Always Universe
Always Hide Your Waterballoons
By Missy

SERIES: Always Hide Your Water Balloons

UNIVERSE: Always...

AUTHOR: Missy

EMAIL: lasfic@yahoo.com

PART: 1 of 1

RATING: PG-13 (Adult thematic material, language)

PAIRING(s): L/L; S/C; R/S; F/E

DISTRIBUTION: To Myself  so far; any other archives are welcome to ask, but disclaimers must be included, my email left intact. send a URL, and provide full disclaimers as well as credit me fully. Please inform me if you are going to submit my work to any sort of search engine.  Please do not submit my work to a search engine that picks out random sets of words and uses them as key words, such as "Google"

 

Please contact me in order for this story to be placed on an archive, or if you want know of a friend who would enjoy my works, please email me their address and I will mail them the stories, expressly for the purpose of link trading. MiSTiers are welcomed! Please do inform me that you'd like to do the MiSTing, however, and send me a copy of the finished product. I'd also love to archive any MiSTings that are made of my work!

CATEGORY: Romance

FEEDBACK: PLEASE?!

SETTING IN TIMELINE: California, Post-I Do, I Don't

SEQUEL TO: Ever After, Always A Bridesmaid, Always Prepared, Always a Mess, Always Apologize First, Always a Challenge, Always Too Much Lasagna, Always There For You, Always About You, Always Looking In Higher Places and Always Something Else.  Twelfth in this continuity.

Spoilers For: the entire universe, I Do, I Don't.

SPOILLER/SUMMARY: Laverne and Lenny send out their invitations; Rhonda waits for the results of some tests.

 

***

 

One Month Later

 

"Huh?"

 

Shirley's voice pierced Laverne's eardrum.  'I said," she repeated, punctuating every word with a thrum of her pencil against a manila-colored clipboard, "where do you want to go on your honeymoon?"

 

Laverne paused, a folded envelope poised on its journey and halfway to her mouth.  She considered her options, then said to her best friend, "somewhere with a lotta pretty ceilings and a door I can lock."

 

"That's not helpful," Shirley remarked, scratching the bridge of her nose with her eraser.  Laverne took in the sight of her best friend, snuggled Indian-style in what was once her side chair with a clipboard resting against her folded ankles, and gave up a quick prayer of thanks to God for making Shirley her best friend.  Due to her advanced organization skills, preparations for the wedding were speeding along at a good clip.

 

"I dunno, Shirl..." The front door flew open, and for a millisecond she felt a wave of relief, believing it to be Squiggy.  Said relief was not tamped down when she realized it was a frazzled Lenny shambling over the threshold.  "Len," she said, reaching out for him - he walked over to her, bent over the couch, and pecked her on the mouth before strolling over to the refrigerator and pulling out a bottle of Pepsi.

 

"Lenny, where do you want to go on your honeymoon?"

 

"Huh?" he muttered, sounding a thousand light years away.

 

"Honestly!" Shirley cried out.  "I said where do you want to go on your honeymoon, you..."

 

"Watch it with the 'you's," Laverne requested quietly. 

 

Lenny paused - bottle of Pepsi halfway to his mouth - and thought it out.  "Somewhere with a lotta pretty pillows and a door I can lock."

 

While Laverne laughed at their synchronicity, Shirley shook her head and whapped the clipboard once more.  "I don't believe God made two of you."

 

"Why not?" Lenny asked, vaulting over the arm of the couch and clumsily sprawling his way face-first into Laverne's lap.  As she helped him into a sitting position, he looked back over his shoulder and asked Shirley, "if there wasn't two of us, there wouldn't be no babies and the Kosnowski line'll die out."

 

Shirley nose wrinkled.  "How romantic."

 

"Shirl, you don't get what he's saying.  If there weren't no me, he wouldn't marry no one else - there wouldn't be no babies with his name.  And I feel the same way."

 

Lenny nodded.  "Yeah, that's the smart way of sayin' it."

 

Laverne wrapped her arms around his neck and gave him a quick hug.  "Aww..."

 

Her best friend sighed impatiently.  "I need an answer."

 

Laverne looked sideways, her eyes locking with Lenny's.  She sighed and shrugged.  "It don't matter, Shirl."

 

"What?" Shirley cried out, as if Laverne had insinuated she was a tramp.

 

Laverne squirmed, looked down at her lap.  Lenny said, "there ain't gonna be a honeymoon.  Laverne can't get time off, and we don't got the money."

 

A strange fire flickered in Shirley's eyes- before Laverne could remark, it was gone.  "I thought you were planning on quitting Bardwells' soon."

 

"That's the plan," Laverne groaned ruefully.  She had been on what felt like a billion interviews over the last two months, and none of them had been productive.

 

"So?"

 

She gestured toward the phone, waving an invitation in mid-air.  "You hear that ringing?"

 

"What about your vacation days?"

 

"I already checked.  My sick days are gone - I kinda used them when you were on your honeymoon - and I'm saving up my vacation days in case Rhonda needs us.  I already used up two taking her to chemo in the past month, and, in case I don't get a new job, I gotta take the 27th off for the wedding."

 

Shirley smiled.  "You deserve it, Vernie - you've been so unselfish in helping out Rhonda.  I just don't see why you should skip your honeymoon!  Maybe you could drive up to Malibu for the weekend, or down to Bajha..."

 

Lenny shrugged, rubbing Laverne's shoulders.  The lack of a trip clearly bothered him, as much as it bothered Laverne - she was unwilling to admit how much.  Still, he seemed to care more about the fact that she was distraught.  "Or we could swipe the keys to the laundry room and stay there for a night," he suggested.

 

"That don't sound like much fun," Laverne muttered glumly.

 

Lenny wiggled his brows and took another draught of the Pepsi.  "You ever sat on a washer when it's spinning?"

 

"Yeah but..." her eyes widened, a saucy grin forming on her lips.  "You're a genius," she moaned, lurching toward him and rubbing herself against his side in a way that made Shirley clear her throat before they got carried away.

 

"Could you please put aside your animal desires for a minute and help me stuff these envelopes?" Shirley pled.

 

Laverne snorted, separating herself from Lenny and turning back to the invites.  "I don't see you doing no stuffing."

 

"That's because I'm coordinating.  Leonard, wipe your hands before you touch those!" 

 

Lenny grumbled, putting down the Pepsi and wiping his wet palms against his knees.  "I thought we was having a small wedding."  He looked at the heap of carefully-folded papers morosely before picking up an envelope and stuffing an invitation inside.

 

"This is a small wedding.  There are only twenty-five invitations in this pile," Shirley informed him.

 

"We made too many copies at the library," Laverne added.  She stopped in mid-motion and examined the mimeographed sheet, feeling Lenny's hot breath against the back of her neck as he peered over to read along with her.

 

It was another case of Edna's connections panning out in her favor.  One of the waitresses at Cowboy Bills had taken a calligraphy course over the summer at Burbank Community College, and  Edna overheard her chatting with one of the cooks about a thriving side-business - selling name scrolls at a flea market in East LA.  Edna took the girl aside and proposed that she mark up an invitation for her stepdaughter in return for a little under-the-table overtime - Angela only needed to keep this a secret from Frank.  In a week she had produced a master invitation, which Laverne and Shirley copied over at the Public Library until the machine ran out of toner.

 

The pretty, simple sheet read:

 

Edna DeFazio Requests

Your Presence At

The Wedding of her daughter, Laverne Marie

To Leonard John Kosnowski

In the Garden of Assumption at

the Santa Maria Church in East Los Angeles, California, USA

Friday, October 27th, 1965 At 12 PM.

