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Authors: Robin Jones Gunn

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BOOK: Sisterchicks in Sombreros
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I kept thinking that during one of those predictable phone conversations I would say, “How’s Russell?” And when she started to talk about her schnauzer, I’d say, “No, I mean the
other
Russell.” Then I’d find out what really happened and why she took off for India for so long.

But I never quite managed to pull that one off.

That was, until last year, when Joanne and I unexpectedly crossed another bridge between friendship and sistership. Or maybe I should say we set sail on a ship that took us to a new place as sisters because that’s literally what happened.

I would never have taken off on such a lark, if the choice truly had been mine. But it wasn’t.

I look back now and realize that in the same way we don’t choose our relatives, I think it’s also true we don’t choose the best moments of our lives. God chooses them for us, the same way He chose two sisters like Joanne and me, who are “almost twins,” to turn us into the best friend neither of us ever thought we had.

L
ast November
, on the last Saturday of the month, I stood in the garage untangling a string of twinkle lights and thought,
Who came up with the term Father Christmas?

At our house, it’s more like Mother Christmas. I’m the one who knows where all the decorations are stored. I organize the festivities, buy the gifts, address the cards, initiate the parties, and single-handedly festoon the house. Without the information stored in my brain and without the loving labor of my two hands, Christmas wouldn’t come to our humble abode in Langley, which is a suburb of Vancouver.

I always start with a long list of what needs to be done and tell myself to start earlier than I did the previous year. Untangling the lights on November 29 was a pretty good running start.

That was, until Aunt Winnie called.

“Melanie, dear, you must come over at once. My lawyer is here, and he doesn’t speak a word of Spanish.”

“Aunt Winnie, what are you talking about?”

“The letter. It has your name on it. You have to be here when the conference call comes through. The call with Joanne. This is most disturbing. Please don’t dawdle.”

She hung up without saying good-bye, and I growled at the phone. Untangling Aunt Winnie had not been on my list that day.

“What’s going on?” my husband asked, as I stomped down the hall.

I repeated the cryptic message and pulled a change of clothes from the closet. Jeans and a sweatshirt weren’t appropriate attire to visit Aunt Winnie.

“Sounds strange,” Ethan muttered. “Even for your wacky aunt. What do you think she’s trying to pull?”

“Who knows? She was completely rattled.”

“More than usual?”

“Yes, more than usual.”

I slipped into my gray wool skirt and tried to straighten the permanently creased waistband. “And she’s not wacky, Ethan. Please don’t say that in front of the girls.”

“Right. Not wacky. Eccentric. Isn’t that what you told the girls?”

“Yes. Is this blouse too wrinkled?” Before Ethan could answer, I pulled it off and grabbed the tried-and-true black turtleneck.

“I thought your aunt was on a cruise to Alaska.”

“No, she leaves sometime next week for Mexico, not Alaska. Alaska was last July. Panama Canal was in October.”

“That woman goes on more cruises than anyone I’ve ever met. Why can’t you tell her you’ll come see her when she comes back from her cruise?”

“Her lawyer is there, Ethan. What am I supposed to do? If you had heard her on the phone, you’d be on your way over there, too.”

“Do you want me to go with you?”

“No. I’ll call if there’s any reason for you to come. Joy has her Girl Guides meeting at two o’clock, and Brianna is babysitting at four, but I should be back by then.”

Ethan looked at me skeptically. “If you’re not back by five, do you want me to order pizza for dinner?”

“No, I’ll be back before then.” I brushed past Ethan and reached for my purse. “If you really want to help, you can finish untangling the Christmas lights and pull out all the bins with the decorations.”

I backed out of the driveway, chiding myself for being so brusque with Ethan. He was right; Aunt Winnie was wacky. She was demanding. I didn’t know why I was defending her instead of siding with my husband. My only comfort was that Winnie would be on her cruise next week, and I could concentrate on what I needed to do at home.

Turning right onto Highway 1, I sped up for the forty-minute stretch into Vancouver and made a mental list of all the
possible reasons her lawyer was there.

