by Ginger Scott
a girl like me
Ginger Scott
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Books by Ginger Scott
Copyright © 2017 Ginger Scott
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or events is entirely coincidental.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
* * *
Ginger Scott
For Helen.
The most bad-ass young woman I know.
Love you to the moon, girl.
O, when she's angry, she is keen and shrewd!
She was a vixen when she went to school;
And though she be but little, she is fierce.
~The Bard
One
When I was little, still in grade school, right after my mom left, I had these dreams that she had just gone to the store to pick up something my dad had forgotten. My dad and I were always sitting at the table, sometimes playing a game, other times just talking. The feeling was so alive, so real. It was…normal. I’d wake up in this distorted existence where everything was okay. Sometimes that feeling would last almost a full minute. It always disappeared, but I’d go to sleep the next night whispering prayers—to whomever it is that puts dreams in heads—to let me have that one again.
It would never come when I truly wanted it.
Over the years, I had that dream less and less. I think it was maturity killing silly, childish fantasies. It’s been three years since I felt my mom’s presence in my slumber, and the memory of that dream had almost left me completely.
Last night, though—she was here.
Here.
Kyle and I arrived at Grandma Grace’s house in Tucson after an all-night drive that turned into morning, then afternoon. I needed to see her, and my heart and head were acting together when I hatched the late-night plan to hit the road with the only friend I have who would embrace my wildest and craziest ideas. Kyle has been through it all with me—literally from the bottom to this rocky journey back up. When I asked him to drive me here, to see my grandma and get answers about my dead mom, he merely motioned toward the truck, keys in his hand, ready to drive. And when I added in the bit about also wanting to find Wes, Kyle didn’t flinch, indulging my hopes and not once questioning me. Kyle loves me more than I deserve, but I will never tell him that. I’m selfish, and as much as my heart belongs to Wes, Kyle’s friendship also makes me whole.
I called my dad from the road when we were too far away from home for him to stop us, and he reluctantly called ahead to Grace for us. This was after chewing my ass out for about thirty minutes and demanding we turn around and come home. I left out the part that our drive home would take twice as long…because oh yeah, and we plan to look for Wes, because I believe he’s alive and he’s sent me cryptic messages. Sound good?
The drive took nine hours; by the time we arrived at the small brick home—surrounded by cactus and shadowed by a mountain scarred with blackened earth from a recent fire—the sun was just beginning to set over the peak.
Our greeting was awkward. Grace pulled me in for a hug, but her hands never came to a rest on my back, her touch stilted—guarded. She made a pallet on the floor in her sewing room for Kyle. She led me to a spare room with blank walls and laced curtains at the end of the hall, and when my head hit the pillow, my eyes closed easily from exhaustion.
That was more than twelve hours ago. I’d give anything to close my eyes again, but it’s too late. They’ve opened, and that feeling from the dream…it’s already gone.
My body aches from the long ride in Kyle’s truck and the hard mattress beneath me. I roll to my side and pull my knees to my chest, one at a time, removing my prosthetic and stretching my body as I kick away the heavy quilt I slept under. I half expect the sensation of phantom pain to kick in, but it hasn’t for weeks—at least nothing like when I first lost my leg in the bus accident.
The door to my room is slightly opened, and I strain to see what I can of the house beyond it through the four-inch gap. When the door pushes toward me, I startle and sit up quickly while my mind registers that it’s only Kyle.
“There’s breakfast out there,” he says, stretching his arms above his head, his fingertips nearly grazing the ceiling-fan blades above him.
“What time is it?” I press my palms into my eyes, forcing out the puffiness.
“Eleven,” he says, his mouth ticking up on one side while my eyes widen. “Yeah, we slept for fifteen hours.”
“So, doesn’t that make it lunchtime?” I say, tugging my fingers through the knots in my hair.
“Yeah, but Grace…or your grandma, or…what do I call her?” Kyle asks.
I shrug. She’s really a stranger, other than the few times I saw her when I was a kid.
“All right, well…Grace…she said she always wanted to make you breakfast, so…”
Our eyes meet as his words trail off, and I instantly wonder if what Grace told Kyle was a lie. I was so brave in that field, when I held that photo in my hands, sure I’d find Wes and some long-lost connection with a woman I barely know. I’m not brave now. That dream took away my faith when the warm feeling left me.
“Kyle, maybe we should just—”
A woman with a long, gray ponytail tethered at her neck and dirt-stained garden gloves covering her hands fills my doorway, and I pause mid-sentence. I didn’t really look at Grace when we arrived, and the image in my head was something daintier, or maybe polished, at least. The person smiling at me right now is miles away from that version. This Grace is tough, a thick body that looks like it could carry fifty pounds without breaking a sweat, despite the wrinkled arms that dangle at her sides.
