Read Early Spring 01 Broken Flower Online

Authors: V. C. Andrews

Tags: #Horror

Early Spring 01 Broken Flower

BOOK: Early Spring 01 Broken Flower
9.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Broken Flower

Early Spring #1
V.C. Andrews
Copyright (c) 2006
ISBN: 0743493885
.

Letter to the Reader
.
It was not my idea to write
all
this down and

tell this story. It was my brother Ian's.

Not long ago, when we saw each other after some time apart, he said, "When people reach our age. Jordan, they always try to make sense of themselves, their lives. They look back and they're really not sure anymore what was real and what was not. They are shocked to discover that the way they saw a major event in their life is not necessarily the way others who were there saw it, and they begin to wonder if their whole life has been a dream."

This is an attempt to discover if mine was. .
Jordan March

Prologue
.

My mother didn't discover what was happening to me until just before my seventh birthday.
At the time I was in second grade and old enough by then to run my own bath and take care of my personal needs without her telling me when to do so or standing over me. I was proud of my
independence and how I could successfully imitate my mother by putting just the right amount of bath oil into my tub, scrubbing my body with the same sort of soft brush she used, and laying out my clothing or pajamas neatly on the bathroom table, my fluffy pink slippers waiting eagerly below like two loyal servants.
Afterward.
I
brushed my hair exactly fifty strokes on both sides as she did hers, parted my face with some of her special skin cream, and went to bed. Most of the time she was there to kiss me good night, but I was always under my blanket by then, snuggling in anticipation of opening the doorway to dream magic, as I called it.
That fateful day, however, my mother stepped into my bathroom after I had prepared my bath and had just sat in the water.
"You're such a good girl, Jordan," she said as she came through the door.
She barely glanced at me in the tub before going to the medicine cabinet to search for something. However, when she closed the cabinet door, which was a mirror, she stood there staring into it as if she were looking at a television set and saw an incredible event taking place, like the events on one of those science or history channels my brilliant, thirteen-yearold brother. Ian, liked to watch. The cabinet mirror reflected me in my bath.
She spun around, blinked rapidly, and then very slowly approached the tub. The warm water was spiced with her wonderfully lilac-scented bath oil that I loved to suds up around me with the bubbles touching my chin. I felt dainty and feminine and anticipated her usual compliments about how grownup I had become.
"Sit up, Jordan," she ordered instead.
Confused at her sudden harsh tone. I immediately sat straight, thinking she was criticizing my slouching. She always tried to correct my posture or my manners before my grandmother Emma had a chance to do it, because she believed that whenever Grandmother Emma criticized either me or my brother. Ian, she was really criticizing her for not bringing us up properly.
The bubbles popped and the foam fell away from my upper body.
She gaped and then slowly squatted beside the tab and reached
over to touch my chest. "I don't believe this.
You're.. .developing breasts!" she said. "You have buds!"
Her face contorted, her lips twisting, her eyes seeming to bulge. She shook her head to deny what she saw.
I looked down at myself. I had felt the development, but I hadn't thought anything of it. Somewhere in the back of my mind. I had stuffed a mental note to ask my mother about it one day, but I had forgotten. There was nothing painful or unpleasant about it.
"How could I have not noticed this? How long has this been going on?" she asked.
Lately, she had rarely been present when I dressed or undressed. My clothing for school was always decided the evening before and if Mama didn't set it out for me. Nancy, the maid, did.
I shrugged. I really hadn't marked the calendar on the desk in my room and couldn't even take a good guess. One day I noticed it and the next day I didn't. I wasn't at all like Ian, who took notes about everything as if he were the secretary for human history.
"A while," I said.
As she continued to stare at me. I could set another thought
tightening the corners of her eyes and stretching her lips. She looked even more fearful and brought her hand to the base of her throat.
"Stand up,' she said. "Stand up, Jordan!" she shouted when I didn't move quickly enough.
I did so and her eyes, which were already wide and surprised, widened even more.
"You're getting. ..you have pubic hair!" she cried, as if
I
had been hiding something behind her back or had performed a magic act right before her eyes.
I looked down and once again shrugged. I didn't know what it was called, but I knew she had it, just more of it. Why shouldn't I be getting it, too? After all, she always told me girls were just little women.
"How could I have not noticed it? My God, she said, and I remember she actually flopped back on her rear and sat there on the tiled bathroom floor staring at me. She grimaced in pain and reached out to clutch the side of the tub. She looked like she couldn't breathe.
"Mama?" I said. I could feel my throat tightening. Whatever frightened her was nothing compared to how she was frightening me.
She shook her head and put her hand up like a traffic cop, stopping all the crackling and buzzing going on around us.
"I've got to think. I've got to think,' she chanted. Then she looked at me again, and again shook her head. "You're not even seven years old yet, Jordan. This can't be happening. It cannot!" she insisted.
She slapped her hands together as if she was really a magician and could make it all disappear. I looked down at myself almost with the expectation that I would see that it had, and then I looked at her again. From the way her face contorted and her lips quavered. I thought she was going to burst into tears, but she simply stared and bit down on her lower lip to stop the trembling.
"Can I sit in the water?" I asked, embracing myself. I was getting cold and beginning to tremble, too.
"What? Yes, yes. Sit, sit," she said. "Where has my head been? How could I miss this? What if someone else had discovered it first?"
There was no question about whom she was thinking. That put a new idea in her head.
Suddenly, she looked at the open bathroom door and rose to close it quickly. I'll never forget how she looked back at me. It was as if I had turned into something or someone other than her own daughter.
Perhaps I had.
I do remember thinking that I was no longer who she thought I was.
I had no idea how long it would take to find out who I would become.

