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Kristin Hannah's Family Matters 4-Book Bundle: Angel Falls, Between Sisters, The Things We Do for Love, Magic Hour

Page 76

by Hannah, Kristin


  “Small changes, Mama. The kind that take us forward in time.” She paused, loading the big gun. “Papa would have approved.”

  “He loved my calamari ripieni, it’s true.” Mama pushed away from the sink and sat down beside Angie. “I remember when your papa bought me the Cadillac. He was so proud of that car.”

  “But you wouldn’t drive it.”

  Mama smiled. “Your papa thought I was crazy, ignoring that beautiful car. So one day he sold my Buick and left the new car keys on the table, along with a note that read: Meet me for lunch. I’ll bring the wine.” She smiled. “He knew I had to be pushed into change.”

  “I don’t want to push too hard.”

  “Yes, you do.” Mama sighed. “Your whole life has been about pushing, Angela, getting what you want.” She touched Angie’s cheek. “Your papa loved that about you, and he’d be so proud of you right now.”

  Suddenly, Angie wasn’t thinking about the menu at all. She was thinking about her father and all the things that she missed about him; the way he hefted her on his shoulders to watch the Thanksgiving Day parade, the way he said prayers with her at night and told silly, meaningless jokes at the breakfast table.

  “So,” Mama said, her eyes misty, too. “We will try a few specials this week and then we will see.”

  “It’ll work, Mama. You’ll see. Business will really pick up when the ads start. We’re the front page of the entertainment section on Sunday.”

  “Already more people are coming. I must admit that. It’s a good thing you hired that girl. She’s been a good waitress,” Mama said. “When you hired her—a redhead—I was sure we were in for trouble, and when you told me about the poor thing needing a dress, I thought—”

  “Oh, no.” Angie shot to her feet. “The dance.”

  “What’s the matter?”

  “Tomorrow night is homecoming. That’s why Lauren was hanging around in the kitchen. She wanted to remind me that she needed tomorrow night off.”

  “Then why did she say she’d work?”

  “I don’t know.” Angie fished her car keys out of her pocket and grabbed her coat off the hook by the door. “Bye, Mama. See you tomorrow.”

  Angie hurried from the restaurant. Outside, a light rain was falling.

  She looked up and down the street.

  No Lauren.

  She ran to the parking lot and got in her car, heading north on Driftwood. There wasn’t another car on the road. She was about to turn onto the highway when she noticed the bus stop.

  Light from a nearby streetlamp spilled down, giving everything a soft, amber glow. Even from this distance, she could see Lauren’s copper-red hair.

  She pulled up in front of her.

  Lauren looked up slowly. Her eyes were red and swollen.

  “Oh,” she said, snapping upright when she saw Angie.

  Angie hit the window button. The glass slid downward. Cold air immediately whooshed into the car. She leaned toward the passenger side. “Get in.”

  Lauren pointed behind her. “My bus is here. But thanks.”

  “Tomorrow is the dance, right?” Angie said. “That’s what you were trying to tell me in the kitchen.”

  “Don’t worry about it. I’m not going.”

  “Why not?”

  Lauren looked away. “I don’t feel like it.”

  Angie glanced down at the girl’s old, too-worn shoes. “I offered to loan you a dress, remember?”

  Lauren nodded.

  “Do you need one?”

  “Yes.” The answer was barely audible.

  “Okay. You be at the restaurant at three o’clock. Have you made arrangements to get dressed at a friend’s house?”

  Lauren shook her head.

  “Would you like to get ready at my house? It might be fun.”

  “Really? I’d love that.”

  “Okay. Call David and tell him to pick you up at my house, 7998 Miracle Mile Road. It’s the first driveway after the bridge.”

  The bus pulled up behind them and honked.

  It wasn’t until much later, when Angie walked into her dark, empty house, that she wondered whether she’d made a mistake.

  Getting a girl ready for a dance was a mother’s job.

  The next morning Angie hit the ground running. At seven o’clock she and Mama met with suppliers and delivery men. By ten they’d ordered most of the week’s food, checked the vegetables and fruits for freshness, made out the payroll checks, deposited money in the restaurant’s account, and dropped the tablecloths off at the laundry. When Mama went off to do her own errands, Angie headed for the printers, where she had flyers and coupons made for wine night and date night. Then she dropped off the first batch of donated coats to Help-Your-Neighbor.

