Read The Gingerbread Boy Online

Authors: Lori Lapekes

The Gingerbread Boy (24 page)

BOOK: The Gingerbread Boy
11.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Just
listen
,” Beth pleaded, raising her hand in the air. Her eyelashes batted furiously. “Five minutes of your time. That’s all we ask.”

“I’m not easily amused, but you two are rather entertaining.” Joey sighed. Then his eyes flashed. “One minute. That’s all you have.”

Beth relaxed. She shifted back to her former position, Calvin pressed fearfully against the couch. Joey leered at him a moment, then turned to Beth.

“Go ahead. Amuse me.”

Beth folded her impeccable manicured hands on her lap. “It’s… it’s hard to talk about this, but someone has to know. It’s about Catherine. It’s about… it’s about how she really is
.

“How she really
is
?” Joey interrupted.

“You’re wasting my one-minute.” Beth said coolly as Joey folded his arms together. She went on. “I’ve always known Catherine was a little… a little
disturbed
, but it wasn’t until I bumped into Calvin at the gas station and we talked yesterday that I realized just how disturbed she is. Just how potentially dangerous she can be. Especially to Daniel. Especially to your band, Joey.”

Joey’s mouth skewered into a grin. “Eastie
?
Dangerous? That’s a good one, Miss Shackles… or whatever your last name is. Don’t you think I remember you? You’re so hot to get Daniel you’d say anything to…”

“What she says is true,” Calvin interrupted, leaning forward but shrinking back into the couch as Joey glared at him. Finally, he added, “It’s true. Catherine is unstable. She always has been. Her father left her when she was just a kid and her mother was a worthless drunk. Then her brother disappeared, her own brother, for Pete’s sake! For all they know he’s dead, but he probably just skipped out too. Didn’t want the responsibility of caring for the women in his family like a real man should have. I’ve known Cathy for a long time. She’s got severe emotional problems. She uses men. She…”

Suddenly Joey’s hands were around Calvin’s shirt collar, snapping him forward until they were face to face.

“She used
you
?” he seethed. “I watched you slap her in a bar a few months ago!”

“I know,” Calvin stammered. “I was drunk. I get more courageous when I’m drunk.”

“And that’s why you broke into her house and tried to kidnap her – you were courageous because you were drunk?”

Calvin’s eyes widened. His mouth moved but no words came out. Sweat broke out on his forehead as he gazed helplessly at Beth.

Beth sighed in frustration. “For crying out loud, Joey, I
let
him in. All he wanted to do was talk to Catherine. I made up that stuff about him chasing Catherine so that Catherine wouldn’t come after me, too.” She gestured toward Calvin. “Yes, Calvin was drunk. But he also seemed sincere. He’d finally gotten enough courage to talk to Catherine face-to-face once again, and he had to do it, no matter what time it was. I’ve been in situations like that before… crap, I’m in one like it right now.”

Joey released Calvin, turned to her and raised his finger in the air. “If either of you honestly
believes
I’m going to fall for this, than you’re sicker than I’d previously believed. Your time is up. Out!”

Beth snatched her purse, rose to her feet. “Okay but don’t say I didn’t warn you. If the judge throws this neurotic kidnapping fabrication out of the hearing next week, don’t be surprised. And The Front will end up paying dearly for Catherine’s emotional problems. Just wait until Daniel does one wrong thing and Catherine wants to get revenge. She could ruin you. All of you. Soon you’ll know what it’s like to be walking on eggshells every second of the day…”

“Out!” Joey bellowed.

Beth raised her hands. “I’m gone. C’mon, Calvin. I can see talking to this guy was a waste of time. He’s just the band’s manager. He only cares about the money the band makes – not its members. I guess we’ll have to go to Daniel himself.”

Joey was so fueled with rage that just the look on his face made Calvin dart behind Beth in horror.

“If my best friend hears one word, just one word of this feeble-brained scam, I’ll personally come and pull your fingernails out, one by one.” Joey warned as Calvin peered out from behind Beth’s shoulder.

Beth shook her head, clicked her tongue. ”My, my, some
do-gooder
you are.” She sighed. “Let’s go, Calvin. We tried. That’s all we could do.”

With that, Beth turned and walked gracefully out the door, Calvin scurrying behind in panic.

Then the door slammed shut.

Behind them, Joey’s fists balled like chunks of granite. He backed toward his bed. Feeling the side of it against his knees, he fell back on it, and covered his eyes with his hands. He would not sleep that night.