1 Too Young
.

My mother grasped my shoulders and even shook me as she spoke. "Never, never let
Grandmother Emma see you without any clothes on. Jordan," she warned in a loud whisper. "Don't tell Ian and don't even tell Daddy about this yet. He's likely to slip and say something. Your grand-mother watches every little thing we do in this house as it is," my mother added, and let me go.

Why would all this anger my grandmother Emma? I wondered. If she did find out, would she tell us to leave her house? Would Daddy be just as angry?

Mama read my fears in my eyes. "I'm sorry, honey. I didn't mean to frighten you. It's not your fault. Everything that is happening to you is just happening to you too early," she said in a softer voice. "It's too much of a surprise. It's just better if no one else knows for now, okay?"

"Okay, Mama," I said. She looked relieved, but
I
was still trembling. She helped me into my pajamas and into bed.

Suddenly, something else occurred to her and she went to the dirty clothes hamper in my bathroom. I had no idea what she was doing, but she reached in and began pulling out my socks, panties, and shirts. She held up my panties and looked closely
at them before tossing it all back into the hamper. "What are you looking for, Mama?" I asked her.

She thought a moment and then she sat on my bed and took my hand into hers. "You're way too young for this conversation, Jordan. I don't even know how to begin it with you."

"What conversation?"
"The conversation my mother had with me when my body started to change, but you're not even seven and I was nearly thirteen before she decided
I
had to have the most important mother-daughter talk with her. Something very dramatic happened to me first."
"What?"
I
asked, my eyes wide with expectation.
"I
menstruated,"
"What?"
I
scrunched my nose. It didn't sound very good or like any fun.
She was quiet.
I
saw her eves glisten. She was holding back tears. Why?
"I'm not going to have this conversation with you," she suddenly decided firmly, and stood up. "This is just not happening. We don't need to talk about this yet. Remember my
warning, however," she added, nodding at me. "Don't let anyone else see you naked. Especially Grandmother Emma," she emphasized.
My mother hated the idea of our moving in to live with Grandmother Emma. I think the saddest day in her life was the day we walked out of our home and came here. In the begriming she would often forget, make wrong turns and head toward our old home, not remembering it was no longer her house until she nearly pulled into the driveway. On a few occasions, I was the one who reminded her. She'd stop and look and say, "Oh," as if she had just woken from a dream.
I had lived there five and a half of my six years and eleven months. Ian was just a little more than eight when my parents bought the house. Before that they had been living in one of my grandfather's apartment buildings. In those days there was supposedly a great deal of hope and promise. After all, how could my father not succeed? He was the son of Blake and Emma March, and my grandfather Blake March had been a vice president of Bethlehem Steel during its heyday, what Grandmother Emma called the Golden Age, a time when Bethlehem Steel supplied armies, built cities, and had a fleet of twentysix ships. If she had told me about it once, she had told me a hundred different times.
"You have to understand how important it was," she always said as an introduction. "Bethlehem Steel was the Panama Canal's second-best customer. Lunch each day for the upper management of which your grandfather was an essential part was held at the headquarters building along Third Street and was equivalent to a four-star dining experience. Each department had its own dining room on the fifth floor and each executive enjoyed a five-course meal."
Once Grandmother Emma permitted me to look at her albums and
I
saw pictures of their lawn parties during the summer months. Other executives from Bethlehem Steel and their wives and children would be invited, as well as many of the area's leading businessmen, politicians, lawyers, and judges. There was music and all sorts of wonderful things to tat. She told us that in those days the champagne flowed like water. She pointed out Daddy when he was Ian's age, dressed in his suit and tie and looking like a perfect little gentleman, the heir to a kingdom of fortune and power.
My mother always said my father grew up spoiled. Whenever she accused him of it, he didn't deny it. In fact, he seemed proud of it, as proud as a prince. For most of his young life, he was attended by a nanny who was afraid of not pleasing him and losing her job. When he was school-age, he was enrolled in a private school and then a preparatory school before going to his first university. He flunked out of two colleges and never did get a degree. My grandfather eventually set him up in business by foreclosing on a supermarket, which was renamed March's Mart, in Bethlehem. It was expected that because the business now had the March name attached, it could be nothing but a success and the expectation was Daddy would eventually create a supermarket chain.
However. Daddy's supermarket business was always hanging by a thread, or as my grandmother Emma would often say, "Was always doing a tap dance on the edge of financial ruin." Our expenses grew and grew and our own home became too much to maintain. Since my seventy-two-year-old grandmother lived alone now in this grand house after my grandfather had died, she decided that it made no economic sense for us to live elsewhere. Economics reigned in our world the way religion might in other people's lives.
