Happy Hour (18 page)

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Authors: Michele Scott

Tags: #Family Life, #General, #Contemporary Women, #Female Friendship, #Fiction

BOOK: Happy Hour
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CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Jamie

Nora arrived thirty minutes late, as usual, but Jamie had prepared for it
this time. “Buenos Dias, Nora,” Jamie said.

Nora didn’t reply, but instead took out a small piece of paper from her
purse and unfolded it. Jamie recognized it. It was the check she’d written her
last week. “El cheque es no good. Bounce, bounce, bounce.” Nora made a motion
like she was bouncing a ball on to the ground.

“No. No. I don’t think so. You sure?”  Jeez. Jamie had hoped this
wouldn’t happen. She’d written the check on Sunday as always and crossed her
fingers that Nora wouldn’t go to the bank until Tuesday. Tuesday was the day
her check from work went automatically into her checking account. “When did you
go to el banco?”

Nora stared at her.

Great. The game
. Here she was going to play
the game
with
Jamie and they were talking money. For once could they not play the stupid game
of,
I don’t understand what you are saying to me, even though I really do.
 “Okay.
Donde. No. Que. No. Quein did tu visita to el banco?” She asked motioning with
her fingers like they were walking and knowing that her Spanish was pretty much
all wrong but she had to at least make the effort.

Nora raised her eyebrows. “Hoy.”

“Today?”

Nora nodded. “Hoy. Sí.”

“What? No. That’s wrong. It has to be wrong. You wait here.”

What Nora was telling her couldn’t be. She couldn’t be overdrawn. She
headed toward her office and nearly crashed into Dorothy, who came around the
corner out of her room. “Hello, darling girl. I was wondering if you could get
me an appointment at the hairdresser today? I have a big date tonight.” She
smiled and did a little curtsy. “Guess who with?”

“Not now, Mom. I have to take care of something with the bank.”

“What do you have to take care of with the bank? Tell Nathan to do it.
He’s the man of the house. He can handle whatever it is. Come in my room and
see what I’m going to wear tonight. It’s so pretty and it’s all for Dean. It’s
purple with organza. I want to wear a purple flower in my hair.”

“Not now. I will in a minute.”

Dorothy frowned. “Jamie, that’s enough. Go and tell Nathan to do it.
That’s what men do. They take care of the finances and you are supposed to take
care of the house. That means me and Maddie, too.”

How was it she could be so coherent on some things, but could never
remember that Nate was no longer alive? Jamie grabbed her gently by the
shoulders. “Mom. I am
the man
now. I do all of it. Nathan is gone. We
have had this conversation. I will come and see your dress in a minute, and I
will see about getting you a hair appointment, but first I have to deal with an
issue with the bank.” Dorothy frowned. Jamie hugged her tightly seeing that
she’d hurt her feelings, but what was she supposed to do? If Nora’s check
didn’t clear that morning, then something was seriously wrong. Jamie knew that
she’d scheduled all of her bills to go out that day through online banking, and
she’d set up her mortgage to automatically pay on the first of the month.

Nora followed Jamie, flagging the check at her as they went down the
hallway. “I needed dinero. I needed para mi familia. You needed a pagar mi
ahora. I no coming no mas. You paga mi.”

Jamie waved a hand at her. “I know. Uno momento. Please wait. Por favor.”
She shut her office door, sat down at her desk and sighed while her computer
booted up. When she finally signed onto her banking site, she gasped. “What
the…?” Oh no. Jamie saw that she was a thousand dollars overdrawn. Yes, things
were tight but how could this have happened? Her first thought was that someone
had stolen her identity or had somehow gotten access to her checking account.
That had to be it. Going over the withdrawals everything looked normal. Until
she got to the mortgage payment. “How stupid! How could I have been so stupid?”
she said out loud.

She opened up her desk drawer, found the bill file, and located the
mortgage company’s statement. She dialed the number on the payment coupon, went
through the five minutes of prompts and listening to her balance, her pay off,
et al., and then after seven or eight minutes of listening to ridiculous
elevator music and commercials about American Bank, Jamie was ready to come
unglued. Finally a person came on the other end—a real live, freaking human
being. Imagine!