Formal-to - Semi casual Dress Required

RSPV at....

 

Two things popped out to Laverne as she re-read the invitation - foremost, Edna calling her 'daughter', with the word 'step' not in sight.  Her heart warmed as she realized that Edna saw her exactly as that - no alterations necessary.  Second was the lack of her father's name - the fact that he wouldn't be there and wasn't giving her away once again speared her through the heart. 

 

Lenny's lips brushed the back of her neck.  "It's okay," he reminded her.

 

After a moment, she smiled.  "Yeah, it is."

 

Shirley was, by now, thumping her pencil against her clipboard with the dedicated ferocity of a drum major.  "Leonard, finish sealing the envelopes.  Laverne, read the addressees so I can check them off."

 

Lenny pulled away from Laverne and gave Shirley a mock-salute, then picked up the first stuffed envelope that came to hand and licked it, handing it causally over to Laverne.

 

"My Uncle Fungi," Laverne said.

 

'Check," said Shirley.

 

"My Aunt Theresa," Laverne said, reading another envelope.

 

"Check," Shirley repeated.

 

"Lenny's pop," Laverne said, placing a third on the pile.

 

"Check," Shirley's pencil squeaked against the small check-list.

 

"Anne-Marie," Laverne added, re-stacking the small pile.

 

"Anne-Marie?"  Lenny snickered.  "You're gonna invite a nun to the wedding?"

 

"She's one of my best friends." Laverne retorted.

 

"How'm I supposed to take off your garter in front of a nun?" Lenny cried.

 

"Keep your eyes up my skirt and pretend we're alone?"

 

Lenny gave a pained moan and tossed a handful of envelopes into the air before lunging at Laverne.  Between the smacking of their lips and the wild mauling of his hands, Laverne heard Shirley say, "ought to...get a spray bottle...treat you both like cats in heat..."

 

Laverne gently shoved Lenny away, smoothing in a motherly fashion his disheveled ducktail.  "Sorry.  I think this waiting thing's taking its toll on us."  It hadn't been a big issue for awhile, ironically - with Lenny running himself to pieces taking care of the ice cream and talent ends of Squignowski simultaneously while she did overtime and inventory to make up good with her supervisor over the multitude of disingenuous sick and vacation days, their nights routinely ended in an orgy of fruit punch, TV dinners, and nights dead asleep in front of her tv set. 

 

"Gee, Shirl, I'm surprised you ain't going crazy."

 

"Whatever for?"

 

"Well,  yanno, you ain't seen Carmine in a month..."  Lenny wiggled his brows up and down, flaring his eyes comically.

 

"I didn't marry Carmine for smut," she sighed. 

 

"Yeah, I bet Carmine feels the same way," Laverne snickered tartly.  Lenny gathered up the scattered envelopes and handed them to Laverne.  "Biff, Dave and Bill from the Brewery," she concluded.

 

Three more checks made to the list, Shirley continued, "we're coping.  It's all we can do - which isn't much, since he's all the way across the country."  A glimmer re-appeared in Shirley's eyes, and Laverne could only guess what they could be doing in the teensy bit of private time they managed to eke out over the phone.

 

Laverne winced.  "I don't wanna know how...Lenny's grandma, Hector, Eleanor, Terri, Carmine, Grandma, Anthony, and..."  her voice lowered itself.  "Fonzie."  She shoved the invitation somewhere near the bottom of the stack.

 

Lenny had heard.  "What'd she just say?" he squeaked to Shirley, who instantly became invested in her clipboard.

 

"Don't get mad..." Laverne said, but her voice held a warning tone.

 

"Fonzie?! You invited Fonzie?" 

 

Laverne nodded.  "He's a good friend, too, Len."

 

"He's your ex-boyfriend!"

 

"That's right, my EX boyfriend.  As in I'm-not-interested-in-him-and-I'm-marrying-you."

 

"I didn't invite Karen or Gretchen!"

 

"Yeah, but you don't wanna see them again," Laverne wrapped her arm around his shoulders and began to caress his shoulder and arm, butterfly-gentle.  "Me and Fonzie have a lot of history.  He's a swell guy, but he's not the one I'm in love with..."

 

"Then why're you..."

 

"Like I said - he's an old friend.  'sides, he's supposed to be in town and he was gonna stop by to see us anyway."

 

"What's he doing up here?" Lenny muttered distractedly.

 

"He's gonna be coming through on his way back to Milwaukee; Eleanor wrote me that he took his new son, Danny, down to Van Nuys for the summer to see Ritchie and his family.  Anyway, Wisconsin's starting the school year a little late, so they're gonna spend a week down in LA before driving back home."

 

"Fonzie has a son?" Shirley gasped. 

 

"Adopted," Laverne corrected, not as gently as she intended.  "Danny's around ten or nine.  And Ritchie's got three now."

 

"Ritchie Cunningham - father of three," Shirley shook her head, reminiscing.  "Goodness, that makes me feel old..."

 

Lenny glowered.  "I bet Fonzie ain't aged a day."

 

Laverne petted his arm gently.  "I don't care how he looks, Len.  Why don't you think of  the next couple of months as a chance for us to say goodbye to our old, single days, eh?"

 

"You gonna say goodbye to him the way you said goodbye to Sonny?"

 

"Yeah, but no below-the-belt stuff," Laverne teased. 

 

"Let's move on to holier subjects, shall we?  Have you decided on the vows?"

 

"I ain't thought of nothing," Laverne said glumly.

 

"May I suggest the Corinthians?" Shirley asked.

 

"They coming to the wedding, too?" Lenny asked.

 

"Do you have any suggestions, Leonard?"

 

Lenny, to the amazement of both women, produced a Bible from his back pocket.  "I hi-lighted a bunch of stuff," he announced. 

 

"Len, you ain't supposed to highlight the Bible..." Laverne protested.

 

'Why not?  Makes it a lot easier to find the dirty parts."

 

Her eyebrows went up.  "You highlight the dirty parts?"

 

"I was a deprived child, Vernie.  When I was fifteen, all I had was the Song of Solomon and my right..."

 

"All right, never mind," Shirley said.  "I'll take these down to the mailbox," she began gathering the sealed envelopes and placing them in a paper grocery bag.  "Maybe the two of you should deliver the last five to Emmy, Mikey, Squiggy, Rhonda and Adam West?"

 

"You invited Adam West?" Laverne snickered.

 

Lenny just snickered and shrugged.  Their new neighbor rarely made himself known, though Laverne had caught him wearing a Batman costume 'in preparation' for tryouts down at the NBC studios.  She had barely been sucessful in covering her amusement.

 

"Okay," Laverne stood, dragged him to his feet and to the door, the invitations in her hand.  "While you're out, can you pick up dinner for us, Shirl?  We gotta celebrate finishing!"

 

Shirley moaned.  "Gee, I guess so.  I've been on my feet at Lou's all day, and  Emmy promised she'd bring home dinner for the three of us tonight."  Emmy and Shirley had both secured jobs at Lou's diner, Emmy working the afternoon shift, Shirley the morning breakfast rush.  The length of Emmy's shift often meant that Shirley watched Mikey until his mother came home in the evening, a task she seemed to find pleasant, if exhausting.

 

Laverne dug into the back pocket of her shorts, picking out a wallet.  "I'll pay you for it, Shirl..."

 

"It's okay - you deserve a break.  Poor thing, spending the whole night stocking shelves..." Shirley said to Lenny, whos features turned downward as he stroked his way down Laverne's spine in a gesture probably meant to be comforting.  Laverne felt her blood fire and squirmed against his touch with a sigh, her feet pulsing again at the memory. 

