“Sounds to me like fate. I’ve learned that you should never argue with fate.” Nadine took out another doughnut and shut the box. “If it’s open, I’ll eat them until it’s empty.”
“Hey, where all you at?” Lettie called out at the same time the bell above the door rang. “I brought brownies.”
Nadine grabbed the box of doughnuts and hurried toward the office with them. “We’re over here in the new mystery section. I’ll get you a mug of coffee. Bring a chair with you.”
Lettie must’ve gotten a chair with no rubber caps on the legs. Jennie Sue covered both ears, and Nadine yelled, “For God’s sake, Lettie, pick that chair up. That sounds like fingernails scraping against a blackboard.”
“Oh, hush,” Lettie hollered. “Nothing is that bad.”
The mention of blackboards made Jennie Sue think of school. “Maybe I should’ve studied education. Texas is always needing teachers. I wonder, if I got my education credential, if I could get a job right here in Bloom teaching high school.”
“Why would you do that? Kids today are all about entertainment, not learnin’.” Lettie popped the chair out, sat down, and put a plate of warm brownies in the exact spot where the doughnuts had been. “Have one while they’re hot. Nadine, you goin’ to take all day with that coffee?”
“I’m right here. You don’t have to yell at me. And I’d be for anything that would keep you in Bloom. I’d even be willin’ to pay for your education and put in a word for you at the school.” She put a cup in her sister’s hands and reached for a brownie. “Now what did you hear about Belinda this mornin’?”
Just like that, another avenue opened up to Jennie Sue that would keep her in Bloom. Classes would start in the fall if she wanted to go that route. She could probably get what she needed in a year, and then she’d be ready to start teaching. She’d wanted something to help her make the decision about what to do . . . Was this the answer?
“Where are you woolgatherin’ at?” Nadine touched her on the arm.
“My future. I’m havin’ a lot of trouble making the decision about whether to stay in Bloom or not,” Jennie Sue answered, knowing the sisters deserved her honesty.
“We want you to stay, and we’ll do whatever we can to help you, but, honey, the final decision has to be yours or you’ll always wonder if you made the right one,” Lettie said.
“Thank you both. I think we were talkin’ about Aunt Belinda.”
Lettie and Nadine both cocked their heads to the right at the same time.
“It’s a Sweetwater Belle thing that I have trouble shaking. All of us kids were encouraged to call them ‘aunt,’ since they referred to themselves as sorority sisters,” she explained. “Go on about Belinda.”
“She’s keepin’ the baby,” Lettie said. “Lonnie wanted her to end the pregnancy at first because he said that there would be a big chance something might be wrong with it. She said that she couldn’t ever end the life of a little baby. The doctors did some kind of newfangled test to be sure it didn’t have problems, and it’s a boy. So Lonnie is struttin’ around like he’s the cock of the walk now.”
“Did she tell him about the two daughters?” Nadine whispered.
“Don’t know, but since we didn’t hear an explosion, I guess not. But I did hear that the daughters aren’t too happy about it. After all, one is twenty-two and gettin’ married at Christmas. The other one is twenty-one and just got engaged. Think about it—they’ll probably have children not much younger than their brother.” Lettie sipped her coffee.
Jennie Sue finished what she was doing and picked up a box to go searching for mystery books scattered about the store. She grabbed a brownie on her way past the plate and winked at Nadine.
“These are fabulous, Lettie. Do you give out your recipe?” she asked.
“Honey, it’s on the back of the cocoa box. The secret is not to overcook them. Brownies should be gooey, not dry and stiff,” Lettie answered.
“Sounds like good sex,” Nadine said.
Lettie slapped her on the knee. “Watch your mouth. I swear to the Lord, you go to church on Sunday and do all kinds of work up there and then come home and talk about sex.”
“Do you think Adam and Eve had them kids of theirs by immaculate conception?” Nadine got another brownie. “Hell, no, they did not! And they enjoyed the sex, too, I’d be willin’ to bet you.”
Jennie Sue ducked behind a row of books and held her hand over her mouth to keep from giggling out loud. A new vision replaced the one concerning the kiss. This one had her and Rick tangled up in cotton sheets with a ceiling fan blowing down on them after an afternoon in bed.
A deep crimson blush dotted her cheeks as she shook the picture away and went back to filling the box with books. Listening to the two sisters bantering made her wish again that she had a sibling in her life to grow old with.
Charlotte arrived just as Nadine and Lettie were leaving at noon. She drew her shoulders back and said, “Ladies,” with a nod as she set her wet umbrella just inside the shop.
“Charlotte,” they said in unison and left with their chins jacked up an extra inch or two.
Now that was a prime example of civil friends, Jennie Sue thought as she crossed the room to hug her mother. “Mama, what brings you to town?”
Charlotte returned the hug, but only briefly, before she took a step back. “You smell like old books and sweat, and you look like crap.”
“Well, thank you for that, Mother.” Jennie Sue dragged out the last word into several syllables. “I’ve been working all morning, like most people in town. Want a cup of coffee or a glass of sweet tea?” She had to bite her tongue to keep any more sarcasm from sneaking out of her mouth.
“No, thank you. I thought maybe we could have lunch together,” Charlotte answered.
Oh, goody! A whole hour of listening to belittling remarks about how she looked, talked, or just her life in general.
“I’d love to. The café is only a few doors down the street, so let’s go there. They make a mean burger.” She’d get chastised for the fat grams in a burger and fries for sure, but that’s what she planned on having.
“I haven’t been in there in years. Do they have decent salads?” Charlotte asked as Jennie Sue got her purse and umbrella.
“Just enjoy something fattening, Mama. One time won’t even add a pound to your skinny frame.” She led the way out of the store, flipped the sign that said she’d be back in an hour, and locked up. “Let’s not fuss today.”
“I’ll try,” Charlotte sighed.
It might not be a guarantee, but it was a start. One baby step at a time—at least today she was going to lunch with her at a simple little café. That was a big thing in Charlotte’s world.
Though the place was more than half-full, conversation ceased when the two Baker women walked inside. Everyone stared at them as if two of Nadine and Lettie’s aliens had dropped out of the sky and hit the café first.
“What’s happening?” Charlotte whispered.
“You know us—we’re the movie stars in Bloom. The paparazzi will arrive any minute and start flashing pictures of us. Tomorrow we’ll be on the cover of all the gossip papers in the whole state—the ones that you buy right next to the grocery-store checkout counter.” Jennie Sue chose a booth and motioned for her mother to sit across from her. “Turn your best side toward me. I see phones takin’ our pictures.”
“Oh, hush! I shouldn’t have even come today, but I wanted to see you before your dad and I leave town for my birthday. We’re flying to Las Vegas for a few days,” Charlotte said.
“Good, because by next week, our picture will be pasted on the front, and the headline will be, ‘The Wilshire Women. Mother Still Beautiful. Daughter Looks Like Shit.’”
“Stop it.” Charlotte slapped at her and then giggled.
Jennie Sue hadn’t heard sincere laughter from her mother in years. It warmed her heart. “Why? I made you laugh and that erases wrinkles. Greasy hamburgers do the same thing. You know, at a certain age, you got to choose between your rear end and your face,” Jennie Sue whispered. “Look, everyone is talking again. They’re tryin’ to figure out what I’m sayin’ right now so they can go home and gossip about us.”