I wonder if Aunt Winnie is in some sort of financial trouble
.

One of the enigmas of my aunt was that no one in the family knew where her money came from or how much she had. Uncle Harlan had passed away three years ago. He and my father were brothers and came from a long line of simple, rural-type Canadians. The money that had funneled into Harlan and Winnie’s forty-eight-year marriage came from some undisclosed source on Winnie’s side.

Arriving in Vancouver as a mist of chilling rain dotted the windshield, I cut across town on King Edward Avenue and headed for Aunt Winnie’s luxurious apartment with its spectacular view of English Bay. As the elevator took me to the tenth floor, I straightened my skirt and checked my posture.

“Is that Melanie?” Aunt Winnie sang out as Mei Lee, her housekeeper, welcomed me inside the permanently rose-scented apartment. Today tinges of burnt toast lingered in the air.

I noticed that the mahogany furniture had been rearranged to make a clear path through the Victorian-style living room for what Aunt Winnie called her “Scoot-About.” Several weeks ago she saw the motorized wheelchair advertised on TV and picked up her phone to order one. I wasn’t convinced she needed the assistance, but she was enamored with her new device.

“Hello, Aunt Winnie.” I went to her side and pressed my cheek against hers. “How are you feeling?”

Her tightly curled silver hair framed her oval face like the
crocheted lace on the throw pillows that lined her sofa. She held out a piece of paper to me. “Most disturbing news I’ve had in a month. No, six months. Most upsetting.”

The stationery, I noted, was from El Banco del Sol in Mexico. The only words in English were my sister’s and my names, which appeared in the middle of a sentence at the top of the page.

“What does this say?” I asked my aunt.

“I have no idea. Tea?” Aunt Winnie rang a small silver bicycle bell attached to the right handle of her Scoot-About. It was the sort of bell my girls had on their tricycles years ago, the kind that makes a cheerful brring-brring sound with a flick of the thumb. On the front of her Scoot-About hung a woven wicker basket, also of the tricycle variety, complete with pink and lavender plastic streamers.

I was glad Ethan hadn’t come with me. No matter what Aunt Winnie had to say, I’m sure my husband wouldn’t have been able to see past the basket with the plastic streamers.

“Does your lawyer know what this letter says?” I asked.

“No, I told you: He doesn’t speak a word of Spanish. That’s why he left. To get it translated. I sent him downstairs to make a copy and insisted he leave the original letter with me. I knew you would be proud of me for thinking of that. He will have the letter decoded by the time he calls us in …” She glanced at her ornate grandfather clock. “Twenty minutes.”

“And that’s the phone call Joanne will be in on,” I surmised.

“The very one.” Aunt Winnie triumphantly flicked her thumb against the silver bell.

Mei Lee, ever the efficient housekeeper, appeared with Aunt Winnie’s Royal Albert teapot and matching china teacups on a tray. She set the preparations before us with a plate of Nanaimo bars, Aunt Winnie’s favorite teatime dainties.

“You don’t speak Spanish, do you?” Aunt Winnie asked Mei Lee.

“No.” The petite woman shyly dipped her chin.

“But you do speak Chinese.” Winnie shook her finger. “If Harlan had bought his summerhouse in Hong Kong, we would have been coming to you for advice. How is the fishing in Hong Kong?”

“Very nice, I’m sure.” Mei Lee left the room as I put the pieces together.

“Uncle Harlan owned a summerhouse in Mexico? Is that what the letter is about?”

“Oh, that awful, ugly fish. It was hideous! He insisted on having it mounted. Melanie, will you pour, dear?”

“What fish are you talking about?”

“The one Harlan caught.”

“In Mexico?”

“Yes, of course, in Mexico. That’s why he wanted the summerhouse.”

“And the summerhouse is in Mexico.” I held out her cup of tea with a quarter teaspoon of sugar already stirred in, the way she liked it.

“Naturally. Thank you, dear. I only went there once, you know.”

“You only went once to Mexico?”

“Harlan’s summerhouse.”