 

"We'll see you, Shirl," Lenny said, opening the door and pulling Laverne out. 

 

"Bye - be careful!" Shirley cautioned, her meaning containing a double-edge to Laverne.

 

Alone in the hallway,  he pressed her to the wall with lips and hips, her body curving instinctively around his.  She was the one to break the embrace this time, to his disappointed grunt.  "Not in the hallway, Len."

 

"We ain't alone anywhere anymore for very long," he retorted. 

 

"Yeah, but only 'cause Mikey's too short to ring the doorbell."

 

"And you still don't lock the door."

 

She ran her fingers lightly through his greased hair.  "You're the only man Mikey's got in his life right now - it's okay if he wants to come in sometimes and spend a little time with you."

 

Lenny shrugged.  "The little guy's grown on me a lot," he admitted sheepishly.

 

"Me too," Laverne admitted genuinely.

 

Lenny disengaged himself from her arms, turning around and bending over to slip Adam's invitation under the door.  It was instantly grasped and sucked beneath the doorframe, sending Lenny backward in a sprawl of shock against Laverne.  Wide-eyed, they immediately backed down the hallway and over to Rhonda's door.

 

Laverne hesitated before she knocked.  "I hope they're home."

 

Lenny shook his head, his gaze becoming distant.  "Dunno, Vernie.  It's been a long time since I seen Squig face-to-face."

 

She turned back to the door, realizing it had been around a week since anyone had seen either Rhonda or Squiggy for more than a minute - usually coming to and leaving Rhonda's radiation treatments.  And it had been days since that pivotal moment in May, since they had come to an uneasy truce in their relationship and closed ranks against even their best friends.

 

And Laverne was dying to hear the details.  She only knew what she had seen - and that had been titillating enough.

 

***

 

May 23rd.

 

***

 

"Rhonda?"  Laverne's voice sounded like an alarm, far more brisk than she intended, as her palm slapped rhythmically against the heavy oak door.  She heard no response, and in irritation glanced at her watch.  It was four in the afternoon, they had to be at Cedars by four-fifteen at least to get her checked in and prepped for her treatment.  Laverne knew the routine and could perform it in her sleep by now, but Rhonda was still adjusting and spent much of her time asleep. 

 

Groaning, Laverne slammed the door again, until her palm began to ache.  Why the heck handn't she thought to ask Rhonda for a dummy key?  Something could be wrong...really wrong...

 

"RHONDA!" Laverne shrieked in an agonized tone.

 

The sound of Squiggy's voice made her jump a mile.  "What goin' on?" he muttered, sounding half-asleep. 

 

Laverne cast worried eyes on her fiancé’s best friend as he approached from the direction of her apartment.  He looked like hell and probably felt it,  considering how much beer he'd consumed the night before.  Squiggy's dependence on alcohol would normally have been troubling, but his change in behavior was more of a relief than a disappointment, because he wasn't acting like a zombie.  For the last month or so he had been sleeping on her couch, and though Shirley had offered to switch places with him and let him back into his old apartment Squiggy wasn't having it.

 

"Rhonda's not answering the door," Laverne said flatly.  To her surprise, Squiggy's shove only resulted in her smacking lightly against a wall and out of the way.

 

"Woman!  Open up," he ordered the locked door.  He looked over his shoulder at Laverne and grumbled, "why does she lock her door, I dunno what to do with a locked door!" 

 

To Laverne's relief, the door opened a tick, revealing Rhonda's puffy red eyes.  "Andrew," she said softly.  It opened another bit.  "Could you take Rhonda to Cedars today?"

 

"Rhonda, I..." Laverne began.

 

"Rhonda's going to be a little later than I thought.  She needs Andrew's help with something."

 

Squiggy snorted.  "Why?  You looking for another heart to smash up into crumbs?"

 

The sound of a lock unlatching barely gave Squiggy time to react before a well-manicured hand thrust its way out through the opened door and yanked Squiggy inside by the lapels of his leather jacket.  Laverne waited, unable to make another move without confirmation from Rhonda that she was no longer needed.  The silence that followed alarmed her more than it had before.

 

Abruptly, Rhonda's door opened.  "Tell Len he's gotta do the route today," Squiggy said.

 

"Does Rhonda still need someone to drive?"

 

"I'll take her in her car," Squiggy said. 

 

"Squig, what's wrong?"

 

"She needs me," Squiggy said noncommittally.  "Tell Len what I said."  And then he shut the door.

 

Laverne traipsed back to her apartment, where she had left Lenny sleeping a few minutes before.  He had been up all night securing some kind of big deal for Junko the Clown to perform at a children's society party, she couldn't wake him now.  Actually, she realized, Lenny had been doing a lot of the grunt work for the business while Squiggy hovered in his manic-depressive coma.  As she realized the complete unfairness of the situation, her blood boiled overtime, and sent her running back to Rhonda's apartment to tell Squiggy off.

 

But there was nothing to greet her when she returned but an empty apartment and the sound of Rhonda's Cadillac speeding away outside.

 

***

 

The memory made Laverne regard Lenny with a critical gaze once more.  His eyes were getting baggy, and he looked exhausted.  She bit back a commentary on Squiggy's using Lenny, once again, as a tool to serve his means and bent over to shove the invitation under the doorway.

 

Immediately upon deposit, the door swung open, and Laverne barely contained a gasp at what was revealed to her.  Squiggy in an apron she had seen multiple times, and the even the presence of said apron over a leather jacket gave her no pause. 

 

She glanced askance at Lenny, who looked beyond Squiggy's form and at the couch, exactly where Laverne had directed her attention.  Rhonda sat there; regal and glowing, looking surprisingly well for one with such drawn and distracted features.

 

Her completely bald head only made her eyes seem bigger.

 

Laverne stood motionless in the doorway, unable to force a word from between her lips.  Leave it to Lenny to charge into the gap.

 

"Hey Rhonda - you look pretty."

 

The actress smiled self-consciously at Lenny's praise.  "Thank you."

 

"You're gonna swell up her head," Squiggy said, trying to keep a light tone.

 

"Rhonda always appreciates the adoration of her public."  She abandoned a copy of Confidential to the coffee table.  "Come in.  We could use the company."

 

Laverne took a couple of steps into the apartment, only to be met by Squiggy's short form.  "You ain't sick, are you?" he looked at them both accusatorially.

 

"No, Squig," Lenny promised.  "Honest injun."

 

"Okay.  Just don't breathe on nothing," he stepped out of the way, walking over to Rhonda's mirrored end table and picking up an abandoned china tea cup.  "You want anything else?" he asked Rhonda, taking the abandoned dishes to her kitchenette and hiding his mannerless anxiety by peering into the sink.

 

"No, Andrew.  Thank you."

 

Gingerly, Laverne passed around Lenny and sat at the opposite end of Rhonda's couch.  "Hey - how do you feel?" she asked, under the rush of water being poured over dishes in the kitchen sink.  Laverne paused and turned around to gawk - Squiggy washing dishes!  What had the world come to?

 

"Rhonda's fine," she said, drawing Laverne's attention back into their conversation.

 

Cautiously, Laverne peered at the starlet.  Under her typically flawless makeup, she seemed a trifle paler than usual, and definitely a few pounds thinner.  "You sure?"

 

Rhonda looked up from her once-fascinating nails and caught Laverne's eye.  "To be honest,  I'm a nervous wreck."  Then Rhonda's eyes fixed themselves upon the pink princess phone sitting elegantly cradled on her end table.  Laverne realized suddenly what she was waiting for and felt instantly contrite at her own self-absorption.

