Everything is Everything Book 2 (11 page)

BOOK: Everything is Everything Book 2
3.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter Eight

 

Two days after the fight in Findlater Gardens, Donald Jerome Miller was taken off life support. He had never regained consciousness and doctors had advised that even if he did wake up, he’d be little more than a vegetable.

Donald’s parents’ had made the decision to remove him from life support and Scott Brian Tremont was charged with reckless homicide.

Later, Vanessa would wonder if Scotty had expected it. When the knocking on the door woke them, Scotty had simply paused in bed and then he got up, throwing on a t-shirt as he wordlessly headed for the front door. She was in a state of confusion asking questions and scurrying to follow after him.

And then the police were flooding into the apartment and she was crying and trying to explain that he hadn’t done anything wrong. Scotty didn’t say a word as they handcuffed him and read him his rights.

It wasn’t until she began sobbing uncontrollably that he looked at her. He didn’t look afraid and his calm expression began to effect her, calming her as well.

“Call Phonso. I want you to stay at Miss Gloria’s. I don’t want you here alone.”

“But—“

“He’ll know what to do, baby. Do what I say, okay?”

“Okay,” she swallowed back her tears but more flooded from her eyes and trailed down her face.

As the police led him out the door, Vanessa wanted to scream. This could not be happening. Scotty called over his shoulder.

“I’ll call you as soon as I can, Vanessa. I love you, babe!”

“Scotty …” She wanted to beg for him not to go. “I love you too!”

This was too much. She would not survive this. Scotty could not go to jail.

 

 

Phonso was not nearly as calm as Scotty had been, but he was a long shot from Vanessa’s hysteria. When she refused to go to Miss Gloria’s because she might miss Scotty’s phone call, Phonso called his sister Beady to come to the apartment to sit with her. Phonso knew nothing about calming hysterical women and besides, he had important business to take care of; he and G would need to pull together the bail money.

Phonso wasted no time leaving Vanessa as soon as Beady showed up.

“Vanessa,” he said as he left the apartment.

She looked at him from where she was seated on the couch holding the cordless phone in her hand so that she could answer it the second he called.

“They almost have to do this, okay? When they bring charges against someone then they get arrested, they make bail, and then they get a court date. And when that happens we will get this straightened out.”

Vanessa watched him hopefully and Beady sat down on the couch next to her and stroked her hair.

“Trust Phonso,” she said. “He knows what to do. My brothers have been arrested enough times to know this inside and out.”

Phonso closed the door and Vanessa turned her hopeful expression to Beady. People said they looked alike but that wasn’t true. They were just two young multi-racial women and to some that meant that they resembled each other.

Beady was light skinned with light colored eyes and golden hair, cut into a short boy cut. Her smaller stature held more voluptuous curves. Vanessa had a chocolate complexion; brown eyes and dark hair that cascaded down her back in exotic waves. She was tall, and her well-proportioned body was neither too thick nor too thin—though she was convinced of the latter.

Both girls were nearly the same age but Beady seemed much older, and if age could be a measure of ones experience than Beady was, in fact, a great deal older than Vanessa.

“He was just defending me,” Vanessa explained. “Why should he be arrested for that?” Her expression of confusion broke Beady’s heart. Vanessa was so gentle. Some women would just curse their men for being arrested, but Vanessa hurt for Scotty.

Beady hadn’t gotten to know Vanessa over the last few months, nor when they were children. But she liked Vanessa for her innocence. Somehow she was right for Scotty. He was far from innocent but he wasn’t bad. Beady couldn’t say that about herself.

“It’ll be alright. If he can get his bail set by the end of the day he’ll be out tonight. If not, he’ll have to spend the weekend in jail but he’ll be out Monday.”

“What?” The weekend?

Beady shrugged. “Its early so lets keep our fingers crossed.”

Hours later, the phone still hadn’t rang and Vanessa was still holding it.

“You should go back to school-“ Vanessa began.

“I’d like to stay, if you don’t mind. I know Scotty will call you first and I’d like to be here when he does.”

Vanessa nodded her consent. She didn’t mind the company and Beady looked enough like Scotty that being close to the pretty girl was helpful.

At noon Beady made them lunch of canned soup.

“Wow, there’s food in here. This must be your doing.” Beady called as she stirred the pot of simmering soup.

“When I first moved in he had ice and salt and pepper. That’s all.”

Beady laughed.

