Driving Me Crazy

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Driving Me Crazy Page 1

by Webb, Peggy




  ______________

  DRIVING ME CRAZY

  ______________

  A Novel

  By Peggy Webb

  USA Today Bestselling Author

  “If you can read only one book this year, make it DRIVING ME CRAZY.”

  Daily Journal Reviews

  Driving Me Crazy by Peggy Webb, author’s cut

  Published by Westmoreland House

  All characters and events in this book are fictional. Any resemblance to actual persons or events is coincidental.

  Copyright ©2016 by Peggy Webb

  Cover Design by Kim Van Meter

  Paperback edition published by Harlequin NEXT, Copyright ©2006 by Peggy Webb

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or via any means, including electronic mechanical, photocopying, recording or via any information storage and retrieval system without the express written permission of the copyright holder and publisher.

  Published in the United States by Westmoreland House, Mooreville, MS

  ______________

  Dedication

  ______________

  In memory of Mama who taught me to love books and music and flowers. Her independent nature, sharp intelligence, indomitable spirit and sassy ways color every page of this story, and my gratitude to her is infinite.

  I don’t know whether she put words in my mouth or I put words in hers. But this I know: somewhere she’s smiling.

  ______________

  Table of Contents

  ______________

  Letter To The Reader

  Driving Me Crazy Reviews

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Read More

  About Peggy Webb

  Other Books by Peggy Webb

  ______________

  Letter To The Reader

  ______________

  Dear Reader,

  My mother died the way she lived, with sass and courage. Driving Me Crazy is my memorial to her and my gift to you.

  Mama is the only person I know who could become a character in a novel without embellishment. When my muse started whispering this story, she was right there, too, dictating and running the show, the way she always did.

  Is anybody else in this book real? Hmmm…maybe. But I’ll leave you to figure that out for yourself. Grab a cup of tea and settle back for a funny and heart-touching read.

  In this digital version, I’ve added a few scenes that were deleted from the earlier print version. Enjoy!

  Peggy

  ______________

  Driving Me Crazy Reviews

  ______________

  “If you can read only one book this year, make it DRIVING ME CRAZY.” Leslie Criss, Reviewer, Daily Journal

  “Every once in a while you read a story that stays with you a long, long time. This is that book.” Vine Voice Reviews

  “Peggy Webb is a master storyteller and the preeminent comedy writer in America today.” S. Fortune Reviews, Ed.D.

  “Warm, funny and worth however long it takes you to finish it.” Liz, a reader

  “Peggy Webb outdoes herself with this fabulous read! It has earned a place on my bookshelf next to great authors like Fannie Flagg and Elizabeth Berg, only Mrs. Webb pulled more heartstrings and created characters that jumped off the page and stayed with me long after I closed the book. I laughed, I wept, and I felt wiser in the end.” CHB

  “A lovely book, filled with warmth and humor. Any woman who has had too much to do should take a break and spend some time with this funny, sweet and tender novel.” SR

  Driving Me Crazy was nominated for a Pulitzer.

  ______________

  Chapter One

  ______________

  The weather will be mostly cloudy today with patches of low-lying fog in the early morning and scattered thundershowers in the afternoon. Drivers, proceed with caution. Pay attention, now! I know what I’m talking about.

  Joseph “Rainman” Jones

  WTUP-FM Radio

  I’m driving along in a fog, which is my life in a nutshell.

  A year ago when I divorced Stanley, I expected heroes to line up outside my door to worship at the shrine of my pot roast and my black lace panties. What I got was one hot hunk who loved shrines but hated commitment and one geriatric who drooled his soup and peed on the toilet seat.

  After I finally fled a marriage I couldn’t fix, I saw my future self as happily re-wed, gainfully employed, and skinny. I’m none of the above. What I am is 41 and lost – in more ways than one - and even if I had a map I couldn’t see the road. Fog shrouds everything, including my Jeep as I inch down what I hope is highway 371 to rescue Mama.

  That’s me. Maggie Dufrane. Rescuer of stray cats, wounded dogs, latchkey kids, lonely old farts, sick neighbors, and a 75-year-old mama.

  There ought to be a law against emergency phone calls at five o’clock in the morning, especially from my sister Jean who equates hangnails and bad haircuts with floods and tornadoes….and who feels compelled to ask my opinion about all of them.

  Her alarmist viewpoint explains why I didn’t bolt out of bed this morning when she wailed, “Maggie, you’ve got to come.”

  “Jean, do you know what time it is? This had better be good.”

  “It’s Mama. She fell and banged her head. She called me a little while ago, crying.”

  That jolted me awake. Granted, Mama is feisty and dramatic. Once an actress, she’s partial to histrionics that involve wild gestures, contorted features and raised voice. But tears? Never!

  I leaped from the covers, got tangled in the phone cord and fell in a heap with yesterday’s sweatpants while Jean was blubbering.

  “What are we going to do, Maggie?”