 

"Your doctor ain't called back yet?"

 

"No, not yet, but today's supposed to be the day."

 

"So you've been through your last round of radiation?"

 

She nodded.  "It's been five days since they took the tissue sample."

 

Laverne looked up to cast eyes on Lenny, but her boyfriend had wandered into the kitchenette and was trying to help Squiggy dry dishes.  The "plinking" sound of free-bank-giveaway china hitting the counter involuntarily made her jump.  Rhonda's touch calmed her, caused an apologetic wince to marr her expression.

 

"Rhonda is sorry she hasn't kept in touch," a thin smile made her features beauteous.  She gestured ineffectually.  "My hair started to fall out, and Rhonda didn't want anyone else to touch me."

 

"You coulda asked me."

 

"Rhonda couldn't let another woman...you...see me like this."  She winced again.  "Not while Rhonda was getting used to being...this way.  Rhonda was lost in a Faith Domague-esque world of madness for a little while, and Andy seems to know how that world worked.  And how to shave a head."

 

Laverne nodded.  "When he was in the reserves his C.O. tried to palm him off on the base's barber." 

 

"Really?"

 

"They didn't want him touching the guns."

 

Rhonda touched her bare head once again, this time less gingerly.  "He won't leave my side," she looked over Laverne's shoulder and examined Squiggy in an admiring fashion, seemingly not minding as he picked his teeth with a cheese knife before washing it.  "Which is exactly what Rhonda didn't want him to do," she added. 

 

"You should know Squiggy better by now," Laverne played with a wrinkle in her cut-offs.  "He's loyal."

 

"To a fault," Rhonda sighed.  "Is Leonard doing well without him at Squignowski?"

 

"That's what I gotta talk to Squiggy about.  Len's burning the candle at both ends," Laverne watched Lenny as he leaned against Rhonda's countertop, half-listening to what his friend was saying as he began to nod off. 

 

"Perhaps the boys should hire an assistant."

 

Laverne snorted.  "Rhonda, they can't even afford an office."

 

"Oh, surely there has to be a woman of desperate means who'd be willing to take pity on the boys.  This town is filled with psychopathic hen types..."

 

At that moment, the front door swung open, admitting a furious-looking Emmaline and a red-faced Mikey.

 

"LENNY!" Emmaline barked, looking from face to face until she saw her brother cowering by the sink.  She marched her son over to his uncle and prodded  Mikey gently between the shoulder blades.  "Show your Uncle Lenny."

 

Mikey looked down at his sneakers.  "Do I have to?"

 

"YES."

 

With a sigh, Mikey turned out the pockets of his chinos.  Hundreds of crumpled foil wrappers fell to the ground, littering the carpet surrounding his sneakers.

 

With an incisive glare, Emmaline took in her brother.  "What do you have to say?"

 

Mikey sighed.  "I'm sorry I used all of your water balloons, Uncle Lenny," his eyes brightened and he added, "but there was this really big man in a green bathing suit walking under the window!  He was like a target board, and Mommy had a big brand-new jar of ketchup and..."

 

Lenny's beet-red face showed delight.  "Did you get him good?"

 

"Yup."

 

Emmaline coughed.  "You have another apology to make, young man."

 

He sighed, marching over to the couch.  Emptying out the back pockets of his jeans, he turned to Laverne and said, "I'm sorry I took the water balloons out of your purse, Aunt Laverne."

 

The engaged couple met, eye to eye, over the head of the little blonde boy.  They spoke Emmaline's name as one.

 

Emmaline held out a supplicating palm, an undeniable fury in her eyes.  "I don't want to know why you have enough 'water balloons' to protect the Greek Army, but I do want to know why you can't keep them out of my son's reach!"

 

Laverne bristled.  "Hey, they were out of his reach - he snooped around to find them!"

 

"Nuh-uh!  I was playing detective, just like Uncle Lenny taught me.  That's how I found Aunt Shirley's diary!"

 

Lenny shrunk against the counter.

 

Laverne smirked.  "Did you hide it again?"

 

Mikey's nose wrinkled.  "Uh huh, under her pillow where I got it.  Aunt Laverne, what's a twenty-five b?"

 

"Yes, Aunt Laverne," snarled Emmaline, a thousand daggers in her eyes.  "What is a twenty-five B?"

 

Their animosity was quickly curtailed by the ring of Rhonda's phone.

 

Immediately, Laverne reached for the actresses' hand, and Squiggy walked around the other side of the couch to wrap his arm around her.  The gravity of what could happen, versus their small, insignificant problems, caused the entire group to join in a sympathetic period of silence for Rhonda.

 

The blonde picked up her phone, "hello," she said, a slight waver in her voice, "you've reached Rhonda Lee: actress, singer, model..."  her voice broke off, shaking slightly, as she listened to the dull mumbling of her oncologist.  "Yes.  Yes.  All right."  robotically, she hung up the phone, avoiding every eye as she marched directly to the bathroom and clicked the lock shut behind her.

 

Mikey broke the gloomy silence.  "Is Miss Rhonda okay?"

 

Lenny managed a crooked smile.  "She just needed to use the bathroom," he lied.

 

Emmaline knelt down, quietly taking Mikey into her arms.  His mother's impassioned action only confused the boy.  "What's wrong?" he worried, his voice shaking.

 

"Mikey..." Emmaline began.

 

"Hey, kid," Squiggy cut in, his dark eyes bright.  "D'you know that Adam West bought a new turtle last week?"

 

The five-year-old's concern was quickly forgotten.  "Oh boy!"

 

"Yeah - he's big and brown and he's got mean little eyes," Squiggy sniffled locked his jaw, and continued, "and Mister West was sayin' that he's gonna be gone all afternoon taking rope climbing lessons and there ain't no one to feed little Herbert."

 

Mikey frowned, concentrating very hard on Squiggy's words.  "Do you think Mister West would mind if we  did?"

 

"I was just going to go ask him."

 

Mikey frowned.  "Why do you need to ask him if he's gonna be gone?"

 

"Don't sass your elders," said Emmaline, a bit too emotionally.

 

"I wasn't sassing, Mamma - honest Injun!"

 

"Maybe he left his butler home sos we don't need to tear up no lettuce," Squiggy lied grandly.  "See, that's who I was gonna talk to, his butler."  He babbled on, moving toward the door and opening it.  "You gonna come with me?"

 

Mikey accepted this with a shrug.  "Can I go, mamma?"

 

"I don't see why not," Emmaline said.

 

"Okay!" Mikey rushed to the door, his worries forgotten in the thrill of reptilian discovery.  "Maybe we can  race him against Missus Cowsington's Poodle!"

 

"Everyone knows there ain't no money in legit turtle racing," Squiggy said patiently, shepparding the boy outside, "What you gotta do is make a turtle suit for a rabbit and race it.  That's what you call running a ringer-round the collar..."

 

Emmaline watched the boys leave.  "Is it possible," she asked the room, "that God made two of them?"

 

"Two of what?" Lenny asked as he sank down onto the couch.

 

"Never mind," Emmaline mumbled.  She cast worried eyes on her brother.  "You look thin."

 

Lenny poked a roll of fat poking up over his beltline contemptuously.  "I ain't nowhere near thin."

 

"Aha," said Emmaline.  "I thought that maybe you've been sweating off too many pounds lately." Her eyes were glittering and malevolent, focused on Laverne while uttering words meant for Lenny.

 

Laverne stood up and began to advance on Emmaline again, only to be yanked back onto the sofa by Shirley.  "Not again," said her friend.

