The Distance Between US by Lindsey Osorio (best historical biographies .txt) đ
- Author: Lindsey Osorio
Book online «The Distance Between US by Lindsey Osorio (best historical biographies .txt) đ». Author Lindsey Osorio
He doesnât stop me.
Back in the stockroom Henry is packing away his guitar and Skye is wrapping a scarf around her neck.
I donât want to be left alone. My stomach hurts. âWhere is everyone going?â
âHenry doesnât like the offerings.â Skye points to the food on the table. âWeâre loading up on some real food at the corner mart.â
âReal food as in nachos and day-old corn dogs?â
âExactly,â Henry says.
I carefully add three secondsâ worth of Mountain Dew to my cup then move to the Powerade.
âWhatâs she doing?â I hear Mason ask.
Skye laughs. âItâs her special mixture. She spent all last summer on this experiment. She has now discovered the perfect formula of soda fountain mixture.â
âIâll have to try it,â Mason says, the owner of the gas station trailing behind him as he walks. The owner doesnât trust teenagers and he always follows us around telling us the âdeals of the dayâ in a veiled attempt to make it seem like heâs not watching us. Right now he is telling Mason about the sale on beef jerky and Mason is messing with him by asking if he can mix and match different items. The only one amused by this is me. Skye is pumping mustard onto an oversized hot dog.
I finish up my last add-in and take a sip. Perfect. Skye may make fun of me but this was an experiment worth the effort. âHow much would you pay for a shirt?â I ask suddenly, thinking of the hundreds of dollars Xander was about to spend on a replacement shirt for his âimportant customer.â
âI got this one for fifty cents at the Salvation Army,â Mason announces proudly, pointing with a stick of beef jerky to the band logo on his T-shirt. The owner intently follows the movement of the jerky with his eyes as if Mason is going to slip it up his sleeve.
âThatâs awesome even for a thrift store,â Skye says with a nod, clearly impressed.
âFive bucks for these jeans,â Henry says. âI wouldâve been willing to pay six though.â He lifts his shirt to show us a full view of his butt.
I laugh. Including the overly suspicious gas station owner, these are my kind of people.
Mason points and blinks at the same time, giving a loud âAha!â that makes me jump.
âWhat?â I ask.
âThatâs where I recognize him from.â
I turn slowly, following his finger to a Starz magazine on a rack behind me. In the corner on the front page is a picture of Xander.
Chapter 20
I probably shouldnât have bought the magazine. Iâm already irritated enough at Xander. But I did and now I sit alone on the couch in my living room, waiting for my mom to get home, and read the lame article again. All it says is that âThe Prince of Hotelsâ was spotted in New York last week to oversee the reopening of one of the familyâs hotels.
No wonder why he was confused I didnât know what his familyâs business was when we first met. He probably thought I was pretending not to know who he was. I blame it on our lack of cable. I may not have known exactly who he was, but I always knew he was a somebody. An article reminding me of the fact doesnât change anything. I crumble up the thin magazine and throw it at the glowing television. Two seconds later my mom walks in the front door.
âHi,â she says when she sees me on the couch.
âThat appointment took forever.â It would be really obvious if I pick up the magazine so I leave it there and hope she doesnât notice.
âSorry. I ran some errands when I was done.â
I point over my shoulder. âI made you a sandwich. Itâs in the fridge.â
The lighting changes as my show goes to a commercial, and I notice my momâs eyes are red. I sit up and turn toward her. âAre you okay?â
âOf course. Just tired.â She disappears as she walks into the kitchen that is separated from where I sit by a single wall.
âReally?â
âYes. Iâm fine.â
I grab the magazine and shove it in my pocket.
After banging around in the kitchen for a while, she yells out, âDid you have fun?â
I walk the four and a half steps to the television and turn it off then wait for her to join me on the couch. âYes. We went to Skyeâs and did some grave digging. It was pretty cool.â
âThat sounds great. I wish you wouldâve had your friend come in. I wanted to meet him.â
No, you didnât. You wouldâve hated to meet him. âHe has a doll phobia. Some childhood trauma.â
âReally?â
âNot really, Mom.â
âYou are hilarious, Caymen.â
âYouâre getting good at sarcasm.â
She laughs. âSo is this friend a boyfriend?â
âWeâre just friends.â But are we even that now?