  It started raining when she was at the dry cleaners. By noon it was a full-on rainstorm. The streets were a cauldron of boiling water. There was nothing new in that.

  The weather this time of year was predictable. From now until early May it would be gray skies and raindrops. Sunlight in the coming months would be a rare and unexpected gift that couldn’t be counted on and wouldn’t last. Those who couldn’t stand the continual shadow world of misty gray would find themselves waking in the middle of the night, restless, unable to sleep through the sound of rain on the roof.

  She pulled up to the restaurant fifteen minutes late.

  Lauren stood on the sidewalk beneath the restaurant’s green and white awning. There was an old blue backpack on the sidewalk at her feet.

  Angie rolled down the window. “Sorry I’m late.”

  “I’d thought you’d forgotten.”

  Angie wondered if anyone kept the promises made to this girl, or if, in fact, any promises were ever made.

  “Get in,” she said, opening the passenger door.

  “Are you sure?”

  Angie smiled. “Believe me, Lauren. I’m always sure. Livvy is covering my shift. Now get in.”

  Lauren did as she was told, shutting the door hard. Rain hammered the car, made it shake and rattle.

  They drove in silence. The metronomic thwop-thwop-thwop of the wipers was so loud it didn’t make sense to talk.

  When they reached the cottage, Angie parked close to the front door.

  Angie turned to Lauren. “Do you think we should call your mom? Maybe she’d like to join us.”

  Lauren laughed. It was a bitter, humorless sound. “I don’t think so.” She seemed to realize how harsh she’d sounded. She smiled and shrugged. “She’s not one for dances.”

  Angie didn’t go down the road of those words. She was this girl’s boss; that was all. She was loaning a dress to Lauren. Just that.

  “Okay. Let’s go inside and see what I have.”

  Lauren launched herself sideways, threw her arms around Angie. Her smile was so big it swallowed her face, made her look about eleven years old. “Thank you, Angie. Oh, thank you.”

  Lauren hadn’t grown up on make-believe. Unlike most of her friends, she’d spent her childhood hours watching television shows that featured shoot-outs and hookers and women in jeopardy. Real life, as her mother so often pointed out. There had been no cartoons in the Ribido apartment, no Disney specials. By the tender age of seven, Lauren knew that Prince Charming was a crock. When she lay in her narrow twin bed in her apartment that smelled vaguely of cigarettes and beer, she didn’t dream of being Cinderella or Snow White. She’d never seen the point in the princess-swept-off-her-feet fantasy.

  Until tonight.

  Angie Malone had opened a door for Lauren on this night, and the view from its porch was staggering. It was a world that seemed bathed in sunlight and possibility.

  First had come the dress. No, first had come the house.

  “My papa built this place,” Angie had said. “When I was a kid, we spent summers out here.”

  The house was tucked in among towering trees. The music of the distant surf filled the air.

  A wraparound porch outlined the shingled, two-story cottage. Wicker ro
cking chairs were positioned carefully here and there; one could imagine sitting there, sipping hot cocoa on a day like today, watching the silver-tipped ocean below.

  When Lauren saw the cottage, she stopped. This was the kind of home she’d always dreamed of.

  “Lauren?” Angie had said, looking back at her.

  Just looking at this home sparked a well of wanting.

  “Sorry,” Lauren said, lurching forward.

  Inside, the house was every bit as perfect as the exterior had implied. Big overstuffed denim sofas faced each other in front of a river rock fireplace. An old green trunk was the coffee table.

  The kitchen was small and cheery, with butter yellow cabinets and a picture window that looked past the porch to a rose garden. Huge fir trees ringed the property, made it feel worlds away from any neighbor.

  “It’s beautiful,” Lauren whispered.

  “Thanks. We like it. So,” Angie said, bending down to light a fire. “What look do you want to go for?”

  “Huh?”

  Angie turned to face her. “Sexy? Innocent? Princess? What do you want to be tonight?”

