Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
cookie sheets with parchment paper, there was a small
knock on the sliding glass door. Max smiled crookedly and
waved at me, his little hands pressing fingerprints all over
the glass. Steve stood beside him, tail wagging, looking
proud as if to say,
Look what I found wandering around back
here!
I took a deep breath and crossed the room to let him
in.
“Hi, Coach,” he said, smelling of little boy and the
outdoors.
“Hi, buddy.”
I turned and headed back into the kitchen, he and
Steve following me.
“Whatcha doin’?” he asked.
“Making cookies.”
“Need help?” He seemed less animated than usual, a
little subdued.
“Sure.”
I went back to my mixer while he pulled a chair over
to the sink and climbed up to wash his hands.
“Cece’s over,” he said, even though I hadn’t asked. He
wiped his hands on the dish towel, then slid the chair
around to the other side of me. “ey’re arguing, so I came
here.” It was all the explanation I needed and all he
intended to give.
Apparently not having learned my lesson the first
time, I didn’t ask if his mother knew where he was. I didn’t
tell him he should call. I didn’t want to think about Elena,
plus Max was quiet and I was honestly grateful for
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somebody else’s presence, so we worked together in silence,
both in our own mental worlds. He watched as I rolled a
small ball of dough in the bowl of sugar and then he
followed suit.
Once we filled up the cookie sheets, I made another
batch of dough and we repeated the process all over again.
When my kitchen table was covered with four dozen
cooling lemon cookies, I mixed up the ingredients for
thumbprint cookies, which were my grandma’s favorites. I
rolled the dough balls in the chopped walnuts and gave
Max a quick demonstration of how to push his thumb
down into the middle to create a little crater in each one,
then fill it with a tiny taste of jam. We used raspberry and
strawberry preserves, again my grandma’s favorites. He
worked hard, concentrating on his job and not saying
much at all. He was the perfect baking partner and I loved
him for it.
When we’d added the thumbprint cookies to the
lemon cookies on the table, I searched for the recipe for
Grandma’s second favorites, the ones she simply called
“chocolate balls.” Max stood by the table, munching on a
lemon cookie, and as I started putting ingredients into the
mixer, I could feel his eyes on me.
“Coach?” he asked quietly, as if afraid his voice might
break something in the air.
“Hm?”
“Why are we making so many cookies? Are you
having a party or something?”
“No.” e sad chuckle I gave held no energy and no
humor. “No parties.”
“en why?”
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I stopped what I was doing and stared into my mixing
bowl, watching the silver beaters fuse a handful of items
into one smooth combination. en I said, very softly, “My
grandma died last night.”
I didn’t look at him. I simply stood there, my hands
bracing my body against the counter, thinking,
Why on
earth would I say that to a six-year-old? Elena was right. I
know nothing about kids.
And then I felt it.
Max wrapped his small arms around my waist and
hugged me tightly, his cheek pressed against my side. I
imagined it was the only way his young brain knew how to
convey what he was feeling: sympathy. I swallowed the
lump in my throat and put my hand gently on his head.
“anks,” I whispered to him.
“Welcome,” he whispered in return.
We went back to work.
After two batches of chocolate balls, I finally sent Max
home, not wanting him to get in trouble and not at all
ready for the wrath of Elena, should she have to come
looking for him again. I wrapped up an enormous plate of
cookies and sent them with him, then watched from my
front stoop until he was inside his own house.
I’m not sure how long I stood in the kitchen in my
flour-covered apron, surveying the mess, trying to decide
what to make next. As long as I kept baking, I felt
strangely connected to Grandma. It was weird and
ridiculous and I knew that, but I was afraid to stop, afraid
to let that last, tenuous thread slip through my fingers. At
the same time, I was virtually exhausted, at least mentally.
Who knew it was just as grueling to hold your emotions at
bay as it was to be overwhelmed by them?
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I was counting the eggs I had left, trying to decide
how many snickerdoodles I could conceivably make before
I had to make a trip to the grocery store when there was a
staccato knock on the front door. Four quick raps, like the
person on the other side was anxious to have the door
opened. I closed my eyes and sighed, not wanting to deal
with any neighbors, salespeople, Jehovah’s Witnesses, girl
scouts. I stood quietly and didn’t move, bringing a finger to
my lips to shush Steve, who’d lifted his head from the
kitchen floor, ears pricked up.
e knock sounded again in the same rhythm.
“Damn it,” I muttered as Steve jumped up and barked.
I wiped my hands on my apron as I entered the foyer.
When I opened the door, I couldn’t have been more
surprised.
“Avery.” Elena stood there, no trace of the anger or
pain I’d seen on her face the last time she’d been here, no
ice in her tone as she said my name like the last time I’d
spoken to her. She stepped inside and before I could say
anything, she lifted a hand to my face and stroked my
cheek so gently my eyes filled. “Baby, I’m so sorry. Are you
okay?”
at was it. at was all it took. As if my protective
walls were made of sand and Elena’s voice was the tide
coming in, they simply disintegrated. ere was no loud
crashing sound, no shocked feeling of destruction. e
barrier around my emotions was simply there…and then it
had slipped away. All the pain, all the sorrow came pouring
out as I crumpled, Elena’s arms suddenly around me,
holding me, trying to cushion my descent with her body
and we ended up on the floor, a tangled mass of limbs.
