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Authors: Penny Watson

Apples Should Be Red (4 page)

BOOK: Apples Should Be Red
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“Is that what you did when Alberta died?”

“No, Alberta… Well, that was different. She’d been sick for months. It was like she didn’t even exist. Didn’t talk. I didn’t have any animosity toward her. Just felt bad at the end. For her suffering.”

Bev focused on her breathing. She did not want to hyperventilate in front of this man. “And you think I had animosity toward my husband? Is that what you think? Not, I might add, that it’s any of your business. And it’s extremely poor manners to discuss this at the dinner table.”

“You wanna talk about it on the porch?” Tom kept a straight face, but she knew he was laughing inside.

“I don’t want to talk about it at all.”

“Because your late husband was such a bastard? Treated you like crap for almost forty years? I’d wanna talk about it. I’d take the pearls and chuck them right into the chicken shit pile. He didn’t deserve you. You should have—”

“Enough!” She was shaking. She jerked up from the table and knocked over her chair. “You.” Deep breath. “You.” Black stars dotted her vision. Her legs began to crumble.

She closed her eyes as Tom’s arms wrapped around her. “Take a nice even breath, Bev. No use getting so worked up about the motherfucker. I’m just giving you shit.” Tears leaked down the sides of her face. Tom’s arms were strangely comforting. He smelled like sweat and oil. His whiskers tickled the side of her face. “Better?”

Her eyes fluttered open. “Yes. Please pardon my overreaction.”

“There’s nothing to be—”

“If you’ll excuse me, I’d like to get ready for bed.”

Tom sighed. “I’ll get you some fresh sheets.”

His gaze, icy blue, searched her face. She stared back, unblinking.

Fifteen minutes later she put on her nightgown.

She glanced at her reflection in the mirror over the dresser. Those fifty-one beads winked back, lustrous in the dim light. She ran her fingers over the gems. Each one soft. Luminous. Perfect.

Beverly removed the pearls and placed them in her travel case, snapping it shut in the silence.

 

T
his was his favorite time of day. Early morning. He perched his ass on the edge of the porch steps and sipped a cup of coffee. Instant. When the kids visited, they pulled out his coffee maker and brewed up something gourmet. He knew Bev was a tea-drinker, so she wouldn’t care.

He’d pushed her too far last night.

Once he’d been at a hotel job, working on a renovation project, and he’d seen Roger. Bev’s late husband had reminded him of a weasel. Long narrow nose, weak chin, pasty white and pudding-soft. The woman giggling in his ear hadn’t been much better. She was stuffed into a tight red dress like a slutty sausage, and her grating laugh had echoed off the walls of the lobby. Roger had lipstick stains on his shirt collar and a tent in the front of his polyester pants. Tom had made sure he wasn’t seen. He had no interest in that bullshit melodrama. Hell, as far as he knew, Bev knew all about it.

If he’d had Roger as a spouse, the first thing he would have done after the douchebag croaked would be to paint the house neon fucking orange. Then he’d rip out all the perfect little flowers lined up like toy soldiers in the front yard. Sell the BMW, get a convertible. Chuck the librarian ensemble, dress in ratty jeans. Jump in the car. Live it up. Travel.

But Bev was still in that house, still immaculate as always. Same clothes, same tight bun. Same repressed personality. Just once he would like her to explode like a motherfucking volcano and cuss him out. Say something honest. He’d like to pop her like a boil and watch the bubbling pus leak out. No doubt about it, Bev was filled with pus. Roger had made sure of that.

He usually got a kick out of busting her chops. But last night…last night the look she’d given him lacked the haughty attitude she usually wrapped around her like a shield. That look was vulnerable. It made him feel sort of sick to his stomach, jabbing her when she didn’t fight back.

That sure took the fun out of the game.

Tom wasn’t going to deal with the inexplicable sexual chemistry that had reared up when he touched her. She was clearly as shocked as he was. He’d bet a million motherfuckin’ dollars that Beverly Anderson had never had an orgasm in her life. Christ.

The porch door squeaked. “Tom?”

He turned to see Bev’s shadowy figure through the screen. “Come on out on the stoop. Get yourself a cup of tea.”

“I already did.” She clasped the tea like a lifeline.

“You look like a nun. Is that what nuns wear to bed?”

Bev graced him with a small smile. He noted her puffy eyes, but the smile seemed genuine.

“I don’t know what nuns wear to bed, Tom. But this is a perfectly respectable bathrobe and slippers.” She glanced at his ratty T-shirt and jeans. “You’re one to talk about wardrobe choices.”

“I’m comfortable. Got no one to impress.”

She stepped onto the porch, clutching the tea so tightly he was scared she’d shatter the mug.

“Take a load off, Bev. Sit on the stoop and watch the world go by. Let’s see what my neighbors are up to this morning.”

She hesitated. “I’ll sit on the rocker…”

“No, sit on the stoop.”

“Why are you so bossy?”

“Why are you so stubborn?”

Bev barked out a laugh. “Me? Me stubborn? You are the most stubborn man I’ve—”

“It’s not the same thing,” he said. “The rocker. There’s something about sitting on the stoop. It’s just better. Try it.”

“I’m too old. I don’t think my knees can take it.”

“For Christ’s sake, Bev. You’re not that old. Late fifties isn’t old. Ninety-five is old. I’m sixty-two and still sprightly.”

She refused to make eye contact with him.

“I’ll help you. I promise.” Tom had no freaking idea why he was so damned insistent Bev sit on the stoop, but for some reason it seemed important. He stood up and held out his hand to her. “Come on.”

She stared at his hand for a good sixty seconds. Neither one of them moved. Finally she let go of the mug and reached for him.