 

"Yeah - we don't got the money to waste on frozen steaks," Lenny added.

 

"And we have bigger problems."  Shirley looked over her shoulder at the closed power room door.

 

Laverne huffed out a lungful of air in irritation.  "Whatt're we gonna do about that?  When she wants to come out, she's gonna come out."

 

"Rhonda shouldn't be left alone at a time like this," contradicted Shirley, who stood and made her way to the bathroom. 

 

"Shirl, don't bug her while she's in the bathroom..." Laverne followed her friend over to the door.

 

But Shirley began to tap on the closed surface.  "Rhonda?" she said softly. 

 

"Go away!" a tearful voice demanded.

 

"This ain't gonna work!" Laverne pushed her friend aside and hammered her fist into the door.  "Rhonda!  Get your patootie over here and open the door!"

 

"Rhonda doesn't want to be seen!"

 

Laverne tried to formulate a response, only to find herself shoved aside by Shirley.  "Please let us in."

 

A long pause followed, then the sound of a lock slipping open.  Laverne and Shirley pressed themselves into Rhonda's very small - and very pink - bathroom. 

 

Laverne squinted as she took in her surroundings.  Wandering over to the rim of the tub and sitting down, she laughed aloud at the sight of Rhonda's shaggy pink toilet lid cover. 

 

Shirley instantly went into hostess mode.  "How lovely," she said, picking up a canister of hostess soaps.  "Look, Laverne - they're shaped like shells."

 

Crossing her legs in a ladylike way, Laverne chuckled.  "You always wanted some of th-" whatever else Laverne wanted to say was lost in a groan as she fell backward into the thankfully-empty and dry tub.  Before she could yell for help Shirley and Rhonda had heaved her out and into a sitting position.  Embarrassed, she mumbled a thank you, watching as Rhonda sat down on the toilet lid, exhausted and pale from the effort.

 

"Don't try to make me feel better," Rhonda turned away from the two women and addressed her bathroom window.

 

"We're not trying to," Laverne spoke up.

 

"Vernie..." Shirley scolded.

 

"You don't gotta make yourself feel anything you don't wanna,” Laverne insisted.  "Just keep fighting, Rhonda.  Keep trying to get better."

 

Rhonda snorted bitterly.  "I've advanced to stage two breast cancer - call that better?  I have to have a mastectomy in two weeks - do you call that better?"

 

"Did the doctor say if you have the surgery you might go into remission?" Shirley asked.

 

"Yes.  Maybe."  Rhonda threw her hands up in frustration.  "He said I had a fifty-percent chance of making it with a mastectomy and more chemo.  It hasn't spread to my skin or organs or bones - nowhere but the breast tissue."

 

"Then you could make it," Shirley thought aloud, ever the optimist.

 

"Fifty-fifty, Shirley," Rhonda said, nearly vehement.  "I could be dead in a year if I don't." 

 

"But you got a shot - and a tough girl like you only needs one."

 

Rhonda looked down at her chest and snorted.  "If I do make it, I'll be a one-breasted freak."

 

"No," Shirley replied, her own vehemence just as strong, "you'd be a survivor."

 

Rhonda locked eyes with Shirley.  A small grin began to transform the bleakness of her expression.  "What the heck would Rhonda do without you girls?"

 

"Go talk to Natalie Wood," Laverne snarked.  Her bitterness was stifled by a hard hug from Rhonda.  The embrace lasted for a few minutes, and then Rhonda pulled away from the girls. 

 

"Rhonda's in a celebratory mood now," she announced, pulling the lock open.  "Are you girls ready for dinner?"

 

Laverne's face darkened at the morbidity of the idea, but Shirley said, "I haven't had anything since my shift at Lou's.  Meatloaf sounds wonderful."

 

"Meat-loaf?  What in the world is meat loaf?" Rhonda wondered, prancing out into the living room and picking up her phone.

 

"Ground chuck with bread and ketchup," answered Emmaline.  "Is everything okay?"

 

"Ground chuck," Rhonda shuddered.  "Rhonda serves only the best to her guests at chez Rhonda," she rapidly dialed up a number, then said into the receiver, "Hi ho, Pierre?  Rhonda!  Yes, you should bring it to Laurel Vista -  Lobster for six, a bottle of Sauvignon Cabernet, Foie Gras, pasta de truffle, green beans almandine, six individual flans, a small cheese platter with the trimmings...you could call it a celebration, yes..."

 

"And two hamburgers, fries and Coke for Mikey," Emmaline added, getting up with a grunt to get her son something.

 

"Do you have anything for children?"  Rhonda asked.  "Oh...okay...." she muffled the mouthpiece and asked Emmaline, "does he like chicken fingers?"

 

"Yes."

 

"A chicken platter set.  No, I don't have children - I'm entertaining a four-year-old....no, not a date's child....Thank you!  And you'll put it on my tab?...Wonderful!  I'll see you at Ciro's!  Ta ta!"  Rhonda hung up the phone and jumped to her feet energetically.  "I need to air out my good linens."

 

"You've got good linens?" Shirley asked jealously.

 

"From Grammy Wilson," said Rhonda, her features darkening briefly, telegraphing that this grandmother was the cancer victim.  Immediately, she seemed to burry the idea in a flurry of activity, opening silverware drawers and linen presses in the tiny kitchenette and leaving Laverne, Lenny, Shirley and Emmy to watch dumbfounded by her progress.

 

"Who the heck is Pierre?" Laverne finally asked, having instinctively moved closer to Lenny on the sofa.

 

"A busboy at La Violette Chat.  We took classes together at the Strasburg school."

 

"You went to the Strasburg school?" Emmaline suddenly sounded very interested. 

 

"I learned under Susan, actually.  Back in 62, I took two courses with Wood, Newman and McQueen..." Rhonda abruptly stopped gathering dishes, leaning against the kitchen window sill, looking out onto the overheated pavement and a broiling-hot Wednesday afternoon.  "...When I first got into town.  Why are there children out in the middle of the street?  It's only three in the afternoon."

 

"It's June," Laverne reminded her friend.

 

"It is, isn't it?" Rhonda said suddenly.  "Spring's already gone."  Her tone was uncomfortably heavy compared to her light chatter about the Strasburgs.

 

Lenny broke through the uncomfortable stillness.  "Come on, let's set the table," he grabbed a pile of plates from Rhonda's hands and began placing them on her white lace table spread.  When Laverne didn't move, he locked eyes with her and smiled.  "Everybody helps," he added.

 

His warmth radiated through the space, spurring Laverne to action.  For the millionth time that day, her choice in a marital partner seemed like the wisest move she had made in weeks.  Soon they were all crowded in the small kitchenette, laying out Rhonda's best glassware, china and silver for the late-afternoon feast. 

 

Everybody helped.

 

 

***

 

"Does anyone else remember the time Squig played a carrot in the school play?"

 

Shirley winced as Emmaline's shrieked memory rousted her out of a foie gras-enduced daze.  She glanced sideways at the young blonde, whose rosy tone and lazy smile suggested that she could hold her liquor about as well as her brother - not at all.  Lenny - comparatively sober beside his fiancée - chortled out loud at the memory. 

 

Squiggy leaned over his cracked-open lobster and shouted loudly, "I was a great carrot!"

 

"You said you were full of 'vinerals and megitables'.  Then you bumped into 'corn' and knocked him over and you both fell off the stage."

 

"I still got a scar from that!" Squiggy said, "anyone wanna see?" he was already on his feet, pulling out his tee-shirt.

