Like our mother, Kalen was usually stoic. Not much rattled
her, so it surprised me when she got emotional. Dad and I
exchanged odd glances.
“I’m pregnant, Daddy.”
Dad and I expelled a shocked breath, and his heart rate sped
up a bit on the monitor.
Kalen wiped at her face. “Probably not the best time to tell
you, but if we aren’t reason enough to live, then think of the
grandbaby you have on the way.”
Dad was grinning from ear to ear. “I wonder if ol’ Todd put
the stem on the apple.”
“Well, we’re not going to know that until he or she gets
here because Todd and I agree we don’t want to know the sex
beforehand.” Kalen turned and looked at me. “Can you believe
it? After all this time and trying for years, we’d given up, and at
thirty-eight, I’m gonna be a momma.”
I was crying like a baby when I pulled Kalen into my arms.
We were standing there blubbering when Mom walked into the
room.
“Dear God, what is it?” she asked in alarm.
“Hot damn!” Dad slapped the bed. “Kalen’s got a bun in the
oven.”
This set off beeping sounds that brought two very concerned
nurses into the room. We were allowed to give Dad a kiss and
hug before we were all ejected into the hall. As we went, I could
hear him asking if he’d be allowed to smoke a cigar nine months
from now.
“How long have you known?” I asked as we went back to the
waiting room.
“Four months.” Kalen looked at us both sheepishly. “I wanted to
make sure I made it through the first trimester before I told anyone.
I’ve been hiding the weight gain under baggy winter clothes.”
Pitifully Ugly
Mom and I nodded in understanding, neither of us wanting to
mention the two miscarriages, as though it might jinx this one.
“I just can’t believe I have a grandbaby on the way.” Mom
sank down into a chair. “Good God, what a night…and now a
day. I’ve never been so scared and elated at the same time.”
Her words sobered us.
I took a seat next to Mom and patted her arm. “He’s gonna be
okay. It’s a smal blockage, and the stent thing is routine nowadays.”
Mom smiled and nodded. “Look at you,” she said, cupping
my cheek. “I just saw you at Christmas, and you don’t even look
like the same woman.”
“All of this,” Kalen said gesturing at me, “occurred in the two
weeks while I was gone. And she’s got two women interested in
her.”“You’re dating again?” Mom asked. “And two women at the
same time?” Mom was practically giddy. “I may have more than
one grandbaby to look forward to.”
“You don’t like my new look?” I asked, hoping to throw her
off the trail.
She made a face that said, cut the shit. “Love it.”
“Hey, don’t forget the bloated pregnant chick over here.”
Kalen jerked a thumb at her chest. “And somebody needs to feed
this baby before it starves me to death. It’s sucking me dry, and
it’s not even here yet.”
The topic turned to food after that, but I knew Mom would
eventually pull me aside and grill me about everything I’d done
since the holidays.
Dad’s stent procedure happened without incident. He would
be discharged after a day and night of observation. Mom finally
relented and agreed to go home with us. I doubt she would’ve
left his side if it hadn’t been for Kalen, who raided the vending
machines every half hour, then slept in a chair between snacks.
We picked up KFC on the way home for dinner since Mom would
undoubtedly have to endure Dad’s diet along with him. She’d
always been a healthy eater anyway, but every now and then, she
liked her fried chicken.
Robin Alexander
“I suppose that we’ll all be eating differently from now on,”
Mom said with a smile as we sat around the table on their screened
patio.
“True, but I’ll start that tomorrow,” Kalen said. She’d removed
all the skin from her chicken before she ate. And instead of fried
potato wedges, she opted for the mashed potatoes. She made up
for her healthy choices by topping her dinner with a Snickers bar
she had stashed in her purse. “I guess I should enjoy sleeping as
much as I can now because that’s all going to come to an end.”
“Trust me, it’ll all be worth it. It certainly was with you two,”
Mom said with a tired smile. “I had you a year apart. I don’t think
me or your dad really slept until you moved out of the house.”
