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Trouble in High Heels
Christina Dodd
Excerpt
If Brandi's caller ID had been working, she would never
have picked up the phone. But it wasn’t, and she did, and that just figured, because
it had been one hell of a week. Not that Brandi hadn't expected it. Anybody with a lick of
sense could predict that moving from Nashville to Chicago
in the dead of winter would be difficult, and Brandi prided
herself on her good sense. But she’d picked the coldest weather Chicago had seen for a
century, which made the pipes in her apartment building
freeze, which meant that her movers had had nothing to
drink, not that that had stopped them from using her
toilet, which for the lack of water didn’t flush, and using
it with such typical male abandon that she didn’t dare sit
on it even in the most dire circumstances because there was
no way to clean the seat. And one guy caught her talking to
herself while she tried to wipe the seat with a wadded-up
Kleenex out of her purse, and the son-of-a-bitch had the
gall to inch away as if she were crazy. She didn’t know anybody in this town except Alan and Mr.
McGrath — for years now she’d called him by the honorary
title of Uncle Charles — but where were they while she
crammed her entire life into a one-bedroom apartment? In a lovely piece of irony, the icy roads had sent the
truck carrying her new oversized sofa and armchair
careening into an empty Marble Slab Ice Cream Shop. The
delivery men wrestled the oversized furniture up to her
four floor apartment by tilting it sideways in the freight
elevator, a maneuver that made her cover her eyes and pray
to the gods of furniture placement. Her entreaties must have worked, because they planted the
sofa and the chair in front of the small propane fireplace,
put the ottoman between them, and moved her end tables into
place. The sofa wasn’t damaged. The colors and fabrics were
the way she ordered them. It was only later that night when
she stopped unpacking long enough to drop into the chair,
put her feet up on the ottoman and look, really look at the
furniture, that she realized the sofa was eighteen inches
too short.
She’d received the love seat, not the full-sized sofa she’d
ordered. Now she had to wait another six weeks until the
furniture she had actually ordered arrived, and for a few
minutes it seemed as if that sucked more than anything else
that had happened in this horrific, endless week.
Until the phone call she picked up because she thought,
honestly thought, Alan was calling to tell her he was
coming over at last.
Instead, it was her mother. "Well? How did the move go?" As
always, Mother sounded like a cheerleader bolstering her
team’s spirits before the big game.
Brandi stared around at the endless parade of boxes. Empty
boxes piled catawampus against the wall. Flattened boxes
stacked by the door. Boxes, far too many boxes, still taped
shut and scratched with black magic marker. An endless
supply of boxes, no stereo system in sight, and pizza for
dinner again. "I’ve been unpacking for a day and a half and
I haven’t seen Alan. Not once."
"Now, sweetheart, I’m sure he’s busy. After all, he is a
physician." Mother’s Tennessee accent sounded soft and
tender.
Brandi didn’t know why she’d bothered to complain. It was
pure exhaustion and loneliness that made her give into her
irritation and criticism her fiancé to, of all people, her
mother. "He’s not a physician. He’s a resident."
"That poor boy. I saw on Sixty Minutes how those hospital
administrators work their residents ninety-six hours at a
time."
For once, Brandi wished her mother would take her side.
About anything. "He hasn’t called, either. He may have
emailed, but I don’t get connected to the internet until
next week."
"I hope you didn’t call him. A nagging woman is an
unpleasant creature." Tiffany was the personification of
nineteen-fifty’s Southern womanhood.
"Yes, Mother, I know, although if he’d remember me, I
wouldn’t be seized by this overwhelming desire to nag him."
Brandi scratched her nails against the grain of the fabric
on the couch, watched as the brocade rose in four welts,
and wondered which one of them she wanted to scratch — her
mother or her fiancé. "But I’d like to point out that I’m a
lawyer who relocated from a lovely, soft, warm city to be
close to my fiancé. I’m about to start my first full-time
job at a major Chicago law firm and I’m going to be working
all the time. He could at least call to see if I’ve frozen
to the side of the dumpster taking out my trash."
Mother’s voice took on that pious tone that made Brandi
want to shriek. "To keep her man, a woman always has to
give one hundred and ten percent."
