Authors: Jettie Woodruff
My mom let go of me and walked back to
Caroline. She squatted to her level and held her hand out
for me to come.
“Caroline, do you know who this is?” she asked as
she took my hand. I squatted too. I didn’t know what I was
supposed to do.
“My sister,” she smiled. I held out my hand and
took her little hand into mine. “It’s nice to meet you,” she
said.
I shook her little hand and smiled. “It’s very nice
to meet you too, Caroline.” I fucking loved the kid, right
off the bat. I fucking loved the little girl that I hated and
resented just five minutes earlier.
“Come on kiddo, let’s go batten down the
hatches,” Jason said to Caroline, wanting to give us some
time.
“There’s a big storm coming,” Caroline informed
me.
I only smiled. I didn’t know what was wrong with
me, but I suddenly had no words in my brain.
Jason kissed my mom before taking Caroline’s
hand and leaving us alone. She was happy, and I was
happy that she was happy. I’m not sure why. I hadn’t felt
like that before I had gotten there. I hoped that she was
miserable.
“Can you bring Morgan’s things in?” she asked,
kissing him back as she hooked his fingers with hers.
What? I’m not staying…
“Sure thing. Can I have your keys?” he asked.
I gave him my keys.
“Do you want to take a walk?” my mother asked.
I shrugged. “Sure.”
This was strange. This was not the mother that I
had grown up with for almost eighteen years. My mother
was a loud mouth drunk with the vocabulary of a drunken
sailor. This woman was soft spoken, well kept, and very
loving. She was pretty with the same dark hair as mine,
manicured nails, painted in a light pink to match the toes
sticking out from her sandals. She looked healthy and in
shape. My mother wore slutty clothes and didn’t keep
herself up at all.
She held my hand as we walked along the beach.
We both laughed when we slid out of our shoes at the
same time. We walked out to the end of the pier and sat
down with our arms over the railing and our feet dangling
from the side.
“You can ask me anything that you want Morgan. I
am sure that you have a million questions,” she started.
I couldn’t hate her. I just couldn’t do it. I loved
her, no matter what she had done. I loved her damnit.
“I want to know about my real dad. How did you
meet a rich man from Vegas in the hills of West Virginia?”
My mom took a deep breath. I had just married
your dad. We had been trying to get pregnant for about
four months.” She laughed. “I wanted to have a baby so
that I could get a monthly state check, like everyone else. It
just didn’t happen. He decided to take off for the summer
and follow the carnival across the south side of the United
States. Michael was there on business, something about
some diamonds that had been found while mining coal. I
don’t know a lot about that because he had told me that it
was all hush, hush and he was there to retrieve them
before anyone caught wind of the outrageous find.
“He was so young and good looking. He made me
want out of there and make a better life for myself. I
always knew that he wouldn’t be my knight in shining
armor and be the one to save me, but none the less I
dreamt about it. I fell head over heels in love with
Michael. We spent the entire two weeks that he was there
together. We spent it in Charleston of course, in some
fancy hotel. He wasn’t the type to stay in the rent by the
hour hotel back home. When your dad got tired of being a
carney and came home after three months, I was almost
two months pregnant.”
“He beat the hell out of me but never told anyone
that you belonged to another man. He would throw it up to
me occasionally, but no one else knew.”
“How did Michael find out about me?” I asked.
“He came back six years later for the same reason.
That find didn’t turn out to be the gold mine that he had
hoped for. They were just some sort of crystals that wasn’t
worth much. I was still waitressing at the truck stop. I
spent the night with him and told him about you.” She
snorted. “I was hoping that he would take us away from
there. He didn’t, and he was gone before I woke up the
next morning.”
“I still don’t understand. How did you end up
here? How did my little brother end up adopted by a
family in Vegas? How did I end up married to a man that I
didn’t even know?” I asked, not taking a breath from the
never-ending questions.
“Is he good to you, Morgan?” she asked, moving
my hair from the front of my shoulder to the back.
“Yes. He is very good to me,” I said. That wasn’t
a lie. He was good to me. It just wasn’t always like that.
What was I supposed to do, tell her that he took me to be
his lawfully fuckable sexmate? To fuck and to suck in
various positions until his orgasm do we part? I had a
good feeling that she had been through a lot herself, and
this was harder for her than I had originally thought.
She smiled content with my answer. “Mr.
Callaway showed up at the truck stop when you were
close to eighteen. He had a whole slew of pictures from a
private investigator that had been spying on me. He made
me feel like a piece of shit when he showed me the
pictures of the trailer back home and the living conditions
that I allowed my children to live in. He had pictures of
the church bringing in food, you in a thin worn coat, trying
to pry frozen wood apart, Justin with the same clothes,
three days in a row. I didn’t think I had a choice, Morgan.
Please try to understand that I did this for you and Justin,
not myself. I would have agreed had he not offered me one
penny.”
“He explained that he never knew about you until
Michael was on his deathbed. I knew that you were going
to marry Drew Kelley. I knew that Justin was going to be
adopted by Hillary and Peter Dunn. They had tried to have
kids for years and were not able to. I knew he would have
a good home, and you would never want for anything.”