  “Any dress is okay.”

  “You need serious help in the girlfriend department. Perhaps even send-an-aid-car help. Come on.” She walked past Lauren and headed up the narrow staircase. The steps creaked along the way.

  Lauren rushed up behind her. They followed a slim hallway into an airy, lived-in-looking bedroom with a high-peaked white ceiling and whitewashed wood floors. A big four-poster bed dominated the room; on either side banged-up tables held reading lamps and piles of paperbacks.

  Angie went to the walk-in closet and pulled the light cord. A single bulb hung overhead, casting a swinging beam of light onto rows of clothing.

  “Let’s see here. I brought only a few of my gowns. I was actually going to try selling them on eBay.” She moved down to one end of the closet, where several yellow-beige Nordstrom garment bags hung smashed together.

  Nordstrom.

  Lauren had never owned anything from that venerable Seattle landmark. Heck, she couldn’t afford a cup of coffee at the kiosk outside the store. She took a step back.

  Angie unzipped a bag and pulled out a long black dress, then turned to her. “What do you think?”

  The dress was halter style, with rhinestones at the throat and a double band of bigger stones at the waistline. The fabric was slippery. Silk probably.

  “What do I think?” Lauren couldn’t borrow something like that. What if she spilled on it?

  “You’re right. Too mature. This is a fun night.” Angie dropped the dress on the floor and went back to garment bags, burrowing through them in a frenzy.

  Lauren bent down and picked up the fallen gown. The material caressed her fingers. She’d never touched fabric so soft.

  “Aha!” Angie withdrew another gown; pink this time, the dainty color of a scallop shell. The fabric was heavier, some kind of knit that could expand or contract to fit a woman’s—or a girl’s—body. It was a single sleeveless tank front with a deeply plunging back. “It has a built-in bra. Not that seventeen-year-old breasts need a bra.”

  Angie pulled out another dress; this one was emerald green with long sleeves and an off-the-shoulder neckline. It was gorgeous, but Lauren’s gaze returned to the pink knit.

  “How much did that one cost?” she dared to ask.

  Angie glanced at the pink dress and smiled. “This old thing? I got it at the Rack. No, it was at that secondhand store on Capitol Hill.”

  Lauren couldn’t help smiling. “Yeah, right.”

  “So it’s the pink, yes?”

  “I might damage it. I couldn’t—”

  “The pink.” Angie hung the black and green dresses back up, then slung the pink one over her arm. “Shower time.”

  Lauren followed behind Angie as she tossed the gown on the bed, then headed for the master bathroom.

  “Do you have shoes?”

  Lauren nodded.

  “What color?”

  “Black.”

  “We can make that work,” Angie said as she turned the shower on. “I could knit a sweater in the amount of time it takes to heat the water around here.” She started grabbing bottles and jars from the cabinet. “This is an exfoliant. You know what that is, don’t you?”

  At Lauren’s nod, Angie reached for something else.

  “This is a hydrating mask. It helps my skin. Makes me look ten years younger.”

  “That would make me a kindergartner.”

  Angie laughed and shoved the products in Lauren’s arms. “Take a shower, then we’ll do your hair and makeup.”

  Lauren took the longest, most luxurious shower of her life. There were no pinging pipes, no water that came and went and suddenly turned cold. She used all the expensive products, and when she came out she felt brand-new. She dried her hair, then wrapped herself in a thick, oversized white towel and returned to the bedroom.

  Angie was sitting on the edge of the bed. There was a pile of accessories around her—hairbrushes and makeup, curling irons and handbags and wraps. “I found a beaded black shawl and a black evening bag, and this!” She held up a beautiful pink and black butterfly hair clip. “Come on, sit down. My sisters and I used to do each other’s hair for hours.” She tossed a pillow onto the floor in front of her.

  Lauren dutifully sat down, her back to the bed.

  Angie immediately started brushing her hair. It felt so good Lauren actually sighed. She couldn’t remember ever having her hair brushed. Even when her mother took the time to cut Lauren’s hair, there was no brushing involved.

  “Okay,” Angie said after a while, “now sit on the bed.”

