Song of Summer

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Song of Summer Page 1

by Laura Lee Anderson




  Contents

  Dedication

  Seven Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Six Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Five Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Four Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Three Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Two Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 33

  One Week of Summer Left

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Last Day of Summer

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  To Eric: You deserve much more than a book.

  And to Westfield, NY: This one’s for you.

  Seven Weeks of Summer Left

  Chapter 1

  Robin

  “I just don’t see why you couldn’t make it work,” Violet rasps. She pours Jell-O with the precision of someone measuring liquid explosives. Her long plastic fingernails shine red, white, and blue, the commemorative paint chipping from last week’s holiday.

  I smile and sigh. “It wasn’t my call, Vi,” I say. “I was all for making it work. He was not.” I spin the stool around and clunk another roll of silverware into the bucket on the counter, the hi-hat clank deadened by paper napkins. The brunch rush is over—two couples linger over coffee. Both are Violet’s tables. “‘We’re in high school,’ remember? ‘We’re not married.’” I laugh at the end of my bad Trent impression but it still smarts a little. My brain replays the rest of his breakup line. High school is about fun, Robin! I just can’t be tied down for our senior year. You’ll thank me for this later, I promise. I readjust my apron and start on the next silverware roll.

  “Plus, he has a crooked smile,” pipes in Fannie’s voice from the grill. She pokes her rosy, round face into the pass-through window. “He’s a charmer for sure, but you can’t trust a boy with a crooked smile.”

  “Exactly! Thank you, Fannie. See that, Vi? Crooked smile.”

  The sun shines in through the huge front windows, illuminating the high-backed Amish-made wooden booths arranged around the outside and the flimsy, plastic-covered tables stranded in the middle. Classy black-and-white photographs hang on the walls in cheap plastic frames, and white Christmas lights decorate dusty plastic fake grape vines. The Byrds pipe in over the management-mandated oldies station, cutting through the greasy air better than any cleaning spray. My voice floats a descant atop their three-part harmony, and I dream of the Martin Dreadnought Junior Acoustic that awaits my tips at the end of the summer. Only eight more weeks and six hundred more dollars and the “Dread Pirate Martin” (as I like to call it) is mine.

  “What was wrong with that boy from last week?” Violet asks.

  I sigh. Violet is operating under the delusion that she and Fannie can help me find my one true love. After all, they found Violet’s now-husband, Rex, twentysomething years ago. They’re acting as if Trent’s absence left some gaping hole in my life. Really, I’m fine. All I need is my melody, not his harmony.

  “He was…” He grunted when he ordered and spat in the flowerbed outside of the restaurant. He was covered in ATV-thrown dirt and he called me ‘Babe.’ He tipped seventy-eight cents. “He was… something else.”

  The concept of fairy godmothers is pleasing in theory. In practice, it’s turned out to be kind of a bust.

  “Bad tipper! Remember?” Fannie pipes in.

  “Right,” Violet says. “I remember now. You’re right, Robin, you don’t want to date a bad tipper. Shows a lack of generous spirit.”

  “Amen,” I say.

  “Good tipper. It’s on the list.” Fannie calls from the back. She’s holding a pen and a sheet of paper and is waiting expectantly. “What else?”

  Oh geez. There’ll be a written record of this? “I dunno.”

  “Come on, Robin. What’s your type?” Violet demands.

  “Short, stubby, and ugly?” Fannie hollers.

  I laugh. “Yes. That. That’s exactly what I want. How did you know?”

  “No, he’s gotta be tall, dark, and handsome!” Violet corrects, missing the joke. “And good with kids. And rugged and interesting and funny. Am I right or am I right?”

  “You’re right! Keep going!” I grin and let Violet describe my dream guy. Or her dream guy. Really, it’s everyone’s dream guy.

  “Smart!” she continues. “And romantic.”

  “And rich!” Fannie pitches in.

  “Money isn’t everything.” Violet’s taking this way too seriously. “He has to have a good heart. Anything else, Robin?”

