Honey, Baby, Sweetheart (23 page)

Read Honey, Baby, Sweetheart Online

Authors: Deb Caletti

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Themes, #Adolescence, #Dating & Relationships, #Family, #General, #Social Issues, #Dating & Sex

BOOK: Honey, Baby, Sweetheart
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“Good, thanks.”
“Ruby was kind enough to offer to drive me to see my good friend Lillian. My car is having trouble,” Peach said.
“How nice of you,” Mrs. Connors said.
“Broke down in the street, which gave me a real
fright, and I don’t want to take that chance again,” Peach said.
“My brother is a car mechanic,” Mrs. Connors said. I could read Peach’s mind.
Figures.
“If you’d like his number.” Mrs. Connors reached for a pad of paper.
“Oh, that’s all right. My nephew offered to have a look. It’s at his place now.” Peach was gaining new relatives by the minute. “Well, we ought not keep Lillian waiting.” Peach’s smile looked like it was ready to crack and slide down her face. I could hear footsteps coming down the hall. That was sure to be Harold, heading for Mr. Fiorio’s room. He was early.
“She’s in good spirits today,” Mrs. Connors said.
Again, I read Peach’s mind.
I’ll bet.
At least that was what I was thinking. Past the desk, Peach took a pinch of her sweater near the chest and waved it in and out. “Whew,” she said. “You had to go and know someone. Do you think she suspected anything?”
“Nah,” I said. Here’s what I’ve noticed—a guilty conscience is like a pimple. We think people see it way worse than they do.
“I hope we don’t have trouble with Lillian’s roommate.” Peach knocked on the door.
“Lillian has a roommate?’
“Come in,” the roommate said.
“Helen,” Peach said. “Didn’t I mention her? Deaf as a doorknob. Hi, Helen,” Peach said loudly.
“More people for Lillian. No one ever comes to see me. This place is like Grand Central Station,” Helen said. She
lay in bed in a flowered housecoat. Her face was dominated by a huge pair of glasses. It was all you noticed. Her ears may have been suffering, but her eyes were getting military-size help. By her bed was a picture of a cat in a frame. I wondered if she’d had to leave him, a beloved friend, behind somewhere. Lillian was upright at the edge of her bed. She gave us a wide smile. I don’t think I’d ever seen her smile before—it was as if she’d suddenly inhabited her body again. Her eyes even twinkled. You could see that she was once beautiful. You could picture her dancing. You could picture her writing poetry, arranging flowers in a vase. She made a fist with her good hand, held it near her chest. An
excited heart,
she seemed to say.
Happiness.
“Oh, Lillian. I am thrilled for you,” Peach said. I wanted to cry. Lillian’s little slippers with the elastic all around the top made my heart feel as if it might break. I was also filled with surging energy. We had to make this happen for her. We had to get her out of there.
Peach looked at her watch. “Oh, dear, we’re almost late. Going to the doctor,” Peach said to Helen.
“I’ve never liked Walter. Bad breath,” Helen said. “Why my sister married him, I’ll never know.”
“Doctor,” Peach shouted. “Ruby, get the wheelchair. We’ve got to hurry. Grandfather Wong will be erupting at any minute.”
“Doctor,” Helen said. “She doesn’t need a doctor. She’s the picture of health. Look at me. My foot’s been swollen for three days.” She plucked one foot out of the covers and held it up. I was worried her housecoat was
going to slide too far up and I was going to see more than I wanted to. Her foot did look kind of swollen. “No one will listen to me.”
“That’s because she talks without stopping,” Peach said. Lillian gave a patient nod.
You got that right,
she seemed to say.
I’d already checked the closet, but no wheelchair. I looked in the adjacent bathroom and under the bed.
“Come on, Ruby, get on with it,” Peach said.
“I think we’ve got a problem,” I said.
“We can’t have a problem. We don’t have time for a problem.”
I looked behind the door, any space big enough. “Do you have a wheelchair?” I asked Helen.
