My Soul to Keep (2 page)

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Authors: Melanie Wells

BOOK: My Soul to Keep
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I was shouting instructions, trying to herd them all into a reasonably straight, alphabetically ordered line, when my cell phone rang. Amid hoots from my charges—I’d confiscated cell phones from several conspirators who were plotting to interrupt the festivities with coordinated Pink Floyd ringtones—I hiked up my gown and fished in the pocket of my cutoffs, which, paired with my stilettos, made me look
like a streetwalker on a
Dukes of Hazzard
episode. I smiled sweetly and flipped open my phone.

“We’re here, Miss Dylan!” the caller shouted.

It was my little friend Christine Zocci, due to arrive from Chicago today to celebrate her sixth birthday with me.

“Did you know this airport is called Love?
Love, love, love,”
she sang.

“Where did you learn that song?”

“Everyone knows love, love, love,” she said, clearly disgusted with me. “It’s the Bees.”

“I think that’s Beatles, Punkin.”

“I don’t like beetles. I like bees.”


Beatles
is the name of the band that sang the song. Not a bug.”

“I like bees,” she insisted.

And that was the end of that.

“Are you guys getting your bags now?”

“The pilot has our suitcases.”

“I don’t think so, Punkin. The pilot flies the plane. He doesn’t carry the bags.”

“His name is Captain George. He’s nice.”

As though that explained it.

“How do you know his name is George? Did he tell you?”

She sighed. “I had a bee in a jar once, but it stang me and died.”

“How about if I talk to your mommy?”

I heard a series of clunks as the phone changed hands, and then her mother came on the line.

“Hi, Liz. Where are you guys?”

“All I know is, we landed at Love Field. We’re …” She paused. “I don’t see any signs. I’m not sure where we are.”

“Baggage claim is on the bottom floor. Take the escalator down.”

“The pilot has our bags.”

“Um, okay, Liz. Have you guys been doing a lot of craft projects lately involving glue? Because glue fumes can cause serious brain damage. You should be aware.”

“Oh, there he is.” I heard her shout to someone named George. I
pictured an American Airlines pilot carrying Christine’s lavender Barbie suitcase. And then, of course, I realized what was going on.

Liz and Andy Zocci are the primary shareholders in a Midwestern regional airline called Eagle Wing Air, founded by Andy’s father. They have more money than the Mormon church.

“You guys brought your own plane, didn’t you?”

“It was just easier,” Liz said, sounding embarrassed.

“Oh sure, well, I always think it’s easier to take my own plane. Because, you know, the other ones are so … crowded. All those peeeople!”

“Dylan …”

“And the snacks are just not acceptable. Crummy little packets of pretzels passing for food. And don’t even get me started on those filthy blankets. I hate those things.”

“Dylan, this is very original humor. I’m laughing hysterically. Really, I am.”

“You can see other people’s hairs on them. It’s disgusting.”

“Are you done? Or is there more?”

“Hmm … that’s about it. Do you want directions to my house, or should I meet you at your hotel?”

“I think we’ll go unpack and then meet you at your place. Christine has been talking about this for weeks. I don’t think I can hold her back much longer.”

“I’ve got another couple of hours here in the salt mines,” I said. “Can she make it that long?”

“We’ll unpack and get some lunch. It might take me a while to find something Christine will eat. You know how she is.”

“Is she still on crunchy food?”

“It comes and goes. For now it’s crunchy food mainly. And orange, if at all possible. Carrots, Cheetos, things like that. Yellow’s okay too. We eat a lot of vegetables and corn chips.”

“Your kid is weird.”

“I try not—Christine, gum and hair don’t mix—try not to think about it.”

“Did Andy and the boys come?”

“They’re out of the country.”

“Well, la-di-da,” I sing-songed. “They’re not even in kindergarten, and they’re already world travelers?”

“It’s an Angel Wing mission.”

“Oh.”

“To your friend Tony DeStefano’s orphanage in Guatemala.”

“Well, that’s different.”

“Thank you. I thought so. Want to retract your la-di-da?”

“Da-di-la.”

Angel Wing Air is the Zoccis’ charity airline. They fly small planes into remote areas around the world to supply and transport medical personnel and missionaries. Tony DeStefano was a friend from my seminary days. He’d also been a sort of spiritual touchstone in recent years, an ally in that whole Peter Terry, life-disintegration fiasco. He and Jenny had recently returned to the mission field.