Vanessa pulled bowls from the cabinet and set them on the table, just as she would now be doing for her and Scotty if he was here. She sighed and decided that next time she cried would be with no witnesses. She couldn’t promise that she wouldn’t do it any time soon but she promised herself that no one would see her doing it. Not anymore.

“What was it like having Scotty as a brother?” Vanessa asked as she stirred her tomato soup and then ate a spoonful.

Beady smiled and Vanessa saw sadness in her expression. She remembered that she was not the only one affected by Scotty’s arrest.

“He was … bossy.”

Vanessa threw her head back and laughed. “Oh, really? Even then?”

Beady laughed too. “Scotty’s not that much older than me. So technically since I’m a girl I’m the oldest.”

Vanessa grinned at that.

“Come on Vanessa. For the most part that is true, don’t you agree?”

Vanessa nodded her agreement.

“But with Scotty he’s always been this age. Do you ever notice that he’s not afraid of anything?”

A shadow fell across Vanessa’s face. She’d seen fear on his face twice; once just a day ago when she screamed for him from the bedroom and then again when they were younger, after Tino had touched her.

Vanessa touched her lips. She was Scotty’s Kryptonite. Without her in his life, none of this would be happening to him. He didn’t react the way he normally would when it had to do with her.

Beady touched her hand.

“Are you okay, Vanessa?”

Vanessa forced a smile and then nodded quickly. “Tell me some stories about him.”

The girls laughed and talked about Scotty and Winton Terrace and people they knew and Vanessa decided that she and Beady would be more than just sister-in-laws but very good friends.

She thought fleetingly of Jalissa but that sent an unwanted jolt to her gut so she put thoughts of her cousin out of her mind.

The phone call from Scotty came at nearly 2 pm. Vanessa had finally placed the phone down and she dashed into the living room for it, answering on the second ring.

“Hello?!”

“Hi babe. It’s me.”

“Oh Scotty! Are you okay?”

“I’m fine, babe,” she thought he sounded tired. “How are you?”

“I’m okay. Beady’s here with me and Phonso and G are getting together your bail money.”

There was no response for a moment. “Good that Beady’s there. But I want you to move in with Miss Gloria like we planned-”

“No, not until you’re out on bail. I’m staying in our house, Scotty.” It had his smells and his essence. She wouldn’t move in with Miss Gloria without him.

“Babe, listen to me, okay? I just had a murder bond hearing.”

The word murder almost caused Vanessa to hyperventilate. Murder—not murder because-

“The bond is too high-“

“But we get it back, right?” She interrupted. “That’s how bail works, you just have to pay a percent and then you get it back.”

“Yes,” he replied. “But no one can afford to be out money like that for as long as it might take to go to trial.”

Vanessa didn’t speak. She was in too much shock. She felt Beady take the phone.

“Scotty, you need to bring your ass home and stop playing super man. I understand that! We can get a bail bondsman-“ Beady was quiet as she listened to her brother. She handed the phone back to Vanessa without saying another word.

“Scotty, it’s me,” she said quietly. “What about the bail bondsman?”

“He’ll take ten percent. That’s ten thousand dollars. That’s almost all the money I got and that’s tied up already.”

“But why is it so high? It’s not m-murder. You were defending me. Isn’t that involuntary manslaughter or something?”

“Shhh, calm down. Don’t cry-“

“Don’t tell me not to cry, damnit! I want you home and you’re telling me you’re not accepting bail-“

“They pulled my records.”

Her breath froze in her chest.

“What?”

“My records were unsealed because of the nature of the crime. That’s why. Babe, I have to go. Vanessa I love you. And I’m sorry. I’m so sorry baby.”

“Wait, Scotty I love you. I’m sorry. I should have never went to the party-“

The phone went dead.

She was shaking and holding the phone in her lap. Beady took it and hung it up.

“He’s so freaking hard headed,” Beady growled. “Phonso can get ten grand for the bond-“

Vanessa met Beady’s eyes with her own dry ones. She had kept her promise to herself not to cry.

“I can get five thousand from my grandmother.”

Chapter Nine

 

She couldn’t call her grandmother over the phone for this. She would have to talk to her face to face. Her grandma had offered her five thousand for her birthday and Vanessa had not wanted anything to do with it. The five thousand dollars was supposed to appease her, to buy her grandmother some forgiveness for the lies and disappointment.

If not for Scotty she wouldn’t accept it, but she had to bail him out of jail.