****

“We blew it… we really blew it.” Calvin muttered as he and Beth walked down the hallway. “He didn’t believe us. We’re not actually going to say anything to Daniel, are we? Joey meant it. I think he’d hurt me”

Beth refused to look at him. “You know, Calvin, I may despise Cathy Sealey, but she was right about one thing. You really are a neurotic little ‘Cave Pig.’”

 

Chapter Twenty-Six

 

“I doubt we’d have time to explore much.” Catherine said, “But there are some beautiful sections of Chesapeake Bay I’ll have time to show you. There’s a place called Calvert Cliffs about an hour south of Annapolis where I used to spend time beachcombing on the weekends. Maybe we could find some fossils there, or just walk along the beach and have a picnic. What do you think?”

Daniel smiled. His look wandered past Catherine and out the window into glowing peach-colored clouds that seemed to smother the plane.

“I’m looking forward to it. I’ve never been this far east. I’m thinking about asking Joey to try and squeeze Baltimore into our tour.” He paused, looking back to Catherine. “This beach jaunt, do you plan to go before or after the visit to Hazel?”

“After, I think. It’ll help me to relax.” Her voice became determined as she went on. “I’m going to try real hard not to be a drag. I don’t want to ruin this trip for the both of us.”

Daniel squeezed her hand. “Hazel’s condition is worse than you let on, isn’t it?”

Glumly, Catherine nodded.

Daniel released her hand and wrapped his arm around her shoulders. His voice was barely a whisper among the murmur of the surrounding passengers.

“I didn’t want to come with you for a sightseeing get-away. I wanted to come with you because you might need me, and this time, I wanted to be here for you.”

The noble face Catherine had once worn crumbled. She bit her lip, fighting tears. She had met with Hazel so many times, and even though it was usually sitting and talking for hours on her porch or on the patio in the back of her home, she’d seemed robust and healthy. Yet now, in a short time they’d be in Maryland. In another few hours… they’d be at Pebble Creek Nursing Home, visiting a sick old woman who might not even realize she had company.

An old woman Catherine had no idea just how much she loved until now.

“I don’t know if Hazel will even know we’re there,” Catherine said. “Every time I call, the nurse tells me she’s so out of it she can only sit and mutter her own name.” She attempted a laugh. “I bet her voice still cracks when she says Mrs. VanHoofstryver.”

“She’ll sense you’re there,” Daniel said, “even if she can’t respond.”

“I just wish she could meet you see how wonderful you are,” Catherine said. She wiped away a tear. “I didn’t write much after all those desperate letters she sent me. I didn’t know what to say. I could have tried to comfort her and assure her of my friendship, even after I had you in my life. Maybe that’s all she needed to know. I wish I could have called or written in time. Maybe it would have given her the strength to fight off that stroke when her husband died.”

Daniel shook his head. “From what you’ve been told, her husband was a monster. I doubt anything could have prevented her present condition. Remember, she never told you what exactly he was putting her through. You couldn’t have known. You still can only guess.”

Catherine shuddered. “From what I’ve heard, no one knows if Hazel blacked out from the horror of seeing him fall or if she saw him doing something to one of her cats. The cats were her only real family.”

“Besides you.” Daniel added.

She smiled lamely. “Maybe so. She was like a mother to me.” As soon as those words came out of Catherine’s mouth, a streak of dread raced through her. She glanced quickly out the window, hoping the topic would end.

Too late.

Daniel chose his words with care as Catherine studied smeared fingerprints on the glass. Her toes curled nervously in her shoes.

“I know you don’t like to discuss your mother,” he said, “and I don’t
mean
to make you uncomfortable. I just can’t help but wonder… does she know you’ll be home for the weekend?”

Catherine bit her lip again, made no reply.

“Okay, I can see that she doesn’t. I’m not going to preach, I understand you have your reasons not to visit her. I won’t ask about her again.”

“Thanks,” Catherine whimpered, still gazing at the smudges, “Someday I’ll tell you about her, I promise.”

Daniel tightened his arm around her shoulder as a voice over the intercom announced, “Passengers, please take your seats and fasten your seatbelts. We are circling Baltimore and will be landing in about fifteen minutes.”

Fifteen more minutes and she’d be on her own home turf.

But it might never feel like home again.

****

It was about a thirty-minute drive to the nursing home. Daniel made comments about the scenery and poked fun at their tiny vehicle in an attempt to lighten Catherine’s spirits.

