Out of Left Field: Marlee's Story

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Authors: Barbara L. Clanton

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BOOK: Out of Left Field: Marlee's Story
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Out of Left Field: Marlee's Story

 

by

 

Barbara L. Clanton

 

 

Copyright © 2008 by Barbara L. Clanton

 

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Parts of this work are fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, or events is entirely coincidental.

 

 

 

ISBN 978-1-935053-96-5 (eBook)

 

 

eBook Conversion September 2011

 

 

 

Cover design by Donna Pawlowski

 

 

Published by:

 

Regal Crest Enterprises, LLC

4700 Hwy 365, Suite A, PMB 210

Port Arthur, Texas 7764

 

 

Find us on the World Wide Web at http://www.regalcrest.biz

 

 

Published in the United States of America

Acknowledgments

 

Thanks to everyone at Regal Crest for making this a reality for me. I especially want to thank Cathy LeNoir for taking a risk with a newbie and to my editor Mary Phillips for helping me with my learning curve. Sincere thanks go out to everyone who read and commented on various drafts of
Marlee
, in particular Andi Marquette, my very first Beta reader who I now call friend. Thanks also go out to my other early draft readers Kim Dahl, Beth Robinson, Carmen Roldan, Melissa McCurley, Shirl Wright, Deidra Mitchell, and the Cathys who offered wonderful advice and encouragement. Thanks to my parents, Paul and JoAnne Clanton, my brothers, Paul and John and their respective families for their encouragement. Thanks to my “in-laws,” Mamie and Joe Weathers, who have also been great cheerleaders. Grandma, thanks for your companionship in upstate New York where this book was largely written. And thanks, finally, to my rock, Jackie Weathers, who has been the one great love of my life.

 

 

Dedication

For my grandmother, Barbara M. Thompson who helped provide a solid foundation for this questioning kid turned grownup. Thanks, Grandma.

 

 

 

 

Out of Left Field: Marlee's Story

 

 

 

by

 

Barbara L. Clanton

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

Soft as Rain

 

 

MARLEE MCALLISTER SHOUTED over the wind. “Hey, Jeri, c’mon. Put the top up, I’m freezing!” She put a hand on her head to keep her short blond hair from whipping into her eyes.

Marlee’s best friend, Jeri D’Amico, made no move to adjust the Mustang convertible’s top. “Hey, don’t avoid my question.” When Marlee didn’t respond, Jeri said, “Oh, you're such a baby. There’s a blanket in the back.” Jeri reached into the backseat causing the car to swerve on the dark country road.

Marlee grabbed for the panic handle on the door, but came up empty. “God, Jeri. Let’s get there in one piece, okay?” Marlee received a playful punch on her arm in response. “Watch it,” Marlee rubbed her bicep. “I gotta pitch on Tuesday. Don’t hurt the merchandise.”

“Oh, give me a break. That’s not even your pitching arm, Miss Pitcher of the Year wanna-be. But, girl, how are you gonna be the First Team All-County pitcher when you’re up against the reigning All-County pitcher,” Jeri switched to an announcer’s voice, “Christy, Christy, Christy...Loveland, Loveland, Loveland of the East Valley Panthers, Panthers, Panthers...”

“Oh, shut up.” Marlee knew that even though the topic had changed, Jeri wouldn’t drop the original question for long. “What’s so special about Christy, anyway?” Marlee looked over at her friend. “What do the Panthers have that we don’t have?”

Jeri snickered, “Besides Loveland? Who knows? All I know is that the Clarksonville Cougars, all two of us, are going to make a grand entrance tonight. So that’s why we have to arrive with the top down and act like we’re all that.” Jeri pursed her lips and bobbed her head from side to side. She slicked back her curly dark hair.

“Both hands on the wheel,” Marlee admonished as another car whizzed past them on the dark and nearly deserted road.

“And speaking of all that,” Jeri added, “let’s get back to that question you’re avoiding. So, have you and that cute boyfriend of yours, uh, you know...done it?”

Marlee and her seventeen-year-old boyfriend, Bobby Sullivan, were both juniors in high school and everybody said they made the perfect couple. His strawberry blond hair complemented Marlee’s own lighter blond. Marlee’s mother called her hair the color of corn silk, but Marlee wasn’t sure she liked being compared to corn. She did agree with most people’s assessment of Bobby. He was good-looking. His stocky 5’ 10” build complemented Marlee’s lanky 5’ 6” frame. She’d met him three months earlier at a New Year’s Eve party and it had been instant like. Marlee liked the fact that Bobby played football, but she would have liked it better if he played baseball instead. And she would have liked it even better if they went to the same high school. Bobby went to nearby Southfork High School and he made the drive from Southfork to Clarksonville three or four times a week to see her. She liked that about him. Marlee’s mother liked him, too. “A very conscientious young man,” Marlee’s mother had called him.

Before Marlee could come up with some sort of answer to Jeri’s nosy question, Jeri added, “Dave pressured me after two weeks.”

“And...did you?”

“After two weeks? You gotta be kidding.”

“After how long?”

”Okay, now you’re twisting this so it’s about me.” Jeri poked her friend. “I believe we were talking about you.”