I excused myself and went into the bathroom. I sent Hailey a
text and told her that Dad was doing fine. She sent one right back
and said she was relieved to hear from me and that everything
sounded like it was going well.
I leaned against the sink and thought back to the kiss that
we’d shared the night before. Those same lips had told me that
she could only offer friendship, but when they met mine, they
conveyed an entirely different message. One that said behind the
guise of friendship burned a passion that would burn us both to
embers if unleashed.
I cleaned up after dinner. It took an argument to get Mom
and Kalen to go sit down and leave me to it. I figured they needed
time to relax, and I just wanted time alone to wonder what Hailey
would tell me when I returned home. Would she give us a chance,
or would she keep me at arm’s length again?
Kalen was the first to go to bed. Mom had showered and
found me in the den flipping through the channels. “Tell me
about these two women Kalen mentioned,” she said as she took a
seat next to me.
“Actually, it’s just one woman. I’m not going to see the other
one anymore.”
“Was that your choice?”
I nodded. “I didn’t think it was right to lead Marci on because
Hailey is the one I really want to get to know.” I looked into Mom’s
Pitifully Ugly
dark eyes. It surprised me how much she and Kalen had begun
to look alike. Her dark and wavy hair damp from her shower was
pulled back away from her face, and though she was tired, she
still looked a lot younger than her sixty-three years.
She rested the side of her head on the back of the sofa and
looked at me. “Your sister would’ve dated them both until she
made up her mind,” Mom said with a grin. “How did you meet
Hailey?”
“She moved into my building. There’s just something about
her—a connection that I can’t explain.”
Mom gave my arm a squeeze. “I look forward to meeting
her.”“I hope it’ll go that far.”
Mom touched her finger to my nose. “I’m happy that you’ve
found someone that makes your eyes sparkle the way they are
now.”“I’m sparkling?”
“Yes, and your sister is glowing.” Mom yawned. “It means so
much to me to have you girls here now.”
“Dad scared you half to death, didn’t he?”
“He sure did. There are days that he’s a complete pain in my
ass, but I can’t imagine life without him. When you find the right
one, there’s a bond that makes you feel whole. I know that one day
you’ll understand exactly what I mean.”
I thought I was beginning to.
“I have The Glass Bottom Boat in the DVD player in my
room. Want to curl up like we did in the old days and watch it
until we fall asleep?” Mom asked.
I managed to make it to my favorite part when the vacuum
cleaner ate Doris Day’s slipper. Mom had long been asleep when
I switched the movie off. I put my phone on to charge and sent
Hailey a message telling her good night and thanked her again
for taking care of me. Her response was, Anytime and sweet
dreams.
I lay down then and studied my mother’s face as she slept.
I wondered what she was seeing behind her closed eyes. What
Robin Alexander
made her brow furrow even in slumber? I remembered a time
long ago, the first time we watched movies in bed together and
seeing her face look the same way.
I think I was around six when my parents had a party. Kalen
and I were tucked into bed, but I could hear the laughter coming
from the patio and couldn’t sleep. I slipped out of bed and watched
the grown-ups through our window, drinking their drinks and
talking in groups around the yard. I wanted to be grown, too, and
drink the drinks they were mixing in the blender.
I remembered that there was a big tray in the kitchen loaded
with sandwiches with the crusts cut off just like I liked them. I
sneaked out of the room and moved quietly down the hall. I was
about to make my move for the tray when I heard a woman’s voice
coming from the den.
“Roger, it’s too risky.”
And then I heard my father’s voice whispering something I
couldn’t make out. The woman laughed. It wasn’t my mother’s
laugh, so I leaned around as far as I could. She was facing Dad,
but I could see his hand on the small of her back, and they were
kissing just like my mom and dad did.
"Pitifully Ugly" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "Pitifully Ugly". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "Pitifully Ugly" друзьям в соцсетях.