Signs Point to Yes (4 page)

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Authors: Sandy Hall

BOOK: Signs Point to Yes
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Jane sank back into her chair, looking relieved. Her mother leveled her gaze at her.

“Do you really want this? It's going to be hard, much harder than filing. Being a babysitter isn't as easy as it looks. Especially for kids as energetic as those Buchanan girls.”

Jane sat up straight. “I want to. I swear. I went over there yesterday, and they interviewed me. It seemed like a lot of fun.”

“Fun?”

“Yes, fun. Even if it is hard work, it seemed like it could also be a lot of fun. And the girls seemed so excited.”

“All right.”

“All right, I can do it?”

“Yes,” her mom said. “It's good that Connie will have some reliable help this summer. From what she tells me, Teo is in a funk. Being rude and always out with that boy.”

“What boy?”

“That Ravi. The one who used to always tease you so much in middle school.”

“Thanks for the reminder, Mom.”

“Maybe he liked you,” her dad said.

Before Margo had a chance to tear into him about how sexist and awful it was that boys could tease girls under the auspices of “liking them,” her father stood and started clearing the table, and her mother followed. Margo's rant would have to wait for another day. Along with any chance for her to come out.

Even if her parents had stayed at the table, there was no way she could have come out to them after that display. It would have been foolish to even try to talk to them when they both had Jane on the brain.

Or at least that was what Margo told herself so she would stop feeling like such a coward.

She would come out when the time was right, on her own terms.

“I need to get back downstairs,” their dad said. “I'm working on a huge submarine model, and I'm at the trickiest part.”

Margo rolled her eyes but helped with clearing the table.

Only Jane sat there through the cleanup, looking stunned.

Margo took the seat across from her once everything had been put away and the dishwasher was humming.

“It sucks that Mom acted like that,” Margo said when their mother had slipped out the back door to take the trash to the garbage cans.

“Thanks,” Jane said. “But it actually went way better than I'd expected. She didn't even mention me quitting. I thought for sure that would be her fix for everything.”

“What would you have done?”

Jane looked thoughtful. “I would have really pushed the whole ‘helping a neighbor' angle. She would have eaten that up. I think luck was on my side, though, since mom had talked to Connie recently.”

“True,” Margo said.

“I wonder what's up with Teo. I thought he was always some kind of perfect son.”

“Yeah, perfect Teo, always doing what his mom needs him to do, never complaining.”

“He practically ruined our childhoods by being so perfect. And now he's off with Ravi Singh, making trouble every night.”

“Wait, has Teo really gone all bad-boy?” Margo asked.

“No. I don't think so, at least. It's probably more along the lines of Mom totally misconstruing something Connie said and turning the fact that he's not home much or whatever into a much bigger deal than it is.”

Margo squinted. “Yeah, I just really can't imagine what kind of trouble those two would even get into.”

“I bet they mug old ladies.”

“And knock over mailboxes with baseball bats.”

“Take candy from babies,” Jane said.

“Hot wire cars,” Margo added.

“Drink wine coolers and stay out past ten.”

“Yeah, they're totally badass.”

Jane pumped her fist in the air. “Yes! I love it when you curse.”

Margo giggled at her sister's enthusiasm for swearing.

Margo almost told Jane her secret right there in the dining room. It had been a long time since she'd felt this close to her sister. Sometime in her teens Margo had lost touch with Jane, and then when she left for college, she never seemed to have the time. But maybe this summer would be a good chance for them to become friends again.

It couldn't hurt to have one.

Unfortunately, their mother came back in from the yard, and their dad starting yelling from the basement, and the moment was lost. But Margo promised herself that she would find another one and not let it pass her by.

 

Chapter 4

On her first day of work, Jane slipped out the front door with a yelled good-bye toward the back of the house.

“But what about breakfast?” her mom called from the kitchen.

“I'm not hungry.” Jane slammed the door good and hard to punctuate that sentence.

She ate a granola bar that she found at the bottom of her backpack and washed it down with water from the bathroom sink. It might not be the most balanced breakfast, but it got her out of the house nice and fast.