Marlee remained silent.

Jeri seemed to take the hint and asked, “Has Bobby seen my new car yet? He’s not gonna be the only one with a muscle car anymore. Mustangs are so much cooler than Camaros.” She flicked her wrist dismissively.

“No, I don’t think he’s—” Marlee flailed for the handle again as Jeri less than expertly maneuvered the car through a series of curves on the country road.

“You see how my car handles the curves?”

“Oh, my God, Jeri. Can you chill out?” Marlee reached for the fallen blanket. “At least slow down on the curves.”

Jeri slowed down but moped. “Fine. Fine. This from someone who doesn’t even have a driver’s license. And you could try to be a little impressed, ya know.”

“I am impressed. My best friend has a Mustang convertible. How cool is that? But who gets a graduation present in April anyway?” Marlee tugged on the sleeve of Jeri’s Clarksonville letterman jacket. “Tell your dad to buy me a Mustang next year when I graduate.”

“Oh, that’ll be the day.” Jeri took the thirty-mile-per-hour curve at forty-five. “But let’s get back to Bobby. So, has he?”

Marlee winced before she realized that Jeri was teasing.

“Has he seen my car?”

“Man, you have a one track mind. And, no, he hasn’t seen your car. You just got it yesterday. Besides, I’m not seeing Bobby until tomorrow night.”

“Ohhh,” Jeri sing-songed knowingly, “and what are you two going to do all alone on a Saturday night, hmm?”

Marlee didn’t think she wanted to talk about something so personal, even with her best friend. Before Marlee could come up with a decent retort, Jeri said, “And how’d he ever let you come to a softball game on a sacred Friday night?”

“Well, first of all, he doesn’t own me.” Marlee glared at her friend. She dismissed the look of disbelief she thought she saw in her friend’s dark eyes. “I just told him it was ‘Girls’ Night Out’.”

“And he bought it?”

“Bought what? I told him I’d see him on Saturday ‘cause you and I needed to hang.”

Blinding light pierced the darkness. Obviously startled, Jeri jerked the steering wheel and two of the tires lurched onto the shoulder. A car, high beams on full blast, had appeared out of nowhere. Jeri eased the two tires back onto the road and slowed down to the actual speed limit. She continued as if nothing abnormal had just happened. “Well, it’s not like Bobby to let you go off on your own.”

Jeri’s voice had taken on a serious tone and Marlee couldn’t tell whether the sudden appearance of the car or their discussion about Bobby caused it. Jeri shrugged. “I just mean that you two are never apart on the weekends. Never.”

“Yeah, well, maybe I need some breathing room.”

Jeri looked at her friend with raised eyebrows.

Marlee continued, “Remember how we’d all go bowling or to the movies? Me and Bobby with you and Dave? I mean, we don’t do that anymore.”

Jeri shot her a hurtful look.

“No. I know you guys broke up and all, but what I mean is that Bobby and I don’t do stuff with anybody else anymore. All he wants to do is go to Lake Birch. And park. And...” Marlee hesitated but decided to finally answer her friend’s question. “Okay. We haven’t yet, but he wants to. The thing is I don’t know if I want to.”

“Oh,” Jeri said. “So you haven’t?”

“No!” Marlee snapped.

“Okay, okay. I’m just asking.” Jeri threw her hands back defensively.

“I know,” Marlee snarled. “You’ve been asking me all night.”

“Sorry, you’re my best friend. I’m supposed to know these things. I didn’t mean to get in your business.”

“That’s okay.” Marlee tried to lighten the mood. “We’re cool. And look, you’re leaving for college next year and I’m gonna be a senior all by myself so I’d rather be hangin’ with my best friend tonight and going to see some softball.” She pulled the blanket up around her neck and stuck out her lower lip.

“Oh, now who’s making a scary face? But, c’mon, I’m just going to Clarkson County CC and I’ll still be living at home and working at the restaurant.”

Marlee shrugged. “Yeah, I guess. Community college isn’t really like you’re going away. But still.” She hugged the blanket tighter.

The two friends grew quiet as they reached the section of County Road 62, affectionately known as the “Oak Tunnel” by the locals. Overhanging branches from the thick oak forest met over the two-lane road creating an oddly square shaped tunnel that blocked out the sky. Marlee’s father had told her that the Boy Scouts squared up the trees every spring, but Marlee wasn’t ever sure if she should believe him. When she turned twelve years old, about a year after his death, she finally realized he had been kidding her the whole time and that passing trucks did the trimming when they ripped off low-hanging branches.

She smiled fondly at the memory, but snapped back to the present when she saw the turnoff sign for Sandstoner Fields. “Ahh, home of the mighty Panthers softball team.”

Jeri pulled into the parking lot. “Enemy territory. You ready?”

“As I’ll ever be.”

Jeri pulled her brand new Mustang into a parking spot near the backstop. Marlee clutched the much-needed blanket as she stepped out of the sports car. In the North Country of upstate New York, so close to the Canadian border, April meant spring, but did not necessarily mean warm since April often brought snow. Snow that could even cancel softball games.

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