  “Music,” I say without even thinking. “He has to love good music.”

  If he’s going to tour with me after I graduate next year, he’s got to be good. I could never date a nonmusician. He would never understand practice hours, rehearsals, gig setup, music equipment, recording software…, the list goes on.

  “Music. Got it,” says Fannie. After a dramatic dot, she shoves the list through the pass-through window to Violet, who grabs a thumbtack and sticks it to the bulletin board, right between the daily specials and the number for the pest-control guy. “ROBIN’S PERFECT MAN” it says, and all the qualities are listed with little check boxes: “Good Tipper,” “Tall,” “Dark,” “Handsome,” “Good with kids,” “Rugged,” “Interesting,” “Funny,” “Smart,” “Romantic,” “Rich,” and, “Good Heart.” “Loves good music” is crowded in at the bottom. I laugh.

  “Right,” I say. “When you two find this guy, let me know. Because I’ll have to beat all the other girls off with many, many sticks.”

  I go back to my silverware wrapping and smile to myself. Guys like that don’t exist. I mention Alison Krauss or Emmylou Harris to the guys around here and they space out immediately. Trent’s different, of course—looks so good behind his stand-up bass. My mind travels back to our breakup and I shake my head, mouthing his words, “It’s high school. We’re not married.” I guess it’s louder than I think.

  “What was that, Robin?” Violet asks.

  “No! Nothing! Sorry…” I just sometimes relive old conversations under my breath. That’s all. Can’t imagine why Trent didn’t want to make it work.

  “Hey, can you take these back to the big cooler?” Violet says as she throws the empty Jell-O pitcher in a bus bin. “I need a smoke.”

  I eye the big tray filled with fancy scrolling Jell-O glasses. I hate carrying ungelled Jell-Os to the big cooler. I just imagine tripping and red sugar-water going everywhere. Glass will be broken. It will be bad. But I know better than to interfere with Violet and her smoke break. “Yeah, sure,” I say. She leaves and I see her and Fannie out the plateglass window, smoking and chatting at the picnic table. She’s almost done with her cigarette when I carefully grasp both sides of the tray and ease it off the counter.

  “Please, please, please, please… ,” comes unbidden from my mouth. I clamp my lips shut and hold the tray against my stom
ach like a seventeen-year-old female ring bearer with a very heavy, very fragile pillow. If it were food, I would swing it up to my shoulder—easier to carry and showier in general—but since it’s liquid, I want it somewhere I can keep an eye on it.

  I’m inching down the hallway, almost to the big cooler, when the bell on the door rings and Violet’s voice calls out, loud and clear: “Anywhere ya want!” It’s supposed to tell customers that they can choose their table, but it mostly just confuses them. I ease the Jell-O tray onto an empty shelf do a little celebration jive down the long hallway, since I didn’t die. Violet waits at the end of the hall, a smile on her face, two menus in her hand.

  “Robin? You have a table,” she purrs. Of course! They found Mr. Tall-dark-handsome-soft-heart-good-tipper-good-music already!

  “No,” I mouth, afraid he’ll hear me. “You take him.”

  She shakes her head and hands me the menus. Two? Great. He’s probably already on a date. This is perfect.

  “You owe me,” I whisper as I snatch the menus out of her hand.

  “Oh no, honey. You owe me,” she says, and I turn to look at the dining room. Sure enough, two guys are silhouetted against the huge plateglass windows. I can’t see at all what they look like. Just that they’re guys and they’re both texting on their phones. Great. Teenagers, myself excepted, never tip well.

  As I get closer, I can see them a little better. The one facing me is strawberry blond. He’s wearing creased khakis and a Ralph Lauren polo, and I’ve only ever seen his phone on commercials. Rich kid. The Chautauqua pass hanging around his neck confirms it. He’s kind of average looking, with freckles scattered across his nose and gel in his hair. The guy with his back to me has his head down, texting intently. All I can see is dark hair in a neat, short haircut. The strawberry blond guy looks up when he hears me coming. I plaster on my best, “I’m-going-to-kill-you-Violet” smile and stride confidently up to the table. The strawberry blond taps the table in front of his friend and points at me as I approach.

