Free Read Novels Online Home

Played by Tasha Fawkes (47)

Megan

It was turning into one of those gorgeous Southern California mornings: crisp, clear, only a few dots of white, puffy clouds and an incredibly blue sky. Thank you, ocean breeze. The sounds of vendors at the early morning farmers’ market preparing their stalls, chatting among themselves, and laughter floated around me. Aromas assaulted my senses, but in a good way; the pastries at our booth, the scent of fresh tomatoes and sweet corn, green peppers and the earthy scent of radishes from the stall next to us, comforting in their familiarity. I couldn't help but take a moment and take it all in. I tried to appreciate the moment, knowing that I didn't do it often enough, but that's what happens when you're so busy trying to eke out a living.

It's just another Saturday morning for me, helping my mother as we set up our stall at the weekly farmers’ market in the parking lot of the Bill Barber Memorial Park in Irvine. It was a perfect location, really. In the summertime, Little League and Pony League games, soccer matches, and picnickers brought plentiful crowds to the park. It was convenient too, located not too far from our one-bedroom apartment a few blocks away. While our apartment building was not exactly considered Section 8 housing, it was a low-income, nearly forty-years-old and rather bland-looking stucco structure without the benefits of air-conditioning, patios, or balconies. Unfortunately, even with our combined incomes, it was all we could afford.

Then again, I shouldn't really complain. We were getting by. I knew that we were a lot better off than a lot of people in the region, and while after paying our rent, utilities, the grocery bill, and putting gas in our cars, there wasn't much left over, there were lots of things we could do around here that didn't cost any money. Personally, I liked to drive down to the beach, just to hang out. I knew a spot a couple blocks away where I could park my old Honda Accord without having to pay for it.

On the rare occasions where my mom, Anne, had a night off work and wasn't too tired, and the weather was nice, we went to one of the few drive-in theaters that still operated in the area for their Classic Movies Night. Once a month, the old drive-in played the good old black-and-white movies with Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, Humphrey Bogart, and Spencer Tracy, just a few of my favorites.

If we had a little bit of extra money left over after paying our bills, or if there was an opportunity to cater, I also took advantage of a number of cultural events and wine festivals in Orange County. So it wasn't all work and no play. More often than not however, I indulged in my self-treats alone, as my mom found idleness wasteful. To tell you the truth, I think I was just a cover-up though, for her emotional wounds. She kept pretty much to herself, had no friends—acquaintances only—but she seemed okay with that.

It had been nearly a decade since my dad died, but she had never really recovered from the incident. Well, she's put on a good front, but I knew. After my dad died, and pushing her mid-forties with no work history, she had realized that she was practically unemployable, with no skills to speak of. She nevertheless put in an application at one of the local long-term care nursing facilities and they told her if she signed a two-year commitment, they would pay for her schooling so she could obtain her license as a certified nursing assistant.

She'd worked there ever since, and while she did enjoy working with the residents, it was hard on her, physically and emotionally. She wasn't a spring chicken anymore, and the physical and mental demands of the job wore her down.

On the rare occasions where I came home from work and she was off or working a different schedule than her usual graveyard shift, the only position that had been open, and which she kept because it offered greater job security—after all, who really likes working the graveyard shift—I would find her laying on her bed or on the sofa, just staring up at the ceiling, too exhausted to do much of anything.

More than anything I wanted to be able to take that burden from my mom. Someday, my dream was to make enough money to support us both so that she didn't have to work anymore. My dream? If, by some miracle, I could save up enough money, I wanted to open my own bistro. Maybe it was far-fetched, but it wasn't impossible. Nothing was impossible if you tried hard enough and kept your dreams alive, even on those days when you wanted to just chuck it all in. I was determined, so maybe that would be enough. Who knows? Life had dealt us a cruel blow, and while we both tried to make the best of our lives, it was hard. We scraped by every month, but living like this wasn’t exactly living. It was existing. Surviving. I wanted more than that.

I sighed, thinking it would be wonderful if I could actually make a living baking and cooking? I loved creating, experimenting; making an adventure out of combining this flavor with that, or substituting ingredients in a recipe, just to see what happened.

So, every Saturday morning, Mom and I brought our pastries and pies to the local farmers market. Not only was it a chance to earn money, but it was just about the only time we had where we could sit together, socialize, and, well, relax. Not that running a stall at the farmers’ market was easy all the time.

On the heels of that thought came the overwhelming reality of my situation—our situation. Mom and I barely managed to get the bills paid with our weekly visit to the farmers’ market and her job and my odd jobs. We were living on the edge. A canceled farmers’ market due to bad weather or, anything actually, would put us in dire straits.

I tried not to dwell on it, tried not to grow cynical or despondent, but some days, it was hard. Like today. In spite of the gorgeous weather and the refreshing breeze rustling through my hair. I quickly gathered my ponytail, rolled it into a bun, and fastened it with my scrunchy while darker thoughts crept in.