“I made a cake,” I offered, more to change the subject than to announce the menu. “A regular, spongy, noncrunchy cake.”

“What kind?”

“Strawberry. Isn’t that what you said?”

“Yep. She makes exceptions for strawberry anything. What time do you want us? We’ve got a car.”

“La-di-da again. You didn’t bring a limo too, did you? Like, in the cargo hold?”

“We’re renting a regular, run-of-the-mill car, just like the little people.”

“Where are you staying?”

“The Crescent. Do you want me to call you? Or just show up?”

“I’ll call with directions when I’m done here. Hey, you didn’t tell Christine about her present, did you?” I said. “I want her to be surprised.”

“Not a word.”

“Great.” I checked my watch. “I think I can be out of here by two o’clock, assuming no one blows anything up or passes out or anything.”

The students in my immediate vicinity began making explosion noises and pretending to faint.

“I gotta go, Liz. I’m losing control here.”

Someone shouted, “She never had control!” into the phone as I hung up.

I spent the next two hours sweltering under my regalia—surely one of the more enduring medieval torture devices—enjoying one of the slim gratifications of another year of largely thankless effort. As much as I gripe about my work, there’s no fighting off the joy when my students high-five me as they walk off the stage toward the rest of their lives, clutching four years of hard-won education in a maroon leather folder, their families cheering from the seats. It’s one of the few times of the year when I feel proud of my incredibly low-paying, bottom-of-the-academic-ladder job.

The rest of the time I feel poor, mainly.

After the ceremony, I walked a hot half mile to faculty parking, swept off my mortarboard, and drove my crummy pickup home to my tiny house. I parked in the driveway under the sycamore tree that always needs pruning and cut the motor, which shrugged reluctantly to a stop. I hauled my stuff to the porch and unlocked my front door. The air conditioner hummed a pleasant little greeting, which is always good news on a hot Dallas afternoon. I threw my keys on the kitchen table, placed my once-a-year heels in the back of my bedroom closet, tossed my graduation gown into the dry-cleaner hamper, Frisbeed my mortarboard onto the dryer for sponging and Febreze, and walked over to the rabbit hutches in the corner of my bedroom.

“Bunnies, I’m home,” I cooed, peering into the cages. Two small rabbits hopped over to greet me—a little red one, whose auburn coat matched my hair color exactly, and a tiny gray lop-ear. Melissa and Eeyore. I reached down and scratched them behind their ears.

I’ve never really been a pet person. All those bodily fluids and floaty little hairs are prohibitive for a person of my obsessive inclinations. Even the smell of a pet store is a problem—I order all pet supplies online to avoid that trauma entirely. But both bunnies had been orphaned the previous winter when their owners were caught in one of Peter Terry’s snares.

So I had taken them in—Melissa first and then, later, Eeyore.

It turns out that nonverbal roommates are better than no roommates at all. And as an added bonus, rabbits are relatively tidy little creatures. These two were actually housebroken. But since almost no one has need of two bunnies, especially two bunnies of the opposite gender (though Melissa had recently surrendered her femininity at the vet), Eeyore was to be my birthday gift to Christine.

I couldn’t wait to give him to her. I’d gotten him a big, purple bow—Christine’s favorite color—and had his name painted on a set of (mail-order) ceramic bowls. I could now send his hutch home with the Zoccis as well, since cargo room was clearly not a problem.

I showered quickly and went to the kitchen to set out some refreshments. I was squeezing lemons for lemonade when the doorbell rang. I glanced out the kitchen window and wiped my hands on a cup towel. My friend Maria Chavez had arrived with her little boy.

Maria is an OB-GYN at the local public hospital and one of my All Time Favorite People. She also happens to be a fellow Peter Terry target. She is my only local friend, the first recruit in my campaign to improve my abysmal social life—an effort I commenced last year along with a rigorous Thigh Recovery Program. (I like to believe in the possibility of Total overhaul.)

I opened the door and greeted her with a best-friend hug, then knelt down and said hello to my groovy little friend, Nicholas.

“Hey, doodlebug.” I gave him a quick hug, squeezing the air out of him as he tried to say my name.

“Hi, M(squeeze)iss (squeeze) Dy(squeeze)lan,” he coughed out.

We did The Squeeze every time I saw him. It was our little thing. He giggled. “Do it again!”

I did it again. He coughed out my name in spurts.

Nicholas had wild, curly brown hair just like his father, who at that moment was sitting in a hot cinderblock cell down in Huntsville, serving ten flat for aggravated sexual assault. That crazy mop of hair framed bright blue eyes and a face so flushed and pink with innocent vim, you couldn’t possibly imagine he’d been conceived through violence.

