Read California Diaries # 11: Dawn III: Missing Online
Authors: Whitney
though. I want you guys to make up. I want al my friends to be happy. That’s
really important to me.
At this point, I keep my mouth shut for a moment. I know this is true. After
what happened to Alex, Ducky must be sort of desperate for al his friends to be
happy. But that’s a lot of pressure. I’m beginning to feel that I can’t tell certain
things to Ducky for fear of worrying him or at least disappointing him. My silence
continues while I think all this stuff over.
Finally…
Ducky: You are going to come to the concert, aren’t you?
Me: (First thinking about al the trouble Ducky went through to surprise us
with the tickets and then imagining myself in the car with Sunny.) Oh, man…
(Ducky is silent. I now imagine Pierre.) Of course I’m going to come to the
concert. Are you sure Sunny can’t ride in someone else’s car?
Ducky: (Laughing.) Right. I’m going to drive to your house, pick you up,
wave to Sunny next door, and call, “Your ride’s on the way. Sorry you can’t come
with us, even though we have room, but I wanted to work out something more
complicated. See you at the concert.”
Me: (Now I’m laughing.) Okay, okay. I’l be big about this.
Ducky: Great.
Me: Now I just have to convince Dad and Carol to let me go.
Ducky: What? You still haven’t gotten permission?
Me: Not exactly. I mean, no.
Ducky: And you put me through al this when you don’t even know if you’ll
be coming with us?
Me: Oh, I know I’ll be able to come. I just have to do a little planning.
Ducky: You have less than a week.
Me: That’s plenty of time.
Ducky: I hope so.
Me: ‘Night, Ducky. I’ll see you on Monday.
Ducky: ‘Night, Dawn.
Sunday morning 2/28
I feel that I’ve been a little too good lately. I need to do something daring.
Or at least fun. Hmm. I think I’ll cal Maggie.
Sunday night 2/28
Maggie and I spent the day together. Maggie is SO much more fun now
that she’s eating again. Before it was always, like, “Oh, no, I can’t eat that.” Or,
“Oh, no, I can’t eat dinner.” She might as well have added, “Are you crazy? I just
ate dinner last week.” Which, horrifyingly, was sometimes practical y the truth.
She was no fun shopping or at a party. Even at school when she started skipping
lunch and she wasn’t even IN the cafeteria, Amalia and I found ourselves sitting
around discussing Maggie’s absence and what it could mean. We were always
discussing Maggie and her weight and her appearance and the horrible tiny
meals she’d eat, when she ate at al .
But now that Maggie’s getting some help, she’s eating again. And she’s
not so obsessed with food. We can go to a restaurant and she can order like a
normal person instead of discarding absolutely every item on the menu because
it has too many calories and then ordering a small bowl or lettuce leaves or
something.
Anyway, I called Maggie and she said she didn’t have any plans today, so
we asked her dad’s chauffeur to drop us off at Harmon’s. We sauntered in there
like we were going to look around that department store forever, but the second
her car had disappeared we ran down the street and soon we were headed
toward the Square. Dad and Carol can’t stand the square. They think the kids
who hang out there are Trouble, like the ones in the “River City” song in The
Music Man. Dad calls them punks and constantly reminds me of the dangers of
marijuana. Ha. If only he knew what those kids real y do. But Maggie and I
weren’t going to hang with the kids. We were more interested in the stores on the
streets around the Square. You can get anything in them – leather clothes, ripped
clothes, incense, hair dye. And you can get any part of your body pierced.
Maggie and I poked around and bought incense, and I bought an incense
holder. Then I considered dyeing my hair black, but Maggie talked me out of it.
Finally we went into this little restaurant, the one cal ed the Tea Shop. You can
buy an awful lot more than tea there, and I don’t mean just food.
Later Sunday night 2/28
My hand was about to fall off. I had to stop writing for awhile.
Maggie and I didn’t go into the back of the Tea Shop, which is where the
interesting things happen. We sat at a booth by the front window. I ordered a
veggie burger and Maggie ordered a salad – but a good, big, healthy salad with
cheese and olives and stuff in it in addition to the vegetables. She even put some
dressing on the salad and she ate almost the whole thing.