Mama always said, "For the Marches, the portfolio was the Bible, with the first commandment being 'Thou shalt not waste a penny."
Even so, my father never had much interest in being a businessman. He hired a general manager to run the market and was so uninvolved in the day-today activities that it came as a surprise to him to learn it was on the verge of bankruptcy. My grandfather invested twice in it to keep it alive and after his death, my grandmother gave my father some money, too, but in exchange, she forced us to sell our home and move in with her. Daddy was permitted to have assistant managers, but he had to become the general manager.
After that, Grandmother Emma took over our lives as if my parents were incapable of running their own personal financial affairs. ''Practice efficiencies and tighten your belts"' were the words we heard chanted around us those days. Once I heard Mama tell Daddy that Grandmother Emma had cash registers in every room in her house ringing up charges even for the air we breathed. I actually looked for them.
It didn't surprise me that my mother had complaints about Grandmother Emma. I don't think my mother and Grandmother Emma were ever fond of each other. According to what I overheard my mother say to my father, my grandmother actually tried to prevent their marriage. My mother came from what Grandmother Emma called "common people. My mother's father also had worked for Bethlehem Steel, but as a steelworker, a member of the union and not an executive. Both her parents had died, her father from a heart attack and her mother from a massive stroke. Mama always said it was stress that killed them both, whatever that meant.
My mother had an older brother, Uncle Orman, who was a carpenter and lived way off in Oregon where, according to what I was told, he scratched out a meager living, working only when he absolutely had to work. He was married to my aunt Ada, a girl he knew from high school, and they had three boys they named after the Beatles. Paul, my age. Ringo, a year younger, and John, two years younger, all of whom we had seen only once. They were invited to visit us but never came, which was something I think pleased Grandmother Emma.
"Your grandmother thinks your father went slumming when he dated me," Mama once told me. At the time. I didn't know what slumming meant exactly, but have since understood
it
to mean Grandmother thought he should have married someone as rich or at least nearly as rich as the Marches.
However, even though Grandmother Emma scrutinized us like an airport security officer when we entered a room. I didn't think it would be too difficult to keep my new secret from her. Since we had moved into her house, my grandmother had not once set foot in my room. She didn't even come over to our side of the house and said nothing about our living quarters except to warn my mother not to change a thing. She had set up imaginary boundaries so that Ian and I were discouraged from going into her side as well.
We were now living in what had once been the guest quarters in what everyone in our community called the March Mansion. It was a very large Queen Anne, an elaborate Victorian style house Grandmother Emma described as romantic even though it was, as she said, a product of the most unromantic era, the machine age. She often went into great detail about it and I was often called upon to parrot her descriptions for her friends.
The mansion had a free classic style with classical columns raised on stone piers, a Palladian window at the center of the second story, and dentil moldings. The house had nineteen rooms and nine bedrooms. Although a great deal had been added on and redone, the house was built in the early 1890s and was considered a historic Pennsylvania prop city. which was something my grandmother never wanted us to forget. Her lectures about it made me feel like
I
was living in a museum and could be sat down to take a spot quiz any moment of any day, which is what would happen if she asked me to recite about it to her friends.
Ian wouldn't mind being tested on the house. He could not only get a hundred every time, he could give my grandmother the quiz, not only about the house, but all the history surrounding it, even the history of her precious Bethlehem Steel Company.
Daddy's old bedroom was on my
.grandmother's side of the house, but we knew the door was kept locked. It was opened with what Ian called an old-fashioned skeleton key. Only Nancy, the maid, entered it once a month to dust and do the windows. I was always curious about it and longed to go into it and look at what had once belonged to him as a little boy. As far as I knew. Daddy didn't even go in there to relive a memory or find something he might have left from his younger days.
Mama told me this house was fall of secrets locked in closets and drawers. She said we were all better off keeping them that way. Opening them would be like opening Pandora's box, only instead of disease and illness, scandals would flutter all around us. I didn't know what scandals were exactly, but it was enough to keep me from opening any drawer or any closet not my own.
