marry off, to show off, to count on, but she couldn’t.”

Angela was her mother’s present and future.

Jefferson pulled Angela to her and kissed her, hot but fast, eyeing the curtain. Angela pressed against her, took the stolen kiss, then moved away, fast.

“I want to run into the store and spill my happiness all over them. I’d shout, ‘Jefferson and I are in love! We’re going to move in together after graduation.’ I’d fling my arms around these two people who made me the woman who loves you. Why shouldn’t they be excited too?” She stirred the stew.

Jefferson could only agree. They’d made Angela bright and attractive, taught her to laugh. Why should she hide the rest of who she was? Why shouldn’t they share her happiness?

Angela gave her a look that made her heart race. “It’s all I can do not to run back out there and tell them right now.”

“They’d keep me away,” she predicted, part of her hoping that wasn’t true, although she knew it was. “I’d never get to see you again.”

“They couldn’t,” Angela countered. “What would they do, tie you up?”

Jefferson scowled. “They’d send me away,” she told Angela, holding her hand under the jacket on her lap. “Bury me in some prep school where chapel is a requirement and the girls talk about boys from morning till night.”

“I’d come to you. Live in the nearest town. I could get work as a waitress. We’d do it on the chapel floor at midnight. I’d steal you away on weekends, and we could be naked together in my little room at the top of some old lady’s big house.”

“We’d get away with it for about two weeks. We’d get caught. You’d be sent home. I’d be locked in my room except for classes. The other girls would hound me for being…strange. You’re such a kid about these things, Angie. If we don’t do everything the way the adults want, they have more ways to punish us than God could even imagine. Your parents would be the same.”

“So we’re going to sneak around forever?”

“Yes.”

Angela got angry then and lashed out at Jefferson. “I think you
like
all this hiding and conspiracy, Amelia Jefferson. I think you get a charge out of being scared all the time, that’s what I think. It dresses up your little-rich-girl country life, like playing cowboys and Indians when you were a kid. In the Bronx, we played Nazis and Jews on our front stoops, while you were rolling down your green hills.”

Jefferson stood up to go. “I’m not a rich kid,” she protested, although, compared to Angela, she must seem so. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe I do make a game of it in a way. Maybe I’ve always felt safer than you because my family’s been in this county since the dinosaurs. Maybe we’re too different to be together.”

Outside, she was Gary Cooper in
High Noon.
She could feel the holstered pistols on her hips and scowled at passersby. That did nothing to chase off the black-cloud monster in pursuit. She swung a leg over her bike and rushed toward the hill.

Chapter Six

In certain sunlight the quarried stone blocks in the magnificent Tudor-style railroad station in Dutchess looked Mediterranean pink, in others, a rough gray. The pointed arches gave the many doorways a beckoning depth as the elaborately decorated passageways, brief tunnels most of them, suggested destinations more exotic than Kingston or Albany. One night Angela and Jefferson arrived at the station before the sun set and watched from a bench outside as the stone glowed a rosy gold and the shadowed portals were curtained with a velvety darkness filled with promises.

“Looks like a castle,” Jefferson said. She wore a yellow V-neck sweater vest with a wide-collared white blouse and her jeans rolled up into a cuff. Emmy was giving her money to buy her own clothes now. She and Jarvy’s crowd had become big drinkers. Jarvy went off to work every day, but Emmy stayed in bed with a hangover. Jefferson told the housekeeper what needed doing and delivered buttered toast or ice to Emmy after school, then left the house until they were gone in the evening to go touch Angela every moment she could. On weekend nights Angela could come over for a while if she wasn’t working, but she had to lie; the Tabors thought she was spending too much time alone with Jefferson.

Angela told her parents she was studying with other kids at the library, and they met wherever they could be close to, but out of sight of, the candy store. No one was around outside the railroad station.

Jefferson captured Angela’s hand. A year after their first kiss, that neat, warm hand stirred her still. She clasped the narrow fingers and walked her thumb along the pads below them, straying frequently onto that sensitive flesh toward the palm. Jefferson gave Angela her bold, one-dimple smile. Aloud, she said one word: “Angel.”

The 6:10 clacked into the Dutchess station. Balding businessmen in sports coats and unbelted slacks, carrying black molded briefcases, strode to their cars or walked toward houses off the main streets. Jefferson scuttled behind the last one, imitating his weary, hunched walk, then swirled around and sped back to Angela.

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