While we were eating I said, “I have to find a way to make Dad and Carol
let me go to the concert next weekend.”
“They won’t let you go?”
“No, they haven’t said that yet. But they’re going to when they realize that
the concert is in a club and that liquor will be served and that Ducky is driving us
and it’ll be late at night.”
Maggie made a face. “Yikes,” she said.
“I know.”
“I’ll help you. I’m good at this sort of thing.”
“I know that too.”
“Okay. First of al , be as honest as you can without telling the whole truth.
That way, your dad and Carol can never say that you kept anything from them
exactly.”
“For instance?”
“For instance, tell them the concert is going to be held in a club, not at a
concert hall, and that ordinarily you’d get carded before you go in, but that this
concert is open to all ages. They should figure out the liquor thing.”
“Somewhere, in the backs of their minds,” I added.
“Right. And later, if it’s an issue, you can say, ‘But I told you it was going to
be held at a club.’”
“Okay.”
“Then, of course, there’s always begging, wheedling, promising, bribing,
and bargaining.” (I grinned.) “Although you don’t have to try them in that order,
and you don’t have to be subtle about some of them.” Maggie swallowed a radish
and smiled at me.
The waitress (crew cut, green streak on top of head, two nose rings, five
earrings in one ear, other ear naked, leather tank top, miniskirt) asked us if we
wanted anything else. Maggie and I ordered tea so we could sit and talk a bit
longer.
We made a list of how I could approach the concert with Dad and Carol.
Here’s the list:
1. Tell them about the concert and how badly I want to go. Don’t tell them
everything, but don’t lie either. Impress upon them how much trouble Ducky went
to in order to get the tickets.
2. If they say no, try begging.
3. If they stil say no, try wheedling.
4. If they stil say no, start making promises. (Like, I promise to wear my
seat belt, to make Ducky stick to the speed limit, and to call the moment we get
to the concert.)
5. If they are uncertain, try bribing them. Tell them which chores I’l do if
they let me go.
6. As a last resort, try bargaining, but I may have to compromise the
evening if I do.
Maggie and I hung out at the Square until 15 minutes before we were
going to be picked up. Then we raced back to Harmon’s. When the limo arrived,
we were standing in front of the store looking exhausted from window shopping.
(We had put our bags containing the incense and stuff into old Harmon’s
shopping bags that we’d hidden in our purses before we left.)
I plan to try #1 on the list tomorrow at dinner.
Monday night 3/1
Here is our conversation from dinner (clearly I am going to have to move
on to #2 on the list, probably later tonight):
Dad, Carol, Jeff, and I sit down at the table. Gracie has just had a big
snack of milk and is crawling around on the floor where we can keep an eye on
her.
Dad: So, did everyone have a good day?
Jeff, me, Carol: Oh, yes, sure, yup.
Jeff: My math teacher is a bonehead.
Me: He is? Why?
Carol: It isn’t nice to call people boneheads.
Jeff: Even if they are boneheads?
Dad: This salad is delicious.
Carol: Hearts of palm.
Me: I have some news. (Everyone looks at me.) It’s…well, it’s really
fantastic! I am so excited!
Jeff: What is it? What is it?
Me: Ducky invited me to the Jax concert. Actually, he invited Amalia and
Sunny and me. He got four tickets. Isn’t that cool?
Jeff: (Nearly falling off his chair.) You’re going to the JAX concert? Whoa.
Oh, man, you are SO lucky! The Jax concert. Man…man…I didn’t really think
you’d get to go.
Dad: When and where is the concert?
Me: This Friday night. In North Palo.
Dad: How are you going to get there?
Me: Ducky’s driving.
Carol: What time is the concert?
Me: Jax comes on at about eleven, but the warm-up act starts earlier.
Around ten, I think.
Dad: (Choking a little.) So you won’t even be leaving here until nine or so?
(He glances across the table at Carol and they exchange a meaningful look.)