 

"No!!" Shirley shrieked, making everyone around her laugh heartily.  "Put your shirt back on, Andrew - Mikey's going to come back from Adam West's apartment and see your shame!"

 

"Pleah.  Kids wreck everything," Squiggy commented, putting his shirt back on.

 

"Don't blame Mikey," Rhonda smirked.  "I don't think anyone else wants to see it," she sipped down the rest of her wine and grinned.  "It is a very cute scar though..."

 

"I don't wanna know about this," Laverne grumbled, taking her plate to the sink. 

 

"...shaped like a little heart..."

 

"Does anyone want more green beans almandine?" Shirley asked, shoving the red crockery in Lenny and Emmaline's general directions - the siblings shook their heads.

 

"...on his bottom..."

 

"Ohhh," Shirley moaned.  Her very live-looking lobster suddenly seemed very appealing.  She had eaten a good portion of foie gras, pasta, cheese and crackers and green beans, with liberal doses of wine.  The rest of the table had begun a dessert of caramel flan, which she had finished a few hours ago while leaving the lobster whole.  It sat lukewarm before her, uneaten, though Shirley didn't know how she could eat it - the poor think, like its Milwaukeean predecessor, had sensitive-looking black eyes.

 

"The last time I saw Squig's bottom we were skinny dipping at Healy's Pond." Emmaline revealed.

 

"You went skinny-dipping with my sister?" Lenny growled.

 

Squiggy shrugged.  "It was hot...and so was you, Emmy!"

 

Shirley noted a flicker of jealousy in Rhonda's eyes, but they immediately brightened up, mock-polite. 

 

"'Was'.  Yes I was," Emmaline looked down at herself critically.  Shirley wondered at her reprobation - Emmaline was anything but overweight, though her dress and hairstyle made her look somehow both modern and antiquated, and a bit matronly.

 

"You'll bounce back, Emmy," Laverne said as she ran water over the dishes. "I hear it takes a little while for the baby weight to come off."

 

Shirley winced at her best friend's jibe, but Emmaline wasn't one to lie down.  "I've heard that too," she tippled a bit more of the wine.  "What's your excuse?"

 

Lenny cut off his advancing bride-to-be and steered her toward her chair.  "Lemme pull out your launching pad, Laverne."

 

Her anger was quickly forgotten.  "Thanks, Len."

 

"Always a gentleman," smiled Emmaline.  "I remember when you were all around six and you girls would come over to play with our goldfish.  Lenny would do just about anything to make the two of you happy."

 

"Remember the lemonade?" Lenny chortled.

 

"Oh my God!" Shirley blurted out.  "I thought I'd never get all of that sugar out of my shoes!"

 

"Did your Pop ever find out about that?" Squiggy asked Lenny.

 

"Nah.  I said it was a science spearmint, and he said I should stick with the gum racket, 'cause it makes more than the fish one."

 

"We were terrible.  And I backed you up!" Emmaline said.

 

"A good sister ain't afraid to lie for her brother," Lenny insisted.

 

Emmaline shrugged and polished off the rest of the wine.  She reached for the bottle, pouring herself another full glass - her fourth.  Shirley sent Lenny a warning glance but he didn't notice.   The blonde took another draught, then turned to Rhonda.  "So, Miss Lee - where do you come from?"

 

"Well, Em, when a man loves a woman's bod very much..." Squiggy said dramatically.

 

"That's not what I mean!" Emmaline giggled, far more energetically than she normally might.  "I mean, where did you grow up?"

 

Laverne laughed.  "Good luck getting her to tell you that," she laughed.

 

Rhonda sat up straight.  "Rhonda Lee was born in the trunk..."

 

"...backstage during a presentation of Hello Dolly at the Wiltshire Theatre in Lexington, Tennessee.  She was the creation of a greasepaint warrior named Mark Leonowens in nineteen and sixty one..." recited Laverne, Squiggy, Lenny and Shirley together.

 

The blonde sniffed.  "None of you have any appreciation for high art," she complained.

 

"You have to admit it's a little hard to believe," Shirley said.  "And a trifle theatrical."

 

"Yeah, and a little flashy,  too," Lenny said.

 

"Flashy is important in Hollywood.  It brings positive attention,"  Rhonda said, eyeing Emmaline.  "Some of us could use a little POSITIVE attention," she added coolly.

 

"My," Shirley said loudly, "this lobster looks just...fabulous, Rhonda..." she clumsily cracked a claw and sucked out the meat.  Surprisingly, Shirley found the taste pleasant and intriguing.  Before long she forgot that the lobster had ever had a face and busied herself downing the rest of the shelled treat.

 

She finished her meal with a contented sigh - mopping her lips, she listened to Laverne recall the story of their first Shotz Talent Show, and how very uncoordinated she had been, and their ridiculous fruit-salad hats.  Shirley tried to bring up a protest, but suddenly her tongue felt very thick.  She looked down at her numb hands to find them shingled with a rash. Alarmed words would not form on her lips.

 

Laverne was suddenly before her, pulling her to her feet, saying something about a hospital.  The words made Shirley's dizzy head feel even worse, but somehow she made herself walk, huffing breath through a thin windpipe.

 

She didn't complain about Laverne's driving, and Laverne didn't complain when Shirley threw up all over the floor of the ice cream truck.

 

***

 

Rhonda watched the rest of Shirley's lobster swirl itself down the garbage disposal with a disapproving grumble.  Why in the world hadn't Shirley told her she was allergic to shellfish?  She could have had Pierre substitute with filet mignon...

 

Her ruminations were interrupted by Squiggy's emergence from the bathroom.  "She snores like a Kosnowski," he decided, hiking a thumb over his shoulder before vaulting over the back of the couch and leaning over to click on her tv.

 

"Yes, I can hear the family resemblance."  The kitchen now clean, Rhonda couldn't resist peeking into the bathroom as she re-entered the living room.  Through the slightly ajar door, outlined by the dim pink glow of her night lamp, she could make out the passed-out form of Emmaline Haarker, snoring lightly against the rim of the tub. "That wasn't what I meant when I told her she could sleep here for the night."

 

Squiggy shrugged.  "If she's anything like Len, she'll be okay in the morning.  And she'll make the rug a pretty orange color."

 

Rhonda's nose wrinkled.  "Thank you for the mental image," she muttered.  Before joining Squiggy on the couch, she headed over to her small white bookshelf and withdrew two cloth-bound volumes.  As she sat down, she spread them open.

 

Predictably, Squiggy soon hung over her shoulder.  "Who's the blonde with the big cans?"

 

Rhonda winced, peering down at the black-and-white photograph.  "My older sister, Inger," she said. 

 

Squiggy grinned, looking at her chest, "I can tell."

 

"Not for much longer, you won't."

 

Instantly, Squiggy sought to appologize-without-appologizing to her.  "Hey, ain't that you?"

 

Squiggy was pointing to - more accurately, leaving a grease stain on - a photograph of a teenaged Rhonda, smiling widely and holding an ear of corn.  "Yes it is."

 

"What were you doing?"

 

"Rhonda was Queen of The Corn."

 

Squiggy looked at her once, then burst out laughing.  A light swat to the thigh made him stop.

 

"It was a very prestigious title back in Mudlick," she flipped the page, revealing a parade of bad 'sophisticated' hairdos and home-made gowns - sashes and crowns flying by.  "Rhonda was also Queen of the Harvest, the 4-H Beauty of the Rodeo, and Princess of the Pigs."  Now Squiggy was roaring.  Rhonda slammed the album shut.  "If you're going to laugh, Rhonda won't show you her baby pictures."