“Bacon’s on the table. I’ll wash up and join you both in a minute, but feel free to start without me.”
Her smile lingers on me a few extra seconds before she spins from the door and disappears down the hallway. Kyle and I both look at the spot she just left. I don’t breathe until I hear a door close.
“She looks like me.”
Kyle lifts his eyes to mine, a small chuckle escaping with the lift of the left side of his mouth.
“I bet she swears like a sailor, too,” he says.
My eyes slit and my lips pucker a second before I throw the down-filled pillow at his face.
“Oooph, that’s it! You owe me a piece of bacon,” he says, zinging the pillow back at me. I catch it on my lap and sneer at him one more time. “Right…because you talk like an angel.”
“You bet your ass I do.”
Kyle cranes his neck to make sure the coast is clear before flipping me off and leaving me alone again in my room. I laugh hard enough that a sound escapes me, and hearing it makes my smile grow. I can do this. There are things I want to know—I need to know.
After spending a few minutes stretching my limb, I put on my prosthetic and work my way to the bathroom to freshen up. We drove straight from the flower field. I was too afraid that my dad would notice if I stopped back at home. Maybe I was afraid I’d change my mind about this trip, too. Now, five hundred miles away from home, toothbrushless, clean underwearless, and—I tuck my chin to my left shoulder and sniff—deodorantless, I think the next leg of our trip in the truck is going to be a rough one.
I make do with what I can find, splashing water on my face and rubbing a finger full of toothpaste around my mouth. By the time I feel clean enough to leave the bathroom and head to the kitchen, Grace has joined Kyle at the table. Her smile catches me off guard; it’s the same one as before, almost like she thought I’d been a made-up story all these years and is only now finding out I’m real, as if the other times we were together were delusions.
“Here,” she stands, the squeal of her chair against the tile making me flinch. “I have a plate for you.”
I take the dish from her hand, my eyes not able to make it fully to hers. I’m intimidated.
“Thank you,” I say.
“Grace, what’s in these eggs? I mean, serious…these are pretty much the best thing I’ve eaten in my entire life,” Kyle says in-between bites.
“It’s just a little bit of pepper jack. I find it gives them kick,” she says, that last word coming out a little louder than the others.
“I just hope it doesn’t give me gas,” Kyle says through the side of a full mouth. I kick his chair hard enough that it scoots to the side an inch or two.
“What?” He looks up at me with his shoulders drawn up and eyebrows pinched.
My eyes fall closed and I shake my head. My face feels hot.
“Nothing,” I whisper, recognizing the feeling that made me scold him. I want Grace to like me. It’s the same desperate feeling I used to get when the kids at school would stare at me when something embarrassing happened—when I sat with Christopher…Wes.
I fill my plate with two strips of bacon and a scoop of eggs before taking a seat next to Kyle. Grace pours a glass of orange juice for each of us while I pick at my food, nibbling at the edges of a piece of bacon.
“Thank you,” I say as she finishes pouring. I glance up at her, but immediately look back down at the bacon in my hand.
She slides the pitcher onto the table next to my plate, and without pause moves her left hand to my shoulder, resting it on me gently. My pulse quickens.
“Josselyn.” I swallow hearing her say my name. Somewhere deep inside me, I think maybe I remember hearing her say it before—a long time ago. My lips tight, I look up at her again and smile through my fear of rejection. She moves her fingertips to my chin, tilting my head up just enough that I have to look her in the eyes, and my breath grows choppy with my nerves.
“I have missed you so much.”
I bite my lip the second it quivers, but she sees right through it, her hand sliding to cup my cheek as she reaches up with her other hand, too.
“You grew up so beautiful,” she says.
I force myself to breathe in slowly, looking for the lies in every word. I can’t see them, though. All I see is a reflection, my future. My eyes are blue because of hers.
“Thank you,” I whisper.
A gentle chuckle shakes her shoulders before her fingertips fall away from my skin. My heart now kicking steadily, I hide my nerves behind my appetite, cleaning my plate and taking seconds.
Kyle and I both help Grace clean up the kitchen, and we follow her to a back patio that looks out over an open stretch of desert. We sit on a wicker sofa while she sits in an iron chair across from us.
I keep glancing to Kyle nervously, not sure how to transition into the millions of questions I want to ask. I should have practiced with him while we were on the road, but I didn’t think I’d need to. I was so sure of myself until I was faced with the real thing. Every time Kyle raises his brow, urging me to speak, I want to kick him. He finally rolls his eyes and looks out at our view.
