Summer Breeze (27 page)

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Authors: Nancy Thayer

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Slade picked up his cell. She told him what she wanted; he said he’d bring it and grab some CDs of his own from his van. She didn’t ask him why they were taking so long, and he offered no explanation. She tossed her cell phone into her bag and went back to her ladder.

“Did you get Slade?” Bella asked.

“I did. He’s going to pick up my CD player, and they’ll be here soon.”

Natalie had carefully edged in one wall before she heard the crunch of tires on gravel: Finally Slade and Morgan were returning. She heard the van doors slam. Morgan and Slade called to the men working outside; Natalie strained her ears to hear whether Morgan was chatting with Ben, but could detect no exact words. Finally, Morgan swept in, lanky and flushed.

“Damn, it’s hot! Bella, don’t you have air-conditioning?” Morgan demanded.

“I do,” Bella replied from the top of her ladder. “But it doesn’t seem fair to use it when the guys are sweltering away outside.”

“Oh, for heaven’s sake,” Morgan said. “They can deal.”

Slade sauntered in, carrying the small portable CD player. “Here you are, Sis.” He put it in the middle of the floor and hit a few buttons. Heavy metal guitars screamed.

“HEY!” Natalie yelled.

Slade hit the volume control. “Sorry.” He took out the CD. “That was one of mine.”

“Surprise,” Natalie said.

“What do you ladies want?” Slade asked.

Morgan was looking through the discs. “Let’s hear some ABBA. That should get us moving.”

Natalie wanted to say, snippily,
Bella and I have been painting for an hour
. But she kept quiet.

Slade left. Bella climbed down her ladder, closed the door and windows, and turned on the air conditioner. Morgan opened her gallon of paint and set to work on her own wall. ABBA sang “Take a Chance on Me.” Occasionally Natalie caught a glimpse of Ben passing a window. He’d taken off his shirt and put on a baseball cap to shade his face.

They broke for lunch around one o’clock. The women had finished the walls and were beginning the doors and baseboards. With the
air-conditioning pumping into the big room, the first coat would dry soon enough for them to add a second coat after lunch.

Bella had made sandwiches, macaroni salad, potato salad, and coleslaw. Her father and brother lugged out a cooler filled with ice and soft drinks and another one filled with ice water. Natalie had brought chips, brownies, and cookies, and Morgan had added cold spicy fried chicken. The picnic table wasn’t big enough for all of them, so they tossed a couple of old blankets from the trunks of their cars on the grass. Everyone was craving salt, and conversation was at a minimum as they ate and drank.

Natalie had taken her loaded paper plate to the blanket under a tree and arranged herself there as alluringly as possible, hoping Ben would join her. So far, he hadn’t even looked at her. He’d gone straight for the food, sat at the table, and eaten like a starving man. She wondered if he cooked for himself. She wondered a lot of things about Ben—most of all, why he wasn’t talking to her. He could at least say hello.

“This chicken is amazing, Morgan,” Natalie said, watching Ben out of the corner of her eye to see if he sent any kind of glance at Morgan.

“Thanks,” Morgan said. “I got the recipe off the Internet.”

“I do that all the time,” Bella chimed in. “It’s easier and quicker than using a cookbook. But when I’m relaxing, I love to look at cookbooks.”

“Me, too,” Natalie agreed, and then no one else spoke.

The group seemed rather out of sorts today, Natalie thought as she ate and looked around. Morgan was not flirting with Ben or Slade; she seemed sunk in her own thoughts, and didn’t look happy. Bella and Aaron weren’t sitting together; they weren’t even talking to each other. All the men looked tired after painting outside in this heat. It had to be in the nineties, and the humidity was killing.

Still, it was just so strange how Ben wasn’t paying any attention to Natalie at all. It was as if he had amnesia. As if he hadn’t kissed her. She’d never had an experience like this, so she had no idea what to do. She wasn’t going to sidle up to Ben and wiggle her
shoulder and give him a sexy hello. The more she thought about it, the angrier she got, and it was a relief when the group decided lunch was over. Time to get back to work.

Of them all, Bella, not surprisingly, was the most determined. “Natalie, since you’ve got such a steady hand, how about you start on the trim while Morgan and I give the walls a second coat?”

“Fine with me,” Natalie agreed.

The smaller brush was lighter, and the trim required concentration and an unfluctuating line. She couldn’t allow even one bristle to touch its drop of cream paint against the umber of the wall. Bella put on the Beatles’
Sgt. Pepper’s
album; soon all three women were singing along, and Natalie’s spirits rose.