“What do you have behind your back?” I said to Nicholas. “Did you bring your G.I. Joe?”

He shook his head and giggled.

“Is it your turtle?”

Another giggle.

“Is it a skyscraper? I heard one was missing from downtown. Or maybe a buffalo? I’ve always wanted my own buffalo. Let’s saddle him up and go for a ride.”

“A buffalo is too big,” he said, giggling. He swung his hand around and pointed a plastic gun at me. “BANG!”

I pretended to die, clutching my heart and crumpling to the ground.

“Don’t shoot people, Nicholas,” Maria said. “It’s bad manners.”

“But that’s what it’s for,” he whined.

I picked myself up. “He’s got a point, Maria.”

“Enrique gave it to him,” she said. “He’s recruiting him, I think. It came with holsters and a badge and a little red siren for his bicycle. It runs on batteries.”

“The holsters sound cool. I could use a set of those myself.”

“I may never forgive him.”

“How is he?”

“Enrique? Charming. Handsome. Overworked.” Her brown eyes twinkled mischievously. “Slightly unavailable.”

“Ooh, I love that in a man,” I said.

“Very sexy,” she agreed. She gave me her girlfriend-confrontation look. “I still think you should call David.”

“It’s a procedural violation to call a man six months after he breaks up with you.”

“You’re stubborn.”

“Check the handbook.”

“And it’s only been four and a half months.”

“I think he’s made it perfectly clear, Maria, that he doesn’t want to be with me.”

“I keep hoping.”

“You’re an optimist. I hate that about you, you know that? I truly do. You really should get it seen about.”

Liz and Christine arrived then in a regular, run-of-the-mill, rented Suburban. I made the introductions, and we all trailed inside. Christine went nuts over Eeyore, as I knew she would. We sent the kids to the backyard with the rabbits while we blew up balloons and lit candles, then we brought them all in and gathered at the kitchen table for cake and presents.

We’d all gotten gifts for Nicholas too. And though Christine was officially the birthday girl, she let Nicholas wear her Barbie birthday princess tiara while she sported the cowboy hat I’d bought for him. Eeyore wore his spiffy satin bow and sat in Christine’s lap eating crumbs from her strawberry birthday cake.

I was setting up my homemade version of pin the tail on the donkey when Christine announced she wanted to take Eeyore to the park. I decided to bring the game along, just in case the kids got bored. I threw the blindfolds, tails, and donkey—which I had drawn myself in a misguided fit of Martha Stewart ambition and which, I’m proud to say, actually looked sort of like a donkey—into a shopping bag, tossing in my staple gun at the last minute.

I live in a Dallas neighborhood called Oak Lawn, which is funky and artsy and pleasantly rickety. It has groovy old houses, giant, misshapen trees, cracked sidewalks, and quirky people. My next-door neighbor has a bubble machine on his balcony. That’s how cool my neighborhood is. The parks, however, are full of weeds, doggie poo, and sticker-burrs.

Two streets over is Highland Park, a much nicer, nonfunky, not-at-all-rickety neighborhood that has fabulous parks with manicured azalea bushes and banked flowers and lacy white gazebos. Sort of like a Thomas Kinkade painting.

Highland Park, for me, is like the Bermuda Triangle. My luck is terrible there.

It’s a low-crime area with huge houses, fancy cars, and its own police
force. Which means it’s crawling with bored cops trolling around all day in a shiny fleet of Suburbans.

They care if you go thirty-five in a thirty.

Interlopers like me driving loud, crummy vehicles with lousy mufflers and cracked windshields, stand out like goats in the piano parlor. Since I am a fast driver and a slow learner, I’d received, at last count, three—count ’em, three—speeding tickets in Highland Park. And that was in one year.

Given the nature of our mission, however, I caved to the sticker-burr issue and let Liz drive us over to Highland Park, banking on her luck to overcome mine.

Apparently, lots of other birthday groups had the same idea. The place was crawling with kids—balloons tied to their wrists, cake smeared on their faces. Their defeated moms trailed behind them yelling out halfhearted prohibitions. Off to one side, someone had set up a petting zoo with a tiny Brahman calf, two saddled, bored ponies, a little herd of baby goats, and a few baby rabbits hopping around in a pen. Melissa and Eeyore sniffed sympathetically through the pickets at their imprisoned relatives.

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