“No one is allowed to leave without the nurse. She brings it,” Helen said. It made her feel good to know the rules, you could tell. Her voice was sitting up straight.
“Shit,” Peach said.
“Don’t panic,” I said. I felt like panicking.
“Find one!” Peach said. She had her back to Helen. She was stuffing a few of Lillian’s things in her bag.
“What are you doing over there?” Helen said. She narrowed her eyes. Those glasses were like two telescopes.
“Do something, Ruby! We can’t get her out of here without a wheelchair!”
“Don’t worry.” Something people say when they are worried as hell. “I’ll go look in another room.”
“Just hurry.”
I peered out in the hall. I could hear Mrs. Wong talking to the nurses.
He’s been very excitable today.
And then Mrs. Wong:
Oh dear. One of Grandfather’s bad days.
She clucked her tongue in concern.
He keeps saying someone’s getting kidnapped.
Shit, shit!
Last week it was the F.B.I.
Mrs Wong said. She was good at this. Well, no Almond Roca for Grandfather Wong.
Wheelchair. I sped into a neighboring room, two owllike faces giving me surprised looks. The room was identical to Lillian’s except for a few personal items. There would be no wheelchair here, either. I knew there were some behind the nurses’ station, but that would be way, way too dangerous. Supply closet? I crept down the hall.
Please,
I begged.
Please, just a little bit of luck.
Mrs. Wong stopped talking. I heard her heels clip down the hall and the nurses start to talk about her behind her back.
I wish I had a chunk of her change.
Car salesmen wear less jewelry,
Mrs. Connors said.
I was filled with anger. I would have defended Mrs. Wong if I could right then. Mrs. Wong had guts. Mrs. Wong had spirit. It struck me how much I cared about her, about all of them.
And then there it was. The wheelchair, thank God. Sitting and facing the bed of a man in a plaid robe with matching plaid slippers, two rooms down from the owl faces. The man wore a sweater over his robe, as if preparing
to go outside. Unfortunately, he’d have to wait a little.
I took hold of the handles of the wheelchair.
“You’re new,” he said sweetly.
“Got to borrow this for a minute,” I said.
“Hey!” he said to my back as I peered down the hallway and headed out with the chair.
“Emergency,” I said. “Heart attack.”
I raced down the hall with the chair. The squeak of the wheels on linoleum sounded loud and furious, Revenge of the Wheelchair in Surround-Sound volume. I was really starting to sweat now. My heart was going a thousand miles an hour.
“I am not a communist, God damn it!”
Grandfather Wong’s first shout.
“First they steal from me and then they say I am a communist!” I heard a crash, breaking glass. Grandfather Wong was doing a great job, but oh, God, we were supposed to have Lillian ready to fly out of there by now. I zipped into the room, just as I saw a flash of white pass the hallway. Nurse number one, check.
“Jesus, what took you so long?” Peach said. “Grandfather Wong is going at it.”
“You try finding a wheelchair in this place.”
“Only nurses are allowed to move us,” Helen said.
“I got permission,” I said.
Lillian clutched her purse to her as if she couldn’t wait to get out of there.
“Something fishy is going on here,” Helen said.
“Get your hands off me! I am a citizen!” Grandfather
Wong shouted down the hall. I heard a solid thump, another crash.
“Olivia!” a nurse shouted. “Quick!”
Nurse number two.
“Heave ho,” Peach said. We pulled Lillian up. She was helping all she could. We set her down a little roughly in the chair. Our aim wasn’t the greatest either—one thin butt cheek was tilted up the side of the chair.
“I’m calling the nurse,” Helen said. “You two are trouble and you can’t tell me different.”
I acted on instinct. I ran to Helen’s bed. “Look,” I said, taking her hand and leaning down next to her ear. “We’re getting Lillian out of this place to be with the man she loves.” Helen’s eyes got big behind the glasses. Big as Poe’s would be in the pictures Chip Jr. just took of him. “You can be part of helping her escape.” It was a gamble based on my feeling that people who most stringently adhered to rules were the ones who most enjoyed the secret thought of breaking them.