She marched down the street and around the corner, proud that she was actually going to be twenty minutes early. If only school were this close to her house, she might be early for that sometimes, too.

Connie had told Jane to let herself in the back door when she arrived, because it was sometimes hard to hear the doorbell from inside the house, and Connie wanted Jane to get comfortable streaming in and out anyway. Connie had had a key made for her and everything.

So Jane let herself in through the back door and was met by a shirtless Teo in the kitchen.

If she were a different kind of girl, she would have let out a wolf whistle.

For the record, she'd seen him without his shirt plenty of times in the past. He was the kind of guy who would mow the lawn without a shirt on or would whip it off while playing soccer with his friends. He was a lifeguard, for God's sake, Jane told herself. She'd seen his naked torso on numerous occasions.

But somehow, while he was sleep-mussed and standing in his own kitchen wearing only a pair of basketball shorts, it was a completely different story.

She tried to calculate the last time she'd seen him without his shirt on and realized it was probably last summer. Jane would guess he'd done a lot of abs work during those long winter months, because she could basically count his six-pack.

“You're early!” Teo said, putting down his glass of orange juice and covering himself with a paper towel.

Jane turned away to hide her laughter and the blush that was traveling up her entire body, only to walk directly into a kitchen chair.

“Sorry,” Jane squeaked, apologizing to Teo and the chair she knocked over.

“No, it's cool. Just a little surprising,” Teo said, looking at the paper towel as though he wasn't entirely sure how it had gotten in his hand. He put it down, then went into the laundry room and grabbed a sleeveless T-shirt, pulling it over his head as he reemerged.

“Thanks. I obviously can't handle the sight of boy nipples,” Jane said, blushing even more deeply and slapping her hand over her mouth.
I shouldn't even be allowed to speak
, she thought.

Teo's eyes went wide, and he blushed as deeply as Jane had.

She squeezed her eyes closed and balled her hands into fists.

“What are you doing?”

She carefully opened one eye so she wouldn't totally lose her concentration. “I'm trying to sink through the kitchen floor.”

“Oh, yeah, sure.”

“Any advice?”

“I've never actually sunk through a floor before,” Teo said, but now he was smiling, and Jane could at least relax a little.

Jane cleared her throat. “So, um…”

“Teo,” an annoyingly familiar voice said from the basement stairs. “I thought you were bringing down Pop-Tarts.”

Jane thanked all the gods she could think of that someone was about to rescue her from this embarrassing moment.

Unfortunately, that someone was none other than Ravi Singh.

He took one look at Jane, and then, making a production of ignoring her, he turned to Teo. “What's for breakfast?”

“Good morning to you, too, Ravi,” Jane said.

“Oh, Jane, how lovely to see you,” Ravi said with the kind of fake grin usually reserved for creepy clowns in horror movies.

Teo just stood there with his mouth open. He had backed himself into the doorway. Jane figured he wanted to be able to beat a hasty retreat if she and Ravi went nuclear on each other.

“You want a Pop-Tart?” Ravi asked Teo, holding the box he had found in the pantry and offering one to him but not to Jane.

Truth be told, Jane did want a Pop-Tart, but she certainly wasn't going to ask Ravi for one as if she were some kind of peasant asking for a boon.

“I need to get out of here,” Ravi told the room. “I have SAT prep this morning. I need to get my score up if I'm serious about applying to anywhere Ivy League.”

Jane rolled her eyes and tried not to regurgitate her granola bar.

“How did
you
do on the SATs?” Ravi pointedly asked Jane, stuffing half a Pop-Tart into his mouth.

Lucky for Jane, he wasn't the first person she'd had to dodge on this matter. “I did perfectly fine for where I want to go.”

“And where do you want to go?” Ravi asked, gesturing with the other half of his Pop-Tart. “I think you'd be good with one of those HVAC repair programs, or maybe a gas station attendant.”

“Gee, I don't know,
Mom
. Maybe wherever you aren't?”

