Mary Jane Jessica Blau (namjoon book recommendations TXT) đ
- Author: Jessica Blau
Book online «Mary Jane Jessica Blau (namjoon book recommendations TXT) đ». Author Jessica Blau
Sheba sang, âBeeeanie Jones, Beeeanie Jones, when she enters the room, there are hollers and groooooans.â
We all sang the line and then Sheba went on, âBeanie Jones, Beanie Jones, first she grunts and then she moooooans.â
We repeated that line and then Izzy came up with, âBeanie Jones, Beanie Jones, the telephone rings âcause sheâs on the phones!â
âGood one!â I hugged Izzy and felt a rush of pride.
Mrs. Cone sang, âBeanie Jones, Beanie Jones, she storms into town like a trail of cyclones.â
âYour turn, Mary Jane!â Sheba said.
âOkay . . .â I bit my lip, thinking. âBeanie Jones, Beanie Jones, her body is flesh, then there are bones!â
âBones, bones, bones,â Sheba sang. âBeanie Beanie Jones. Bones, bones, bones, she hollers then she moans!â
We all repeated those last two lines, with Sheba taking melody and me on harmony, for the rest of the ride home.
10
At breakfast, Jimmy looked at the last two recipe cards. One was for pot roast and the other was for tomato soup and grilledcheese sandwiches.
âPot roast.â Jimmy slapped the card down in front of Izzy. Izzy had come to the table in her nightgown but removed it whenI wasnât looking. She was now eating her porridge naked.
âThatâs not a summer food.â Sheba was in a different bikini than yesterday. This one was white with a crotch so small thefuzzy scribbles of her brown pubic hair poked out along the sides. I was wearing my new suit, but had thrown my new Dolfinshorts and new striped T-shirt over it, as I couldnât bring myself to walk out of the bedroom wearing just the suit.
âBut I love pot roast. And Iâve been so good!â Jimmy climbed off his chair, went to Sheba, and started kissing her all over. She batted him away, laughing. Izzy got out of her chair and ran over to kiss Sheba all over too, so Sheba was covered by the two of them. I watched, smiling, and wondered what it would feel like to kiss so freely like that.
Dr. Cone came into the room and Jimmy lifted his head up from the kisses. âRichard, what do you think of pot roast for dinnertonight?â He sat at the table.
Dr. Cone looked at me. âMary Jane?â
âWell, we bought all the ingredients. But Sheba thinks itâs not summery enough.â
âIf we bought the ingredients, letâs not waste them.â Dr. Cone went to the stove and served himself a bowl of oatmeal fromthe pot.
âSeriously, Mary Jane. Does your mother make pot roast in the middle of summer?â Sheba lifted her bare legs and crossed themon the table. Izzy settled on Jimmyâs lap. She looked over the recipe card and sounded out the letters.
âI copied her recipe cards for the meals she had scheduled this week, so, yes.â I wondered if Dr. Cone cared that his nakeddaughter was sitting on a grown manâs lap. No one else seemed to notice.
âYou got a hell of a mother,â Jimmy said. âThe best meal my mother ever made was when sheâd buy a brick of cheddar cheese,pull out a sheet of tinfoil, and then melt the cheddar on the foil.â
âAnd then what?â I picked up Izzyâs nightgown from the floor and slipped it over her head.
âThen what what?â
Sheba said, âWhat did she do with the melted cheese?â
âNothing. That was it. She took the foil out of the oven, put it on the coffee table, and we pulled it off with our fingersand ate it while we watched TV.â
I laughed. âWhat did you call it?â
âShe called it âmelted cheese.ââ
âHow did you ever get so creative and smart?â Sheba recrossed her legs, left over right now. âYour mother was of no help toyou.â
âAt least she was there. Unlike my dad, who was with the macramĂ© lady who lived down the road.â
âWe did macramĂ© at camp!â Izzy cried.
âWho was the macramĂ© lady?â I asked.
âShe sold macramĂ© plant holders outside the supermarket. She had big eyes and big tits. That and the macramĂ© did my dad in.He followed her home one day and that was that.â
âTits,â Izzy whispered. I hoped she wouldnât ask what it meant.
Mrs. Cone walked in wearing a breezy yellow sundress and leather sandals. She paused, looked at Sheba, and then slipped offthe dress, revealing another microkini. Then she sat at the table.
âIzzy and I made oatmeal,â I offered.
âLovely!â Mrs. Cone clapped.
I went to the stove and ladled out a big bowl for her. âDo you mind pot roast for dinner?â
âWhat does everyone else think?â
âI think itâs too wintry.â Sheba recrossed her legs again. Each time she moved them, it was like a flash of lightning thateveryone but Izzy turned toward.
âI want it,â Jimmy said. âItâs better than melted cheese on tinfoil.â
âJimmyâs dad loves the macramĂ© lady with big eyes,â Izzy said.
âBaby,â Sheba said, to Jimmy, âyouâre right. This time is about you. Pot roast it is.â
âHurrah!â Izzy shouted.
At two p.m., Izzy and I stuck the roast in the oven. It had to cook for four hours. Back on the beach, we decided weâd collect shells to decorate the dining room table.
âHat.â I plopped a purple hat on Izzyâs head. Her face and shoulders had been burning and peeling all week long and I wantedto stop the cycle. Everyone but Dr. Cone and Izzy had been slathering on Bain de Soleil tanning oil all week, trying to heightenthe sunâs effects. Sheba was the darkest, with Jimmy coming in second. Mrs. Cone only crisped and then molted, so she hadto start all over again every second day. Dr. Cone was uninterested in tanning, but had been turning brown nonetheless. Ilooked as brown as a nut and my hair had gone blonder.
âBucket,â Izzy said, and she gripped the handle of her bucket and started marching down the beach.
âWeâll be back in a bit,â I said, but Dr. Coneâthe only one on the beach with usâwasnât listening.
I hurried after Izzy. I hadnât put on my shorts or shirt and felt like there
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