Chapter 18
“Yoo-hoo!”
Cheri sat up in bed, noting right away how the painfully bright light streamed through the window and how her stomach had clenched in on itself with hunger. And what about that bizarre dream she’d been having? She could swear she heard someone calling out to her clear as could be. The smell of blueberry muffins still wafted through her nostrils.
“Cheri! It’s Granddaddy and Aunt Viv! We brought you some breakfast!”
She swung her feet over the edge of the bed and clutched at her aching head. She heard the deep rumble of her grandfather’s laughter coming from the living room.
“Plus dinner and supper and snacks and more damn furniture than this place can hold,” he said.
“Oh, hell, no,” Cheri mumbled to herself, wondering what ungodly time of day it was and how Viv could possibly think she was welcome out here after that debacle at the supper table. Forget the books—her priority for the weekend should be buying a big-assed lock for the front door.
She scrambled to find a pair of jeans and a T-shirt, deciding to skip the bra. Who cared?
“Tater Wayne and some helpers are here, too!” Viv announced.
Cheri grabbed a bra. “Coming!”
After a quick pit stop in the bathroom, she stumbled down the hall and into the living room. Cheri shielded her eyes from the light pouring through the front door, and the first thing her vision focused on was a refrigerator sitting in the middle of the living room floor.
“What the—”
“Now come on in here and have a seat,” Viv said from the kitchen.
“Mornin,’” Granddaddy said, holding out a Styrofoam cup of what Cheri prayed was real, steaming hot coffee.
She shuffled over to the old oak table and took the cup from Granddaddy. “Thank you so much,” she said, pulling back the plastic lip of the lid and taking a sip. Suddenly, a knife and fork, salt and papper, and a paper plate were set down before her. On the plate was a hard-boiled egg, a blueberry muffin, and a banana.
“Nothing fancy, but at least it’ll get you going today,” Viv said, leaning down and leaving a kiss on the top of Cheri’s head.
“Thank you, really, both of you,” she said just before she bit into the still-warm baked confection. She moaned in pleasure as the sugary delicacy hit her taste buds. How could she stay mad at Viv when she made these awesome muffins for her? With the crumbly tops?
“Oh, I nearly forgot. Here’s y’all’s pat of butter.”
And butter!
“Thank you so much, Aunt Viv,” Cheri said. “This is delicious!”
“Well, now, once Tater gets the fridge hooked up, you’ll be set for a while.” Viv began unpacking covered dishes from a half-dozen brown paper sacks lined up on the drainboard. “I fixed y’all a little bit of everything—a chicken and rice casserole, baked spaghetti, some beef noodles with gravy, and a meat loaf. Oh, and my sweet potato casserole.”
Granddaddy rolled his eyes and whispered, “Just in case the union Army marches through.”
Cheri laughed as she crammed another bite of the muffin in her mouth.
“Where y’all want this?” Tater Wayne stood in the doorway holding a chest of drawers.
“Put that one in the back room,” Viv ordered. “The bigger one goes in the front bedroom for Cheri. She needs a lot of storage for her delicates.”
“You got it,” Tater said. “Oh, Cheri, we nearly ran over that damn squirrel just now, standing there hollerin’ like it was guarding the driveway or sumthin’.”
Cheri spun around in her chair. “Did you hit her?”
“Naw, but I can put a twenty-two-caliber greeting card right between its eyes if you like.”
“No!” Cheri was horrified, but realized everyone was looking at her funny. “I don’t mind the squirrel much. Thanks, though.” She hid her face in her coffee cup.
“Suit yerself,” Tater said, carrying the bureau down the hall. Cheri took a moment to assess the growing assortment of household items piling up in the living room. There were several cans of interior semigloss paint, a few secondhand tables, lamps, and a space-age lime green sofa that was so out-of-date it would be considered retro chic in Tampa.
Viv sighed loudly. “I told Garland that couch was enough to make a person queasy but he said you’d like it.”
Granddaddy winked at Cheri.
“Everything’s lovely,” she said. “I truly do appreciate you taking care of me like this.”