“And exactly where is Uncle Harlan’s summerhouse?” This was the first I’d heard that my uncle had such a place.

“Haven’t you been paying attention at all, dear Melanie? His summerhouse is in Mexico.”

“Yes, but where in Mexico?”

“Some town with a Mexican name. What about this teapot, Melanie? Would you like this one after I’m gone?”

On a “normal” visit, Aunt Winnie’s erratic communication skills drove me nuts. Today I thought I was going to scream. As firmly as I dared, I said, “Aunt Winnie, you said you thought the letter referred to your summerhouse. What—?”

“Oh, it wasn’t mine!” she yipped. “It was Harlan’s house. I couldn’t take the heat. Dreadful! He loved it. But I don’t know why we’re discussing this. Harlan sold the summerhouse years ago. After his first heart attack. Did I already promise you this teapot?”

“Yes, Aunt Winnie, you did.”

She reached for her famous ledger, which I noticed she now kept handy in her little wicker basket. She had started the ledger because every time I came to visit, she gave an inventory of her belongings and offered me first grabs on anything I liked.

I used to say, “Oh, I couldn’t ask you for that” or “I’m sure
you have many more years left to enjoy it.”

My polite approach gave her fits, so about eight months ago I started to say, “Why, yes, thank you very much. I would love to have that someday.”

That response prompted her to buy the ledger, and today she wrote down the Royal Albert teapot under my name for the second time.

“You know,” she said with a funny little sniff. “It’s beachfront property. Gorgeous white sandy beach. Miles and miles of it. I have photos here somewhere.”

With her hand on the control switch, Aunt Winnie puttered across the room. She stopped the Scoot-About in front of her antique secretary, stood up, and bent over to pull a box out of the lower drawer. Settling back in the padded seat, she rang her bell and merrily motored the distance of eight feet, back to where I sat on the couch.

“Palm trees.” She opened the box and filed through the photos. “Blue water and so many fish. I said I’d never go again, and I never did.”

She looked up at me with a blink of surprise behind her glasses. “Harlan and I fought like cats over that fish of his. Do you know that it took twenty years before he finally took the bloated thing off the wall?”

Tilting her head she added wistfully, “Funny, I miss it. Hmm.”

The phone rang, and Winnie called out, “Mei Lee!” For emphasis she added a brring-brring of her tricycle bell.

“That will be my lawyer,” Winnie said. “You talk to him, Melanie. He said he wanted you to be on the phone with Joanne.”

Mei Lee handed me the phone, and what followed was a fifteen-minute conversation that left me speechless. As soon as I hung up, Aunt Winnie squawked, “Well, what did he say?”

“The letter is from a bank in Mexico.”

“Yes, yes, I know that. What does it mean?”

“It seems Uncle Harlan listed Joanne and me as the beneficiaries of his summer home.”

“Beneficiaries? I told you, Harlan sold the beach house. Eight years ago. After his first heart attack.”

“According to your lawyer and the bank in Mexico, Harlan didn’t sell the house.”

“Are you sure? How preposterous!”

“It’s true, Aunt Winnie. Your lawyer has all the documentation.”

“Then why did it take those people three years to get around to telling me this?”

“It took a long time to get all the paperwork through the right bank in Mexico. The property still is owned by Uncle Harlan, but since he’s gone, it’s now deeded to Joanne and me.”

“Imagine that,” she said with a curious sounding “piffle!” at the end of her sentence. Holding out two black-and-white photos, Aunt Winnie nodded for me to take the square-shaped pictures from her. I guessed them to be from the sixties, due to the white trim around the borders. One photo showed a
stretch of white sand and what had to be aqua blue water.

“That’s what you see from the front,” Winnie said. “White sand, like I said.”

The second picture was of Uncle Harlan wearing only a pair of shorts and dark midcalf socks with sandals. He had a floppy straw sombrero on his head and was pouring a bucket of water on a three-foot-high palm tree.

“Harlan had a groundskeeper, you know, but he planted this palm tree himself. Said he needed a place to hang his hammock.”

BOOK: Sisterchicks in Sombreros
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