Ian's bedroom was next to mine but closer to our parents' bedroom, which was across the hall and down toward the south end of the house and property. Although they were originally meant to be guest rooms, all of our bedrooms were bigger than the bedrooms we had in our own house. Even the hallways in the March Mansion were wider, with ceilings higher than those in any home I had ever entered.
Along the walls were paintings my
grandparents had bought at auctions. There were pedestals with statuary they had acquired during their traveling and at estate sales. My grandmother was supposedly an expert when it came to spotting something of value that was underpriced. When she was asked about that once, she said, "If someone is stupid enough to sell it for that price, you should be wise enough to grab it up or else you would be just as stupid."
So many things in my grandmother's house once belonged to either other wealthy people who had bequeathed their valuables to younger people who didn't appreciate them or know their value, or wealthy people who had simply gone bankrupt and needed money desperately.
"One man's misfortune is usually another's good luck," Grandmother Emma said. "Be alert. Opportunity is often like a camera's flash. Miss it and it's gone forever."
She tossed her statements at us as if we were chickens clucking at her heels, waiting to be fed her wisdom or facts about the house and its contents. The truth was there was so much about it that I. even so young, thought was breathtaking, and I couldn't help being proud when other people complimented me on where I lived. Even my teacher, Mrs. Montgomery, who had been at Grandmother Emma's house once, made flattering comments, comments that caused me to be more conscious of its richness.
Some of the grand chandeliers hanging over the stairway, the hallways below, and the dining room came from Europe, and one was said to have once belonged to the king of Spain.
"The light that rains down on us now once fell on royalty," Grandmother Emma was fond of saving.
Did that mean we were magically turned into royalty, too, when we stood within its glow? She certainly acted as if she thought so. She walked and talked and made decisions like someone who expected it all to be written down as history. After all, the mansion was historic, why wasn't she?
No two rooms had the same style furniture. Ian and I were often given sermons about it so that we would fully appreciate how lucky we were to be living in the shadows of such elegance and culture. Everything, even the knobs on doors, had some significance and value. She made the house sound like a living thing.
"Each room in a house like this should be like a new novel," Grandmother Emma said. "Every piece should contribute to some sort of history and tell its own story, whether it be the saga of a grand family or a grand time."
Some of the pieces of furniture in the same room could have a different background and heritage, as well, whether it be a picture frame, a stool, or a bookcase.
The dining room had a table, chairs, and a buffet that was vintage nineteenth-century Italian and had once belonged to a cardinal. The sitting room, which was different from the living room, had a Victorian parlor settee, a Victorian gossip bench, and a Victorian swan fainting couch I loved to lie on when my grandmother was out and about and wouldn't see. The wood was mahogany and the material was a golden wheat brocade with a detached roll pillow.
All of her furniture, despite its age, looked brand new and there was always this terrible fear that either Ian or I would tear something or spill something on a piece and bring down the family fortune. Our own grand heritage and glory would be lost, for we were never to forget that this family once paraded through the Bethlehem community with great pomp and circumstance, our family crest flapping in the breeze.
There had often been overnight guests here and grand dinner parties during Grandmother Emma's Golden Age. She would describe them to us with an underlying bitter tone as if it was our fault she no longer had them. I knew she couldn't blame us for her not having guests anymore. There was still another guest bedroom downstairs and Daddy's old bedroom on her side, so there was plenty of room for someone to sleep here. She maintained a maid. Nancy, and a limousine driver named Felix, and a man named MacIntire whom everyone called Mac, to oversee the grounds. He lived just down the street, so it wasn't a question of extra work for her either. Money was certainly no problem, although I often heard my father complain that his mother held such a tight grip on the money faucet, there was barely a drip, drip, drip.
I didn't doubt that. Grandmother Emma was always criticizing my mother for being extravagant. I thought that was at least part of the reason she stopped going regularly to the beauty parlor and stopped buying herself new clothes. Like someone living on a fixed income, Grandmother Emma would complain' about the electric and the gas bills, too.
"If you would stay after your children and have them turn off lights when they are not necessary and close windows when we're heating the house, we wouldn't be throwing money out the window," she lectured. She threatened to fine us for every

BOOK: Early Spring 01 Broken Flower
9.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Shooting Elvis by Stuart Pawson
Cat's Lair by Christine Feehan
Long Slow Burn by Isabel Sharpe
Drury Lane Darling by Joan Smith
The Fiddler's Secret by Lois Walfrid Johnson
Dark Tendrils by Claude Lalumiere
Girl of My Dreams by Mandel, Morgan