A Peach of a Pair (7 page)

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Authors: Kim Boykin

BOOK: A Peach of a Pair
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9
N
ETTIE

B
ut why?” Sue whined.

“It’s better this way.” Right now, I felt strong. Going back would only serve to remind me why I was leaving, and I couldn’t bear to see the pity in Sue’s eyes, that same look on my friends’ faces. Certainly Justine was over her momentary lapse of sympathy. She probably had the catty minions standing watch for my return while Justine sharpened her claws. As horrible as it was to disappoint and maybe even hurt Sue, I was relieved I wouldn’t have to succumb to their torture yet again.

“I’m going to miss you so much, but I want you to be happy.” She sniffed and made a lame attempt to laugh it off. “I really don’t know what I’m going to do without you. The room is so empty already.”

“Donna Ciriello’s been dying to get out of her room since Sharon
joined the mean girls. She’d love to move in, and you love Donna. She’s such a sweet girl.”

“She is, but she’s not you. I love you so much, Nettie, it hurts that you’re leaving. Why you’re leaving. I’m worried about you.”

“Please don’t be.” I swallowed back tears and wheeled around to see Remmy watching me. I swiped at my eyes and attempted to smile, pleading for a few more moments of privacy, but he didn’t move. Oh, yes, Katie had said he was a stickler for the phone bill and goodness knows how long I’d been on. “I have to go now, but I’ll be there to stand up with you and Jimmy at the end of June. Promise. I love you, Sue.”

“Then don’t say it. Nettie. Don’t say good-bye.” She gulped the words, sobbing. “Never say good-bye.”

“I won’t. We’re sisters.” I set the phone gently on the cradle and turned to see him still there. “I’m sorry. My roommate is a little longwinded.” I grabbed my purse and pulled out a few bills and put them beside the phone. “Three dollars should more than cover the cost of the call. If it’s more, please let me know and I’ll pay you the rest.”

“Put your money back in your pocketbook, Nettie Gilbert.” He smiled. “Cora May says dinner’s ready, and she doesn’t like to be kept waiting.”

He motioned toward what was a beautiful dining room with tall walnut wainscoting that matched the glossy dark floors. Just above the wainscoting, the walls were a lovely candlelight yellow. Connected by a fancy ceiling medallion, a glorious chandelier hung over a long mahogany Chippendale table with ten chairs that could easily seat fourteen guests. A large oil portrait of horsemen in red coats ready for the hunt hung over a long buffet on one side of the room,
and four smaller paintings of a horse in various stages of a jump were on the opposite wall.

An older woman, maybe in her sixties, ran her hand over the tablecloth. She was pretty, with a heart-shaped face the color of black coffee. Striking amber-colored eyes scrutinized fine china bowls scattered across the table full of mashed potatoes, field peas, fried okra, creamed corn. A silver butter dish and a tray of biscuits were the centerpiece. At the head of the table, a beautiful roast beef was swimming in gravy. And, after not having an appetite for days, I was suddenly hungry.

“Dinner looks delicious,” I said, making Cora May smile.

“You have one of Cora May’s biscuits,” Katie said, pushing her wheelchair up to the table. “You’ll think you’ve died and gone to heaven.” She pulled into an empty space and transferred herself to the dining chair on her right, glancing back at the chair, a silent command for Remmy to wheel it away.

“Aw, Miss Katie, how you do go on. But everybody knows it ain’t my biscuits that’ll take you to the back side of heaven’s gate; it’s my cornbread. For sure.”

“I can attest to that,” Remmy said, holding my chair.

“Thank you,” I said, ignoring that his hands lingered on my chair for a moment before he pushed Katie closer to the table.

“Won’t you stay and eat a bite, Cora May?” he asked.

“Thank you, Remmy, but I best get on home. Darnell will be wanting his supper.”

“Everything’s wonderful, Cora May. We’ll take it from here. Thank you very much,” Remmy said, sitting down and placing his napkin in his lap.

The woman nodded and gave his shoulder a squeeze, then Katie’s.

“Love you,” Katie said.

“Love you too, babies,” Cora May said, taking one last look at the table.

Remmy served the roast beef and the bowls were passed around. While Cora May’s biscuits were indeed heavenly, they weren’t as good as my mother’s or my grandmothers’ back home.