"How did that work out for you?"
The sound of her mother’s shocked inhalation brought Brandi
to her senses. She loved her mother, she really did, but
Mother had been Daddy’s first trophy wife and he’d left her
and the quietly anguished eleven-year-old Brandi for his
twenty-three year old secretary and a new baby, a son
guaranteed to give him what he needed — a football-
uniformed mirror image of his youthful self. "I’m sorry, Mother. I’m a bitch."
"No, you’re not."
"I’m pretty sure I am." Not always a bad thing, in Brandi's
opinion. "Let’s face it, Daddy has proved he doesn’t know
what he wants. Not in a wife. Not in his kids."
"Your father is a good man." No matter how much Daddy
screwed Tiffany over, she never said a nasty word about
him.
That was why Brandi had gotten engaged to Alan. He might
not be a man of fire and passion, but he was steady and
dependable — or he had been until she needed him.
And Mother was right about that, too. He probably had a
whopper of an excuse. But Brandi — who’d broken a
fingernail down to the quick, whose deodorant had failed
hours ago, who was dehydrated and didn’t dare drink her
bottled water because she couldn’t flush — wasn’t in the
mood to hear it right now.
"Alan’ll be by soon." Mother used a conciliatory
tone. "Maybe he’ll come tonight to take you out to dinner."
"I don’t want him to take me out. I want him to help me
unpack." Yep. Definitely bitchy.
"No, go out! You should seize every chance for a good time
right now while you’re young." About this, Tiffany sounded
fierce.
And that made Brandi squirm with guilt. The reason Tiffany
hadn’t been out there kicking up her heels was because
she’d been trying — not succeeding, but trying — to make a
living for Brandi. "Mother, you’re not exactly old. You’re
not even fifty. You could get out there and have a good
time."
"Men my age want women your age, and men who want women my
age are too old to have a good time. In every way."
Tiffany's voice was droll. "But actually, I’ve been
thinking …"
"What?"
Tiffany hesitated.
"What?" It wasn’t like her mother to be coy. Quite the
opposite.
"I wish I could be there to help you!" Tiffany burst
out. "I miss you!"
Brandi would have sworn that wasn’t what Tiffany intended
to say. But she was too tired, too dirty, too disheveled to
dig for the truth. "I haven’t lived at home for seven
years. You can’t miss me that much."
"I know, but it’s different with you so far away. When you
were at Vanderbilt you were right across town. Now …"
"I’m okay, Mother. Really. I’m good at taking care of
myself." A lot better than you are at taking care of
yourself.
"I know. You are capable. I’m proud of you." But Tiffany
sounded fretful. "I just wish Alan was there. He’s so
reliable." "Tomorrow night, he’s going to take me to a party at Uncle
Charles’s." And if he did this disappearing act and didn’t
show for that, she didn’t care what excuse he came up with,
she was going to kill him.
Except now.
"A party?" Tiffany inhaled with excitement. "At Charles’s
home? Oh, that is a showcase. He recently had the foyer
remodeled. I wish I could see it! Do you like Charles?"
Her mother’s leaps from one subject to another made Brandi
blink. "Sure. I’ve liked Uncle Charles since he used his
legal expertise to wring child support out of Daddy."
"Your father was confused by that woman he married."
"So we’re hoping he’s pussy whipped instead of morally
corrupt?"
"Don’t use that term, Brandi. It’s not at all attractive in
a young woman."
"Yes, ma’am." Interesting that when Tiffany got motherly,
Brandi felt more secure.
"Tell me all about the party."
"It’s a charity ball to raise money for the museum.
There’ll be a silent auction and I’m sitting at the McGrath
and Lindoberth corporate table." Of course she was. She
might be new, but she’d earned straight A’s out of
Vanderbilt Law and that was no small feat. She’d won this
job fair and square.
"What are you wearing?" Tiffany asked.
Uh-oh. "That black sheath I bought for parties at the law
school."
Tiffany didn’t say Oh, but you bought it at Ann Taylor or,
But that’s two years old. Instead she said, "Darling,
black? That’s so New York. Show those Chicago lawyers how
good a Southern girl can look! Wear red. Men adore red."