  Although she’s is two years older than I, she has been asking me that question all my life. She asked it thirty years ago when our Persian cat got stuck in a tree over the pig pen and wouldn’t come down. She asked it when she leaned too close to the candles at her wedding rehearsal and her hair caught fire. She asked it when Daddy’s pickup truck fell through the bridge and he floated to Glory Land in the Tombigbee River.

  “Just hang on Jean,” I told her as I have a thousand times. “I’ll think of something.”

  And I will…the minute I assess the situation. I always do.

  Right now, though, I’m concentrating on driving.

  Today is Saturday, April 15th, my birthday. I hadn’t planned to be a one-man cavalry. What I’d meant to do was ease out of bed around nine, indulge in a long bubble bath, then pamper myself with a leisurely breakfast of freshly squeezed orange juice and croissants with strawberry jam, al fresco. That means on the fire escape because my apartment in downtown Tupelo was once a department store whose owners had no need for balconies - and the current management considers them frivolous.

  What I’m doing, instead, is charging forth in my ex-husband’s once-white dress shirt, gray sweat pants cast off from yesterday’s workout at Curves and red sequined flip flops, the only evidence of my plans for decadence and celebration.

  As the clock inches toward six the scattered patches of fog begin to lift, and I can see the lake
that borders Mama’s north pasture. What if she’s badly hurt? What will I do?

  Though I pretend otherwise, I don’t have all the answers. If I did I’d have a house, a mortgage and a sex life. I’m not even close to having any of those things, which explains why I can be thrilled by the thought of a birthday celebration on a fire escape.

  Alone, on the fire escape.

  Now I’ve cracked the door, and Depression pokes his giant foot through. The next thing I know he’ll have his big hairy self sitting on the front seat, and then who will rescue Mama? Who will play taxicab for Jean, who backed Daddy’s car over a hydrangea bush when she was fifteen and never saw the need to master reverse? Or forward, either, for that matter, especially after Mama said, “Let Maggie try it. She’s efficient.”

  I switch away from the patter of the weatherman, “Rainman” Jones, to a station that plays music, hoping to boost my spirits by warbling along to “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain” with Willie Nelson. That’s me, Miss Efficient and Cheerful. Reliable, too, the one you want to call when something goes wrong.

  I peer into the lingering mists for any lurking hydrangea bushes or stray cattle that might waylay me. I’m in rural Mississippi now, the farm country of my childhood where trees know how to become castles and tree branches know how to become racehorses worthy of the Kentucky Derby.

  Jean is waiting for me on Mama’s front porch, her pink slacks on wrong-side out and her matching pink tennis shoes dew-soaked from the grassy pasture that separates her house from Mama’s. Her blond hair sticks up like the tufts of baby birds as she rushes toward me.

  “Mama’s got the deadbolts on. I can’t get in.”

  “Where is she? Can you see her?”

  “No, but I can hear her moaning.”

  I rattle the front door and yell, “Mama! Mama, can you hear me?”

  “Ohhh. Ohhhh.” Mama is either gasping her last breath or auditioning to be the ghost of Halloween. With her, it’s hard to tell. Once when she was recovering from flu she telephoned at 6:00 a.m. to say I had to hurry right over, it was an emergency. On the drive I imagined finding her relapsed and half dead. She was dying, all right, she said, from starvation but didn’t feel like frying the bacon.

  Now panicked, Jean races around to scope the south side of the house while I jerk screens off the front porch windows and shove against casements to see if one of them can be opened without breaking a glass.

  “Maggie, around here. Quick.”

  “What?” To save time I jump off the side of the porch, but the dew-slick grass outsmarts me and I meet the damp ground with a thud. Jean grabs my arm and hauls me up.

  “Hurry. You’ve got to climb through that window.” She points to a south-facing window with a narrow slit at the bottom where it’s not quite connected to the sill.

  “You’re shorter, Jean. I’ll hoist you up.”

  “If you think I can get my forty-five inch butt through that thirty-six inch opening, you’re crazy.”

  I’m not about to admit the size of my hips, so I step into Jean’s cupped hands, grab hold of the windowsill and then…nothing.

  “You can do it, Maggie. Come on. Heave ho!”

  “I’m heaving, I’m heaving.”

  Inside, Mama’s still moaning. And now, so is Jefferson, the ten-year-old golden retriever who is her companion, her watch dog and her best friend. If this were the movies he’d be trained to open the door with his mouth and swab her forehead with a wet washcloth clutched in his paw.

  Who am I kidding? If this were the movies, I’d rewrite the ending. Heck, I’d rewrite the middle, too. Instead of teetering on the windowsill over a thorny lantana with rescue on my mind, I’d be on a yacht in the Mediterranean with my rich husband, the Duke of Somewhere Important, with something else entirely on my mind. Food, if you want to know the truth, which just goes to show the alarming shifts that come with a certain age. What I’m thinking about is having a personal chef who hand feeds me squab under glass and pears glazed with honey.

  “She’s dying in there.” Jean destroys my honey-glazed vision. “You’ve got to climb in and get her.”

  “Where’s Walter when we need him?” Jean’s husband is a successful international deal-maker with Sumo-wrestler looks and teddy bear personality.