“It’s pretty out here,” he says, and I breathe out a laugh through my nose at his small talk. His foot nudges mine, chiding me.
“I sure like it. When Zeke passed away…that was your grandpa. He died just before you were born,” Grace says, filling in the gaps. “I wanted something simpler than living in California. It took a year or two to work out, but eventually I bought this place with the money I got from his pension, and when the house sold in Pasadena, I moved here.”
She moved away.
“It made it awfully hard to see you, though,” she says, almost as if hearing my thoughts. I start to nod slowly, not expecting a reason, but she isn’t done. “Your mom and me…”
She holds her mouth half open, eventually pushing her tongue into one cheek and nodding as she looks just below my eyes. She stands, holding up a finger. When she steps toward the back door, I get up to follow her, but she shakes her head.
“I’ll be right back.”
Kyle and I sit in silence for nearly a minute before I speak.
“I’m scared,” I admit to him.
He reaches down to where my hand rests between us and threads his fingers through mine, bringing my knuckles to his lips, kissing them.
“Don’t be,” he says, squeezing once before letting go.
Grace steps back outside a few seconds later with a metal tin. She pops the lid off as she sets it on the glass table between us, and I lean forward to look inside.
“I have more things I’d like to give you, but it’s been so long since I’ve gone through the old things in boxes that I’m not sure what everything is anymore,” she laughs, and I catch the vibration. She’s nervous, too. “I put this together when your dad called so you’d have something to take home with you.”
She reaches in, pulling out an old Polaroid photo, and even though it’s faded, I recognize the pink knit cap on my baby head immediately. I’ve seen photos from this day, just not this one.
“You were there when they brought me home?” I bring the picture close so I can take in the details of a tiny me cradled in a younger Grace’s arms.
“I sat through thirteen hours of labor waiting for you,” she laughs. “I wasn’t going home before the good part.”
This time when I look up, I meet her gaze and hold it. A warm feeling rushes around my insides, almost like the one from my dream, but better—this feels more permanent. I lean forward and reach into the box, taking out a golden pin shaped like eagle wings with a propeller in the center, the metal a little tarnished at the creases.
“Air Force,” Grace explains. I nod. “Your grandfather was a lifer, which meant we moved around a lot when your mom was little.”
The next photo I take out is of my mom as a teenager. She looks about my age, and she’s standing in front of an old Volkswagen Beetle, holding keys out toward the camera. Her hair is curly and she’s wearing flip-flops, swim trunks, and a bikini top, her face freckled from summer sun. She looks happier than I ever remember her. I see the difference in her eyes—there’s a light there, one that by the end, was never there for us.
“That was when we bought her a car. Her seventeenth birthday,” Grace says, taking the photo from my hands and leaning back in her seat to look at it closely. Her smile is faint, and I can tell there’s sadness mixed in her thoughts. “We moved around so much, your mom never really had any roots or real friends. When we got to California, Zeke was finally put in a permanent position, and I just wanted h
er to have something. She was so happy that day. I think it’s the last time she and I truly got along until you were born.”
“Why didn’t you get along?” I ask, my courage growing.
Long seconds pass before she puts the picture down. Our roles reversed, Grace keeps her gaze from me this time, instead leaning back again in her chair and looking off to the side, toward the charred mountain.
“That happened last summer,” she says, bypassing my question to instead talk about the landscape. I feel my chest constrict, but I hold in my sigh. We all have things that are hard to say. My mom isn’t easy for me to talk about either.
“Wildfire?” I ask, indulging her.
“Arson.”
I look back to the mountain after her quick answer, this time with new eyes. I’m not sure how big an acre is, but I’d guess what I’m looking at equates to hundreds.
“It’s hard to believe a single person can do so much damage,” I say, my eyes tracing along the blackened, jagged rocks and small signs of new growth that pepper the mountainside. I look back to Grace, and her eyes are waiting for me. They’re devastated—raw at the edges and black in the center—as if she’d just talked to the living dead.
“I know you came here for answers, and I want to give them to you, but…” Grace’s words stop, her lips parted.
I sit back and fold my hands in my lap to show her I’m ready. She closes her eyes for several seconds, probably praying for strength. I wait until she’s ready.
“Sometimes, Josselyn, things just are what they are. There isn’t some great reason, or some moment of redemption that makes all of the hurt and suffering right again,” she says, closing her mouth after that last word, a heavy breath pushed from her nose.
“Was she ever even sorry?” I ask, letting go of that final thread that held on to hope that there was a reason for it all…that my mom left because of money, because she and my father fought, because she was depressed. She left for a man, a man I hate deep in my soul.