Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
learn to move to the ball and gave them time to do so.
Nobody played any particular position at that point; I just
wanted them to get used to being in the field, to going
after the ball. I also didn’t want to have them run the bases
yet. Just to have fun batting. We’d run the next day.
A petite African-American boy named Gabriel was
up to bat first. He knew very well how to hold the bat and
he sent the ball sailing on his very first try.
Hey, maybe
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this’ll be easier than I thought,
went zipping through my
head as he proceeded to connect with the next eight balls I
set on the tee for him. Of course, I jinxed myself right then
because Gabriel was the only kid who hit it on the first
attempt.
When one of the Brittanys was up, I heard a woman’s
voice from the bleachers. “Come on, Britty! You know how
to do this!” I took a quick glance; she was on the edge of
her seat, hands fisted, looking way too invested in whether
or not her five-year-old could hit a plastic ball off a tee
with a plastic bat. e phrase Helicopter Parent flashed
into my mind. Terrific.
Brittany proceeded to whack the crap out of the tee
itself, but had trouble actually connecting with the ball.
“Eye on the ball, Brittany! Just like at home! Come
on!”
I was reasonably sure her mother’s continual shouts
weren’t helping. When I saw her big brown eyes start to
well up, I felt a little ache for her and spoke softly. “Hey,
let’s try again tomorrow, okay? Give yourself a break for
now. You’ll get it. Don’t worry.”
She nodded and sniffled, quite obviously trying not to
cry as she picked up her glove and went back out into the
field. I noted no encouraging comments from the
bleachers, only silence, and it forced an irritated breath
from my lungs.
Max the latecomer was next. He was a really cute kid
with enormous brown eyes and hair that was almost black.
His eyelashes were the impossibly long variety that most
women would kill for and when he gripped the bat, his
tongue poked out at the corner of his mouth in
concentration. I couldn’t help but smile at him. It took him
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three tries, but the third one, he hit over the heads of the
first line of fieldsman.
“Nice!” I cried.
e first thing Max did was whip his head around
toward the bleachers, his face a glowing smile of pride. His
mother was still on her cell and wasn’t even looking in his
direction. His smile dropped right off his face and he
turned back to the tee. I wondered what the opposite of a
Helicopter Parent was.
“Okay, gang, bring it in,” I called as the last kid, David,
finished his round at bat. Various vehicles were starting to
pull into the parking lot and I was happily surprised to see
that an hour had already passed. “Come here and sit down
for a minute.” It had only been one practice, but I felt like
I’d learned a few things and I wanted to talk to the kids
about them. “You did great. You did really, really great. I’m
proud of all of you.”
Gabriel snorted a laugh. “Brittany and Jordan couldn’t
even hit. At all.”
“Shut up,” Jordan snapped, his manhood obviously
bruised. Brittany just flushed a light pink.
I bit my lip to keep from snapping out a retort that
Gabriel’s parents probably wouldn’t appreciate. “You know
what Gabriel? First of all, this is a team. We’re all supposed
to work together and do you know what that means? It
means that the people who are good at certain things need
to help out the ones who might not be and that way the
whole team will get stronger together. So just because you
can hit the ball, it doesn’t mean you get to laugh at those
who might not have the hang of it yet. Making fun of your
teammates is not something I want to hear happening.
Understood?”
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Nods and murmurs rippled through the group, at least
from those who were paying attention. Katie was pulling
grass out by the roots and Mikey was sprawled out on his
stomach looking so comfortable that I wondered if he
might actually be napping.
“So, the fact remains that you all did well. You tried
your best and you’ll do it again tomorrow. at’s why we
have practice, so we can get better. Right?” At their nods, I
waved my hands as if shooing them away. “Good. Go. Go
home. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
ey scattered like leaves in the wind.
I was picking up balls and putting them into Maddie’s
nylon bag when the lone male from the bleachers came to
say hi.
“Jake Weber,” he said, shaking my hand in a grip that
was both solid and friendly. “I’m Samuel’s dad.”
I fumbled in my brain to try to pick out which of the
boys was Samuel and finally settled on the quiet redhead
with the freckles and shy smile. “Of course,” I said, noting
Jake’s darker version of Samuel’s hair. “Samuel not Sam,” I
teased, using the phrase the boy had used to tell me his
name. “I’m Avery King.”
“Pleased to meet you.” His smile was kind and I liked
him right away.
“Samuel seems like a really nice kid.”
“He is. A little shy,” he added with a chuckle, “but a
good boy. He’s been looking forward to this since winter.”
He scratched at his neck. “Anyway, I just wanted to say
hello and meet the coach.”
“I’m glad you did,” I replied and meant it.
As Jake headed back to his son, Brittany’s mom
approached from the bleachers. Maddie hadn’t warned me
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about all this parent interaction and I made a mental note
to slap her the next time I saw her.
“Hi there,” she said, holding out her hand. “Marjorie
Sullivan.” Her clothes were designer, her makeup was
flawless, and her short hair was the color of spun gold and
perfectly highlighted. Everything about her said this was a
woman who was used to being listened to, used to getting
what she wanted.
“Avery King,” I responded, shaking her hand and
using effort not to wince as she overdid the firmness on her
end. “Nice to meet you. You’ve got a really nice kid there.” I
nodded in Brittany’s direction.
“ank you. I was just wondering if there was
anything my daughter should be doing at home to help her
with her batting skills.”
It was difficult, but I managed to keep my face neutral.
