Seven, Ten by Abby Grosslein (fiction book recommendations TXT) đ
- Author: Abby Grosslein
Book online «Seven, Ten by Abby Grosslein (fiction book recommendations TXT) đ». Author Abby Grosslein
ââSo Iâm a parasite, a brain worm?â Thatâs what you said to him? Boy, you do have a talent for killing the mood.â
âKilling the mood? What are you talking about? You shouldnât even know what âthe moodâ is! Who told you about that?â
She snickered in my backseat with one ear bud in from her old school flash-drive iPod shuffle and a thumbnail stuck in her mouth (left over from the terrible thumb-sucking habit she never really grew out of).
âSeriously, kiddo⊠thatâs none of your business. And really? Put down your legs; youâre not sitting very lady-like.â
âJust keep your eyes on the road, will ya?â She mumbled, though I could still hear her. The Saturn was small and close and the CD player was empty, radio off. Though the highway was loud, the thup-thuping of the bridge we were driving over drowning out much of our conversation, I still heard her.
âLilyâI am keeping my eyes on the road, but that doesnât prevent your red and green Christmas socks from shouting at the corners of my eyes. Put your feet down, please.â I activated my left blinker and changed lanes to pass a Hummer driven by a little old lady. I furrowed my eyebrows briefly at the paradox.
Lily reluctantly pulled her feet from off either side of the headrest. Even in pants, she really shouldnât sit with her legs up like that. I know Grandma would have never allowed it.
âI wish youâd sat up front, Lily.â I looked in the rearview but she was looking out the window, her feet pulled up and stretched out on the seat next to her. Her twisted torso and adolescent middle strained the seatbelt. âI hate feeling like some sort of 13-year-oldâs taxi service.â
âWhat, Galey?â
âNever mind.â
âAre we there yet?â She piped up from the backseat.
âPlease donât start. Itâll be another half hour, unless we hit traffic.â
As soon as I said it, I had to flick on my windshield wipers to combat the rain that seemed to fall from buckets on the bridge. It reminded me of that college prank where your roommate leaves a bucket of water on your door, propped open, and when you wake up and open the door in the morning, kerSPLASH! My next door neighbor pulled that prank on her roommate and scared the lot of us into never doing anything like it. From that day on, she unscrewed all the light bulbs in the room and switched all her dryer sheets with wax paper, ruining her clothes. Girls arenât very good at pranks; we take them too personally. Girls just generally get too pissy about things. I wonder why boys like us at all.
Red lights appeared all along the line of cars and I had to step on the brake to keep from rear-ending the Cadillac in front of me. âGaley, pay attention!â squealed darling little Lily from the backseat, making me exhale through my nose and purse my lips.
Galey⊠like the thumbnail she kept sucking on, that nickname had lasted through puberty. She could never wrap her mouth around âGayleâ; it was always âGayluhâ which sounded too much like âGaylordâ for most of the familyâs likings, especially my older brother who thought it would just be too funny. So we encouraged âGahleeâ instead and when she learned to write in kindergarten and started drawing âMy Familyâ pictures, she wrote âGaleyâ above my pasty, wobbly image.
It finally sunk in that Lily had somehow heard about my misfortunate use of the term âbrain wormâ to my last ex-boyfriend. How she had heard about it was quite a mystery to me, since I hardly ever talked to Mom about my relationships and hardly ever talked to Dad about anything (and of course Iâd never tell her because sheâs my 13-year-old little sister). I suppose the news could have come to her through the grapevine of school bus drivers (my dad being one of them in the next town over from ours), but Iâd like to think Lily doesnât consort too much with the drivers. When I was a kid, Iâd say hi to them and chat them up sometimes when I was the last drop-off of the day, but I would never want to know about their daughterâs boyfriends, never mind the daughtersâ boyfriends of bus drivers from the next-town-over. Maybe Grammy Jo saw it on my Facebook; she learned all about the Web from her gay next-door neighbor who helps tend her Floribundas. Grammy Jo wouldnât care a wit if she saw Lily sitting spread-eagled over the headrest; itâs Grandma Nelly who wouldâve have a heart attack. But I guess it wonât matter to her, anyways. There arenât any heart attacks in heaven.
