“He’s playing hard to get,” observed Linda, watching the straight, rigid back disappear through the front door.
Briana grinned wickedly. “I’d say he’s putting out a monumental effort.”
Briana was right about another thing. During the entire time we had been clustered around the doctor, spilling out flesh for his observation, I had not seen one flutter of the curtains, one face peeking through the windows, or one shadow passing by the door. There was absolutely no way an intelligent woman would overlook guarding her assets if she was married to the doctor.
We leaned against the porch railing, taking in our new residency. For as far as we could see, houses burst like popcorn over the hilly landscape. The hazy skyline of Seattle etched in faintly toward the back of the house. “Say,” I said, nudging Briana with one elbow and Linda with the other. “We have company.”
While we had been busy putting the doctor through trials and tribulations that would have worn down a saint, various other neighbors had wandered out to watch the spectacle. There were a few teenagers and some still at home thirty-year-old’s, but most of them were on the far side of middle aged. They wore baggy shorts down to the knees, tee shirts that smoothed over their thickening waistlines, and socks with their sandals. We waved cheerfully to them from the railing, and hesitantly, they waved back.
“Well, y’all,” called Briana. “I’d invite you in for coffee but we haven’t unpacked yet. Still, I’m right happy to see you.”
A bony-kneed woman with long, gray hair detached herself from the crowd and stepped forward. “My name is Melanie Hakes. Let me be the first to welcome you to the neighborhood.” She climbed up the steps and confided, “It’s about time someone twisted Dr. Andrews’ panties. He always acts like he has a broomstick up his butt.”
A small, plump woman with home-colored frizzy hair showing solid white roots followed in close behind her. “Which one of you is Henry Lange’s daughter?”
“I am,” I admitted somewhat regretfully. From what little I’ve gathered, my father did not have the most sterling reputation.
“Oh, then, he really did it. He said he would do it and he did.”
“Don’t be repeating scandals now,” scolded Melanie. “This is neither the time nor the place. What’s done is done and his daughter is not to be blamed for it.”
“Have I blamed anyone? Of course, it’s not her fault! It’s just that nobody really believed he had a daughter when he said he was leaving everything to her.”
“It was their own foolishness! How many times have I said, if you hook up with Henry Lange, it’s going to cost you? How many listened?”
“But my dear, the hooking up really was worth a little insanity.” Liz waved her hand around, then placed it on my arm confidentially. “Don’t listen to the rumors. It’s true he was a lady’s man. He went through two divorces and numerous affairs in that house and never stayed true to anyone. But for most of us, well…”
“Henry Lange was a gigolo,” said Melanie firmly. “Those of us who kept our wits about us knew this.”
“And he was worth the money,” added Liz.
Melanie’s mouth turned down as she glanced sideways at her friend. “The problem began when he was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. His ex-wives and two of his ex-lovers began demanding that he write out a will leaving them the house. He told them none of them was inheriting a goddamned thing. He was leaving it all to his daughter.”
“We didn’t believe there was a daughter,” whispered Liz, giggling. “We were all placing bets on who would get the house.”
“How did he end up on a runaway baggage cart?” I asked, trying to fill in some more details.
Melanie and Liz looked at each other with wide eyes. “Who knows?” Asked Melanie. “Maybe his brain tumor was making him do crazy things.”
An old man leaning on a cane and listening in spoke up. “Maybe it was murder.”
“Oh, Mr. Rosenfield, you really do say such terrible things,” said Liz.
“Well, why not?” He challenged querulously. “He was a con artist and a gambler. He had his share of enemies.”
“Don’t listen to Mr. Rosenfield. There must be some reasonable explanation as to why a baggage cart that Henry was sleeping on rolled into the runway and got clipped by a plane. Some accidents are stranger than fiction.”
“Why would someone murder him if he was already dying?” I asked.
“There,” said Liz with satisfaction. “Very good question. You see, Mr. Rosenfield. There’s no motive.”