At three o’clock, Bella’s father came into the shop.

“That’s it for today,” he announced. “I’ve made a unilateral decision.”

“The windows—” Bella began to protest.

“—can wait,” Dennis decreed. “No arguing. It’s just too damned hot and muggy. Anyway, we’ve all been working so hard, if we keep it up, we’ll get sloppy, and you don’t want that. I’ll come over tomorrow and help you with the final bits, Bella.”

“I’ll come, too,” Morgan added.

Natalie felt obligated to pitch in. “I’ll come—”

But Bella preempted her. “No, Natalie, not you. You’ve got to work on the charcoal of Aaron so I can hang it in the shop.”

“Well, anyway, ladies,” Dennis interrupted, “let’s quit for the day, okay? Go home, take a swim. Or a nap.”

“Or a shower,” Natalie said, grinning.

“It’s looking good, don’t you think?” Bella asked. “Kind of elegant?”

“It will once the plastic drop cloths are gone,” her father told her as he went out the door.

The men carried in their ladders and laid them on the floor. They brought in their cans of paint and various tools and set them
inside. The women tapped the lids on their cans, wiped their hands on rags, and took turns rinsing the latex paint off their brushes under the tap in the bathroom sink.

By the time Natalie came out of the building, she saw that Ben’s car was gone. She drove home, saw Slade’s van parked in the driveway, did not see Ben’s car parked in the Barnabys’ drive.

“I hate him,” she said aloud to no one.

Slade was already in the guest room shower. Natalie showered in the master bedroom, put on clean shorts and tee, and immediately felt better. Looking out her window, she saw Morgan playing with Petey on their beach. Aaron and Bella were swimming out to the raft they’d moored in the lake. Dennis was lying on the chaise in the shade of a beach umbrella, the Sunday newspaper over his face. Natalie felt drowsy, too lazy to work, too grumpy to try to swim. She shut her bedroom door, sank onto her bed, and fell asleep.

“Hey.”

She opened her eyes to see her brother standing there. “Hey, what?” she yawned.

“You’ve been snoozing forever. It’s dinnertime. We’re all going in to Mama’s for some crazy cocktails and dinner.”

Natalie scooched up in bed and stretched. “All who?”

“What am I, your social secretary? Bella, Aaron, Morgan, and Petey, I guess.”

“What about Josh? And Ben?” She rubbed her face, as if trying to wake up, not wanting to let her brother catch a glimpse of anything. He could read her so well.

“Josh is still MIA. Bella phoned Ben; I don’t know if he’s joining us or not.”

“Listen, I’ll stay and take care of Petey,” Natalie decided.

“Suddenly you’re Mother Teresa?” Slade asked, puzzled.

“No, I’m an artist, and eccentric and sometimes reclusive. I’ve been with people all day and I want some time to chill.” Natalie swung her feet off the bed and stood up. Outside, the sun was low in the sky, gilding the green leaves and bronzing windowpanes all over
the lake. “Besides, Morgan should have a chance to enjoy herself, and Petey would be miserable at Mama’s.”

“You’ve got your period,” Slade said.

“How did I deserve such a sensitive genius for a brother,” Natalie shot back, knocking his shoulder as she left the room.

They clopped down the steps to the living room and then into the kitchen.

“Aren’t you hungry?” Slade asked.

Natalie shrugged. “I don’t know. Not really. I had a huge lunch.”

Yawning, Slade said, “Well, I bet Morgan would probably love to have you take care of Petey. I know Bella suggested that she leave Petey with Felicity, but Morgan said no, Felicity had Petey all day.”

Natalie slammed the refrigerator door shut. “Let’s go over to Morgan’s.”

Morgan’s front door was open. They let themselves in and wandered through the house.

Slade pointed. “There’s the settee I sold her. Sharp, isn’t it?”

Natalie cocked her head. “Slade, it looks
amazing
there. You really have an eye.”

“Aw, shucks, ma’am,” Slade said, but Natalie could tell he was pleased by her compliment.

Morgan came down the stairs. “Sorry, guys,” she whispered. “I’m not going. Petey wiped himself out at the Hortons’. I just fed him and got him down to bed. He couldn’t wait to fall asleep. Josh hasn’t answered his phone, so I’ve got to stay here.”

“Natalie’s going to stay,” Slade said.

Morgan blinked.

“I’m tired, too, Morgan,” Natalie said. “I’d like nothing more than to sit here in the absolute silence with a book. And, of course, to keep an ear out in case Petey cries.”

“I can’t let you do that,” Morgan said. “You must be hungry.”