  Lauren changed positions. Angie knelt in front of her. “Close your eyes.”

  The whisper-soft touch of eye shadow … a flicking of blush.

  “I’m going to put some sparkle on your throat. I bought it for my niece, but Mira said it was inappropriate … There,” she said a moment later. “All done.”

  Lauren stood up and slipped into the dress. Angie zipped her up.

  “Perfect,” Angie said, sighing. “Go look.”

  Slowly, Lauren walked toward the full-length mirror that hung on the back of the closed door.

  She gasped. The gown fit her beautifully, made her look like a princess from one of the storybooks she’d never read. For the first time in her life, she looked like all the other girls at school.

  ELEVEN

  Angie stood in front of her dresser. The top drawer was open. There, buried among the bras and panties and socks, was her camera.

  To take photos of my grandbabies, Mama had said when she’d given Angie the camera.

  Babies, that smile of Mama’s said, grow as naturally as green buds in springtime. Angie sighed.

  For years, she had used this camera all the time, documenting every moment of her life. She was there, year after year, snapping pictures at family gatherings—birthday parties, baby showers, preschool graduations. Somewhere along the way, it had begun to cause her pain, this looking through the viewfinder at a life she wanted desperately but couldn’t have. One by one, she’d stopped photographing her nieces and nephews. It simply hurt too much to see her loss in color. She knew it was selfish of her, and childish, too, but some lines couldn’t be crossed. By the time little Dani had been born—only five years ago now; it felt like a lifetime—Angie had put the camera away for good.

  She grabbed the camera, refilled the film, and went downstairs.

  Lauren stood at the fireplace with her back to the flames. The golden glow wreathed her, gave her pale, freckled skin a bronze sheen. The shell pink gown was a little too big on her, and a little too long, but neither flaw was noticeable. With her hair coiled into a French twist and held back by the butterfly clip, she looked like a princess.

  “You look beautiful,” Angie said, coming into the room. She was embarrassed by how much emotion she suddenly felt. It was a little thing—helping a teenage girl get ready for a scho
ol dance; nothing, really—so why did she feel so much?

  “I know,” Lauren said. There was wonder in her voice. Surprise.

  Angie needed the distance of a viewfinder suddenly. She started snapping photographs. She kept taking them, one after another, until Lauren laughed and said: “Wait! Save some film for David.”

  Angie felt like an idiot. “You’re right. Have a seat. I’ll get us tea while we wait.” She went into the kitchen.

  “He said he’d be here at seven o’clock. We’re going to the club for dinner.”

  In the kitchen, Angie made two cups of tea, then carried them into the living room. “The club, huh? Pretty hoity-toity.”

  Lauren giggled. She looked impossibly young just then, perched as she was on the very edge of the sofa. Obviously she was afraid to wrinkle her gown. She sipped her tea with extreme care, holding the cup with two hands.

  Angie felt a surge of emotion; she was afraid of what the world could do to a girl like this, one who seemed sometimes to be too alone.

  “You’re looking at me weird. Am I holding the cup wrong?” Lauren asked.

  “No.” Angie quickly took another photograph. As she lowered the camera back to her lap, she met Lauren’s starry-eyed gaze. How could a mother not want to experience this moment? “I guess you’ve gone to lots of school dances,” she said. That was probably the answer.

  “Yeah. Most of them.” Lauren didn’t seem to really be listening, though. Her voice sounded distracted. Finally, she set down her teacup and said, “Can I ask you something?”

  “Generally that’s a question one should say no to. Often hell no.”

  “Really. Can I?”

  “Fire away.” Angie leaned back into the sofa’s denim pillows.

  “Why did you do all this for me tonight?”

  “I like you, Lauren. That’s all. I wanted to help.”

  “I think it’s because you feel sorry for me.”

  Angie sighed. She knew she couldn’t deflect the question. Lauren wanted a real answer. “That was part of it, maybe. Mostly, though … I know how it feels not to get what you want.”

  “You?”

  Angie swallowed hard. A part of her wished she hadn’t opened this particular door—and yet it had felt so natural to speak. Though now that she’d begun, she didn’t know quite how to move forward. “I don’t have children,” she said.

 

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