Every Woman's Dream

Read Every Woman's Dream Online

Authors: Mary Monroe

BOOK: Every Woman's Dream
12.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Also by Mary Monroe
 
 
The God Series
God Don't Like Ugly
God Still Don't Like Ugly
God Don't Play
God Ain't Blind
God Ain't Through Yet
God Don't Make No Mistakes
 
Mama Ruby Series
Mama Ruby
The Upper Room
Lost Daughters
 
Gonna Lay Down My Burdens
Red Light Wives
In Sheep's Clothing
Deliver Me From Evil
She Had It Coming
The Company We Keep
Family of Lies
Bad Blood
 
“Nightmare in Paradise” in
Borrow Trouble
 
 
 
Published by Kensington Publishing Corp.
Every Woman's Dream
MARY MONROE
KENSINGTON BOOKS
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Also by
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 - Lola
Chapter 2 - Joan
Chapter 3 - Joan
Chapter 4 - Lola
Chapter 5 - Joan
Chapter 6 - Lola
Chapter 7 - Lola
Chapter 8 - Joan
Chapter 9 - Joan
Chapter 10 - Joan
Chapter 11 - Lola
Chapter 12 - Joan
Chapter 13 - Lola
Chapter 14 - Joan
Chapter 15 - Joan
Chapter 16 - Joan
Chapter 17 - Lola
Chapter 18 - Lola
Chapter 19 - Joan
Chapter 20 - Lola
Chapter 21 - Joan
Chapter 22 - Lola
Chapter 23 - Lola
Chapter 24 - Joan
Chapter 25 - Lola
Chapter 26 - Lola
Chapter 27 - Lola
Chapter 28 - Joan
Chapter 29 - Lola
Chapter 30 - Lola
Chapter 31 - Joan
Chapter 32 - Joan
Chapter 33 - Joan
Chapter 34 - Lola
Chapter 35 - Lola
Chapter 36 - Lola
Chapter 37 - Joan
Chapter 38 - Lola
Chapter 39 - Joan
Chapter 40 - Calvin
Chapter 41 - Calvin
Chapter 42 - Calvin
Chapter 43 - Calvin
Chapter 44 - Lola
Chapter 45 - Lola
Chapter 46 - Lola
Chapter 47 - Joan
Chapter 48 - Calvin
Chapter 49 - Calvin
Chapter 50 - Calvin
Chapter 51 - Calvin
Chapter 52 - Calvin
Chapter 53 - Calvin
Chapter 54 - Lola
EVERY WOMAN'S DREAM
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Copyright Page
This book is dedicated to my fans. You are all #1 to me!
Acknowledgments
My acknowledgments would be longer than this book if I thanked each person individually for my success. I'm taking the easy way out this time. Thanks to EVERYONE who helped me make it this far!
This is book #1 in my Lonely Heart, Deadly Heart Series.
Chapter 1
Lola
September 1999
T
WO WEEKS AFTER
L
ABOR
D
AY, SOMEBODY RANG OUR DOORBELL
. It was a Saturday, about an hour before noon. When I opened the door without looking through the peephole or asking who it was, I was surprised to see a woman—I had never seen her before—standing on our porch. She was almost as wide as she was tall, and she had to be at least six feet. She was a light-skinned, middle-aged black woman with a scary scowl on her face and one hand on her hip. She wore a dark green pantsuit that looked like it was at least two sizes too small. There were a few strands of gray hair on her two chins and several black moles dotted her thick neck. I could tell she had been crying because her eyes were red and swollen.
“I'm sorry, ma'am. No solicitors,” I said, pointing to the
NO SOLICITORS
sign that my stepmother had made me tack on the wall outside next to the doorbell. It was not my nature to be mean to strangers, so I smiled.
The woman didn't smile back and the scowl on her face was even scarier now. She narrowed her eyes and gave me a skeptical look. Her short, reddish brown wig sat at such a crooked angle on her head, the bangs that should have been above her eyes were on the side of her face. There was bright red lipstick smeared on her teeth and she had on two different earrings. On top of everything else that was off, this creature had dressed in such a hurry, she had buttoned only the three top buttons on her blouse.
“Fuck that damn shit! I didn't come to this goddamn place to sell a motherfucking thing, so you can forget about that ‘no solicitors' bullshit!” she screeched with spit flying out both sides of her mouth. I knew a lot of people who cussed, myself included. But this woman had used more profanity in just a few seconds than everybody else I knew used in an hour. Whoever she was, she obviously had a bone to pick with somebody, but I couldn't imagine
who.
The smile was no longer on my face and I was ready to do some cussing myself, but I chose not to. This woman was already hot enough. The last thing I needed to do was add fuel to a flame when I didn't even know what had caused it.
I stood up straighter and folded my arms. “Lady, you need to chill,” I began, speaking in the most civil tone of voice I could manage under the circumstances. “I don't know what your problem is and why you're here.”
What I heard next made my jaw drop. “I'M HERE TO KICK SOME ASS!” she roared, wagging her finger in my face.