“Least we could do,” Viv said. “We couldn’t just let you stay out here without a pot to piss in or a light to aim by.”
Granddaddy sighed loudly and began to turn around in his chair but Viv smacked his shoulder. “Oh, hold your peace, Garland. I promised I wouldn’t say a thing about Cheri up and moving out like she did, so I won’t, and I won’t mention the party, either.”
Cheri blinked. “What party?”
Granddaddy’s face had gone scarlet. “Vivienne, I have half a mind to—”
“Garland’s turning eighty in two weeks, and we thought maybe—”
Granddaddy smacked his palm on the old oak table.
Viv waved her hand at him and pressed on. “We thought we’d combine the two monumental occasions into one big shindig!”
Cheri felt the half-eaten muffin fall from her grasp to the paper plate. Try as she might, she couldn’t prevent the visual from setting up shop in her brain again—Aunt Viv, in her polka-dot bikini, rubbing up against her jazz musician boyfriend, while firing up a Jamaican-sized spliff.
If that wasn’t horrifying enough, she was beginning to suspect one of those “monumental occasions” had something to do with her.
“It was just an idea,” Granddaddy said, rolling his eyes. “We thought we could jointly celebrate my birthday and you taking over the helm at the Bugle.”
Cheri swallowed a crumb that had become stuck in her increasingly dry throat.
“And,” Viv said, her face lit with excitement, “since the lake house is getting all spruced up, we were thinking we could have the party out here. The water will be warm enough for swimming. Tater Wayne can bring his mobile barbecue pit, the one shaped like a hog. And we can…”
Cheri spaced out for a moment, letting the bizarre scene unfold without her. This visit was invasion of privacy jumbled up with too much food, overbearing love, passive-aggressive good intentions, and genuine desire to smooth over old hurts. It was all very Newberry.
Suddenly, Cheri’s eyes shot to the blue and white checks over the kitchen sink, and the only thing that made any sense—the only right thing to do—was to hug Aunt Viv.
She rose from her chair, went toward Viv, and pulled her aunt’s short, stocky body close to her, which stopped the party planning in mid-sentence. Cheri inhaled the familiar Jean Naté-and-vodka elixir and looked again at the curtains. A worker had tried to take them down and toss them yesterday, but she’d stopped him, and Cheri had washed them out by hand and hung them to dry. Now, as they rippled in the breeze, her eyes began to tear up.
Cheri realized that for whatever reason, she’d woken up without her usual defenses that morning, and it felt like something had softened inside her, like some kind of internal fist had relaxed and opened. She held Viv tighter and let the tears flow and the memories rush through her—raw, alive, and bittersweet …
The brush of her mother’s lips on her forehead. Her father’s voice—a mix of molasses and mischief—as he read to her before bed. The taste of corn on the cob and rhubarb pie at a summer supper. The cries of the loons and the songs of crickets.
And suddenly she knew that her beginnings hadn’t just disappeared from the face of the earth, as hard as she’d tried to convince herself otherwise. The truth was a lot of it remained in the people and places she came from. This old cottage, surely. The elderly great-aunt and a grandfather, still right here in her kitchen, loving her the best they knew how. A sweet boy who’d become a man who fit her. The Bigler Bugle. A best friend who supported her no matter what.
And a sister, so close, and yet lost to her.
“Now, if that don’t beat all?” Viv mumbled into Cheri’s chest. “Why are you cryin’, sugar?”
Cheri couldn’t speak.
“Garland? Why’s she crying?”
“I was near tears myself listening to you carry on about barbecues and potato salad and whatnot.”
Cheri laughed. “No, that’s not it. The party is a fine idea. Really.” She released her grip on Viv but kept an arm loosely wrapped around her. “I’m crying because y’all brought me muffins this morning. And while I’m at it, I want to say thank you, both of you, for taking such good care of me and Tanyalee when Mama and Daddy died. It couldn’t have been easy—I know I wasn’t a pleasant child. I hope it’s not too late to tell you how much I appreciate what you did.”
Cheri smiled down at Aunt Viv’s stunned expression.
Garland laughed. “I do believe that’s the first time I ever saw Vivienne Newberry at a loss for words.”
