died.
âGood, Mama, then Iâll be right over after work.â
âReally dear, Iâd rather be alone tonight.â
âNo you wouldnât, Mama. Youâve never liked living alone. Listen, Iâll stop in at the Bojangles on Cherry Road, and then the video storeââ
âShow up at the door and Iâll break both your legs with a rolling pin,â Mama cooed. She sounded half serious.
âExcuse me?â
âAbby dear, I have a date.â
I nearly dropped the phone. âWith a man?â
Some of the giggles turned into guffaws. They were definitely manly.
âMama! Whatâs going on there?â
âOh, nothing dear. Nothing that concerns you.â
âIf it concerns you, Mama, it concerns me.â There is nothing wrong in recycling someoneâs words right back at them if you get the chance. Iâm sure it must irritate the heck out of them. I know it does when it happens to me.
âThis doesnât concern you, dear. Bye.â
I called her right back, but the phone just rang and rang. I was stunned. Mamaâto whom I had spent nine of the best months of my life hooked up by an umbilical cordâhad just unplugged that other most important cord, cutting me loose for the second time. Against my will I had been born again.
Even worse, Mamaâ my Mamaâwas having, or about to have, sex!
10
M ama could have her disgusting roll in the hay. Aunt Marilyn could keep her precious Fifi and Mimi right where they were. It didnât matter one whit to me what they did, because I had friends. The kind of friends who invite you to dinner on the spur of the moment.
âThis is Bob Steuben,â Rob said, as I was locking up my shop.
I introduced myself to a pale, spindly man, possibly in his late thirties. He had mousy brown hair and a very small, narrow face. His eyes were set suspiciously close. His mouth was a thin gray line. Frankly, it looked like the good Lord had made him out of leftovers and run out of material when he came to the face.
âPleased to meet you,â Bob said, his secret revealed. He had a voice that could calm the Bosphorus Straits. âRob told me all about you. You two set the date yet?â
âExcuse me?â
âHeâs kidding.â Rob read the question in my eyes. âYes, Abby, I made the call. You were right. This Washburn guy sounds okay. He said I did the right thing by calling. I feel a lot better now. Thanks.â
âGood enough for me to invite you two out for some dinner? Maybe smoke a tobaccoless peace pipe and call a truce.â
Rob and Bob exchanged glances.
âI had a great day at the shop,â I hurried to say. âThis is my treat.â
âWell, uhââ
âPlease. I need the company. Auntie Dearest kicked me out.â
âShe didnât!â Rob said with just the right amount of sympathy. âThe camellias? Or was it the pink flamingos?â
âIâll tell you all about it at dinner,â I said for Bobâs benefit.
They exchanged glances again. They must have been meaningful glances because theyâd made a decision.
âBobâs a hell of a cook,â Rob said. âYouâre invited to our place for supper.â
Of course I said yes. My Mama didnât raise any fools. Never mind the money I would save on dinner. Iâd known Rob for seven or eight years, been friends with him for half of that, and had yet to be invited to his inner sanctum. From what I heard through the grapevine, Rob Goldburgâs decor made Versailles seem shabby.
âI have to pick up my cat, Dmitri, first,â I explained. âAuntie Dearest said she would turn him into a hand muff if I didnât pick him up by eight, and she means that literally. The only reason she let me keep him there was because she had a cat named DeMaggio when she first bought that damn house, and Dmitri looks just like him.â
The shared glances
Alyssa Kress
Melissa Schroeder
Robert Doherty
Linda Cassidy Lewis
Claudia Lefeve
Margaret Brownley
Rachael Wade
Leanore Elliott
Finny (v5)
Alessandro Baricco