I wanted for a lot of things, mostly love.
“But the welfare department came and took him
away. I was there when they did,” I assured her, still not
understanding.
“That was only temporary. Mr. Callaway arranged
that until the paper work was complete. He wasn’t about
to let him stay there. He didn’t want to take you until you
graduated because you were so close. I could have stayed
until then too, but I couldn’t stand the thought of being
there without Justin and not being able to tell you what
your future held.”
“Where did you get all of the pictures?” I asked.
“That was the deal. I would only agree to walk
away quietly if I was insured that I would always know
that you guys were okay. I have actually talked to Justin’s
new mother. He was sick once, and she wanted to know
about our family’s medical history.” My mom smiled.
“She was so worried about him. They really do love him,”
she added, happy of the fact. I smiled too, knowing that he
was with a good family made me glad that things worked
out the way that they had, if only for him.
“I like your hair better your natural color. Blonde
just isn’t you,” my mom said, playing with my hair again.
I snickered. “I did that for Drew,” I replied. I did
do it for him. I just didn’t have a say in the matter.
“Tell me about him,” she coaxed.
How was I supposed to do that? Oh, we have this
amazing fucked up sex life.
“Well, he’s busy. He works a lot.” I couldn’t do it.
I couldn’t think of anything to tell her that wasn’t going to
sound fucked up.
“So things are good with you two?”
I pondered for a second before speaking. “Not
right at the moment. We are on a trial separation right
now.”
“But you’re going to work it out, right?” she asked,
almost desperately.
I shrugged my shoulders, and for the life of me, I
don’t know why I had just blurted out the rest.
“I’m kind of in love with someone else.”
“Oh,” she said, surprised. “Are you still in love
with Drew?”
“I am so in love with Drew that I don’t know
which way is up, but I am in love with a simple sheriff
with a simple life too.”
My mom smiled. “Life is a fucked up mess,
Morgan, but it always seems to find a way to work its self
out.”
I laughed at her choice of words. I knew I had
picked up my foul mouth from her. I just didn’t normally
say it out loud. It was normally during conversations
within in my own mind.
“Tell me about Jason. I like him,” I said. She
smiled. I could tell that she loved him.
“Jason is a good man and a good father. I wished
that you and Justin would have had that.”
“I think Justin does have that,” I replied.
“Mr. Callaway let me choose anywhere in the
world that I wanted to live. He told me to make it count
because I was only getting one chance and would be cut
off from his wallet. I didn’t know where to go or what to
do. I’d never even been out of the hills before. A week
after our first meeting a man showed up with an envelope.
Do you remember the man that I had left with the day that I
told you goodbye?” she asked.
“Yes.” Of course I remembered that. I had
nightmares about it.
“Mr. Callaway had done some homework himself,
and thought that this place would give me a fresh start, and
I would be able to run a business here and be able to take
care of myself. I loved the pictures and the thought of
living on the beach. The problem was, I knew nothing
about bookkeeping, taxes, or how to run a business. He
hired Jason to work with me for a few months to get me
started. He and I stayed in this huge house alone for three
months. I think I fell in love with him the first night. Of
course I thought he was way out of my league, and I didn’t
have a chance,” she added. I could see how she felt that
way. I felt that way about Drew. I didn’t think he could
love a backyard, hillbilly like me.
“Jason and I had so much fun together those first
few weeks. I was upfront and honest with him from the
beginning. He knew about you and Justin. I swear if he
hadn’t been there during my many crying sprees I would
have fed myself to the sharks.”
“I was so mad when Drew told me that you were
married and had a new family. I felt like you forgot us,” I
sadly told her how I felt.
“Oh, baby,” she said hugging me tight. “I have not
gone one day without thinking about you both. We even
have birthday cake for both of you every year,” she said in
my hair.
“You do?” I asked, pulling away to look at her.
“Yes, we do. I know it’s silly, but I kind of like
being silly. It makes me happy.”
“I’m happy for you, mom,” I said. I was happy for
her. This wasn’t what I had in mind at all. It wasn’t even
close. I had planned on coming there for all of ten minutes,
giving her a piece of my mind and spinning my tires out of
there so fast. I was glad that my plan failed. I was glad that
she had Jason and Caroline. I was glad that she was
happy.
“Caroline reminds me a lot of me,” I said with a
smile.
“She reminds me of you every day,” my mom
assured me. “She is so smart, sometimes too smart for her
own good,” she added with a smile. “Guess what she
loves,” my mom persuaded.
I shrugged my shoulders with a big smile. I was
happy. I really was.
“Peanut butter and pickles,” she laughed.
I laughed too. That was my favorite food growing
up. “I haven’t had one of those in years,” I said.
“Oh, don’t worry. You will, just give it a day or
two. How long are you staying?” she asked.
I shrugged again. “I don’t have a deadline. I can
leave whenever I want. I was supposed to be using this
time to figure out what to do with these two difficult men
in my life, but so far, I’m still at square one.”
She smiled. “I hope it takes you a month,” she
squealed, happy that I didn’t have to leave right away.