Vanessa carefully applied makeup to cover the bruising beneath her eye. She still wore sunglasses and then she drove Scotty’s car to her grandma’s house.

This time when she knocked she didn’t automatically let herself in as she always had in the past.

Berth Mae answered the door and looked at Vanessa in surprise before allowing her into the house.

“Hi Grandma.”

“Hello Vanessa. Come in.”

They walked into the kitchen without thought. That had always been the place for discussions and that had not changed.

Vanessa took her usual seat at the neat dining room table. She was oddly comforted by the fact that the lace tablecloth was still in its rightful place along with a bowl of fruit and the day’s mail.

The familiar smells of her grandmother’s kitchen brought back a yearning for simplicity. But she wasn’t a little girl anymore and simplicity was a thing of the past.

“Do you want something to drink?” Her grandmother asked while going to the refrigerator.

“Yes, ma’am.” Her grandmother returned with two glasses of iced tea. As Vanessa drank she thought it was the best iced tea ever made.

“Grandma. I want to apologize for how we left things.” There, Vanessa thought. She wasn’t apologizing for their terrible argument because she didn’t feel as if she had done anything wrong. But her grandmother would want an apology.

Bertha Mae looked at the engagement ring on her grand daughter’s finger.

“Is it true that you’re engaged to that man?”

Well at least she hadn’t said, ‘that white man’.

“Yes. His name is Scotty Tremont. He used to be something like my boyfriend back when I lived in Winton Terrace. “ The innocence of those words brought a half smile to Vanessa’s lips. They had been so sweet then, too afraid to actually say that they were boyfriend and girlfriend, yet hanging out with each other at every available second. She’d never even kissed him until she’d come back to the projects for the summer. Things had moved fast but in the scope of their love, not fast enough.

“How long have you been seeing this boy?”

“I told you. Since we were kids.”

Her grandmother narrowed her eyes. “How long have you been seeing him Vanessa?”

“Oh. We didn’t see each other again until this summer.”

“And now you’re engaged?”

Vanessa didn’t flinch from her grandmother’s scrutiny. “I love Scotty. I don’t have a doubt in the world about that.

“Love and politics; two things you can never debate. So I won’t.” Her grandmother stated. She surprised Vanessa when she reached forward and gently removed Vanessa’s sunglasses.

Vanessa hoped that her makeup was good enough but saw that it wasn’t when her grandmother’s eyes grew sad.

Vanessa shook her head rapidly. “Scotty didn’t do that-“

“I know.”

“What?” Vanessa stopped and stared at her grandmother in confusion.

“I know he didn’t. He’s the man that’s been in the news. He beat a man to death with his fists—after the man had tried to rape his fiancée.”

Vanessa sucked in a deep breath. They had been in the news?

“Oh Vanessa, what have you been into, baby girl? They said it happened at a drug house.”

She frowned at her grandmother. The news knew of that? Then that meant that they had busted Phonso and G’s operation. Oh no. She hadn’t asked Phonso about that.

Vanessa rubbed her hands through her hair. “Grandma, I know it sounds bad but there is a reasonable explanation.”

“You can tell yourself that Vanessa. But this is just like love and politics—you won’t change my mind. You are in to things that you don’t need to be involved with. You need to move back home.”

Vanessa closed her eyes. “I’d like to get the birthday money you said you’d give me.”

Vanessa heard her grandmother’s chair scrape the floor as the woman rose. When she looked up her grandmother was holding an envelope in her hands. She handed it to Vanessa who accepted it in surprise. She had expected an argument.

Vanessa opened the envelope and saw hundred dollar bills. More money than she’d ever been around in her entire life.

“Grandma, thank you.”

“You’re going to use that money to bail out that man, aren’t you?”

“That man is my fiancée. And he didn’t do anything wrong. He saved me. Doesn’t that mean anything to you?”

Her grandmother’s expression softened. “Vanessa, baby. Open your eyes. That man is going to drag you down into the gutter with him.”

Oh my God. Her grandmother had just quoted a scene from the movie Sparkle, her favorite movie. Had grandma watched it? She didn’t think so. But why would her grandmother use almost the exact quote?

In the movie Sister had been dating a drug dealer and her mother had come in and seen that he’d been hitting her and feeding her coke. Her mother had said to sister exactly what grandma was now saying to her. And in Sister’s case, her man had done exactly that—dragged her down into the gutter.