 

Suddenly, the laughter stopped.  "I thought Rhonda Lee was born in a trunk."

 

"No.  She was born Essie May Wilson." 

 

Before Squiggy could start laughing again, she pointed to a school portrait - a blonde girl of around seventeen, with a dazzling smile, unmistakably Rhonda.  It was inscribed at the very bottom.  "To Mamma, love Essie."  "Essie's short for Esme," Rhonda continued.  "There's a lot more to Rhonda than you know."  She lowered her flaming cheeks, watching chapters of her life fly by.

 

Squiggy stared intensely at the album.  "I meant, why're you showing me all this stuff now?  It ain't exactly like it's glamorous or nothing..."

 

"No," Rhonda admitted.  "But if I don't start opening up to you now - I might never get the chance."  She ignored his stricken look, continuing on.  "Here's a picture of me when I was two.  Mamma made those sweaters for us by hand, can't you tell?"

 

***

 

The following fifteen minutes were a blur of hysteria and fear for Shirley.  Somehow, they made it to Cedars and she was seated in a wheelchair.  She tossed her cookies one more time before a quick dose of epinephrine was administered by a harried-looking intern.  Lying flat on a bench, much as she had before her appendectomy, Shirley tried to relax. She shut her eyes, blocking out the traumatized yelling of others in the emergency ward, forcing herself to see nothing but black.  Eventually, she felt her throat relax, the heat in her body dissipating and the rash fading away.  Soon nothing remained from her episode but a sense of weakness.

 

Unable to sleep, she finally opened her eyes.  Of course, Laverne sat at the foot of her bed, eyes filled with tears.  Her first conscious thoughts were of her best friend and her dignity.

 

"I threw up all over the boys' truck, didn't I?" Shirley said, feeling a tinge of disgrace and tasting the awful sour in her own throat.

 

Laverne burst into laughter, laughter that intermingled with tears.  "Yeah, you did.  Don't scare me like that no more, Shirl."

 

"I won't," she sat up like a jackknife at a sudden new thought.  "You won't tell Carmine, will you?"

 

"You don't want him to know?"

 

"He'll just be worried for no reason," Shirley settled back down.  "He can't fly out to see me,  unless it's a real emergency."

 

"According to my chart," an officious red-haired doctor said as he parted the curtain, "it isn't."   He flipped through the pages of his clipboard.  "Looks like you had a simple allergic reaction to shellfish, Missus Ragusa."

 

"That's a relief," Shirley sighed.

 

"Not really.  You need to stay overnight for observation, but now that it's out of your system and you've been given a dose of epi, you should be okay to sleep.  I'll have you admitted upstairs..."

 

"But I can't afford an overnight stay - I don't think my insurance will cover it." Shirley began.

 

"Wouldya let me tell Carmine?" Laverne begged.

 

"NO."

 

"All right - I'll pay the bill," she said bravely.

 

"Vernie..."

 

"Shirl!"

 

"All right," sighed the intern.  "Tonight's busier than usual, and your reaction was fairly simple.  If you can pay the two-hundred dollar bill up front, I can treat and street you with some benedryl.  But if you have a problem, be sure to come back and we'll admit you right away."

 

Shirley was already on her feet, pulling off her hospital gown  - which she did not recall donning - and slipping her now vomit-stained top over her head.  "Thank you, Doctor..."

 

"Meaney, Walter Meaney," he smiled.  "I'm glad you've recovered, Missus Ragusa."

 

She paused, giving the doctor a look-over.  He was a pretty-eyed man, short, well-sculpted, smelling faintly of Olde English aftershave as she took her bill from him.  In another lifetime, he would have been her dream man - now she wanted to get home and write Carmine a long letter about her misadventure.  "Thank you.  And I'm sorry about your shoes."

 

"I've been through worse," he said smartly, turning and leaving the scene.  "I spent an entire week in bandages with a head-to-toe rash once!"

 

"Boy, whatta cutie," Laverne smirked, as they headed over to billing.

 

"I didn't notice."

 

"Hah!  You was looking at him like he was a plate of liver and onions."

 

"Yes, just looking." 

 

Shirley and Laverne ended up splitting the bill - her best friend had just gotten paid and with the wedding in mind could least afford it, but never even hesitated to lay her money on the counter.  They didn't speak another word until they were breezing back up the Pacific Coast Highway.

 

Shirley was taken in by the incredible night sky - beautiful, even from her disadventageous position in the     back of the truck.  She'd never noticed the difference between a Milwaukee summer night and one in California.  Out west, the sky seemed the be brighter, a lighter shade of sapphire - but she couldn't see a single star on the horizon.  Milwaukee's sky had always been aglow with heavenly bodies.

 

She wondered what New York's skyline would look like.

 

As if reading her thoughts, Laverne grinned, making a dramatic turn that jostled her insides.  "I dunno what I'd do if this happened and you was in New York."

 

Shirley grimaced.  "Carmine would've called you."

 

"But I wouldn't be there," Laverne grumbled.  "Tonight made me think about all the times I ain't gonna be with you."

 

"We can't always be with the people we love," Shirley pointed out.  "I love my father, but he's on a freighter somewhere in the Indian Ocean right now."

 

"I guess it's cause we've been living together for a long time.  You know I've lived with you longer than I lived with Pop?"

 

"That's right."

 

"I figured that out yesterday.   I should be used to you not being there, since I'm living with Len now, but it's weird.  I keep expecting to wake up and see you there in the morning."

 

"Would you change anything about what you've chosen?" Shirley was almost afraid to hear the answer.

 

"No.  I'm gonna stay here with Len, and be his wife.  You're Carmine's wife already - and one day you've gotta go be in New York and stay with him."

 

Shirley shook her head.  "Just the way we always thought it would be, all the way back to kindergarten."

 

"Yeah, but back in Kindergarten you were gonna marry Jimmy Stewart and I was gonna marry Clark Gable."

 

Shirley chuckled.  "Jimmy Stewart!  Goodness, my taste has gotten better."

 

Laverne turned down the onramp, navigating through a traffic snarl.  "You always liked guys twice your age.  That's why I almost died when you told me you was dating Tommy."

 

Shirley blushed at the memory of her indiscretion with the frat boy.  "A girl has to diversify," Shirley explained.  Laverne offered no answer, simply turning a corner and parking Squiggy's truck under their large shade elm.

 

As Shirley climbed out of the car, she studied the wide-spread branches of the elm.  It had been there for centuries, and would be there for centuries more after her death.  As she crossed the threshold of the building, Shirley thought to herself that she would miss that old tree more than the apartment itself.

 

***

 

Laurel Vista, as Laverne had expected, was deathly quiet.  A glance at her watch in the dim hallway told her it was midnight exactly - graveyard time for nine-to-fivers like Adam and Missus Cowsington.  Carefully, the two women tread towards what had been the boys' apartment. 

 

When they reached the door, Shirley finally spoke up.  "Thank you, Vernie," she hugged her best friend tight.  "I'll wash your shoes for you."

 

"Aww, it wasn't no trouble, Shirl," she smirked.  "I've been thrown up on by worse."

 

"Hello," said Squiggy, pushing open the door and giving them both a start.  "Hey, they checked you out of the funny farm! D'you have to bribe Fat Julio to get out early?"

 

"I want to the emergency room, Andrew."

 

"D'they make you wear the black straightjacket?"

 

"Never mind," Laverne grumbled, handing him back his keys.  "Where's Len?"

 

"He took the kid back to your place.  Emmaline's taking a nap in Rhonda's tub, and you," he gestured to Shirley, "'ve got a phone call in there from the Big Raccoon."