“I’m so glad you stayed, Nettie. It’s so nice to have another girl in the house.” Katie smirked, as she heaped her plate with friend okra.

“What are you talking about? Between you and Cora May, I’m outnumbered,” Remmy drawled, passing the peas to Nettie. “Don’t believe her for a second, Nettie; those two are forever ganging up on me to get whatever they want.”

“Why, Remmy Foster Wilkes, you take that back,” Katie said playfully. “Cora May and I have never conspired against you. Not once. Except of course when you ordered that awful blue suit. You should have seen it, Nettie; it came all the way from Chicago and was so ugly, I had Cora May burn it.”

“I loved that suit.” Remmy smiled.

“You have rumpled old pajamas that look better than that suit,” Katie laughed. “I considered it my sisterly duty to save you from yourself.”

“Enough about the one poor clothing choice I’ve made in my life,” Remmy said, making Katie nearly choke on his words. “What did you think about the sisters, Nettie?”

I didn’t know Remmy or Katie well enough to tell them what I really thought, that Emily was rude, overbearing and Lurleen was at best brutally honest. “They were nice.”

Remmy and Katie looked at each other and burst out laughing, making me wonder what I’d gotten myself into.

“My apologies, Nettie,” Remmy said. “Of course the sisters are nice.”

“In their own way.” Katie punctuated the thought with a huge grin.

“I spoke to Miss Lurleen before we left,” Remmy said, fully recovered but with that inherited Wilkes smirk. “She mentioned she would like to have your things shipped to their home.”

“Oh, I’ll call Dean Kerrigan’s office and arrange it first thing tomorrow,” Katie piped up. “She’s such a dear; I haven’t spoken to her in ages. She wasn’t in when I called to have the advertisement put on the bulletin board. It will be great to catch up with her.”

“That’s okay,” I blurted out, my heart racing. I knew Dean Kerrigan would keep my secret, but I wasn’t so sure about the girls who worked part-time in the administration office. Of course, after my tirade with Mother, everyone knew my sordid tale, and some would be only too happy to share it with Katie. “My roommate will mail my things.”

“Nonsense,” Remmy said. “I’ll just swing by the college tomorrow and pick them up. I’d planned to visit a colleague at Baptist Hospital anyway.”

“Oh, I’d like to see that, a dormitory room’s worth of girly chattel in that red sports car, flying down the highway. Besides.” Katie narrowed her eyes. “You have appointments tomorrow.”

“Only until two o’clock; that’s plenty of time to get there and back, and I’m sure Nettie is anxious to get her belongings, settle in.”

“It’s not much, really. Just a suitcase, a few boxes of clothes, some mementos,” I said. “They don’t warrant a special trip; they can be easily shipped.”

“I’m sure they can,” Remmy said, pouring himself more tea. “But I’m more than happy to do it for you, Nettie.”

The glow from the brotherly-sisterly banter left Katie’s face and
was replaced with a look that resembled the one I’d seen when she was talking to the husband hunter. Katie turned her attention to her plate, head down, quiet. Diagnosing her mood, her brother threw out a playfully arrogant line about the college, much like the one I’d snapped at him for earlier. He looked hopeful his sister would take the bait. She didn’t. Neither did I, and the remainder of the dinner was noticeably silent.

R
EMMY

N
ettie had protested when Remmy sent the girls to porch sit while he washed the dinner dishes. Come morning, Cora May would fuss at him for sure, but that was okay. He thought the menial task would take his mind off of the call he’d gotten from Cecil, but it didn’t. Tomorrow Remmy would interview for the job he’d always wanted, even if it wasn’t in Charleston.

But he wasn’t fresh out of med school, like Cecil was when he started working there. No doubt the powers that be would wonder why he hadn’t plowed ahead with his career, sold the practice in Camden right off the bat, and moved on with his life.

From the porch, Nettie Gilbert laughed at something Katie said, and he found himself smiling at the sound. Seemed like the girls were having a good time, and Remmy was glad. He loved his sister, but lately, her moods could change quicker than the dark April sky that had just opened up, making him wonder if everything that had happened was finally catching up to her.

He picked the meat platter up out of the soapy water and rinsed it off, running his hand across the surface until it felt clean. Lightning flashed. Katie squealed and then giggled. Even when she was little, she hated the thunder but loved to watch the sky light up with angry streaks. The memory of her running full tilt through the house for her bed made him freeze for a few seconds. He could almost see her on her belly, legs windshield wiping back and forth while she watched the long window for the next flash.

