My First Love and Other Disasters (10 page)

BOOK: My First Love and Other Disasters
13.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Naturally she's talking about my Jim. He really does look like an advertisement.

“I know them,” I say as casually as I can. And they both nearly jump out of their skins. They have a million questions, and I can tell from the questions that Dana really digs Barry, which sort of surprises me a little. I don't tell how Barry feels about me.

We watch the guys surfing, and it's funny but they're both a lot like the way they surf. I mean their personalities. Barry's pretty good, but he doesn't seem to take it too seriously. He looks as if he's having a lot of fun. Even when he falls off he seems to be laughing. Another thing: He's so busy surfing that he doesn't seem to be aware of the people on the beach. He's just having a great old time.

But Jim knows he's got an audience (I guess someone who looks the way he does always has an audience) and he's playing to them. I don't mean he's not having fun, but you can tell by the way he
stands on the surfboard that he wants to look his best. And boy, he sure does. Dana's right. He's gorgeous. And he's a very good surfer, too, his blond hair whipping back, his arms straight out as though he's flying, and a big happy smile on his face. I wish he really was my boyfriend. I'd love that more than anything else in the world. And I'd love everyone to know.

Suddenly it seems all the mother's helpers who normally detest the water are nagging their charges to go in. Me too. Except I don't have to ask twice because David is always ready. Even DeeDee wants to go in.

Like lemmings we all head toward the water. Counting the kids, we must be about fifteen. There are so many of us bobbing in the water that if the guys still want to do serious surfing they'll have to move farther down the beach. I guess the temptation of all those cute girl lemmings is just too much, because pretty soon we're all fooling around on their surfboards and nobody's taking anything seriously. Except dumb me, I always take Jim seriously. Kind of cuts into my fun but I can't help it. That's just the way I feel about him.

Jim shows David how to hold on to the board and I feel super because he picked my kid. That must mean something.

By the time we finish with the water and head
up to our blankets Jim has a group of female admirers around him you wouldn't believe. Actually it's disgusting, except he doesn't seem to think so. In fact, he looks like he can hardly tear himself away. When I see how popular he is it makes me think I'm probably wasting my time. I'll never get him.

Out of the corner of my eye I see Dana talking to Barry. I told you she liked him. And he seems kind of interested in her, which is a little annoying, particularly since he's supposed to be so crazy about me. Not that I really care because he definitely isn't my type. It's just that he made such a big thing about how he felt about me. Sometimes guys really give me a pain.

“Hey, buddy,” Jim calls to Barry, “I gotta get back. Are you coming?”

“Sure thing,” Barry says and grabs his board.

“See you around,” Jim says, and he gives everybody one of his big heart-stopping smiles. Then he sort of points at me and says, “At The Monkey, right?” And I nearly drop dead.

“Take it easy.” Barry waves, and they both go off down the beach.

The other girls drift off to their own blankets, and I just stand there staring.

“Wake up,” Anita says.

“Did he point at me or did he point at me, huh?”
I ask them both, and I'm positively hyperventilating.

“He definitely pointed at you” Dana says.

And then I ask them about six more times if they're absolutely certain it was at me, and they swear it was, and I still can hardly believe it. I would go on about it for another half hour except that Dana has a million questions about Barry that I have to answer. Like I said, she's interested in him. I tell her everything I know about him except how he feels about me, which he probably doesn't anymore anyway.

“Are you going to The Monkey later?” Anita asks me as we break up and head back to our houses.

“Are you kidding?” I say. “There's no way I'm not going to be there tonight.”

“See you later then.” They both wave and go off.

Ten

We're pretty late getting back
for lunch. Cynthia probably couldn't wait for us so she left a note saying she went to the Youngs' for lunch and would I pretty please make the kids tuna sandwiches and see if I can't sort of straighten up the house a little because some friends are coming for cocktails. P.S., she says, the vacuum is in the pantry closet, and so is the mop. Good-bye afternoon for me.

But I don't mind because if she's having company, it means she'll be home tonight and I can get out for sure. Fantastic!

