Boy - The Boy Next Door - BestLightNovel.com
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Dear John, This is your grandmother speaking. Or should I say writing. I suppose you will be surprised to hear from me in this manner. I have chosen this venue, the E Mail, with which to correspond to you, because you have not returned a single one of my telephone calls, and your brother Jason a.s.sures me that while you may not check your answering machine, you actually do occasionally answer E Mail messages.
Therefore, to business:
I can forgive the fact that you have chosen to throw caution to the wind and embark on your own career in a field that, frankly, no respectable Trent--or Randolph, either, for that matter--would ever consider. You have proven to me that not all news reporters are parasitic vermin. And I can forgive the fact that you chose to move out of the building and live on your own, first in that h.e.l.lhole on 37th with that hairy lunatic, and then where you currently reside, in Brooklyn, which I'm told is the most charming of the five boroughs, aside from the occasional race riot and collapsing supermarket.
And I can even forgive you for choosing not to touch any of the money that has been held in trust for you since your grandfather's death. A man should make his own way in the world, if at all possible, and not depend upon his family for his means. I applaud your effort to do just that. It is far more than any of my other grandchildren have done. Look at your cousin d.i.c.kie. I'm certain if that boy had a vocation like you do, John, he would not spend half so much time putting things up his nose that have no business being there.
But what I simply cannot forgive you for is missing the dedication the other night. You know how much my benefits mean to me. This cancer wing I've donated is particularly important to me, as you know that cancer was what took your beloved grandfather from me. I understand that you might have had a previous commitment, but you could, at least, have had the courtesy to have sent a note.
I will not lie to you, John. I most particularly wanted you at this event because there is acertain young lady I was very anxious for you to know. I know. I know how you feelabout my introducing you to my friends' eligible daughters. But Victoria Arbuthnot,whom I am sure you will remember from your childhood summers on the Vineyard--theArbuthnots had that place in Chilmark--has grown into quite an attractive young lady-she has even overcome that horrible chin problem that has plagued so many of theArbuthnots. And she is, from what I understand, a real go-getter in the investment market.
Since career-minded women have always appealed to you, I made an effort to ensure Victoria would be at the dedication the other night. What a fool you made me look, John! I had to p.a.w.n Victoria off on your cousin Bill. And you know how I feel about him.
I know you pride yourself on being the blacksheep of the family, John--though what is supposed to be so enraging about a man who works for a living, doing what it is he actually likes to do, I cannot imagination. Your cousins, with their various addictions and unsuitable pregnancies, are far more maddening.
However, this type of behavior really is quite bewildering, even for you. All I can say is that I hope you have a very good explanation. Furthermore, I hope you will take the time to respond to this letter. It is very rude of you not to have returned my calls.
Yours, in spite of that, Mim
To: Genevieve Randolph Trent Mim-- What can I say? You have made me thoroughly ashamed of myself. It was unconscionable of me not to return your calls. My only explanation is that I have not been checking my answering machine as a.s.siduously as I used to, due to the fact that recently, I have been staying in the apartment of a friend. Well, not my friend, really--my friend's aunt, to be exact, who has been hospitalized, and needed someone to care for her pets. Although after what happened to one of her cats recently, I am not convinced I am the person most suited for the job. However, that's not important. What's important is that you know that I did not fail to attend the dedication out of any sort of disdain for you or for the event. I just had something else to do. Something very important. Which reminds me: Vickie Arbuthnot better not be holding her breath waiting for me, Mim. I've actually met someone. And no, it isn't anyone you know, unless you are familiar with the Fullers of Lansing, Illinois. Which I sincerely hope you are not. I know. I know. After the Heather debacle, you'd given up on me for good. Well, it takes a lot more to keep a man like me down than finding out a girl I hadn't proposed to yet had already registered at Bloomingdales as the future Mrs. John Trent (and for $1000 sheets, no less). But before you start clamoring to meet her, allow me to work out a few slight...kinks. No romantic relations.h.i.+p in New York City is ever simple, but this one is even more complicated than most. I am confident, however, that I can work it out. I have to work it out. I just don't have the slightest idea how I'm going to manage it. Anyway, with many loving apologies, I hope you'll still consider me sincerely Your John PS To make it up to you, I'll be at the Lincoln Center Benefit to Raise Cancer Awareness next week, since I know you're its biggest supporter. I'll even crack into the old trust fund and write a check with a guaranteed four zeroes. Will that help soothe your ruffled feathers? To: Mel Fuller <> From: Don and Beverly Fuller Hi, honey, it's Mommy again, writing you on the email. I hope you are being careful because I saw last night on Tom Brokaw that another one of those awful sinkholes have opened up in Manhattan. This one is right in front of a newspaper, no less! Don't worry, though, it is that newspaper you hate, the snooty one. Still, think about it, sweetie, that could have been you sitting in that taxi that fell into that twenty foot deep hole! Except I know you never take taxis because you spend all your money on clothes. But that poor lady! Why, it took three firemen to pull her out (you are so tiny, it would only take one fireman to pull you out of any sinkhole, I would think). Anyway, I just wanted to say BE CAREFUL! Be sure to look down everywhere you go- -but look up, too, since I heard people's air conditioners sometimes go flying out of their windows if they are not fastened securely, and can go cras.h.i.