Helen shut up. She looked pleased. “I once ran an illegal gambling organization,” Helen said.
For a moment, that stopped me in my tracks. You just never thought that people with crocheted Kleenex box covers could be crooks, or great successes, for that matter. Think about it next time you see someone old, wheeling around in his motorized scooter with an American flag on a pole on the back. He could have been a jewel thief. Or a concert pianist. “I’ll come back to visit you,” I said.
“If they ever let you back in,” Peach said. She sounded a little jealous. I was supposed to be
her
granddaughter, after all.
“Let’s go,” I said. I ran up the hall, checked to see if the nurses’ station was clear. From the entrance of the hall, I waved my okay. Poor Lillian still had one butt cheek up. Mr. Wong was still crashing around in his room. More glass breaking.
“Calm down, Mr. Wong! Get Elaine,” one of the nurses shouted.
“She’s in another room.”
“Get her!”
Grandfather Wong was overdoing it a bit. That’s all we needed, for the nurse in Mr. Fiorio’s room to come wandering out right then. I held up my hand in a stop position. Peach froze the wheelchair mid-hall. Mrs. Wong knew what to do, though. “Quiet down a bit,” she cooed. “It’s all right.” I could picture her squeezing her nails into Grandfather Wong’s arm, stepping her heel onto his foot as a message. There was sudden quiet. Probably Grandfather Wong was in too much pain to talk.
We waited a few beats. No one emerged. I waved Peach forward again.
Just then Mrs. Connors emerged from Mr. Fiorio’s room. Shit! I waved my hands madly at Peach. Go
back!
Peach looked struck and frozen with fear. Where could she go? Mrs. Connors was heading for her desk. If she passed the hallway, she’d be certain to see Lillian. Down the hall, Helen’s head popped out of her room. She
wanted to watch. I waved madly at her too.
Back inside!
I leaned against the wall, trying to look casual. My heart was going crazy. I felt like I was trying to conduct an orchestra of lunatics. I leaned against that wall as if it was just something I did all the time. Why anyone would be leaning across the wall looking casual right there was something I hadn’t figured out quite yet. I heard a huge skidding squeak of wheelchair tires behind me. If Mrs. Connors hadn’t heard that, it’d be a miracle.
“Wow,” I said loudly. “Whew.” I scraped the toe of my tennis shoe hard against the floor, trying to replicate the sound.
Thankfully, Mrs. Connors’ ears hadn’t moved on yet from Grandfather Wong’s squawking. “All that commotion!” Mrs. Connors said. She looked at me there, leaning against the wall. “You’ve probably never heard anything like it before. We get it here on occasion. Feel free to eavesdrop.”
She crossed the hall to her desk. I could only hope that behind me, Lillian and Peach had made it out of sight.
Please,
I prayed. I couldn’t tell if Mrs. Connors was being cruel or kind with her remark. “I was looking for a soda machine,” I said stupidly. Yep, hysterical outbursts in rest homes always gave me an unquenchable thirst.
“In the reception area downstairs.”
She took a pad and pen off her desk, headed back to Mr. Fiorio’s. But things were quieting down in Grandfather Wong’s room. God, we’d have to hurry.
My heart was thudding terribly. I ran back down the hall, looking into open doors. I saw Peach and Lillian
backed up inside the room of the two owl faces. Boy, they sure were getting a show today.
“Run,” I said.
Lillian clutched her purse. She held on to the arm of her chair with her one good hand. Peach passed Lillian’s bag to me and we flew. I punched the button of the elevator.
Nothing.
Punch, punch, punch.
“Goddamned elevator,” Peach said.
Nothing.
I heard Mrs. Wong’s voice.
Sorry,
she said.
So sorry.
And the nurse: I’m
sure you’ll replace the television.
“Goddamnit, goddamnit,” Peach said.
Nothing. And then finally,
ding.
We rushed in, jostling Lillian recklessly over the edge of the elevator floor. Peach pushed the button, shutting the door behind us.

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