the tray on her lap?
âBe a darling, Paisley, and bring me some of that wonderful pear butter and maybe, well, never mind.â
âWhat is it, Mother?â
âNo, I donât want to be a botherâ
âMother, please tell me what you want now. I know if you donât ask me now youâll want it later, so just letâs get it over with.â
âNo, no, dear, itâs too much trouble, and you have so much planned for today.â
How did she know? Did she have some kind of radar?
âWhat plans? Itâs raining. We canât do anything until the rain stops.â
âIâm sure you and Cassie have something planned, donât you?â
âMother, I bet you could really eat a bigger breakfast, is that right? How about a nice shirred egg with cheddar on top just like you used to make for me? And some more pancakes, or maybe some buttered toast?â
âAnd some bacon, perhaps. There is some lovely Virginia bacon in the.â¦â
âI know,â I sighed. âI know.â
I trudged back to the kitchen. My energy was already reaching a low ebb, and it was only six forty-five. Twenty minutes later, I had the eggs, pancakes, preserves, and bacon on the tray with some fresh hot tea and toast.
My perky little ponytail had wilted, and I had a least two grease splatter burns on my hand and one on my cheek. I hated cooking and I was in a foul mood. I also knew that this was just the beginning. There would be no rest for the weary until Mother had decided she had punished me enough for calling the doctor.
When I got back to her room, I found that she had gone back to sleep. At first I was furious. I considered slamming the tray down on the night table hard enough to make her jump out of bed, but she looked so much better. The strain was already gone from around her eyes and mouth. She had that gift of a true Southern woman: to look years younger after a good nightâs sleep. I put the tray down softly, grabbed the toast, and tiptoed out. I closed the door to her bedroom and her sitting room behind me.
Cassie was in the kitchen pouring honey over plain vanilla yogurt in slow golden squiggles.
âWow, that looks good.â
âItâs certainly better for you than all that bacon you cooked and burned. Thereâs grease everywhere! Just breathing the air in here could give you a coronary. Really, Mom, you have to learn to eat more sensibly.â
I looked down at the half-eaten toast corner in my hand that was my entire breakfast.
âYou are absolutely right, dear. Iâll try and do better.â
I went to get the cleaning supplies from the storeroom under the stairs. My daughter had always been extremely respectful of that spooky old closet. Meaning she always had some excuse not to go under there. This time Cassie said she would find some nice background music on the radio. I did not argue. I just hoped that I would not have to mop and dust to some heavy metal screech that would drive me insane.
I dragged all the mops and brooms and brushes and pails into the front hallway and dumped them in the middle of the Oriental rug. I started sorting through the buckets to find wax and dust cloths and was pleasantly surprised to hear the rhythmic strains of Glenn Miller coming from the living room.
âWow, Mom! They have the big band channel.â
To the TV generation there were no stations, only channels.
âI love this stuff, donât you, Mom. Did you ever hear of a group called The Andrews Sisters? They are just the greatest.â
Amazed and bemused I swung and swayed behind my daughter as we mopped and waxed and dusted to the tunes by which her grandparents courted. We had a ball. Cassie and I made each other wax and polish everything until we were ready to arrange the furniture in the living room to suit ourselves. We had seen the room look exactly the same way all of our lives. We itched to move things around now that we had a
Mercedes Lackey, Eric Flint, Dave Freer