âWell, if thatâs all youâre looking for then you better watch it because you know the difference between a âboy friendâ and a âboyfriend.ââ
I roll my eyes with a smile. âYeah, yeah.â
âJust a little space,â she says. âDonât go breaking hearts.â
âYouâre like Socrates or something, Mom.â
âI am, arenât I?â I hear a cupboard open and shut and prepare for her to join me on the couch when she says, âThanks for the sandwich, sweetie. Iâll eat it tomorrow. I ate while I was out.â
âOkay.â
âIâm sorry to come in and then crash on you, but Iâm heading to bed.â
âAt eight oâclock?â
âItâs been a long day between manning the shop and running around town.â
I jump up and follow her down the hall. âWait.â
She turns to face me. The hall light is off and we stand in shadows. âYes?â
âPlease talk to me. Somethingâs wrong.â My mom and I used to tell each other everything. The distance I feel between us is my fault, I know, because of all the secrets weâre keeping, but I need her to talk to me.
She looks at her hands and her shoulders rise and fall. She doesnât meet my eyes when she says, âItâs nothing. Really.â
âPlease, Mom. I know what nothing looks like and itâs not this.â
âI tried to secure a loan today. I was denied.â
I donât need to ask but I do anyway. âA loan for what?â
She finally looks up. Her eyes are bloodshot. âTo pay some bills Iâve gotten behind on.â She takes my hand. âBut I donât want you to worry about it. Weâll be fine. Weâre behind is all. Weâve been behind before. Letâs hope for a few good months. Weâll just have to be more careful.â
âMore careful?â How could we be more careful? We already spend next to nothing.
âDonât worry, okay? Itâs fine.â
I nod and she gives me a hug. It doesnât stop me from worrying.
When sheâs in her room I shut my bedroom door with a horrible pressure in my chest. The magazine digs into my thigh so I yank it out of my pocket and smooth it flat. âAre you even worth all this trouble, Xander?â I say to his wrinkled face.
Monday morning I take my time getting ready. Iâve been trying to figure out all weekend what to say to Xander. Iâm tired of the feeling thatâs settled onto my chest and threatened to stay.
When I go downstairs my mom is zipping up the green bank-deposit bag and tucking it into her purse.
âI thought you took the deposit Saturday night.â
She jumps. âYou scared me.â She looks me up and down. âWow, you look nice today. I havenât seen you wear that sweater in forever. It makes your eyes stand out. Is this for the special boy at school?â
If I didnât love my mom so much I would strangle her. âNo, Mom, I told you weâre just friends.â And he doesnât go to my school. And . . . wait, was she trying to change the subject? It almost worked. âSo whatâs going on with the deposit?â
âI didnât take it Saturday.â
She didnât take the deposit? My mom is anal about making the deposit. And didnât she just say last night that we are behind?
She mustâve noted my look because she says, âItâs not a big deal. Iâll take it over right when they open.â
âOkay.â I grab my backpack, smooth down my sweater, and face the door. My heart gives a little unexpected flutter, the first one since fighting with Xander. I smile and step out into the cold.
Xanderâs not there.
My walk to school feels twice as long as normal. Maybe because I keep looking over my shoulder or maybe because Iâve slowed down to give him time to arrive. He never does.
After school, while my mom is upstairs placing orders on the computer, I get out Xanderâs camera that I keep stashed in the stockroom desk and take more pictures of the dolls. Iâve never felt more motivated to get the website up and running. We could obviously use the increase in traffic. As I stare at the lifeless eyes of Aislyn through the viewfinder, a thought comes back to me: my mom standing by the register that morning holding the bank-deposit bag and how she tried to avoid my questions about it.
I strap the camera around my neck and sneak into her office. The first thing I look for is the balance book. The red number is even bigger, over three thousand dollars. It shouldnât surprise me; she had said as much. But it makes me worry even more. I open the side drawer where she keeps the bank bag and pull it out. Itâs zipped shut and I stare at it for a moment, feeling the weight in my hands, not wanting to open it and find out if the money is still inside. I have no idea what it will mean if the money is still inside. That sheâs still hiding things from me? Fast and painless. I slide it open and look in. Empty. Even though the money is gone, proving she made the deposit, I feel uneasy.
The bell on the front door rings, and I shove the bag back in the drawer and rush back out front.
A tall man with dark hair and a dark beard stands just inside the door. It takes me a second to place him, but then I remember he had been in the store a few weeks ago, talking to my mom.
âIs Susan in?â he asks, his eyes lingering on the camera around my neck.
âNo, sheâs not.â I could probably tell him sheâs just upstairs, but the feeling of uneasiness I felt in my momâs office has grown.
âWill you tell her Matthew dropped by?â
âIs there something I can help you with?â
His eyes twinkle and his mouth twitches into a smile. âNo.â With that he backs out the door. He walks by the front window, and I wait for a few seconds then quickly step outside, staying close to the building so he wonât see me. He gets into a navy blue SUV parked a few stores away. I quickly snap off a few pictures, zooming in on the license plate and then up to his face. My heart nearly stops when his eyes meet the camera lens. The metal door handle digs into my back with my hasty retreat. He probably didnât see me. I had zoomed in quite a bit.
Inside I pick up the phone. Just as Iâm about to push
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