“Bah,” he said, scowling, then brightened up. “At least he did one good thing.” He winked at all of us broadly. The dirty old man, but he was kind of cute, wobbly legs and all.
The show over, the neighbors wandered back to their homes, although a couple of the teenaged boys did stick around to help unload the trailer. They were also cute; gawky in that “video games are my whole life” kind of way, trying very hard to adjust from animated figures to real-life big, golden mamas.
Individually, we were each examples of the classic blonde big girl. At nearly five-foot-eleven, Linda was the tallest and most impressive. Her magnificent bust line was a triumph in mass overcoming the effects of gravity, and her hips would seem minimal in comparison if not for a flourishing behind. She had the ginger gene, leaning toward strawberry blonde. As a hairdresser, she knew exactly what to do with her dazzling locks.
At five-foot-six, Briana was the shortest, but in my opinion, also the cutest. She had a face like a pixie, with wide, far set eyes and blonde, curly hair that cascaded half way down her back. She had a figure like the goddess of fertility, with round, firm breasts and very wide hips and thighs.
As for me, they didn’t call me “Soft Cushions” for nothing. My mother, who was a bit doughty herself, had never called me fat. She said I had big bones, and when I grew older, observed I was well-endowed. Even the clothing stores are polite in the labels, calling my measurements a “full figure”.
I had a full figure, alright. It filled into everything I wore and was usually a little overflowing. It didn’t matter, though, as one of the bounteous blondes. Individually, we each had our insecurities, but as a set, we were formidable. The teenaged boys were tongue-tied and ready to invade Ft. Knox for us by the time they had finished helping us unload. “Now, you just come on by in the morning,” I told them, handing them each a ten-dollar bill for their services. “And we’ll have some coffee waiting for you.”
They stared frankly at the cleavage under the peasant top without making a move to take the money. “Not a problem,” mumbled one. “Anything you need, a helping hand, a ride to the city, just give us a call. We don’t want your money, Miss… Lange. “
“Such gentlemen,” said Linda, smooching them each on the cheek. “I would invite you to a beer but I think there are laws against it.”
“Yes, ma’am, you are right. We better go ma’am. You have unpacking to do.”
The utilities had been turned on by request three days before arriving, which meant our refrigerator and stove were operational, as well as the hot water for a long shower. We unpacked our dishes first, and filled the refrigerator with the groceries we had picked up before arriving. Along with a case of beer and two pounds of coffee, we had milk, sugar, butter, eggs, bread, hamburger meat, bacon and several large bags of chips, but we were too tired to cook anything.
We gathered all the blankets and pillows we could find and arranged them in the middle of the living room floor. While the other girls showered, I called for an extra-large pizza with three toppings. By the time it arrived, we had all refreshed ourselves and were in our nighties, ready to settle down for the evening. The pizza delivery boy was almost as overwhelmed as the teenagers had been and had to be reminded to take his money three times.
Chapter Two
It didn’t take us long to turn our house into a home, with all the home comforts of places to sit, to dine and to sleep at night. This was largely because of our sweet
new neighbors who were willing to take us in their pick-up trucks to buy used furniture. We had a very narrow budget, which is to say, practically no budget at all, but thanks to Craig’s List and an apparent fixation of Seattle upper middle class not to keep anything more than two years, we soon had our house dolled out like Barbie’s headquarters.
Still, things weren’t going according to plan. I didn’t wow the Seattle restaurants with my southern cooking skills and ended up a line cook for a grill house. Linda didn’t fare much better. She found a position in a salon, but with no requests from the customers who wanted specific hairdressers, she was primarily doing shampooing and manicures. Her manager said it took time, but Linda was beginning to question how customers could ask for her if she never had the opportunity to cut their hair.
Briana hadn’t found a job at all. After much prodding and prying, she finally went down to flight service and applied for stewardess training. They answered back that they would love to have her in the program but she was twenty-five pounds over her healthy weight. She decided to lose the weight, then reapply.