Viv began to cry, too. She smacked Cheri on the arm. “Now look what you’ve gone and done.” She wiggled free and sniffled as she went back to to her unloading. “I better get these in the freezer before they start to thaw.”
Granddaddy chuckled. “The fridge is unplugged in the middle of the livin’ room, Vivienne, and its interior is about as frozen over as a bonfire in August.”
Cheri began to snicker. Then Aunt Viv’s shoulders jiggled, and Granddaddy’s booming laughter nearly shook the walls.
In the rich harmony of all that laughter, Cheri couldn’t help sense the one missing note—even if it had always been a little off-key.
Tanyalee.
* * *
She pressed against the old brass handle and the door to Wimbley Real Esatate opened with a tinkling bell.
The reception area was unusually metropolitan for Bigler, with its dove-gray leather and chrome furnishings, modern art, and animal-print accessories. Even if Tanyalee herself hadn’t been seated at the reception desk—a point of golden light against a muted palette—the space would have had her name all over it.
Tanyalee hid her surprise with a stiff smile. “Come to see one of the lofts?”
“No, actually. I came to see you. Do you have time to talk, maybe go for a walk or something?”
Tanyalee laughed. “Us regular Joes punch a clock. I just got here, and Saturday morning is our busiest time of the week, so I certainly can’t just up and leave to take a stroll.”
“Okay, then.” Cheri stepped inside and took a seat on one of the couches. She hardly wanted to hover over Tanyalee’s desk—this conversation would be confrontational enough on even footing. “Then we can talk here.”
“About what?”
Cheri took a deep breath. “About you and me. About our family—Viv and Garland and Mama and Daddy. About your marriage to J.J.”
“Oh, Lord-ee, Cheri! You truly are a piece of work, aren’t you?” When Tanyalee tipped her head back and laughed, Cheri couldn’t help but notice the resemblance between her sister and their late mother. Now that Tanyalee was just a few years younger than Mama at the time of her death, the resemblance was impossible to ignore. Her sister had every bit of Mama’s delicate beauty, but not a lick of her gentle nature.
“I just want to talk, Tanyalee.”
“No. No you don’t.” She spun around in her desk chair to face Cheri full-on. “What y’all want is to march into Bigler and get all Dr. Phil on my ass, and I’ll tell you right now, I’m not having it.” Tanyalee crossed her arms over her chest and lowered her chin, suddenly resembling the petulant five-year-old Cheri had had so much trouble getting along with. All shades of Melanie Newberry had disappeared.
“I had nothing to do with your divorce or miscarriage, Tanyalee.”
She blinked her pretty blue eyes. “Really, now.”
“Really,” Cheri said, tossing her purse to the couch. “As you know, I never called J.J. while you were married. There was no secret plot to betray you. Nothing to cause you to miscarry. So tell me what happened to the baby, and why you lied to me about J.J.’s part in the divorce.”
Her sister’s mouth unhinged, her eyes bugged out, and she slammed her fist on the desktop. “Who the hell do you think you are, Cheri? Y’all got a truckload of nerve coming in here and making crazy accusations about something you know nothing about! My God! I don’t know if you noticed, but we’ve all survived just fine here without you and your college degrees and your money and your big house and your high-and-mighty wisdom!”
Cheri kept her voice soft and her anger under wraps. “I’m here to ask you—my only sister—to have an honest conversation with me. Good God in heaven, Tanyalee, we are grown women! We aren’t fighting over an Island Fun Barbie here—this is real life, and we need to sort some shit out between us! We should have done it a long, long time ago.” Cheri took a deep breath. “Now, why did you tell me I caused you to miscarry? Why did you tell me it was my fault that your marriage didn’t work?”
Tanyalee sat frozen for a moment. Cheri watched the tendons in her slender neck tighten.
“You’ve been talking to J.J.” Tanyalee’s mouth had gone hard and her eyes blank. “You’ve already slept with him. I’m sure he’s told you things that make me sound like some kind of bitch. Well, it’s all lies.”
Cheri shook her head. “I did not sleep with him. I was tempted, but I knew it wouldn’t be right until I’d cleared the air with you.”