“American Bank. Can I have your account number and name please?” the
woman on the other end asked.

Jamie gave up all of her info again.

“How may I help you today, Ms. Evans?”

Jamie explained. “You see, well, actually it’s kind of funny. I do online
banking with my bills and I did them over the weekend, and I paid you guys
twice, and I don’t have the money in my account to pay you a double payment.
I’m not sure how I did that. I guess I wasn’t paying attention. Stupid, I know,
but can you help me?”

“Hang on a moment, please.” Jamie could hear the clacking of computer
keys through the phone.

“It shows here that your payment went through fine with us.”

“Yes, with you it did. But um, I have quite a few checks that came out
after yours and the bank did not clear them. See the first five hundred
overdrawn they cleared, but after that they didn’t and they’re charging me
something like thirty-three dollars per bounced check.”

“I’m sorry about that, ma’am.”

“Thank you. So can you refund me that extra payment?”

“We can’t do that.”

“What do you mean you can’t do that? You have to. That’s my money.”

“That’s our policy, ma’am. We can’t do that.”

“You have to do that. That’s my money! I didn’t mean to pay you twice and
now I’m being penalized by my bank and it’s costing me three times as much with
all of these bank charges.”

“I’m sorry, ma’am, you’ll have to take that up with your bank.”

Jamie clinched her fists. “Can I please speak to a supervisor?”

She endured another three minutes of crappy music and then a man came on
the line. Jamie explained the entire scenario again.

In a southern accent the man said, “Gosh, ma’am, I sure am sorry about
that, but you see it is our policy to apply anything over and above the payment
you make toward the principal on the home.”

“Can’t you just with a few keystrokes make a change to that policy? Can’t
you please refund that money?”

“No, ma’am. I can’t do that.”

Jamie sighed. “I’m kind of in a financial crisis at the moment. I’m sure
there is something you can do for me.”

“What I can do, ma’am is waive any late fees you may incur, say, next
month. So say you happen to be after the grace period, I can make sure you
won’t be charged if that turns out to be the case. Will that help?”

“No, that won’t help. I’m never late and I don’t want to start being
late. You have to put that money back into my account, and then I can pay you
on time in August but I’m on a fixed budget right now and I need that money to
get through the month.”

“I really am so sorry, ma’am but there is nothing I can do to reverse
that.”

Jamie shut her eyes tight.
Think.
Think. Nate would have asked her
to ask herself what was the outcome she wanted here. She wanted the damn money
back into the account. That wasn’t going to happen, so what was the next best
case? Wait a minute. Something the manager said hit her. “Okay then, can you at
least make that overpayment go toward my next month’s payment? That should be
doable, right?”

“No. I can’t, ma’am.”

“You’re kidding me. Why not?” Jamie was starting to lose it.

“It’s not our policy. You would have had to have written two checks for
that to happen. One for this month and one for next month. But the good news is
that you now have that extra money applied to your principal. That is always
nice to know, isn’t it? A little security in that.”

“No there isn’t! I don’t care about the damn principal. Not right now! I
care that I am overdrawn by a grand, that I’m being charged by my bank for
every draft now, and that I won’t have any money in the bank for another week.
I need to get groceries and my mother-in-law needs her hair done.” She knew she
sounded frantic.

“I understand your predicament, ma’am. I really do, but there is nothing
that I can do for you. That is our policy.”

“Screw your policy and screw you!” Jamie slammed the phone down and read
over her online statement again. How totally ridiculous. That was her money.
Now she was running late.

Jamie came out of the office with both Nora and Dorothy standing there
obviously eavesdropping. “You paga mi.”

“Yes. I will pay you today in cashola. Okay. Got it? Make her lunch and
take care of her. I have a meeting.” She was way too exasperated to even try
and speak her broken Spanish. She grabbed her purse and headed out the door.
How she was going to pay her— especially in cash—she had no clue, but she’d
figure it out. Right now she had to drive into the city and have lunch with her
brother-in-law David. Maybe it was time for David to step up and help out
financially with his mom. One area she and Nate had not been smart in was
financial planning, but who plans for their husband to die at thirty-five? She
certainly hadn’t.