Vanessa shoved the money into her purse along with her sunglasses and she came to her feet.

“Grandma, I am sorry for how things turned out. But my future is not here, living with you. I’m sorry.”

She hurried out of the house.

“Vanessa,”

She paused at the door but didn’t turn around.

“I love you,” grandma said. “I’m sorry, too. A woman has to live the life that she sees for herself. Right or wrong.”

Vanessa didn’t know what to say so she said nothing and left.

 

 

As soon as she got back to the apartment Vanessa paged Phonso. He called her back in less than a minute.

“Phonso, I need to talk to you. Can you come over?”

“Yeah. You okay?”

“Yeah, everything’s good.” She’d sent Beady home and the apartment felt too quiet, but hopefully that wouldn’t last much longer.

“I’m on my way.”

When he arrived he looked tired. Neither had slept since the arrest and the strain was evident in them both.

“Phonso did you and G’s place get busted?”

He gave her a surprised look.

“Did it?” she insisted.

“Yeah. When the ambulance came to get that fool his pockets were filled with crack cocaine. The cops came back but we’d already gotten rid of all the stuff. But they all know G, they know our crew and now with all this, we’re being watched.” Phonso made air quotes when he said the word ‘watched’.

Vanessa digested the information. “Scotty said that we’d have to come up with ten grand and that it would hurt you guys to do that. Is it true?”

“We can get the money,” was Phonso’s response.

“I have five grand.” Vanessa stated with eyes lit up like Christmas lights.

“Where did you get five grand?” Phonso’s voice sounded suspicious.

“From my grandmother. It’s my birthday money.”

“You have a fine grandmother.” He said with a grin. “Come on little sister. I’m going to show you how to post bail.”

Vanessa didn’t bother to correct that she was older. She was just happy to follow him.

To Vanessa, jail looked like the waiting room of some government office, maybe the BMV.

Security doors opened into an expansive space filled with cheap plastic seats and anxious people waiting to pick up their loved ones. The focal point was a reception desk manned by two bored uniform women. Faded colored stripes on the floor led to different metal doors that looked mysterious.

When Scotty stepped out from behind one of those doors holding a bag containing his shorts and wearing grey slacks that were too large, Vanessa thought he was the best sight in the world. She ran to him and hugged him. He smelled terrible and she didn’t care. His stubble scratched her cheek and she didn’t notice, only that his strong arms held her close with his blond hair falling in wisps along her neck.

He pulled back and looked at her, a soft smile on his haggard face.

“You don’t do a thing I tell you, do you?”

She laughed and brushed away happy tears.

He slapped hands with his brother and they hugged briefly.

“Lets get out of here.” Scotty said.

 

 

Back home, Scotty would do nothing before he went into the bathroom and spent a long time getting clean.

It was almost midnight but Vanessa asked him what he wanted to eat and he said anything. So now she was making them fried bologna sandwiches. When he stepped out of the bathroom dressed in athletic shorts and nothing else Vanessa flung herself into his arms and held him, loving the safety of being with him, loving him with so much force that she didn’t know if her body was capable of holding all the love she felt for him.

The tension flowed from Scotty at the feel of Vanessa in his arms. He held her tightly against him and then kissed the top of her head, which smelled faintly of sweat and flowers. He closed his eyes and relished the feel and the smell of her.

“Are you mad at me?” He heard her whisper.

He looked down and tilted her chin up so that she was looking at him.

“Why would I be mad at you?”

“For not doing what you asked.”

He shook his head. “Vanessa, you are unpredictable. Sometimes I don’t know how to deal with it. But it doesn’t make me mad.”

“I want you Scotty,” she said seriously. “I want you as much as we can be with each other.“ She didn’t need to speak their unspoken fear. Vanessa refused to entertain any thoughts that Scotty could be taken from her permanently. She pressed herself against him, holding him as if he was a lifeline.

Scotty began to swell with need. It had been days since he’d loved his woman. But circumstances were not going to keep that from happening now. He held her in place and then rubbed his erection against her until she parted her legs making contact with her hot core easily accessible.

Other books

Exceptional Merit by Norris, George
Tournament of Hearts by Stark, Alyssa
The Crow of Connemara by Stephen Leigh
The Redeemer by Linda Rios Brook
Premonitions by Jamie Schultz
The Alpha's Onyx & Fire by Jess Buffett
Crash Pad by Whitley Gray