One corner of Tanyalee’s mouth curled up. “But I saw you.”
“Yeah, I know you saw us—because you drove out to the lake without an invitation. J.J. was just leaving.”
She snorted. “Oh, now I need an invitation? To my own family’s land? The lake house is Newberry property, you stuck-up little bitch! And I may not be Queen of the May slash publisher of the Bigtime Bungle, but the last time I looked, I was still a f*ckin’ Newberry.”
“After your last felony conviction, Granddaddy put the lake house in my name only.”
“Who the f*ck cares? Once I’m married to Wim, I’ll be richer than even you.”
Cheri swallowed hard. Tanyalee had mentioned it twice now. Apparently she was as blissfully ignorant of her financial situation as anyone in Bigler. “I’m happy for you,” Cheri told her.
Tanyalee leaned forward on the desk and snarled. “What did J.J. tell you?”
“Not much. He said whatever happened in your marriage was private, and if I had questions, I’d need to ask you.”
Tanyalee sniggered. “That sounds like him. He’s such a pompous, holier-than-thou dick-face. Oh, but just you wait, dear sister—the day’s gonna come when Mr. Perfect’s gonna show his stripes to you, and God have mercy on you when he does.”
“What happened to the baby?”
“I lost the damn baby.”
“How?”
“The usual way—I had a damn miscarriage.”
“Why did J.J. leave you?”
“Because he’s a phony and a liar, and when there was no baby, he figured there was no reason to be married to my ass.”
“No other reason?’
She laughed bitterly. “That’s not enough for you?”
Cheri stood up. “Did you get pregnant on purpose to trap J.J.?”
Tanyalee stood up, too. Both her fists were clenched against the front of her nubby knit skirt. Cheri watched the silver necklace tremble against her silk blouse.
“I hate you,” Tanyalee whispered. “I’ve always hated you.”
“I know you have. Why is that?”
“Because you’ve always thought you were so much better than me—smarter, classier, richer, prettier—and because you were so damn mean to me when we were kids! You were so nasty that Mama and Daddy had to leave town to get away from you! And they died doing it! They died trying to get away from you, Cheri! That’s why I hate your skinny little stuck-up princess ass.”
Those words felt like a knife being forced down her throat and into her chest. But Cheri had asked for the truth, and she’d gotten what she’d asked for, what she’d long suspected. And it all made perfect sense.
“So you trapped J.J. into marrying you to get back at me, is that it? You saw it as the ultimate revenge?” Cheri glared at her. “Answer me one thing—did you know J.J. went to Florida to tell me he’d always loved me?”
One corner of Tanyalee’s mouth curled up. “Sure I did.”
“And you chose that time to tell him about the baby?”
“Of course.”
“Thank you. I get it now.” Cheri sucked in a deep breath. “You trapped J.J. You set up that phone call for maximum damage to me. Then you made sure I saw J.J. as an a*shole of the first order so that I’d never speak to him again as long as I lived. All that, plus you were making sure Viv and Garland thought I was an ungrateful, stuck-up bitch. My, what a busy girl you’ve been, Tanyalee Marie!”
“I wish you were dead,” she whispered. “I wish—” The door to the back office opened and Wim stuck his perfectly coiffed male head into the reception area. “Ah! I thought I heard sisterly voices!”
“Hey, Wim,” Cheri said.
“Hey yourself, Cheri. Come to see one of the lofts? I can probably do a month-to-month for you.”
“Uh, no, thanks. Not today.” Cheri shot a look at her sister—red-faced, shaking, eyes alive with hate.
“She was just leaving,” Tanyalee said, turning to Wim with a smile and a flip of her eyelashes.
“Just one more thing, if you don’t mind.” Cheri reached for her bag and flung it on to her shoulder. “I’m hosting a party for Granddaddy’s eightieth birthday in a couple weeks at the lake house. Viv will be sending y’all an invitation.”
“How perfectly lovely,” Tanyalee said, her words sticky-sweet and her eyes dagger-sharp. “Thanks so much for stopping by. Y’all have a good day.”