Her hands were soft, her nails perfect. Her pale little fingers got lost inside his dark leathery mitt. He tugged. “Come on.”

She pursed her lips but followed him. He led her to the third step down, and they both sat. Bev took a minute to wrap her robe securely around her. Two fuzzy slippers lined up next to each other below the hem of her pink nightgown.

“Now we watch.”

Bev looked amused. “What exactly are we watching, and why do we need to do it
here
instead of on the perfectly lovely rockers that look as though they have never been used?”

He pulled out a cigarette and lit it. “The teenagers down the street have been sneaking out all the time. I’m waiting to see when the parents will catch on. If ever.” He pointed his cigarette at the dingy Victorian across from him. “Mrs. Martin lives there. She’s a sanctimonious prig. And she’s having an affair with her Mexican gardener. Thinks no one notices, but I do.” He smirked. “A couple of hippy professors live on the corner. I think they’re swingers. Lots of sexy young couples coming and going. Probably smoking pot and having orgies. Got some new folks moving in next door, too. Should be interesting to see what they’re up to.”

“I know what you’re trying to do.”

“Hmm.”

“It’s not going to work.”

“Hmm.”

“You’re trying to embarrass me. You love to make me uncomfortable. See if you can make me squirm. Don’t you have anything better to do?”

Tom ignored her. “Look. There. Down the street. See that kid sliding down the porch roof?”

Bev rolled her eyes, but she complied. They watched the kid contemplate the best way to jump off the two-story roof onto the lawn below. Tom figured the boy was missing quite a few brain cells after smoking drugs every day after school for years.

“You don’t think he’s going to—”

“Jump? Yep. I think he is.”

Bev looked startled. “Dear Lord! He’s going to break his leg!”

“Yep. Probably will.” Tom ashed on the weeds growing in front of the porch.

The boy attempted to crawl down the rickety trellis on the side of the house.

Bev started to laugh. “Oh my God. That looks like a climbing rose. It’s covered with huge thorns. That boy is going to be covered with scratches.”

The kid jumped. His foot got caught in the trellis, and he took the whole thing down with him. It made an enormous crash and the idiot started screaming bloody murder.

Bev choked. “Tom. Tom. Are we going to—”

“Nope.”

“But…”

“…help…”

“Nope.” He turned to Bev. “You’re not quite grasping this whole sitting-on-the-stoop thing. We sit. And we watch. We don’t get involved.”

They could hear the boy bawling down the street. What a loser.

“Oh. My. Goodness.” Bev’s eyes were riveted on his next door neighbor’s upstairs window.

“That…that…that man…”

Tom snorted, then started to laugh. He finished off with a hacking fit. It took him a couple of moments to catch his breath.

“You’re amused, Mr. Jenkins.”

“I see you’ve discovered Mr. DiBenedetto.”

“The naked man next door? Yes. You have a very colorful neighborhood.”

“Everyone has a colorful neighborhood, Bev. You just gotta look for the colors.”

He glanced over at her and made a decision. “Do you have any normal clothes with you?”

“Normal? All of my clothes…”

“Not fancy. Regular clothes. If you’re weeding your garden at home, what do you wear?”

“I have dungarees, gardening clogs, and an old T-shirt with an apron…”

“Do you have any of those clothes here?”

“As a matter of fact, I did bring my casual clothes. I thought I could help you in the garden.” She paused. “If you wanted my help.”

“I want your help.”

Goddamn if her eyes didn’t light right up. Chocolate brown eyes, like a motherfucking puppy dog.

He was screwed.

He stood up and offered her a helping hand. She grasped his fingers and stood, slowly. Her knees were trouble, he could tell.

“Go change into your jeans.” He took a last puff on his cigarette and threw it into a clay pot filled with water next to the steps. “And cut your nails. You can’t work on the garden with nails like that.”

“I wear gardening gloves…”

“Nope. You can’t feel the soil with gloves on. Cut your nails.”

“Tom!”

“Don’t fight with me, woman. And don’t bother with all the makeup and perfume and that god-awful lip gloss. You’ll attract every freakin’ bug in the state of California. Got it?”

“You don’t like my lip gloss?” Her brow furrowed.

“No. You don’t need that shit. Your lips look fine just the way they are.”

She was staring at him like she’d never seen him before.

“I’ll meet you in the garden in fifteen minutes.”

“Tom…”

“What?”

“Why do you just watch? On the stoop? Don’t you ever speak to you neighbors? It seems…”

Tom raised an eyebrow. “What?” he snapped.

Bev shook her head. “Just seems antisocial. Watching and never speaking to any of them.”

“Got nothing to say to them. They’re busy with their lives. I’m busy with my life. Most of them are a bunch of idiots anyway.”

“I remember, when Alberta was alive, you had cookouts in the backyard, and she always had that cookie exchange at Christmas—”

“Yeah, well, that was Alberta. She liked to chitchat with the neighbors and make Ritz cracker snacks. I don’t do that shit.”

Bev was quiet for a moment, then nodded. “I’ll get changed.”

Tom reached for another cigarette. So she thought he was antisocial. Well, she was right. He was antisocial. Most folks weren’t worth the trouble.

He needed to take his morning dump.

And then he was going to heartily enjoy mussing up Mrs. Anderson.

Bev gingerly stepped on the edge of the garden plot, trying not to sink into a pile of fertilizer. She could just imagine the feel of chicken poop compost squishing into her gardening clogs.

She shuddered.

“Well, that’s better.” Tom surveyed her from head to toe and nodded approvingly. He struck a match and lit his ubiquitous cigarette. “Except for one thing.” He dropped a pair of enormous boots on the ground. “Change into these. You don’t want chicken shit on your feet.”

BOOK: Apples Should Be Red
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