 

"Carmine's on the phone?" Shirley gasped, suddenly wide-eyed.

 

'Yeah, he said something about an audition and being a Lance a lot..."

 

Shirley squealed, rushing to the door.  "I'll talk to you tomorrow!" she cried.

 

Laverne chuckled at the girlish scene her best friend made.  "I'll see you tomorrow, Squig.  Oh," she said,  unlocking her front door, "and I wouldn't go near the truck 'til tomorrow morning if I was you."

 

"Why?"

 

"Trust me.  Night!"

 

"Night?" Laverne had already disappeared into the apartment, locking the door behind her.

 

The scene in her apartment was surprisingly lively.  In the living room Lenny sat on their couch, intensely scrutinizing a handful of cards.  The boy sat Indian style on the floor,  studying his own hand just as intensely as his uncle.  A mound of cards sat between them on the coffee table, along with a heap of Hydrox cookies - the lion share sitting in front of Mikey.  Stealthily, she slipped behind Lenny and peered over his shoulders.

 

"He doesn't have any threes," she told Mikey.

 

"Go fish!" said the little boy.

 

"Aww!" Lenny cried, dropping his cards and shoving a handful of cookies over to his nephew.  Quickly, he turned his attention to his fiancée, kissing her lightly on the hand.  "How's Shirl?"

 

"She's better.  It was a reaction, but they let her go home.  And," she put her purse down on the table behind him.  "It looks like Carmine got Camelot."

 

"Really?  That's great!"  He whispered confidentially to her, "how's Squig's truck?"

 

"Don't ask."

 

"Let's play again, Uncle Len," requested Mikey, gathering together the scattered cards.

 

"Heck no!  You beat me three times in a row!"

 

"And it's past midnight.  Someone needs some sleep to grow on."

 

Lenny frowned.  "I'm gonna keep growing?"

 

"I didn't mean you. Mikey, go brush your teeth.  You can use the new toothbrush in the bathroom."

 

"Aww, but I'm not..." the little boy yawned.

 

"Yes, you are," Laverne shepparded him upstairs.  "You go get ready, and your Uncle Lenny will sing you a lullabye."

 

Lenny pouted as he gathered up the cards, causing Laverne's grin to widen.

 

***

 

"Puff the Magic Dragon lived by the sea...and frolicked in the autumn leaves in the land of Honnah Lee..." 

 

Laverne lingered in the bathroom, listening to Lenny's fine voice as he sang Mikey the song of Jackie Paper and Puff - a story that always made her a little bit misty.  She brushed her hair, then washed her face - by the time she'd brushed her teeth, the story was nearly over.

 

She waited in the doorway as Lenny crooned to Mikey - the boy looking very tiny in his borrowed PJ bottoms, lying in what had once been Shirley's bed.  The sight of the now-separate beds made Laverne feel a stab of erotic nostalgia for the passion she and Lenny had barely gotten to enjoy.  Her fiancé was ignorant of her desire as he sat beside his nephew, rubbing the boy's back as he sang.  The song ended, and he held the last note for a moment, slowly stopping and steadying his hand.  Mikey's deep, even breathing told them both that he slumbered.  Lenny slipped off of the bed, meeting Laverne's eyes before raking her body with his gaze.  Even though she wore an old pair of pajamas and men's gym socks, he bit his palm.  She closed the space between them, pressing her index finger to his lips.

 

Laverne cocked her head toward the empty bed, and he nodded.  She pulled back the sheets and he stripped down to his boxers, then crawled between the sheets beside her.

 

He noticed the tear tracks on her cheek and traced them, a look of concern communicating all.

 

"That song makes me cry," she admitted.

 

He reached for her, and they arranged themselves comfortably together.  This, she decided was nice - not as good as what he could do to her with his hands and mouth, but still a vitally intimate thing.  As if he could read her thoughts, Lenny's hand began to creep up her inner thigh.  Gently, she removed it and placed it upon her hip.

 

"We can't tonight," she whispered.

 

He smiled, a bit of pain showing in the expression.  "I know.  All the rubbers're gone."

 

She shook her head.  "Mikey'd hear us, you dope."

 

"Sorry."

 

"I'm sorry - I shouldn't have snapped at you.  I'm just mad that I'm gonna have to give the Trojan guys another five cents."

 

"Nah.  Let me take care of it."

 

Her eyes were wide open now.  "That ain't just your job, Len."

 

"But I wanna take care of you."

 

"We're making love together," she reminded him, running her fingers down his jaw line.  "When we do it, we're both gonna be responsible for what happens.  If the rubber breaks and I get..." she gulped, "in trouble, it ain't gonna be just your fault."

 

"It is if I tear it," he mumbled.

 

"Don't worry about it."  She watched his face in the moonlight, half-obscured by the crush of the pillow.  Wrinkles were beginning to furrow his brow - he'd be twenty-nine in October, and she'd reach that age in two months.  The rapidity of time began to dig spurs into her sides, making her worry and ache for him in equal parts.

 

"Vernie?"

 

"Mmm?"

 

"You know if that happened, I'd still marry you - not CAUSE it happened, but it wouldn't stop me from going through with October.  Even if we had to go to the preacher and you was as big as Eleanor Steffeneck."

 

Laverne buried a chuckle in Lenny's elbow.  "Thanks."

 

He ran his fingers over her neck, raising goosebumps everywhere.  Another thought disturbed her peace.  "Is Rhonda okay?"

 

"Squig's still with her.  He said he'd stay the night.  And my sister's over there, too."

 

"In the tub."

 

"I gotta talk to Emmy about how much she drank tonight."

 

"You sure she wants to hear it from you?"

 

"I'll put it real nice."

 

"Okay," Laverne mumbled. 

 

Lenny spoke again suddenly.  "I can't believe someone our age has cancer."

 

"It happens," she said.

 

"Only to old people."

 

"My mom didn’t even get to be thirty."

 

Lenny's arms closed around her a little tighter.  "I'm sorry."

 

"I got a confession to make, Len.  I've been holding my breath for weeks.  I'm two months away from being as old as she was when she..."

 

"It won't happen to you."

 

"How can you say..."

 

"It won't happen to you." They lay in the silence for a moment.  His hands roamed her back in a comforting gesture, his hands getting closer and closer to the cleft of her buttocks.  He stopped, and abruptly laughed.  "This is where you're supposda tell me to get out."

 

Her arms wrapped around him more strongly, her hand going underneath his tee-shirt, brushing the soft flesh of his ribcage, feeling silky skin and knowing his scars lay beneath her fingers.  "I don't want you to leave  me."

 

"Then I won't."  When he spoke again, Lenny sounded sleepy.  "She'll get through this, Vernie.  The wedding'll work, and you ain't gonna die.  I won't let you."

 

They embraced in the darkness, and Laverne rested her head against his inner arm, their faces closet together and their legs intertwined.  "Night, Len," she whispered.

 

"Night," he whispered back.  She heard a breeze rattle through the old elm tree out front, but Lenny's arms lulled her away, and soon enough she was lost to the world and its complexities, both bad and good.

 

THE END

 

SOUNDTRACK:

1: Wedding Bell Blues - Fifth Dimension

2: Everything - Michelle Branch

3: Teach Your Children - CSNY

4: The Difference - Wallflowers

5: Gotta Sin To Be Saved - Maria Mulder

6: Red Dirt Girls - Emmylou Harris

7: Our House - CSNY

8: Puff The Magic Dragon - Peter, Paul and Mary

 

 

To Always Something Else
To Always Safe