  “He had to fly to Japan yesterday. Hurry, Maggie.” Jean puts her weight behind me, and I catapult sideways into the lantana. If you think waking up at 5:00 a.m. is rude, try crawling out of a bush covered with thorny branches.

  “Oh, lord, you’re going to end up in the hospital with Mama.”

  “I am not. If you’ll just stop wringing your hands and give me another boost, I’m going through that window.”

  Jean starts praying, and this time I get through, thanks to guts and grace.

  Mama is stretched out on the floor with Jefferson lying beside her, his big head pillowed on her chest. They both raise their heads at the same time.

  “What took you so long?” Mama says. The skin is peeled back from her forehead to the bone and blood is caked around the gaping wound. My knees feel wobbly and my stomach churns. The only thing that saves me is Mama.

  “Don’t just stand there,” she snaps. “Help me up from here. I’ve got to go to the doctor.”

  The thing about Mama is that she’s going to take charge, no matter what. I can imagine her sitting up from her casket saying, “Fluff up this pillow, it’s hard as a brickbat. And for Pete’s sake, go out and buy yourself a new dress. I don’t want any daughter of mine looking tacky at my funeral.”

  Now I ask her, “What happened, Mama?”

  “I was feeling funny, and when I tried to call Jean, I fell and couldn’t get up, that’s all.”

  Pacemaker, I think. I’ve seen her get weak when her pacemaker needs adjusting – a simple procedure, thank goodness – done with computers.

  I let Jean in, and she starts flapping around like a bird with a broken wing. How I’ll ever get all three of us to the emergency room at North Mississippi Medical Center is a mystery to me.

  “Can you walk?” I ask Mama.

  “Don’t be ridiculous. Of course I can.”

  We help Mama to the car and up close I see that the wound is not as serious as it looks. What bothers me is that Mama couldn’t get up when she fell. And by the way she winces when she walks, I suspect there’s more going on than meets the eye.

  We ensconce her in the back seat on a blue blanket and two pillows we grabbed on the way out the door, and while I drive Jean bargains with God.

  “If you’ll just let us get Mama there safe and sound, I’ll lose ten pounds. I swear to God.”

  Mama rises from her pillow-throne and snaps, “Can’t you think of something less trivial, Jean? This is a life and death situation here.”

  “More like a three-ring circus,” I say, and Jean giggles.

  Laughter through tears. It’s the Southern way, especially with women. I’ve spent my life watching Mama and her sister, Aunt Mary Quana, spin daily tribulations into stories with a touch of humor. They even did it with tragedy. After Daddy died I asked Mama how she could still find anything to laugh about and she told me, it’s the only way to reduce pain to something manageable and render it bearable.

  A sense of well-being flashes through me, momentarily edging out the panic I’ve been trying to keep at bay ever since I saw the gash on Mama’s head.

  It’s a relief to turn her over to the experts who rush out with a gurney and a mouthful of reassurances.

  “Don’t worry about a thing.” The intern who takes charge is fresh-faced and his forearms are dotted with red-gold freckles that match his hair. I have sneakers older than he is. If I’d been lucky enough to have children, one of them might have looked like him. “You two go on and fill out papers. We’ll take good care of your mother.”

  I believe him, partly because of his earnestness, but mostly because it’s the only way I can keep walking. Just put one foot in front of the other, I tell myself.

  It ta
kes thirty minutes and two college degrees, mine and Jean’s, to figure out the forms, and when we finally find the cubicle where they told us to wait until Mama comes back from x-ray, we sink into the hard plastic chairs as if we’re way past our prime instead of women who still have a little fire in the belly as well as other parts of the anatomy.

  Well, occasionally, we do.

  “I’m so tired of being Joshua,” Jean says, as if she’d fought the battle of rescuing Mama all by herself.

  “I’m tired of being Job.”

  “If it’s not one thing, it’s another. What’s happening with your book contract?”

  “I haven’t heard anything yet. My editor’s had my proposal only two weeks. She’s in LA now visiting friends. I expect to hear as soon as she returns to New York.”

  “I hope so. How long has it been since your last contract? Eight months?”

  “Nine. It’s my fault, though. I lost my writing steam after the divorce and I’m just now getting it back.”

  Jean shifts in her chair, plants her tiny size five feet side by side and picks at a hangnail. “Why don’t they put cushions in these chairs? It’s not enough that we’re worried to death; we have to be uncomfortable, too. Maggie, you ought to write a letter.”

  She thinks I can fix anything. I guess it’s because I always try.

  But if I write any letters it’s going to be to Shelia Cox, my editor. I’m a novelist with eight mysteries to my credit. Granted, I’m no Agatha Christie but I was making enough money before I left Stanley to believe that I could support myself as long as my tastes matched my pocketbook. Translated, that means I won’t be dashing off to Paris in a full-length mink. Of course, I wouldn’t buy a mink even if I could afford one. I love animals too much to drape their poor little lost hides over my body. Paris, however, is a whole ‘nother story.

 

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