But he had died. And now, as Jamie headed out onto the 101, tears blurred
her vision and she had a long talk with Nathan, asking him over and over again
the same question until she was shouting it.
WHY?

***

Nate’s brother, David, sat across from Jamie looking suave and
self-satisfied. He did have the same blue eyes that her husband had had, but
David was nowhere near as good-looking or as decent as Nate. He was rounder,
balding and looking into the eyes of his, there was something in them that
hadn’t been reflected in Nate’s—greed.

David had chosen a trendy fish and chips place near the wharf. “I’m not
sure what you’re asking me for, Jamie. You and Nate agreed to take Mom on as
she aged. This is a discussion we had a long time ago. Susan and I never
planned for my mother to stay with us. We both have careers, and on top of that
Mom has always lived in Napa Valley.”

Jamie pushed aside the fried food unable to stomach much of anything. “I
have a career too, and a daughter that I’m raising on my own, and yes, we did
have this discussion when Nate was alive, but that has changed. I’m not asking
you to move Dorothy in with you, but I could use some financial help.”

“What about the money from Nate’s life insurance?”

Jamie shook her head in disbelief. “Wait a minute, this is
your
mother
we’re talking about. And as far as the life insurance or any monies left to me
from Nate, that’s a joke. We spent most of it trying to keep him alive.”

“I told you both that was a waste of time and that you would have been
better off spending that time together doing things with each other and
Maddie.”

“My husband,
your
brother, wanted to live and I wanted him to live
and we were willing to do anything if we had even the remotest possibility of
making that happen.”

David leaned back in his chair, a cool breeze coming off the bay. “Here’s
what Susan and I are prepared to do. My wife is looking into a few facilities
both here in the city and out in Napa. When we find a home that is suitable for
all of us, then we can place her there.”

Defeated Jamie didn’t reply at first. “I’m not looking to put her in a
nursing home. I am only looking for some financial help. I have someone who
comes in daily and helps us out.”

“I’m not paying for your housekeeper, Jamie.”

“She is not just my housekeeper. She makes Dorothy’s meals, helps her
dress, watches over her, and she’s been very good in tolerating Dorothy’s
rapidly declining mental state.”

“Yeah well, her mental state.” He shoved a French fry into his mouth, and
while still chewing, continued, “All the more reason for her to be in a nursing
home. Don’t you think that would be best for you, anyway? You could get on with
your life.” David’s cell phone rang and he answered.

Jamie looked out at the wharf, boats weaving side to side as a steady
strong breeze filtered through. Men on fishing boats tugged in their nets and
yelled back and forth to one another. The silver water cupped into small white
caps with what looked like gold coins bouncing off them as the sun peeked
through the myriad of clouds, reflecting it’s rays off the water.

David bantered on with the person on the other end of the phone about
some brief. She couldn’t believe this guy was remotely related to the man to
whom she’d been married. She had a gut feeling that David’s wife was calling
the shots in this situation. If he made waves and Susan took off for better
things, then David would see his posh lifestyle go down the drain. He made
decent money, but he didn’t come from the kind of money his wife had.

He hung up the phone. “I have to run.” He tossed down enough cash for his
half of the lunch. “It’s been hard times for everyone, Jamie. Money is tight
for us too these days. We’ll do what we can. I’ll have Susan call you when she
finds something, and also to set up some time when we can have Maddie for the
weekend. Good to see you.” He bent down and gave her a kiss on the cheek. “Take
care.”

On her way home, she ran the conversation over and over again in her
mind. She called David every name in the book and drove faster than she
should’ve. She couldn’t believe she’d taken the day off work to get nothing
accomplished.

She picked Maddie up at the ranch where she’d signed her up for horse
camp for the week and prayed that check wouldn’t bounce too.

She parked and watched for a minute as Tyler had the group of kids seated
on the grass while he and another instructor put on a puppet show. Jamie got
out to watch. She sat down next to Maddie, who took her hand. Jamie squeezed
it. Tyler caught her eye and she smiled at him. The story they told with the
puppets had something to do with two cowboys, a sheriff and one very smart
horse—smarter than the cowboys or the sheriff. Tyler did funny voices and all
the kids laughed. Jamie laughed too. It was a nice diversion.

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