I was so taken aback; it was a couple of seconds before I could speak again. “You—you're w-what?” I stuttered. If this woman had shot me with a stun gun, I could not have been more stunned and frightened. My chest tightened and my heart rate felt like it had doubled. I thought hard and tried to recall if my stepmother, Bertha, had mentioned anything about her being involved in a dispute that would explain this angry woman's presence. If that had been the case, Bertha would have been talking about it nonstop every day. “Ma'am, I don't even know who the hell you are! You've come to the wrong address!” I said bluntly.
“No, I did not come to the wrong address, so don't you stand here with your mealy mouth and tell me that shit! I'm looking for Joan Proctor, the whore who has been fooling around with my husband!”
My head felt like it was swimming in a mud puddle and my stomach was churning. “Oh,” I said in a small voice. So many thoughts suddenly formed in my head, it was hard to decide which one to deal with first. Only one made any sense to me. And that was for me to slam the door shut and lock it.
But if I do that, what will I do next?
I asked myself. I gulped when I noticed a pink envelope with a red rose above the return address in the woman's hand. I recognized it immediately. I had purchased a hundred of the same envelopes with matching stationery from Office Depot. Because of that, I couldn't call the cops on this ferocious woman without digging a hole for myself. She waved the envelope at me in a threatening manner.
“So . . . uh, you're looking for Joan Proctor?” I asked with my lips quivering.
“Tell that bitch to come out here and settle this shit with me right now!”
“Uh . . . well . . . um . . .” For a streetwise girl like me, who always had a lot to say, this was one time when I didn't know what to say next. Here I was spewing gibberish.
“Where is she?” the woman hollered as she looked over my shoulder. “I want that no-good slut to know that I found the letters she sent to my husband! And I found the canceled checks he sent to her gold-digging ass! I am not leaving here until I set that wench straight! The man she's in love with and wants to marry already has a wife! Me! We've been married thirty-five years and we have five children and nine grandchildren! I don't care what he told her. He still loves me and I will never give him a divorce. Shit. We just paid off our mortgage and I'm not about to let another woman replace me after all I've done and been through with that man of mine. Least of all some bitch he met through a magazine ad!
A magazine ad!
I never in my life heard of black folks getting caught up in foolishness like a lonely hearts club! For goodness' sake! I even found, hidden in his sock drawer, the issue of the magazine with his name, picture, and all them lies about him being a widower! He ain't no widower, but I might end up being a widow if he don't stop this mess! Before I left my house, I beat the tar out of that cheating motherfucker and I'm going to do the same thing again when I get back home! Him and Joan are crazy if they think I'm going to sit back and let them ruin my life so they can live happily ever after, like she said in her last letter. That bitch!”
I sucked in some air and bit my bottom lip. “Ma'am, uh, Joan doesn't live here,” I managed, looking around to make sure none of our neighbors were out and about. We lived in a quiet, low-crime area, but we had some of the nosiest, most meddlesome neighbors in South Bay City, California. If they knew that a strange woman had come to our house to attack somebody, they would gossip about it for weeks.
“I ain't playing with you, girl! I can see you ain't nothing but a teenager, but do I look like a fool,
fool
? I was going to write a letter to that Joan Proctor bitch myself, but I thought it'd be better for me to straighten her out in person. From all that shit she wrote in her letters, she sounds like the type of die-hard skank who needs a hands-on approach!” The woman waved the envelope at me again. Her fat fingers covered the name of the man the letter had been sent to, but I could see Joan's name and my address in the sender's section.
“Honest to God, lady. Joan Proctor does not live here.”
“This letter with this house address was postmarked last week! It's full of every sex word in the book and then some! That sex-crazed hoochie-coochie woman mentioned things in her letters that she's going to do to my husband—tongue baths and dick milking and whatnot—that I ain't never even heard of! Now, if you think I don't believe Joan lives here, you just as crazy as she is! I drove a long way and I am not about to get back in my car and turn around and leave until I straighten out her nasty self!”
I had to say something that made sense and it had to be convincing. “Joan Proctor
used