At least I hoped I did. “I think she’ll get the hang of it
during practice. is was only the first day and sometimes
it takes a little while. No need to worry, there’s plenty of
time. She’ll be fine.” What I wanted to say was,
Are you
serious? She’s five, for Christ’s sake. Give the kid a break.
Marjorie Sullivan didn’t look all that impressed with
my answer and I suspected I’d just dropped a couple
notches on her list of esteemed teachers and coaches.
“Well, maybe I’ll have my husband work with her anyway.”
I nodded, not that it mattered because she was
walking away. I followed her with my eyes, still just this
side of a little freaked by the amount of pressure she put
on her kindergartner. Before I pulled my gaze back to my
own world, I noticed Max and his mom. She was finally off
the phone and as she handed him a water bottle, she
looked at me. And totally sized me up. She was a good
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twenty feet from me, but her eyes crawled up my body so
intentionally I could almost feel them. I didn’t normally
mind when somebody checked me out. Hell, it was
flattering most of the time. But this just felt…a little dirty.
She wasn’t unattractive, but the way she leered at me made
her less good-looking than I might have originally
thought.
Okay, so Max’s mommy might be family. I wonder if
Max’s daddy knows that.
I filed it away, along with the fact that though she
couldn’t be bothered to come and introduce herself, she
apparently had no qualms about undressing me with her
eyes right there on the baseball field with her son standing
next to her. Shaking my head, I forced myself to look away
and continue cleaning up. When I finally ventured another
peek, the Lexus was pulling away.
1
“So? How’d it go?” Maddie’s voice wasn’t quite as
exuberant as usual, which I blamed on pain medication.
Much as I wanted to give her a hard time, I suspected she
was feeling crappy enough on her own without me adding
to her misery.
“Not bad at all. It was interesting, that’s for sure. And
different.” I mixed some tuna in with Steve’s dry food as I
spoke into the phone. He did a little tap dance on the
kitchen floor at my feet, giddy with anticipation. “You
didn’t tell me some parents might stay and watch.”
“Ooo, did I leave that part out?”
“Conveniently, yes.”
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Starting From Scratch
“Sorry about that. It doesn’t happen often. Usually
they just want to dump their kids and come back later.
Anybody give you any problems?”
e way she said it made me think she’d had some in
the past and a feeling of dread sat in my belly like a peach
pit. “Not today. ough there was one mom who was a bit
overzealous in her cheering. I mean, it was practice, for
God’s sake.”
“Yeah, you’ll get that.” Maddie sighed and I could hear
her grunt as she shifted positions. “Some aren’t involved
enough and some are so over-involved you’re afraid you
might bump into them, they’re so close.” She seemed to
hesitate a little bit and then said, “Um, did anybody ask
about your marital status?”
“My what?”
“It’s just…I tend to keep my sexual orientation under
my hat.” I groaned and she went on. “I know, I know. I
don’t like it either, and I know how you hate feeling
closeted, but it’s just better that way. Trust me, there will
always be somebody who thinks a homosexual teaching
their kid is a gigantic no-no, and they’ll be sure to make a
big stink out of it.”
I hoped my silence told her how much I hated this
little wrench in the gears.
“I know,” she said again. “I know.”
I let her off the hook after a couple more seconds of
icy quiet. “How are you feeling?” I asked as I set Steve’s
bowl down before his little head exploded from the
waiting.
“Owie.”
“I’ll bet. Pain meds helping at all?”
“If I take extras, they do.”
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“Yeah, well, be careful of that,” I warned sternly. “e
last thing we need is for you to become a Vicodin addict or
something. at stuff can mess you up.”
“Hey, you know what would make me feel a lot
better?” she asked, her voice softening. “Some of those
triple chocolate cookies you made around Christmas time.
Remember those?”
A few minutes later I poured myself a glass of
Cabernet and donned my favorite apron, a simple black
one with brightly colored spatulas all over it that Grandma
bought me at least ten years earlier. Pulling mixing bowls
and ingredients out of cupboards, I set to work making
cookies for Maddie.
My love of baking comes from my grandmother. I
know it. She was a practical woman stuck raising her
daughter’s child, not something she ever expected to be
doing, I’m sure. She was fifty-five when my mother took
off and left four-year-old me with her, an age where she’d
been thinking about retirement, not how to entertain a
small child. She wasn’t the kind to play catch with me or
teach me to ride a bike (though she managed to do the
latter), but she made a mean chocolate chip cookie, among
other sweet confections. I still remembered shards of the
very first time I helped her. I must have been five or six and
she was working at the counter. I slid my little chair over
and stood on it so I could see what she was doing. Once I
was quiet enough, she simply began giving me
instructions. “I need an egg. Be careful with it.” “is is a
sifter; just pull on this handle until all the flour goes
through.” “ere’s a bag of chocolate chips in that
cupboard. Grab it for me.” And that’s how it began. It was
sort of unspoken, but that ended up being the quality time
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I spent with Grandma and it didn’t take long for me to
grow to love it. Cookies and cakes were her way of
showing me love, because I think she was so frustrated and
disappointed in her own child, she didn’t know what to say
to me.
So we baked.
I sometimes thought how weird it might have seemed
to somebody looking in from the outside. Somebody who
didn’t know, who wasn’t there during my childhood. But
Grandma took care of me; she clothed me and fed me and
put off her own retirement so I could go to a decent
college. She wasn’t terribly verbal in the emotions