"I don’t care what men adore," Brandi snapped, then took a
long breath. Tiffany had never changed her mind. She’d
lived through fourteen years of miserable existence and she
still thought a man was a woman’s best friend — a man and
the gifts she could get from him. "But the sheath doesn’t show off your figure." "Thank God. Do you know how hard it is to dress for
business with a chest like mine?" "Women pay good money every day for a chest like yours.
Marilyn Monroe made a fortune with a chest like yours. With
a figure like yours!" Tiffany laughed, that kind of throaty
purr that said she knew a lot about how men and women
played. Unwillingly, Brandi laughed, too. It was true. If she
hadn’t become a lawyer, she could have been a Las Vegas
showgirl. She was all hourglass figure. During interviews,
she’d mashed down her bosom so the women wouldn’t
immediately hate her and the guys would look at her
face. "I can’t afford a new dress right now. I bought
furniture" — furniture that was the wrong damned size —
"and paid first and last month’s rent on the apartment.
And starting this month I’m paying Daddy back for my
student loans." Before Tiffany could object again, Brandi
added, "Besides, with Alan there I don’t need to worry
about catching a man."
"No, but you need to make sure his gaze is riveted to you
and he never leaves your side for fear that the other men
will whisk you off!"
Brandi laughed again, but wryly. "Alan’s stable. He’s
professional. He knows he can depend on me. He’s just not
the jealous type."
"Given the right incentive, every man is that type." No use arguing. Tiffany did know her men. "But I don’t want
that type. I consider marriage a meshing of equals, a … a
calm in the midst of the storm of modern life." Brandi's
modern life — a life whose touchstones are good sense,
moderation in all things, and a logical progression toward
her goals of not being like her mother, proving her father
wrong, paying back her debt, and being a model citizen. She
wanted nothing about Desperate Housewives to taint her. "Good heavens," Mother said blankly. "You don’t mean that
you and Alan are calm in bed?" "No, don’t be ridiculous." Although since Alan had entered
medical school he was brief and businesslike and lately, on
the infrequent weekends he managed to get off, too tired to
perform at all. "We have our moments. But there’s no
shrieking fights or huge dramas." "You’re annoyed with him now, but you’re not going to
shriek at him?" "How often have you seen me shriek?" "Never." In a tone that indicated total cluelessness,
Mother said, "You were almost frighteningly calm, even as a
child." Because her parents were playing out the big dramas. "No, I … no, I suppose not. It’s just that those first few
years when your father and I got together in bed we erupted
into flames —"
Brandi pulled the phone away from her ear. "Euw, Mother,
don’t tell me that!" "It seems so early in your relationship to be so cavalier."
Tiffany’s voice brightened. "And that’s why you need a new
dress!" Brandi sighed deeply. "I’ll think about it." For about
three seconds. "Get your hair highlighted, too, honey. You’ve gone a kind
of mousy brown." "I’d call it dishwater blonde." Brandi fingered the split
ends — Tiffany would have a spasm. "Dishwater blonde is just as attractive as it sounds. Get
highlights."
Then, for once in his life, Alan came to the rescue. He
beeped in and Brandi got to say, "Let me take this call,
Mother. This could be him!" She cut Tiffany off in the
middle of her goodbyes and said to Alan, "Where have you
been? I’ve been worried about you!" Which sounded better
than I’ve been irritated at you.
"I’m in Las Vegas." His normally flat Massachusetts accent
vibrated some violent emotion.
"Las Vegas?" She was so dumb. She didn’t suspect a
thing. "What happened? Is someone sick or something?"
"Sick? Is that your best guess?" So much for the calm in
the storm. Alan was shouting. "My girlfriend’s pregnant. I
just got married. And this is all your fault." "When I see Alan I’m going to explain that he needs to be
more sensitive to my needs." Brandi injected humor into her
voice. "You can’t have it both ways, Mother. I can’t be
sensible enough to know that he probably is too busy to
remember that I moved this week and cherish such a huge
passion for him I can’t survive without his very presence."
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