âLily, if you insist on listening to your iPod, please donât hum. You know I donât want to listen to Miley Cyrus or Lindsay Lohan or whatever teeny-bopper princess youâre listening to.â
Lily blinked at me in the rearview mirror. âPuh-lease. Lindsay Lohan is not a teeny-bopper princess. Apparently her dad thinks sheâs gonna die. I read about it on AOL news.â
âDonât believe everything AOL gives you, Lily. Itâs AOL,â Unconsciously I encapsulated AOL in air-quotes over the steering wheel. âYou should read CNN or even ABC News or something. If youâre going to use the Internet, at least patronize viable sources.â
âIâm 13. I donât have to read âold peopleâ news yet, not like you.â
The seven-year difference between us was starting to sour, especially this year when I finished my teenage years and she started hers. It was cute when we were little and I held her as a baby, barely even more than a baby myself at seven years old. The saddest thing about her remark was how terribly old I did feel. It was as if turning twenty made me realize that no, I wasnât getting any younger and I only had four-fifths of a century left to live, if even that! The average life expectancy is currently about seventy-eight years for American women, though itâs declining. I wish Iâd been born Japanese. The Japanese have maintained the highest life expectancy for decades now; maybe I should start eating nothing but rice and drinking nothing but tea. The difference between the amount of caffeine in tea and coffee isnât too great, is it? Iâd probably have caffeine headaches for weeks.
The rain finally let up just as I was pulling off the highway. The black bag partially covering our old exit sign flapped in the wind, alternately revealing and concealing âSwanâ and âseaâ. I pulled off the road into the 7-11âs parking lot and shut the car off.
Inside the 7-11, the only sound was the hum of the incandescent light bulbs hanging from the ceiling. The lack of people made me slightly uneasy, although this section of town was right off the highway, typically frequented only by travelers of Interstate 95. Lily tagged along behind me, running her fingers over bags of candy and boxes of food, humming to her iPod and chewing on her thumbnails. I bought a Mocha Frappachino pick-me-up and drank half of it before I even got to the register.
My subconscious flitted with psychoanalysis and literary criticisms of the cashier as I mulled over how much I had to do after Thanksgiving break. Term papers due, finals to start studying for; and I probably wasnât going to get much work done while I was at home. Lily didnât know it yet, but there was a viewing to go to and a funeral the next day; relatives coming from the west to clean house for, dinners to cook, and smiles to fake.
âCan I get a candy bar, Galey?â I almost tripped over Lily standing between me and the door.
âYouâve got money, donât you? Doesnât Mom give you an allowance yet?â
âNot right now, cuz she says my grades arenât good enough.â
âWell then I guess you canât get a candy bar, hm?â I tried to side-step her.
âPlease?!?!â
âNo.â I put a hand on her head and tried to spin her around with my thumb and pinky finger. When that didnât work, I zipped around her scowling face and strode towards the car.
âCome on, Lily!â I heard her little-girl âhumph!â and plodding feet follow me out of the shop.
I opened the front door for her and climbed into the driverâs seat. When she slammed the back door shut behind her, I rolled my eyes and awkwardly reached over the seat to close the open door.
The house that I pulled up in front of looked different from the one I had left three months ago. Sadie, the tall oak tree on The Townâs side of the sidewalk, had left her leaves on the yard but was herself reduced to a grizzled stump. She had fallen the way of the other oaks along the block, diseased and marked with an ominous orange sign.
My mother stood in the doorway, wearing Barbie Millicent Robertâs plastic face. She waved, âWelcome home, girls!â and walked uneasily towards my car. Lily jumped out and into Momâs arms. I watched as Mom put her hand on Lilyâs shoulder, delicately squatting to her eye level, and knew that she would tell her the news about Matthew.
I turned away and started to unpack my trunk. My backpack and my knitting bag I slung over my shoulders before putting my laptop case under my arm and hugging my pillow against my chest. The trunk lid creaked when I slammed it shut and the horn beeped as I activated the alarm. âHi, Mom,â I said, stepping around her through the open front door. Lily was draped over her shoulder, silent tears running down her cheeks out of wide, shocked eyes. Big Brother Matthew is dead.
âMatthew? Where are you?â I was in our backyard, but the tree house was still standing and the shed hadnât been built yet. I was six, and cold, covered head to toe in a snowsuit Mom and Dad bought me for our family vacation skiing in Maine. Sixteen-year-old Matthew played hide and seek with me because there were no other boys in the neighborhood and I was still of the age where I wanted to do everything he wanted to do. I hated this pink snowsuit because Matthew hated pink. I wanted Matthew to call me âGilâ because âGayleâ was a girlâs name and I wanted to be a boy so I could be just like him. I was very bad at Hide and Seek and he was very good. He said I did too much seeking with my eyes and not enough with my body.
âGil! How long are you just going to stand there? Come and find me!â
I tried to run towards his voice but got confused and wound up standing still in a different spot, even farther, probably, from where he was. I started to get frustrated and sniffled.
âDonât cry, kid. Maybe we should blindfold you or something, then you wonât be able to look for meâyouâll just have to find me.â
âMatthewâŠâ I whined. I was lost and even though I could hear his voice coming from somewhere near the fence, I hesitated to go over there because of the dog next door that barked whenever I got too close. Matthew blended in with the bushes better in his camouflage snowsuit. The dog hated pink.
Finally, Matthew stepped out from behind a bush and came
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