After the accident, Katie hadn’t missed a beat when she was confined to that wheelchair. Maybe her losses were finally catching up to her. It wouldn’t surprise Remmy; there was not a day that went by that he didn’t think about those last perfect moments in his life, the day he graduated from med school. Mama, Daddy, and Katie had come to Charleston to watch him accept his diploma from the Medical College of South Carolina. He remembered looking into the crowd and finding his mother, who was always such a crier, but even more so that day.

She and Daddy were sitting in the row closest to the stage, so that when he shook the dean’s hand, he could see Mama boohooing. Daddy was of course as stoic as ever and still smarting because Remmy had finally told him he wouldn’t be taking over his practice in Camden, but Daddy had beamed just a little when Remmy waved his diploma at them. And Katie had been so beautiful that day; she’d even drug her fiancé, Jack, to the show.

Poor guy had to endure a car trip with Mama and Katie planning the wedding,
then
had to sit through a boring graduation ceremony. Afterward, Mama had made Remmy pose for a thousand pictures. He still had the one Jack took of the four of them, the one where Daddy actually smiled. He kept it tucked away in his sock drawer.
That last moment frozen forever on Kodak paper, when Mama and Daddy could still draw breath and Katie’s legs still worked. Before Remmy became the country doctor he never wanted to be.

He’d paid dearly for surviving the tragedy without so much as a scratch: the loss of his parents, not taking that job he wanted in Charleston. But no more so than Katie. Jack had been injured, but walked away from the accident, and when he found out Katie was never getting out of that wheelchair, he’d walked away from her too.

Even four years after the accident, Remmy still couldn’t bring himself to change the shingle above the neat red brick building a few doors down on Broad Street—Dr. Foster Wilkes, MD. It would feel too much like surrender. But he would never surrender to this life in Camden.

He stacked the last bowl in the drain, threw the towel on the counter, and let out a tired sigh. Before he left the office to take Nettie over to the Eldridges’ house, he’d gone over the files Katie had set on his desk; he’d done it more out of habit than necessity. He knew tomorrow would shape up to be no different from any other day. Mrs. Casper was coming in for her bursitis. The Johnson triplets, who always came down with whatever virus was going around all at the same time. He’d shuffled through the others to find all of them unremarkable. He’d had to reschedule his appointments after lunch to meet with his friend Cecil, hopefully before the interview. It would be interesting to hear what he had to say.

Mignon Coffey’s file had been on top of the stack along with a note from Katie.
This wretched woman called today, six times. I’m tempted to turn her in to the authorities for harassment.
He smiled at Katie’s tenacity, although sometimes he wished she would give that protective streak of hers a rest. Mignon was nice enough. Pretty. Had a little hypochondria, that’s all. But Katie despised her.

Maybe he shouldn’t have gone out with Mignon, but that was for him to decide. He didn’t care how much he loved his sister, he was not going to discuss his love life with her. She meddled enough as it was.

He headed down the hallway that led to his father’s office, sat down on the ancient leather chair, and propped his feet up on the desk, something that had always killed his father, even though he did the same thing all the time. After Remmy took over the practice, he used to sit here and believe the life he’d planned for himself before the wreck was still possible. It wasn’t long before Charleston seemed as far away as California. China. But this new opportunity in Columbia was just what he needed to finally practice surgery again, and with Cecil there, it would seem like old times.

Until then, he was still right where his father wanted him to be. He blew out a breath, dialed the number, and waited. The phone rang so many times, he sat up and shoved his hand in his pocket and pulled out his car keys, ready to go over there.


Hello.

“Mr. Buck?” He breathed out a sigh of relief. “This is Remmy. Just checking in.”

“No. You’re just calling to see if I’m dead yet. We’ll I’m not, so you can hang up now.”

Remmy smiled, grinned actually, and returned his feet to the place on the desk where the finish had been worn slightly away from the backs of three generations of Wilkes shoe leather.

“You feeling all right?”

“I was until I had to get out of my chair during this storm and answer the blame telephone. I told you to stop calling me every day. You’re a doctor; you ought to have something better to do.”

“Than annoy you? No sir, I can’t think of anything better to do right offhand,” Remmy laughed.

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