Linda and I are both cool with following dreams, but our home was sitting on a rocky future. We squeaked by with the first mortgage payment when it came due, and were beginning to worry about the second as our financial future hadn’t changed. Briana really needed to find a job.
“Why don’t you work at waitressing?” I suggested. “You have lots of waitressing experience.”
“I can’t be around food if I’m going to lose weight. And I can’t work as a cashier, either,” she warned before Linda had a chance to say something. “Cashiers stand in one spot all day. I need to move around. I need to exercise.” Her eyes strayed to the window that peered into the doctor’s yard. Once more, he was out nurturing his lawn mower. Dr. Andrews probably had the shortest grass in town.
“Yes!” She said, her big blue eyes growing bright and sparkling. “I need to exercise! Just give me a few more weeks. Once I start working for the airlines, I’ll be making scads of money. I’ll make up to you for every moment I wasn’t working, honest. To prove it to you, I’m going to begin exercising right away.”
She went upstairs before either of us could say anything, which would have been wasted words if we had been given the opportunity, and clamored back down in a complete change of clothes. She was wearing spandex.
There are few women who can wear a form fitting halter top as successfully as Briana. She has these Greek Statue shoulders and perfectly round breasts that would double whammy a physics professor. The pants corralled in her flaring hips, guiding them down to her dimpled knees, and wrapped tightly around her bottom. As she sauntered out the door, she looked back at us. “Ready to shake it girls?”
I looked down at my clothes; black, polyester pants and a white top that made me look pudgy; the standard uniform of the staff. “Give me a minute”.
I dashed upstairs and found a pair of shorts that were cut above the thigh, and added a multi-strap top that flapped loosely at the waist. I’ve got big boobs, but I also have big legs, and I look best when both are highlighted. I did a couple of hip bumps in front of the mirror, smacked my butt like a cowgirl, then tripped back down, wondering how Linda would dress.
She was wearing a long, gathered dress. No real surprise there. Linda has no taste for formal exercises, but she does like to dance and skip around, and Briana had the music going full blast. Briana is neither a serious dancer nor a serious exerciser but does know all the best ways to show off her body.
Looking as determined as any athlete, she stood with her feet apart, her hands clenched in the middle, and turned her waist from one side to the other. I copied her, while Linda spun around, tiptoed among the roses and blew kisses to the gathering audience.
From this slow twist that illustrated so wonderfully, our magnificent hips, Briana then stretched her arms high above her head, her exposed belly button a perfect balance of flesh between her halter and her spandex pants. I also stretched my arms to the limits of their capacity, and the loose blouse hem rose dangerously, revealing two white, gleaming crescents.
There was no time to correct my era in judgment. Briana was now bending downwards to touch the ground, and with several neighbors watching in anticipation, I had to prove I was just as limber and enticing. I stretched my fingers downward, almost managing to touch my toes, my knees perfectly straight and heard a murmur of appreciation as my butt went into the air, and the loose top slipped forward, exposing even more of my bosom’s healthy development.
Briana decided to turn the exercises up a notch, laying on her side and stretching one leg high above her head. I complied. There is the thing I have going with Briana. We’ve been in competition with each other since we were small children. It’s probably genetic. We are second or third cousins, I don’t remember the order, just that on my mother’s side somebody married someone who was related to my grandmother.
As we stretched our legs to the sky, so did some of the neighbors who had suddenly gained an enthusiasm for exercises. In the meantime, Linda continued to sway to the music until she had gained a small parade of young and old, men and women.
It was all so lovely, I could no longer resist. I jumped up and began dancing to the music, spinning around faster and faster until I laid down on the grass in exhaustion. While I rested, I breathed in the Seattle air. It was sweet, not just with mountains and pine, but with blackberries, cherries and Washington apples. I closed my eyes, drinking it in.