After lunch David goes to his friends across the street and DeeDee is so tired from the beach she takes a nap. Lucky for me, because it's going to take me a while to get things in shape. There's
another note from Cynthia on the kitchen table that says only to change her sheets, everyone else's is clean. I start on the downstairs first so I can be sure that's ready for the company. I'm just starting to drag the vacuum up the steps when the phone rings. At first I leap for it, but then I remember about the grandfather and I just stand there and let it ring. But—I know this is a long shot—but maybe it's Jim. Maybe he asked Barry for my number and . . . no way. Still . . . I answer it.

“Hello?” Very sweet, warm, intelligent person of at least sixteen. That's me.

“Cynthia?”

“No, she's not home. This is the mother's helper.”

“Mother's what?”

“The mother's helper. You know, I take care of the kids and . . .”

“Great little kids, aren't they?” whoever he is says, cutting me off right in the middle of my sentence. “Best in the world. How about putting David on?”

“David's not home. Who is this please?”

“What about DeeDee?” he says without answering my question. Except I think I know the answer already. “Isn't she home?”

“She's sleeping,” I say. “Is this Mr. Landry?”

“How'd you know?” And he gets a suspicious tone to his voice.

“Cynthia said you might call.”

“What'd she tell you?”

Now I'm his enemy and that makes me start to fumffer all over the place.

“Nothing . . . except she said . . . uh . . . she thought it would be better if you didn't . . . I mean . . . she said . . .”

“She don't want me to talk to the kids, right?”

“Well . . .” Even though he's not exactly sweet and gentle the way I expected, still it's hard to tell him he can't talk to his own grandchildren. And he seems to be reading my thoughts. He says, “Look, honey, those kids are my flesh and blood—she ain't got no right to do this.”

“I'm sorry, Mr. Landry, but I'm only the mother's helper.”

“Well, listen here, mother's helper or whatever you are, you get that little girl awake and let her talk to her grandpa. You hear me?”

This is terrible. Cynthia said I should hang up, but I can't slam the phone down on someone I practically know, especially a grandfather. “Please, Mr. Landry, can you call back when Cynthia is here?”

“That won't do me no good; that girl's too sour. I ain't saying she's wrong about that boy—a rotten kid Jed is sometimes—but she ain't got no right doing this to me and the kids. I'm their grandpa and we got a right to be together. You got a grandpa?”

“Yes, sir.”

“You love him?”

“Oh, yes, definitely. I love him very much.”

“What would you think, somebody steps in there and says you can't see him and they've got no good reason?”

“Cynthia thinks maybe you could talk to your son about the money.”

“I talked to him about that more'n she has. He's just a downright nasty boy and I'm ashamed of him. If I had a penny more on my Social Security, I'd pay it myself.”

Now I feel even worse. I mean, the poor man has no money. I think maybe Cynthia is wrong about doing it this way. But what can I do?

“Please, Mr. Landry, I don't know what to do. I have to do what Cynthia told me. Maybe you could call when she's home.”

“No good. Tell you what, just wake DeeDee up and let me talk to her.”

“I can't, Mr. Landry. Please don't ask me to do something like that.”

“But you know it ain't right what she's doing. I'm an old man . . . uh, what'd you say your name was?”

“Victoria.”

“Victoria, you sound like a nice girl. Let me tell you, I ain't so young anymore and maybe I don't have too much time left. I don't mean I'm
sick or anything, but I'm past seventy and . . . tell you the truth, honey, those kids is all I have. And I'm the only grandpa they have. . . . Well, there ain't much in my life I'm so crazy about, but those kids, they're special. I guess I love them more than I do . . . well, anyone.”

When I hear his voice break I start to fall apart myself. Nobody has ever talked to me like that before. I mean, I never had the power to say yes or no like this. It's terrible. I hate it.

Right in the middle of everything DeeDee comes down from her nap, still half asleep and creeps onto my lap and snuggles up. She's soft and all warm from sleep and so lovable.

“Who's that you're talking to,” she asks, and I cover the phone, but it's too late.