“Nope. Just tired.”

“She’s an
artist
,” Slade said, sounding only slightly sarcastic. “She vants to be alone.”

“I get that way, too,” Morgan said. “Oh, Natalie, if you really want to—”

Slade’s cell rang. He looked at it, clicked it on, listened, clicked it off. He said, “That was Bella. She got hold of Ben. He’s coming, too.”

Natalie forced a blithe smile. “I really want to stay here. Just let me run home and get a book.” She hurried out the door, nearly falling down the porch steps. So now she’d arranged it that Morgan could be with Ben, and she,
Natalie
, couldn’t. Oh, well, what did it matter? Ben didn’t seem to notice if she was there or not.

She grabbed up the novel she was reading and one of the library’s heavy art books and headed back to Morgan’s. Morgan was all aflutter with excitement about going out.

“Natalie, you are the
best
!” She grabbed Natalie, hugged her, kissed her cheek. “I need tonight, I really do.”

“Yeah,” Slade said. “We can discuss sewage.”

Morgan chuckled and gave Slade a light punch on the shoulder.

Slade and Morgan went off, both tall, lanky, and tanned, chatting away, leaning toward each other, and Slade said something as he opened the van door for Morgan, and Morgan laughed, throwing back her head so her long hair tumbled past her shoulders.
Morgan is just sexy
, Natalie thought.
She can’t help herself
. Maybe Natalie ought to grow her own hair long like that. Like a damned shampoo ad.

Natalie tiptoed up the stairs and peeked into Petey’s bedroom. The toddler slept in a crib. He was on his stomach, knees up, bum high in the air, wearing light summer pajamas covered with baseballs and catcher’s mitts. He was sleeping soundly, his dimpled hand twitching now and then, his eyelashes curving against his cheek.

He was the most beautiful thing in the world.

She wanted to draw him, just like that.

Her paper, easel, and charcoal were of course at her house. For a moment she debated phoning Dennis to ask him to come over for just a moment while she ran home, but decided against it. Bella’s father had seemed pretty whipped this afternoon. She couldn’t take a picture of Petey; the flash might wake him.

She tiptoed back downstairs and into the kitchen. She spotted plenty of pens and pencils in a cup by the phone book and notepad. The notepad was too small even for a sketch. She searched around
until she found where Morgan had neatly stashed the folded brown grocery bags. She fished a pair of scissors out of the utility drawer and cut the bag apart until she had a good-sized piece of paper. She grabbed a black pen and tiptoed back up the stairs.

Downstairs, a door slammed. Startled out of her own private world, Natalie jumped. Fortunately, her pen was not on the paper, so she didn’t mar the drawing.

“Hello?” a man called.

In his crib, Petey shifted, turning over so that he faced the wall. Quietly, Natalie rose and crept away from his door and down the stairs.

Josh was in the kitchen, drinking water from the faucet. He was wearing khakis and a polo shirt. Not really business attire, but perhaps on a Sunday he didn’t need to wear a suit into Bio-Green. When he saw Natalie, he frowned. “Natalie?”

“Hi, Josh. I’m babysitting for Morgan. She went out to eat with the rest of the painting gang.”

“Painting gang?” For a moment, Josh looked puzzled. Then he remembered, and his face fell. He sagged against the sink. “Oh shit. I am in deep trouble now.”

“Why is that?” Natalie was thirsty, too. She wished he’d move away from the faucet.

“I forgot about the painting party. Morgan will be pissed.” He rubbed his face with his hands.

“We didn’t finish,” Natalie informed him helpfully. “There’s still a lot of window trim to do.”

Josh went to the refrigerator and took out a cold beer, then slumped in a chair at the kitchen table. “I’ve got to work tomorrow.”

Natalie grabbed a glass and ran herself a long drink of water. “After working all day today?”

“It’s a demanding job,” Josh told her. “Morgan knows that. Knew it when we agreed to move here.” Natalie had put the drawing on the kitchen table, and suddenly Josh noticed it. “Wow. Did you just do that?”

“I did.” Natalie slid into a chair, welcoming the support of the curved back. “I peeked in on him and he was so irresistible.… I didn’t wake him,” she hastened to add.

“He’s hard to wake.” Josh pulled the sketch over closer to him. “This is amazing, Natalie.”

“Thanks.” She loved the way Josh’s face softened as he studied the image of his sleeping son. Something else shadowed Josh’s expression—Natalie couldn’t read it. She shifted in her chair to check the clock behind his back. “I have no idea how late it is. When I’m drawing, I lose track of time.”

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