supper, if itâs still light, you can help me plant my camellia bushes.â
She teetered on the six-inch heels. âI beg your pardon?â
I pointed to the bagged plants. âI thought they would look great where Mimi and Fifi are now. We could move those plaster mutts over a couple of feetââ
Aunt Marilyn gasped, sucking in a generous chunk of boa. I hastened to extract it before she choked. Two aunts dead in one week by strangulation would be hard to explain to Greg Washburn. Especially if one of them asphyxiated in my shop.
I patted her back to get her breathing again. âThere, there, dear. If you insist, I can plant my camellias somewhere else. Maybe up by the front of the driveway.â
I wouldnât be a southern lady if I repeated what Aunt Marilyn said nextâwhen she could get her voice back. I bet the real Marilyn Monroe didnât talk like that. Hilton Head is just too close to Parris Island, I suppose. My guess, based on the words I heard, is that Aunt Marilyn regularly entertains marines. She sure didnât hear language like that growing up in Rock Hill.
âBut the neighbors all love my camellias,â I said calmly. âEven Mrs. Ferguson loves them. When she saw mine she went out and bought four just like them for herself. She said theyâre the prettiest camellias sheâs ever seen.â
The boa bobbed dangerously close to my auntâs open mouth. Even I would never gasp like that in public.
âThen again, what does Mrs. Ferguson know?â I said helpfully.
âOut!â
âWhy, thatâs exactly what I said to those pink flamingos,dear. Havenât you had a chance to glance at the backyard yet?â
âOut!â
It was the only word she could say for the next few minutes. When she could finally manage a multiple word vocabulary she made it crystal clear that I, my cat Dmitri, and what few belongings I had in her house, were never welcome there again. Not unless I got down on my hands and knees and begged her forgiveness. This dictum inspired a few choice words of my own, which I will spare you.
âAnd I donât allow smoking in my shop!â I shouted as the last of her boa drifted through the door.
It was too late. My favorite auntâmy only aunt, now that Eulonia Wiggins was deadâhad just shut the door on me. Figuratively, that is. I was no longer welcome on Ridgewood Avenue. Thank the good Lord I had most of my stuff stored at Mamaâs.
Â
âWhat do you mean I canât spend the night?â
Mama paused a long time. Long enough for me to hear a stifled giggle.
âAbigail, dear, you know youâre always welcome in my home. I want you to think of it as your home, too, but not tonight. I have plans.â
âIâll watch TV with you, Mama. Iâll even watch those infomercials you like so much. How about it?â
âSorry, dear, but not tonight.â
âCan I at least drop off Dmitri? Aunt Marilyn has threatened to run him through her neighborâs composter if I donât have him out of there by eight.â
Somebody giggled again, and it sure didnât sound like Mama. Neither did Mama, for that matter.
âI told you, Abby, tonightâs not good. Try calling a vet.â
âIs your bridge club there? Is it that Dot McElveen who hates cats? No problem, Mama. Iâll just sneak off to the guest room with Dmitri before anyone sees him, turn the TV on low, and you wonât hear a peep out of us.â
There were two distinct giggles this time. One Mamaâs, one belonging to somebody else.
âIt isnât bridge, dear. Itâs other plans.â
I sighed sympathetically. âMama, you shouldnât allow the Werrels to impose on you like that. They can afford a sitter. Maybe two. Just becauseââ
âIâm not baby-sitting,â Mama said. There was a bounce in her voice I hadnât heard in years. Maybe since Daddy
Danielle Steel
James Herbert
Mark Lawrence
Riley Murphy
Jamie McGuire
Richard Price
Gerry Tate
Alexandrea Weis
H.D. Smith
Barbara Taylor Bradford