  The dark-haired guy turns to look at me and my breath catches in my throat.

  He’s a model. He has to be a model.

  Long black eyelashes set off dark-brown eyes. High cheekbones and a strong jawline frame his face. His lips are full, and there’s the slightest dimple in his chin. His hair is thick and wavy, like a nonmarble version of Michelangelo’s David. His skin is the color of coffee with tons of cream and just as smooth.

  I, of course, trip over my own ridiculous feet and he smiles, revealing a bright white smile with one tooth just crooked enough to keep him from being a toothpaste model. It makes him more handsome, if that’s possible.

  Suddenly, I realize that I’m at the table. They’re both staring at me. I still have their menus.

  “Hi,” I say breathlessly, looking away from Mr. Perfect Guy in order to keep from blushing. It’s not working. “I’m Robin.” I slide their menus onto the table. “What can I—”

  “Two waters,” the strawberry blond interrupts.

  “Sure!” I chirp. Give me a chance to finish my sentence, buddy. I venture a glance at Mr. Perfect Guy and he nods, his perfect lips still playing with a smile.

  “Sounds good,” I say. “I’ll give you a minute with the menu.”

  I turn toward the kitchen and give Violet bug eyes as I walk to the pop machine. “WHAT?!” I mouth. “WHAT?!”

  She shrugs and smiles like the cat that caught the freakin’ bird of paradise.

  When I’m back at the counter, getting the guys’ drinks, she sidles up to me. “I thought you didn’t want me to mess with your love life,” she says.

  I snort. “I have no love life, Violet.”

  “Well you might now.”

  Ice clunks into the plastic cup. “That is a wonderful, delicious thought. But so far, he has only three qualifications out of the litany. He is, admittedly, tall, dark, and handsome. But kind heart? Good tipper? Music? Who knows! Admit it, Vi. You gave me a half hour of eye candy. Nothing more. Not that I don’t appreciate it. I surely appreciate it.”

  She shakes her head, a twinkle in her eye. “I know a prize pig when I see one, Robin. I knew it the first time I saw Rex.” She points at the table. “That. Is a prize pig.”

  I laugh full-out this time, shaking my head, a glass in each hand, and walk back to the table. Right before I reach it, I look back over my shoulder. Violet has bustled into the kitchen. Through the pass-through window, I see her and Fannie gossiping like sixth-grade girls. Fannie peeks through the window and I give her a don’t-you-start look. She grins and waggles her eyebrows before turning back to Violet.

  I shake my head and plop the waters down, tossing a couple of straws from my apron pocket to the table.

  “So, what can I get for you today?” I say, pen and paper ready.

  “I’ll have a bacon cheeseburger with everything, and fries,” says the strawberry blond. He checks his phone and points at Mr. Perfect Guy. “He’ll have a bacon cheeseburger with pickles, no onion, and fries.”

  “Okay…” So maybe this is a date, after all. Strawberry blond is ordering for both of them. I venture a glance at Mr. Perfect Guy. He’s wearing a fitted blue T-shirt, which tells me that he works out but says nothing about his sexual orientation. No Chautauqua pass. He glances up from his phone and gives a little nod and a closemouthed smile. I blush.

  “Sounds good,” I say. “Anything else?”

  “Nope,” says strawberry blond. His phone buzzes and he checks it. “Um, and a chocolate milkshake. After the meal.”

  “Okay.” I force a smile.

  Milkshakes are a pain. I have to make them myself and the milkshake spinner is so ancient it splashes everywhere. There’s a good chance that I’ll end up with as much milkshake on myself as in the glass.

  Turning back toward the kitchen, I give a defeated look to Violet.

  “What?” she says as I punch the order into the computer. (Grape Country Dairy is so small we don’t need one, but at least this way Fannie doesn’t have to read my writing.) “What? Does he have a girlfriend?”