When I opened them, the Doctor was watching me from the other side of the fence. My blouse had become completely disoriented, twisting and flipping up on one side so that one pink, swollen nipple looked around in surprise. “Do you like what you see, Dr. Andrews?” I asked. I smoothed the cloth slowly over the exposed breast and gave him the smile that showed all my dimples.
His mouth pursed, stretched into a straight line, then pursed again. “You girls are a hazard to yourselves and to others.”
He turned and began walking down the length of the fence that separated his yard from ours. His fingers twitched along the boards. I walked along the other side, my fingers scraping along the rough texture of the fence. His side was painted spotlessly white. My side was faded. “Why are you so unhappy?” I asked.
“What makes you think I’m unhappy?”
“You come straight home from work and either go inside or push your lawn mower around. I never see anybody come over to visit. I never see you just hanging out with the neighbors. You don’t do anything to enjoy life.”
“You don’t know what I do when I’m gone from the house.”
“No, I don’t, but I can guarantee it’s not any fun or you wouldn’t look like the cat dragged you in.”
“Unlike you, I have responsibilities. I work in a geriatrics clinic. Half these neighbors are my patients. Here you are, jumping up and down, exposing your… development… How is that good for them? Or do you care? Aren’t you just another Lange, out to exploit anyone you can?”
“That sounds almost like a song. Aren’t you being unfair? I already told you I don’t know my father.”
“Why did you come here? It’s not the type of place for three young, single women. You won’t find more than a dozen young people over the next three blocks. All we have here is a bunch of aging hippies. Why don’t you just leave them alone?”
“It’s my house. I’ve never owned a house before. I’ve never traveled before. It’s my opportunity.”
He sniffed like an old lady and walked stiffly back to his house. That was sort of how our ninth grade teacher reacted when we each attached a condom to our literature exam. Instead of giggling this time, though, I felt annoyed. I wasn’t a little girl anymore. How could he flip me off like that?
I went back inside in a worse mood than when I had first come home. Briana didn’t help matters. “You cheated! You were waving your tits around!”
“I wasn’t! I just picked the wrong top!”
Briana stuck with her exercise
plan, which was really a plan to entice the doctor. We always knew if she was outside exercising, because if she was, there would be old folk out there on their lawns for several blocks back, twisting at the hips and reaching for the ground. Even the guy with the cane was busy doing crunches. We wouldn’t have minded any of it except that our economic situation was really cramping our style and it seemed like Briana was reaping all the benefits. By the length of Dr. Andrews grass, it was safe to bet he had also taken interest in Briana’s efforts.
I was stewing, but Linda was getting piping hot. Her attempts to find clientele had netted her one teenager who changed her hair every other week and blamed her failures in the popularity race on the hair dresser and one middle aged woman who wanted exactly the same trim week after week, without fail. Her artistic creativity was bubbling over and she had nowhere to turn except to one of our very much treated and styled heads.
Briana agreed to a lavender streak down one of her twining, golden locks, but Linda ached for much more. She wanted scissors and bottles and lots of gleaming colors to work in a special magic. Briana said no, and the creative frenzy suddenly turned into a shouting match.
“You’re not cutting one lock of my hair!” Screamed Briana. “See here? This is all I want. One little bit of color for the rad effect.”
“You don’t look rad! You look like Goldilocks. You should grow up, change your style. Then maybe you can get a job.”
“I’m going to get a job and when I do, I’ll be making twice the money you’re making. I’ve lost five pounds.”
“You were supposed to lose twenty pounds by now.”
“It all turned to muscle. Muscles are heavier than fat.”
“We have five hundred dollars to put together by the end of the week. Who has to put it together? Me and Jenna because you’re not working!”
“Why don’t you sell the Bronco? You can get eight hundred dollars for it. The young mechanic down the street told me.”
“I’m not selling the Bronco!” I said quickly. “That’s our ride to work.”
Boxer Next Door Page 48