+ng down onto the pedestrians below. That city is so fraught with peril. Why can't you come home and work for the Duane County Register? I saw Mabel Flemming the other day at the Buy and Bag and she said she'd absolutely hire you as their Arts and Entertainment writer. Think about it, would you? There's nothing the least bit dangerous in Lansing--no sinkholes or falling air conditioners or transvest.i.te killers. Just that man who shot up all the customers at the feed store that time, but that was years ago. Love, Mommy PS You'll never guess what! One of your ex-boyfriends got married! I've attached the announcement for you to see. Attachment: Photo of total goober and a girl with very big hair Crystal Hope LeBeau and Jeremy "Jer" Vaughn, both of Lansing, were married at the Lansing Church of Christ last Sat.u.r.day. Parents of the bride are Brandi Jo and Dwight LeBeau of Lansing, owners of Buckeye Liquors on Main Street in downtown Lansing. Parents of the groom are Joan and Roger Vaughn. Joan Vaughn is a homemaker. Roger Vaughn is employed by Smith Auto. A reception was held at the Lansing Masonic Lodge, of which Mr. LeBeau is a member. The bride, 22, is a graduate of Lansing High School and is currently employed at the Beauty Barn. The groom, 29, is a graduate of Lansing High School and is employed by Buckeye Liquors. After a honeymoon in Maui, the couple will reside in Lansing. To: George Sanchez Dear George, In an attempt to raise the morale around here, which I am sure you will agree with me is-to coin a phrase you frequently employ--p.i.s.s-poor, may I suggest that in lieu of a staff meeting this week, we all take a stroll over to 53rd and Madison in order to admire the gigantic sinkhole which has opened up in front of the office building housing our foe and main compet.i.tor, The New York Chronicle? I am sure you will agree with me that this will const.i.tute a refres.h.i.+ng change from the normal routine of listening to people complain about the how the local Krispy Kremeshut down and how we havent been able to get decent doughnuts at our staff meetings ever since. Plus, seeing as how all the water to the building in which the Chronicle is housed has been shut off, we will have the fun of seeing our esteemed colleagues running into the Starbucks across the street to use their facilities. Please give this matter the full consideration it so richly deserves. Sincerely, Mel Fuller Page Ten Correspondent The New York Journal To: Mel Fuller Are you high? Everyone knows you only want to look at the sinkhole because you love a good disaster. Get back to work, Fuller. I don't pay you for your looks. G. To: Nadine Wilc.o.c.k Come on. How can you resist? If you go with me to look at it, I won't make you go to spinning cla.s.s today..... M. To: Mel Fuller You are insane. It is like a hundred degrees out. I am not spending my precious lunch hour going to look at a giant hole in the ground, even if it is in front of the Chronicle. Ask Tim Grabowski. He'll go with you. He'll go anywhere men in uniform are gathered in large cl.u.s.ters. Nad To: Nadine Wilc.o.c.k You lazy thing, you. If you'd gotten off your a.r.s.e and come with us, you would have, as I did, met this fellow that our little Miss Mel has been yakking non-stop about all month. But I suppose some of us think we're simply too good for sinkholes. Tim To: Tim Grabowski Spill it, you little weasel. To: Nadine Wilc.o.c.k You fiery-spirited wench, you. Tim To: Tim Grabowksi Nadine To: Nadine Wilc.o.c.k Picture it, if you will: The scene--53rd and Madison. A forty by twenty foot hole has opened up in the middleof the street. Surrounding this hole are police barricades, orange caution cones, bulldozers,cement mixers, Con Edison trucks, a crane, television news reporters, about a hundredcops, and twenty of the hottest construction workers this little computer programmer hasever seen. The noise of the jack hammers and honking of horns by unsuspecting commuters, whodid not listen to the 1010 WINS traffic report before they left Jersey, is deafening. Theheat is oppressive. And the smell, my dear--well, I dont know what those Con Ed boysare doing at the bottom of that hole, but let me tell you, I strongly suspect they hit thewrong pipe. It was as if a proverbial h.e.l.lhole had opened up, right before that bastion of all that is evil, the ill.u.s.trious New York Chronicle , and attempted to suck it back down to its creator, Mr. Satan himself. And then, through it all, I saw on the face of our Miss Mel--who is, as I am sure you can guess, already giddy with joy at the spectacle before us--a look of such delight that I thought at first a Mr. Softee truck had appeared, and was handing out free chocolate dipped cones. Then, following the direction of her dazzled gaze, I saw what it was that had brought that beatific look to her face: An Apollo. I am not exaggerating. An absolutely perfect specimen of manly beauty. He was standing behind one of the barricades, gazing into the hole, looking as if hed just stepped off the pages of a J Crew catalog in his baggy chinos and soft denim works.h.i.+rt. The humid wind tugged softly at his brown hair, and I swear to you, Nadine, if one of those construction workers had handed him a shovel, it wouldn't have looked the least bit out of place in those big hands of his. Which is a lot more than I can say for my boyfriend. But to return to our scene: Our Miss Mel (screaming to be heard over the pounding of the jackhammers): John! John! Over here! Apollo turns. He sees us. He turns a deep but nevertheless completely attractive shade of umber. I follow our little Miss Mel, picking her way through the police officers and outraged Chronicle employees, who, wearing their press pa.s.ses, have descended upon the poor souls from the Mayor's office and are demanding to know when their private bidets-- don't try to tell me they don't have them up in those gold-lined halls they work in-- are going to be flowing again. Upon reaching the G.o.dlike creature she calls John, for reasons which are still a mystery to me, our Miss Mel goes on in her usual breathless manner: "What are you doing here? Did you come to take pictures of the giant hole?" Max Friedlander: Um. Yes. Our Miss Mel: Where's your camera? Max Friedlander: Oh. Um. I forgot it. Hmmm. Lights may be on, but no one seems to be home. At least until--