Likes Sarah Bynum (bill gates books recommendations .TXT) š
- Author: Sarah Bynum
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Darkness fell, and Bree suggested baking a cake. She made it sound like the idea had only just occurred to her, but in the kitchen she pulled out the bowl and the hand mixer and the measuring cups and the cake mix from a single cabinet, all ready to go, and Mari filled suddenly with so much tenderness that her eyes watered. The mix was Duncan Hines and the flavor was, mysteriously, āyellow.ā At Mariās house, what passed for cake was a nearly flavorless sponge that her mother bought at the Japanese bakery and then urged guests to try, assuring them that it was āvery lightā and ānot too sweet.ā When Bree dumped the yellow mix into the bowl, it sent up a mushroom cloud of synthetic sugariness that caused Mari to choke. Imogen was perched on the counter and slicing a plastic spatula through the air, as if felling enemies. She didnāt try to contribute anything. She looked on good-naturedly as Mari and Bree followed the boxās directions, and once the cake pans, trembling with batter, were slid into the oven, she held out her arms to receive the empty mixing bowl.
āOh nice,ā she said. āYou left a lot on the sides.ā Without hesitating she sank her spatula into the bowl, circled it around, lifted it back up, and inserted its entire drippy width into her mouth. It came out clean. āShare,ā Bree said. Imogen scraped the bowl again and Mari watched the slathered spatula head disappear inside Breeās open mouth.
The third time Imogen dipped into the bowl, she presented the mouthful of batter to Mari.
āNo thanks,ā Mari said lightly, and drew back from the spatula. She deliberately did not say what she wanted to say, what was foremost in her mind, what was exactly the thing her mother had spoken ominously of: salmonella. Because her mother was usually wrong. Her mother, for instance, had assumed that just because Bree was eight years older than her sister there had to be ādifferent fathers,ā as she put it. Something about the tactful tone she used made Mari want to strangle her. āItās the same dad,ā Mari had announced in a clipped voice, āand donāt worry, him and her mom are married. And yes, she will be at home the whole time weāre there.ā
āHe and her mom,ā her own mother had answered, at which point Mari had covered her ears and let out a moan.
Yet three large eggs had plopped glisteningly into that batter, three large raw eggs probably teeming with bacteria, and just the sight of its yellowness slicking the spatula was making Mari feel queasy. That, and the sickly sweet smell. And the buzzy fluorescent lights in Breeās kitchen. And all the saliva being passed around freely.
By now her friends were looking at each other and smiling. Theyād seen right through her airy demurral. Panther-like, Imogen hopped down from the counter while Bree closed in on Mari from the other side.
āJust try some,ā Imogen murmured. āYouāll like it.ā
She handed the spatula off to Bree but held on to the bowl, dragging the length of her finger along its interior and then extracting it, coated. She slid the finger into her mouth.
āItās the best part.ā Bree swam the spatula closer to Mariās face. āTrust us. Itās delicious.ā
āI donāt want to,ā Mari said from under the collar of her T-shirt, which sheād pulled up over her nose.
āJust a little,ā Imogen said. āJust a little tiny taste.ā Bree stuck out her tongue and delicately pressed the spatula to its tip. āSee?ā Imogen continued. āItāll be that tiny. Youāll barely taste it.ā
Mouth ajar, Bree darted her tongue in and out, in and out, in and out, very fast. Where did she learn to do that? It looked disturbing, like in a Prince kind of way. The yellow droplet sat at the end of her flickering tongue. Mari twisted her head aside.
āYouāre pressuring me.ā Her voice was muffled beneath the T-shirt. āI donāt like eating batter or being pressured or throwing up all night and getting hospitalized.ā
āWho said anything about throwing up?ā
She yanked her shirt back down and glared at them. āHelloāsalmonella?ā
Somehow it sounded less insane when her mother said it. Imogen and Bree stared at her, speechless. Then they both cackled. āSalmonella?ā they repeated. āSalmonella?ā Their eyes glittered. A look of silent understanding passed among the three of them. There was no averting what was coming next.
With a gasp, Mari shoved past Imogen and dove toward the TV room. They flew after her, unleashed, made swift by their socks on the linoleum. Over and around the leather sectional they chased her, careful to avoid the glowing fish tank, no one shrieking or laughing because upstairs Bevin was already asleep. Just their heavy breathing filled the room, and when the two of them finally pinned her to the floor, she could feel how all of their chests were heaving rapidly, in unison, like they had run a mile together with matching strides.
Chariots of Fire was one of her top-five favorite films. Though she didnāt like to run herself, the sight of British men running was very moving.
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