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I cried like a child, missing my grandmother so badly I
thought I might just shatter into a million pieces, never to
be repaired. Elena held me and rocked me and whispered
comforting words as her lips pressed to my hair, to my
temple, as her arms wrapped tightly around me. I fisted her
shirt in my hand and let it all out, sobbing against her
chest and feeling such a sense of loss, I wondered if I’d ever
recover.
I have no idea how long we sat there. I think I’d
started to doze a bit because the next thing I knew, Steve
was curled up beside me, his little body warming my hip. I
petted him absently and as he lifted his head and looked at
me, I had a flash of something almost…human in his eyes,
like he knew exactly what was going on and he was
comforting me the only way he could. I scratched behind
his ears and tried to offer a reassuring smile. I think I fell
short.
“Hey, let’s get you to bed,” Elena said softly. “You need
to rest. Come on.”
She somehow managed to stand up and pull me up,
too, without letting me lose contact with her body. Her
arm tightly around my shoulders and holding me close, she
walked me up the stairs and to my room. In my zombie-
like state, I was barely able to operate. I have very little
recollection of Elena undressing me or helping me into a
T-shirt and pulling back the covers on my bed.
“Steve,” I croaked.
“I’ll take care of him. Just lie down. I’ll be right back.”
She left the room, calling my dog with her. I
remember hearing the sliding glass door open and close a
couple times. en I thought I heard Elena’s voice, but I
wasn’t sure. My body felt like lead and my eyelids were
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lined with sandpaper and didn’t want to stay open. I turned
on my side and my gaze fell on the 5 x 7 framed photo of
Grandma and me on the day I graduated from college.
Tears blurred my vision and I buried my face in my pillow
so I couldn’t see the picture.
Sleep must have claimed me for a while because the
next thing I remember was Elena crawling under the
covers with me. It was fully dark out now and she smelled
of dish soap and toothpaste. She spooned up behind me,
wrapping me in the warmth of her embrace.
“What about Max?” I asked, worried about her leaving
her son home alone, not registering that she’d never do
such a thing.
“He’s fine. Cindy’s got him.”
“What? What about—”
But she interrupted me. “We have a lot to talk about
and we’ll get to that.” Her lips grazed my ear in a sweet
kiss. “But for tonight, I’m right here.”
“Why?”
“Because you need me.”
“I do.”
I was surprised by my own sleepy admission and I
wasn’t so tired and emotionally wrecked that I didn’t
understand what she was doing for me or that it didn’t
make everything between us magically better. I wanted to
grab onto her comment that we had to talk, but my brain
was too fogged with grief and exhaustion. I was simply
thankful and chose not to look beyond that, at least for the
moment.
“Elena?”
“Hm?”
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“I don’t know what to do. I mean…about a funeral or
any of that. I have no idea what to do.”
“It’s okay.” I could feel her breath against my hair in
the dark. “We’ll figure it out together tomorrow.”
“Okay.” I let the relief wash over me, so much better
than the sorrow. But the funny thing about sorrow is that
it never quite goes away. It just hides for a little while and
then pops back up like a spot of grease you thought you
washed out. “Elena?”
“Hm?”
“I’m all alone now.” I sounded eight years old and I
knew it and I didn’t care. It was how I felt.
“No, you’re not.” Elena’s arms tightened around my
worn out body and battered soul. “You have me.”
I wanted to think about that, to ask her exactly what
she meant, to tell myself she was just trying to make me
feel better. But my mind couldn’t hang on to any individual
thought. ey floated away like balloons on a sunny day as
grogginess overtook me and I fell into a deep, dreamless
sleep.
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CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
Maria Walker turned out to be a godsend in the days
that followed. Elena called her on Saturday morning and
said only one thing: “Mama, Avery and I need your help.”
She was on my doorstep within an hour, gave me a
lengthy, heartfelt hug that almost started my waterworks
up all over again, and took over like the best of personal
assistants. Coming from a Greek family whose size and
scope I couldn’t even begin to fathom, she’d been through
dozens of wakes and funerals and knew exactly what
needed to be done.
e two of them went with me to Grandma’s
apartment. I wasn’t sure I was ready to go in, but Elena was
right: if Grandma was as organized as I always claimed she
was, she probably had files with her final wishes, a will, etc.
Turned out she’d already made arrangements with the
funeral home of her choice, the one whose card Sandra
Johnson had given me previously. She even had a burial
plot, of which I was completely unaware, that she and my
long-lost grandfather had purchased over thirty years
earlier. She would be laid to rest next to her own parents,
which gave me some sense of comfort.
Maria helped me go through Grandma’s clothes, for
which I was grateful because it would have been easy to
simply stand in her closet for hours and smell each and
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every item, becoming lost in sense memory. I chose her
emerald green suit, which she not only loved, but looked
smashing in. She had matching low-heeled pumps to go
with it, so I grabbed those, too. Maria reminded me to also
select undergarments, which was kind of weird. Even as a
child, I don’t remember ever going through my
grandmother’s underclothes or seeing her in less than a slip
and pantyhose. I must have looked a bit hesitant because
Maria cheered me up by telling me the story of when her
older sister Angela’s husband passed away and she forgot
to bring his underpants to the funeral home. e thought
of her husband entering the Great Beyond while going
commando really didn’t sit well with Angela and she’d
turned teary-eyed to her brother, Stavros, who sighed and
went into the men’s room to take off his own BVDs, which
he then donated to his sister’s late husband.
I’m not a religious person at all, but I was thanking