“The engine in this puddle-jumper is about the same size as the one in my lawnmower,” he grinned, resting his arm out the window. “Maybe even in your hairdryer. I doubt we have to worry about speeding.”

Catherine loosened her white-knuckle grip on the steering wheel and glanced over at her companion, forcing a smile. It came out a grimace. Having such a handsome young man at her side in her hometown should have made her heady with pride. A few people had recognized him at the airport; a young girl there even asked for his autograph. There was an aura about him, a way he carried himself that separated him from others. It wasn’t pride, and it wasn’t conceit. It was just, well, it was just Daniel.

Catherine looked up toward the sky, thanking God for Daniel’s presence here, now. She doubted she could go through this alone.

“We could have rented that Jag instead of this little heap,” Daniel said, “I don’t want money to be a problem on this trip.”

“You didn’t sell your Corvette just to throw money away,” Catherine scolded. “I’m not going to waste your good intentions on luxuries.”

“What do you mean – for yourself? I’d be riding in the Jag, too.”

“You know what I mean.”

Daniel had finally explained why he’d sold the Corvette. Apparently he’d sold the car because the studio needed money for better equipment. The record company the band was signed with demanded it if the band wanted to continue recording in their own studio. But Catherine hadn’t seen any signs of new equipment, and Daniel was such a perfectionist about the group’s sound that she couldn’t imagine he hadn’t bought the best equipment there was the first time around.

No, Catherine had a nagging hunch Daniel had needed the money for other things. Things like this trip. It humbled her to think he was spending some of the money on her, but she had no real proof of that. She had to wait and see if the new equipment would arrive one day.

Those thoughts did little to lighten her mood as the tiny car sped beneath their exit sign. Her hands grew clammy on the wheel

Hazel was only a few miles away.

Daniel eyed her with concern.

“You look pale. Want me to drive the last few miles so you can get yourself psyched-up for this?”

Catherine shook her head. “No, I need to drive to keep my mind together. Keeps my attention on other things for the moment.”

He raised an eyebrow. “You’re sure?

She nodded vigorously, but she was lying. Her lips felt as dry as cardboard, the inside of her mouth like sawdust. Actually, the whole inside of her head seemed as thick as a bag of sand. She pulled in a long breath and raised her eyebrows in an attempt to clear her mind, but before she knew it the highway was swimming before her eyes…

“Catherine!”

She was aware of Daniel’s body brushing across hers as he lurched for the wheel, struggling to get their zigzagging vehicle in control.

The road swayed before her, left to right, right to left, the bumpers of other automobiles ahead of them flashed in and out of sight, glimpses of other driver’s horrified faces filled her eyes.

Then suddenly, the car came to a stop on the berm.

Daniel flopped back against his seat.

Catherine continued to stare ahead, frozen stiff in her position as cars sped past like bullets.

She’d almost killed them.

There was a long silence.

At last Daniel turned to her, and said with a wink, “I think maybe I will put this car’s motor in your hairdryer. A lawnmower might be too dangerous for you right now.”

****

Catherine’s legs wobbled as she and Daniel walked toward the front door of Pebble Creek Nursing Home. She couldn’t feel the ground beneath her feet and stumbled, thankful for Daniel’s arms uprighting her.

“We can do this later.” Daniel said next to her.

Catherine shook her head. “No, it’s got to be now. I really do want to see her, Daniel. But I’m scared. I don’t know what to expect. I haven’t actually
seen
her since last August, and now…”

“I know.” he whispered.

A few moments later, Daniel was asking a nurse at the main station directions to Hazel’s room, and before Catherine knew it they were walking down a dim hallway, passing people in wheelchairs, some whose heads bobbed listlessly against their chests. A faint scent of urine drifted through the air and made Catherine’s stomach churn. She must have looked a little green, for Daniel whispered, “Don’t pass out now, you might take out several wheelchairs with you.”

BOOK: The Gingerbread Boy
11.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Dying Ground by Nichelle D. Tramble
Introducing Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (Introducing...) by Foreman, Elaine Iljon, Pollard, Clair
The Clouds by Juan José Saer
Once Upon a Marriage by Tara Taylor Quinn
A Midsummer Night's Romp by Katie MacAlister
My Favourite Wife by Tony Parsons
Saturn by Ben Bova
The Gunman's Bride by Catherine Palmer
Some Like It Hot by Lori Wilde