“That DeeDee?” Mr. Landry asks in a loud voice, and suddenly he sounds so excited. “DeeDee, it's Grandpa!”

Well forget it. I'm not going to do something I know is really wrong just because someone tells me to. And in a giant burst of—I don't know, maybe courage or maybe the opposite, maybe I'm too weak to stand up—I put the phone to DeeDee's ear.

And her face lights up. “Grandpa!” And then to me, “It's my grandpa!” And then back to the phone. “Grandpa, I told Victoria all about you and we saw a fisherman today and he wasn't half as good as you, and I told him how my grandpa is the
best fisherman in the whole wide world and David said so too. . . . I miss you too. . . . When are you coming out to see us? . . . How come? I want you to come today. . . . I want you to come tomorrow then.” And then she turns to me and says, “My grandpa can't come out this week, that's what he said. . . . How come, Grandpa?” She's back talking into the phone and they go on for a while, and she's so cute, and she tells him all about every single thing that happened since she came out here. I mean everything, like what she ate for breakfast, and he asks her lots of questions, and you can tell he's really interested in everything about her. And then they say, “I love you,” and they throw kisses and finally they say good-bye and the call probably costs him a fortune. I know people get very little money on Social Security, so I guess he'll have to do without something else to make up for talking to his granddaughter. I'm in a lot of trouble so I'm building up his case. First thing I have to make sure is that DeeDee doesn't say anything to Cynthia.

“You really have a terrific grandpa, DeeDee,” I start off.

And she loves that and she tells me all the things they talked about on the phone, which of course I just heard.

“Do you have any special secrets with your grandpa?”

“What's a special secret?”

“Something you have that nobody else in the whole world knows. I have one with my grandpa.”

“What about?”

“I can't tell you. Then it wouldn't be my special secret.”

“I want one too.” And she wants one so much she's beginning to pout. So I give her one.

“Okay, DeeDee, that phone call from your grandpa, the one just now, that's your special secret. Now, remember, don't tell anyone else.

“ 'Cept my mommy. But not David.”

“Not even your mommy if you want it to be a special secret.” I feel so low tricking a baby like this.

“Not even my mommy?”

“Right. Not even your mommy. And you know what happens to people who keep their special grandpa secrets at the end of the summer?”

“Uh-uh.” And her eyes get twice their size. These kids can smell a prize a mile away.

“They get a prize.”

“A kangaroo?”

“Maybe so.”

“Oooh.” And she jumps up and down and claps her hands.

“Are you going to keep the special grandpa secret?”

She thinks hard for a minute and says, “I'll ask my mommy.”

I try a different approach. “DeeDee, if you tell your mommy about your grandpa calling, my grandpa is going to be very upset and I will be too because then you won't be a member of the Secret Grandpa Club and then you won't be able to come to the meetings or get the button or anything.” I can see I'm getting to her. She's a little confused but the button's got to get her.

“I want the button,” she finally announces. What did I tell you?

“Then don't tell Mommy.”

“Let me see it.”

“If you don't tell Mommy.”

“Okay.”

“My grandpa is going to be very happy, and me too.”

“Victoria?”

“What, sweetie?”

“I want my button.”

“I'm going to write away this very afternoon.”

“I want it now.” And she screws her face up like she's going to cry.

“I have to write away, DeeDee. Look, I don't even have mine yet.”

“You promised.”

“I know and I'm going to do it right now. See?” And I take a scrap of paper and start to write some gibberish.

“Maybe if I ask my mommy she can call on the
phone and then they can bring it over today.”

“They don't have any phones, and besides, if you tell your mommy anything, all the buttons will turn green and melt away.” She's pushing me. If it was Nina I'd tell her
she'd
turn green and melt away. It's so much easier with a sister.

Other books

The Real Thing by J.J. Murray
Hope Rekindled by Tracie Peterson
Falling for the Ghost of You by Christie, Nicole
Before the Rain by JoAnne Kenrick
Barely Yours by Charlotte Eve
The Final Nightmare by Rodman Philbrick
Bill for the Use of a Body by Dennis Wheatley