Teo snorted and Jane looked over at him, shocked. Ravi usually tossed insults at Jane, and Jane took them while Teo stood idly by, ignoring their back-and-forth.

As Jane was about to go on, feeling bolstered by Teo's seeming appreciation of her level of wit, all three of his sisters came spilling into the kitchen.

“Jane, Jane, Jane!” they all said at the same, each of them trying to tell her something different.

Buck walked in then, too, and patted Teo on the back.

“You're looking good this morning,” Buck said to Teo, squeezing his biceps on one arm. “Did you start using heavier weights, like I suggested?”

Jane would have died on the spot, but Teo seemed to take his stepfather's words in stride, even if he curled in on himself a bit, crossing his arms and stepping away from Buck.

Jane would have liked to stay and listen to the rest of the exchange because, damn, she should be getting exercise tips from Teo, and maybe Buck, too, if he was the genius behind Teo's new body. Unfortunately, the girls were all desperate to take her to the basement and show her various toys.

“Mom said we had to wait for the boys to wake up,” Keegan explained, taking Jane's hand and walking down the carpeted stairs. “We wanted to wake them up, but she wouldn't let us.”

The large basement had two separate areas, one with a TV and a sectional couch, where the floor was piled high with blankets and pillows from the sleepover. Beyond that, an area in the back was sectioned off with shelving that held all the girls' toys, including a kitchen set that Jane would have gone wild for as a kid.

The girls got deep into playing almost immediately, and Jane joined in. She tried to focus their play on the kitchen area, because, really, it was beautiful, but they seemed to want to play a game that, from what Jane could gather, was essentially My Little Pony DMV. There was a pony behind a couple of blocks in a pile, and the other ponies would step up and ask questions about insurance coverage.

They didn't even really want Jane to play, because every time she picked up one of the figures, they would tell her that now Applejack (or whoever) had to go to the end of the line because Jane had made her lose her spot.

Connie came down to say good-bye to the girls.

She
tsk
ed at the mess that the boys had left in the basement and told Jane not to clean it up for them. “They're big boys. They can handle it.”

It hadn't even crossed Jane's mind to clean it up.

Connie asked Jane to come back upstairs so they could go through the regular schedule.

Today would be easy because the girls only had swim class at eleven. “I tried to keep it light to start with so you could get used to the routine and get to know the girls a little bit better,” Connie said.

“Thanks,” Jane said, trying to peek around to see if muscle man Teo was still lurking.

“Do you feel okay about driving the minivan?”

“Yes.”

“And make sure the girls are all strapped into their seats before you drive. Sometimes they like to pretend they buckled themselves in, and then they climb into the front seat and scare the bejesus out of me.”

“That sounds terrifying.”

Connie nodded and smiled. “If you need anything, text or e-mail me. Even when I'm in class, I can usually get back to people that way. But the girls are really self-sufficient. Try to be at least within earshot of them, but you don't need to be on top of them all the time.”

Jane nodded. She could handle that.

“Feel free to bring along a book or a magazine or summer homework or anything,” Connie said. “I know you're giving up a lot of time to be here, so I don't want you to feel like you have to watch them every second.”

Jane smiled because that was very good news. She had totally planned to watch them every second.

“And if you're hungry, take whatever you want from the fridge or the cabinets. Let me know if there's anything you like that we don't have. Especially lunch-wise, since you'll need to feed yourself and the girls every day.”

Connie must have caught Jane's scared look. “It doesn't have to be anything elaborate. Sandwiches, fruit. Rory doesn't eat bread. She's not allergic or anything—she just doesn't eat it—so I make her cheese roll-ups or crackers with peanut butter.”

Connie finished packing up her bag and let out a deep sigh. “All right. I'll see you around five!” she said.

Jane went back down to the basement and kept an eye on the time, but it seemed to be moving in the wrong direction when the girls decided they wanted to play hide-and-seek. They would hide and Jane would have to find them. And according to the girls, all games of hide-and-seek had to be started from the living room.

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