  “I think… ,” I say, finding the No Onion button, “he has a boyfriend.”

  “Noooo!”

  “Unfortunately, yes. The strawberry blond guy has been ordering for both of them. All the time. Mr. Perfect Guy hasn’t spoken once.”

  “Oh, well. What can you do?” Violet says hopelessly.

  “I know. Le sigh.”

  “How’d it go?” hollers Fannie from the kitchen, over the kkssshhhh of frying bacon and burgers.

  “He’s gay!” yells back Violet.

  “Vi!” I glance back over my shoulder at the guys, all the way across the restaurant, to see if they heard. Strawberry blond is looking in our direction, but Mr. Perfect Guy is still bent over his phone.

  “Figures,” yells back Fannie. “All the hot ones are.”

  “Except Rex,” corrects Violet.

  “Except Rex,” agrees Fannie.

  “Will you two stop!”

  “We’ll find him,” says Violet, affectionately patting the paper tacked to the wall. She plucks the pen from my hand and adds “Not gay” to the corner of the list.

  “Thank you,” I say, taking my pen back. “Thanks for that.”

  The front door swings open.

  “Anywhere ya want!” Violet calls out, and grabs two menus as a new couple sits down.

  Too soon the burgers are done and plated with their respective fries. I load a tray and strut, tray balanced on my hand and shoulder, to their table. I keep ketchup and mustard in my apron pockets. This time both guys are looking up at me, practically licking their lips.

  I swing the tray down to the table and lift the plates off, sliding each one in front of the correct guy.

  “Thanks,” says strawberry blond.

  “No problem.” I grin. Our burgers rock. Especially with Fannie on grill. I glance over to Mr. Perfect Guy.

  He smiles at me and nods.

  “Anything else I can get?” I
ask as I pull the ketchup and mustard bottles from my apron and set them in the middle of the table.

  “Nope,” says strawberry blond.

  I get another table as the guys chow on their burgers. It’s just the farmers, in for their afternoon coffee. They smell like manure but look like my grandpa, so it’s okay.

  When I look over, the guys are almost done with their burgers.

  Crap.

  Milkshake.

  I scuttle back to the ice-cream station and grab a milkshake tin, pile in three scoops, add milk, and squeeze in some chocolate. I hold a towel up like a shield in front of me as I slide the milkshake tin under the spindle and the machine whirs to life. After a few seconds, I check its progress. Bad idea. The spindle chooses that moment to catch a chunk of ice cream and splatter milk and chocolate across my face. I hastily shield myself with the towel once more, blinking milkshake out of my eyes.

  Laugher erupts from the kitchen, which has a perfect view of the ice-cream station. “Thanks, Fannie,” I say. “When’s Trent getting here, again?” Yeah, that’s right—I got my now ex-boyfriend a job at my workplace. We used to wait the dinner service together. When we broke up he switched from waiter to cook and I switched from dinner to the brunch-lunch shift.

  “Prob’ly never,” she calls back. He’s also perpetually late.

  When the milkshake is done, I pour it into a pretty milkshake glass, top it with whipped cream, two cherries (“So you don’t have to fight over it,” I always say), and stick two straws into it (five-dollar tip every time).

  I print out their ticket and sashay my way back to their table, placing the milkshake proudly in the middle of the table. I sneak the ticket onto the edge of the table and clear their plates.

  “There you go!” I say, arms full of dirty dishes. “Anything else?”

  Strawberry blond gives Mr. Perfect Guy a not-so-happy-couple look and Mr. Perfect Guy grins.

  “Yeah,” strawberry blond says, picking up the check. “Can you split this?”

  I startle. Mr. Perfect Guy is pulling the milkshake toward himself, turning both straws to his own side, shoulders shaking with silent laughter.

  “He gets the milkshake,” strawberry blond says.

  “I can see that,” I say before catching myself. “I mean… Yeah, sure, I can split it.”

 

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