Me: I don’t know exactly what time we’ll be leaving, but yeah, probably
around nine. Maybe earlier if we go out to eat first. (This has never been
discussed, but I add it brightly because it sounds good.)
Dad: Carol and I will have to talk this over.
Later Monday night 3/1
After this disappointing dinner I called Maggie.
“Okay. On to number two,” she said matter-of-factly.
“Yeah. That’s what I thought.”
I got my chance less than an hour after dinner. Dad and Carol were in the
living room playing with Gracie, and Jeff was doing his math homework. (I’m not
sure, because I didn’t ask, but I think the math teacher is a bonehead because of
the length of this particular homework assignment.) Anyway, it was a nice, quiet
moment, so I took it as an opportunity to try begging. Also to drive home the point
about Ducky.
“Dad, Carol,” I began, “Ducky went to a lot of trouble to get these tickets.
And we didn’t ask him to get them for us. It was, like, a surprise. He wanted to
surprise us. It means a lot to him. To be able to take us, I mean. He wanted to
treat us. You know what a hard time he’s been through. Alex and everything. I
don’t want to hurt his feelings.”
Carol nodded sympathetically. But Dad said, “I understand all that, Dawn.
But we can’t make decisions based on your friends’ situations.”
Since this did not sound very promising, I decided to move right to #3,
wheedling, before Dad could even continue.
“Dad,” I said, “I consider you and Carol very enlightened parents.” (I know
Carol loves it when I refer to her as a parent rather than as a stepparent.) “And,” I
went on, ignoring the fact that Dad was clearing his throat and trying not to look
at Carol, “I know you won’t be swayed by the fact that the Winslows are letting
Sunny go and Amalia’s parents are letting her go. I know you’ll just stick to the
facts. And at least take Ducky’s desperate situation into consideration. He’s
vulnerable right now. But he’s also an excellent driver. And the most responsible
sixteen-year-old I know. Just very needy. He needs his friends. And I know how
you two feel about being loyal to friends. It’s practical y a family value.”
I paused to see what sort of reaction I was getting. It was interesting. Dad
and Carol didn’t say no. But they didn’t say yes. I think I’ll wait for them to make
the next move. If they don’t make it by tomorrow night, though, I’ll move on to #4.
Cafeteria, Tuesday 3/2
I forgot to mention yesterday that Sunny’s mom came home from the
hospital again. When I returned from school an ambulance was in the Winslows’
driveway. At first I panicked I ran inside, cal ing for Carol. She and Gracie were
out, but Mrs. Bruen was there, which was just as good (Mrs. Bruen is like another
mother to me.)
“Mrs. Bruen!” I cried. “There’s an ambulance next door!”
Mrs. Bruen looked up from the pasta she was fixing for our dinner. “It’s
okay, Dawn,” she said. “Mrs. Winslow just came home.”
“In an ambulance? She had to ride in an ambulance?” This seemed very
odd. If she was sick enough to need an ambulance, why was the hospital letting
her go?
Mrs. Bruen nodded. “she’s pretty sick, honey.”
“I know, but…”
“I think she just wanted to come home.”
“Maybe I’l go visit her.”
“Why don’t you wait a bit. Let her get settled first. It takes more time now.
At least wait until the ambulance leaves.”
I was so shaken by the sight of the ambulance that after awhile. I decided
not to visit her. Maybe I’l go this afternoon.
Tuesday afternoon 3/2
I am sitting at my desk, looking out my bedroom window. I can see the
Winslows’ driveway. In it is a delivery truck with the words HERITAGE
SURGICAL on the side. Below is a list of some of the stuff that I guess this place
either sells or rents to people: commodes, walkers, back and knew braces,
bedsore products, hospital beds, ostomy supplies (whatever they are). The list
goes on. Under the list, in larger letters, are the words ALL SICKROOM supplies.
I shivered when I read that last part. All sickroom supplies. It sounds so
sad and sort of tragic.
This guy has been going in and out the Winslows’ front door, carrying
large cartons.
Hmm. What’s going on? I was planning to visit Mrs. Winslow, but I guess
I’ll put it off again. At least until things seem quieter next door.