Mom and I worked hard. In addition to baking and selling our pastries at the farmers’ market food stall, I often managed to pick up other temporary jobs: cleaning houses, babysitting, and waitressing. Temp jobs. Jobs were scarce due to the economy, and no one really wanted the hire full-time anymore. Why pay benefits to your employees when you could squeak them by part-time, scheduling part-time or just under the cap for full-time work benefits?

Mom did her best too, but now pushing fifty, she had few prospects for anything more glamorous than earning her living as a nurse's aide. She didn't have a work history, having spent her entire marriage as a housewife, which worked just fine up until the moment my dad shot himself. And you know what made it worse? That he knew that I'd be the one to find him, sprawled out on the floor of the garage next to his car. Me. At least he'd had the decency not to do it in the house. Maybe he figured hosing blood off the cement garage floor would be a lot easier than trying to get it out of the carpet.

Sometimes, I hated my dad. Hated him with every fiber of my being for doing this to us. He had left us with nothing, not even life insurance. I didn't know why it happened. Up until that moment, that horrible moment when I found him on the garage floor, half of the back of his head gone, blood spatter staining the ceiling and pooling around his body… Let's just suffice it to say that I have never forgiven him for, in my opinion, being a coward, taking the easy way out, and leaving my mother and I to fend for ourselves.

Mom and I never really talked about it. I knew it was too painful for her. I didn't think she felt the same way about him as I did. Sometimes when I passed by her bedroom door, I would see her holding a picture of them together, taken just a few months before he died, her fingertip lingering on the glass, a smile turning up the corners of her mouth. I knew she had forgiven him. That's one of the reasons why I never brought it up. I didn't want to spoil her memories of him with my negative feelings and resentment.

I guess in a way that his death did benefit me in some ways. I had grown up independent and self-reliant. Like my mom, I didn't have a lot of friends and wasn't really interested in making any. After high school, my friends had gone off to college while I picked up full-time work as a waitress, at least until the economy tanked. Ever since then, life had been a day-to-day struggle.

"Megan, did you hear me?"

My mom's voice jarred me out of my stupor. I glanced at her, smiling, as if everything was right with the world. "Sorry, Mom, got distracted thinking what a beautiful day it was."

Mom always made sure that she had Friday nights off so that we could have these Saturday mornings. She'd be working tonight. She tried not to take more than one day a week off because we needed the money. Another reason for me to feel bad. I wished I could do more, but because of a lack of a degree, I was pretty much relegated to part-time, entry-level jobs. I had tried going to community college, but my classes just never seemed to coincide with my differing work schedules.

Oh well, maybe later

"Megan, where is your head today?" Mom laughed, shaking her head. "Can you go get the tub of blueberry muffins? I left them on the back seat."

I smiled and nodded. "Sure." I reached for the keys she extended. She was still shaking her head at me and I smiled, glad that something in my life was stable. As I threaded my way through the increasing numbers of vendors hurrying to finish setting up their stalls before eight o'clock, only ten minutes away now, I thanked God once again that Mom and I had such a good relationship. We relied on each other, leaned on each other, and cheered each other on. Actually, I think Mom and I gave each other therapy of sorts, some stability in our lives that kept both of us sane.

I tried to push unpleasant thoughts from my mind as I reached her small, twelve-year-old Ford Focus, unlocked the car, and reached into the back seat for the tub of muffins. We had a number of regular customers, and Mom's blueberry muffins were always in high demand. Grabbing the tub, I clamped the car keys between my teeth, shut the door shut with my hip, and quickly hurried back to our stall. One of the best things about selling our pastries at the farmers’ market was seeing our customers faces as they bit into one of our freshly baked pastries, pies, or cakes. Their complements were always appreciated and validated my dreams of someday opening a small place of my own.

"Here you go, Mom," I said, handing her the tub. We only had a few minutes to spare, and I quickly checked our goods and their placement on our tables: the old-fashioned red and white checkered tablecloths draped over the folding tables, the faux ivy vines and yellow daisy sprigs decorating the foldable faux wrought-iron shelving that set off clear acrylic pastry cases just so.

If we were fortunate today and our regulars came, and the baseball games scheduled today worked in our favor in regard to foot traffic, we would earn enough to pay half of our rent, maybe even a little bit more. Even our crappy apartment cost just over twelve-hundred dollars a month. It was outrageous. I had tried to talk my mom into moving out of the area on multiple occasions, knowing that further inland, or maybe even in another state, we could get cheaper rent, but she refused.

I knew why. If we moved she wouldn't be able to go to the cemetery every week, like she had done every week since my dad died—killed himself, rather. Four hundred-sixty-eight times to be exact.

I sighed, pasting a smile on my face to greet the first visitors to the farmers’ market, pushing thoughts about what might have been, or what things might have been like if my father hadn't abandoned us just before my seventeenth birthday. If he hadn't decided to chuck it all and put that gun into his mouth and pulled the trigger.