to live here!” I said quickly, clutching the doorknob. This huge woman could easily overpower me and force her way in and crucify me. “She moved last Saturday. Just me and my stepmother live here now.”
My confused thoughts were bouncing from one side of my head to the other. It was hard for me to hide the fact that I was scared. I was shaking like a leaf and sweat had already formed on my forehead. I didn't care how scared I was and what I had to say, I had to get rid of this woman before my stepmother returned. If she blabbed to Bertha, not only would Joan Proctor's goose be cooked, mine would be too.
“I don't want to stand here talking to a young child like you. I want to talk to your stepmother.”
“Huh? Oh, s-see—she's not here,” I stammered. “She just left to go shopping and then she's going to have lunch with a friend. After that, they're going to the beauty shop, so she'll be gone for several hours. Uh, look, ma'am, I feel bad about this Joan woman chasing after your husband and taking his money and talking about doing nasty stuff with him, but I can't help you. Check with the post office and see if she turned in a change-of-address form.” I managed to smile again. “I hope you can track her down and straighten out this mess. . . .”
The irate stranger's scowl disappeared, but she still looked mean. She let out a heavy sigh and blinked. “What's your name?”
“Lola,” I said with a sniff. “Lola Poole.”
“Well, can I use your telephone, Lola? I left my cell phone in my hotel room.”
“Uh, I'm not allowed to let strangers in the house when I'm here by myself.” I paused and swallowed the dry lump that had suddenly formed in my throat. “This is a high-crime area and I'll get a whupping if I let somebody I don't know in the house.”
“I don't know why my husband did this to me. I'm a good wife,” the woman said, choking on a sob. A tear rolled down the side of her face. “He's driving me crazy.”
“I know just how you feel, ma'am. Some husbands don't know how to behave. My dead daddy was so buck wild when it came to women, he had the nerve to move his girlfriend into our house to live with him, my mother, and me! But I really am sorry that I can't help you. If you don't mind, I have to go so I can finish my chores before my stepmother gets back. Now, you have a blessed day.” The woman looked so hurt and sad, I felt awful when I abruptly closed the door before she could say anything else. I immediately secured the chain lock and the dead bolt. I put my eye up to the peephole and watched as she stumbled off the porch and down the walkway to a shiny black Ford parked in front of our house. She slowly opened the door on the driver's side. Before she got in, she looked at my house and shook her head. Right after the car drove away, I ran to the telephone on the stand by the living-room couch and called up Joan Proctor, my best friend. I prayed she was home and wouldn't freak out too much when I told her about the angry visitor. We were in our last year of high school and I wanted it to be as pleasant as possible for us, especially since she was pregnant.
I tried to reach Joan on her cell phone first, but she didn't answer. I didn't leave a voice mail or send her a text because if she didn't answer her phone, there was no telling when she'd hear my voice mail or see my text message.
I had no choice but to call the landline.
Joan's mother, Pearline, another scary woman, answered the telephone. “Lola, didn't you just talk to Joan last night?” she growled.
“Uh-huh, I did. But I forgot to tell her something about our biology class assignment,” I muttered. “May I please speak to her? It'll only take a few minutes.”
“Don't y'all tie up this line too long. Joan's got a lot of things to do around this house today and I'm sure you have things to do yourself.”
“Yes, ma'am.” I started tapping my foot on the floor while I waited for Pearline to call Joan to the telephone. “I'm so glad you're home!” I yelled when she came on the line a few seconds later. “Can you talk?”
“Yeah, I can talk. What's up?”
“Girl, we are so busted!” I hollered.
“Busted how?” she asked, speaking in a casual manner. “Talk fast. I'm drying my nails so I can go to the mall with Mama.”
“Listen up. A real mean, fat old woman just left here! She was looking for you!”
“Huh? Why would a ‘real mean, fat old woman' be looking for me?” Joan didn't sound so casual now. She sounded frightened. “What did she say?”
“She said she came here to kick your ass for fooling around with her husband!”
“WHAT?”
“She's one of the wives of the old men we've been writing to in that damn lonely hearts club!”

Other books

The Book of Fate by Parinoush Saniee
Parker 01 - The Mark by Pinter, Jason
Scream for Me by Karen Rose
Gilded Lily by Isabel Vincent
The Hollywood Mission by Deborah Abela
Blind Rage by Terri Persons
The Snake Stone by Jason Goodwin
Savage Spring by Kallentoft, Mons