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What Happens in Texas

Page 8

by Carolyn Brown


  “Don’t worry, I won’t ever tell. What happens in the club stays in the club. Just because I’m a new member don’t mean I don’t know the rules. Aunt Annabel told me exactly what would be expected of me before she even nominated me. But I did want to thank you for your vote. Next time, the ice cream is on me,” she continued to whisper.

  Marty nibbled at the beautiful parfait while Anna Ruth rambled on about how excited she was to be in the club and how she intended to make every single meeting. Why, she’d just be tickled as punch to stop by Clawdy’s and take Marty with her since it was right on the way and all. And it would make Violet so happy if Marty came to more meetings.

  She had barely come up for air when she looked at her watch. “Oh, honey, would you look at the time? I swear we’ve wasted half an hour just goin’ on about the club, and now I’ll have to rush through Andy’s supper. See you real soon, and remember the next sundae is on me.”

  Marty wanted to bang her head on the table just to get the words and vision of Anna Ruth out of it. Jesus would have trouble keeping from strangling the woman, and Marty did not have an ounce of his patience.

  “What was she doing here?” Darla Jean slid into the place Anna Ruth vacated.

  “Trying to kill me with words. What are you doing out tonight? I figured you’d be getting ready for services tomorrow morning,” Marty said.

  “Sermon is ready. Sanctuary is swept and ready. I ordered a hamburger. Want one?”

  “No, I got the special.” She pointed toward the half-eaten parfait.

  Darla Jean’s cell phone rang, and she held up a finger. “Hello, Trixie… At the DQ. Marty is here too… Okay.”

  She flipped it shut and put it back in the pocket of her jeans. “Trixie says we aren’t to leave. She’s on her way.”

  “Guess scrapbooking is over.”

  Marty barely got the sentence out before Darla Jean’s phone rang again.

  “What’s up, Cathy?”

  Darla Jean listened and then said, “Yes, ma’am.”

  Darla Jean looked across the table at her. “I’m to go home. I’m to call Trixie and tell her to come home. I’m to bring you. I’m not to ask questions. Looks like big problems. Cathy doesn’t ever sound like that.”

  “Number thirty-two,” the lady called out.

  “That’s my burger. You walkin’ or drivin’?” Darla Jean asked.

  “I drove.”

  “I walked. I’ll ride with you and call Trixie on the way.”

  * * *

  Agnes was sitting at the table, a fork in her hand and what was left of half a pecan pie in front of her, when Marty and Darla Jean arrived. First she’d seen Marty walk toward the Dairy Queen. Agnes couldn’t believe she was walking right down Main Street dressed in her grease-stained sweatpants and shirt. It was an abomination, and besides, why in the hell would a woman want an ice cream when there was half a pecan pie sitting there for the taking?

  Then she had seen Trixie leave with that suitcase of paper shit; she knew she’d be gone until at least eight thirty. If Molly could keep her eyes open, that stupid little club she’d formed that had grown women cutting and pasting paper would keep going even longer.

  Cathy had driven off to Violet’s house—thinking of her blood kin about to marry into that family was enough to make Agnes cuss. She prayed every night that Ethan would drop dead of some dreaded disease and his mother would catch it when she kissed his dying lips good-bye, and most of all that it would happen before the wedding.

  She and Violet had actually been friends when they were girls, right up until Violet got her under-britches in a wad when she lost Bert Flynn to Agnes. She and Agnes had drawn a line in the Texas dirt and declared out-and-out war on each other. The battle had been going on for more than sixty years.

  Darla Jean smiled when she saw Agnes. “Got hungry, did you?”

  “Aunt Agnes, you’ll be sick if you eat all that rich pecan pie,” Marty scolded.

  “It was eat or cuss, and it’s Saturday night. I got to go to church in the morning and face off with God so I figured I’d eat. You look like shit,” Agnes said.

  “Now you’ve cussed so don’t eat all that pie. I don’t want to drive you to the emergency room with a bellyache in the middle of the night.”

  “You made me cuss. Why are y’all home anyway? Y’all were supposed to stay out for another half hour at least. And don’t you roll your eyes at me, young lady. I’m old, and I’ll eat what I want and die when I’m supposed to. All this worryin’ about eating healthy is for the birds. I might have the rest of that chocolate cake over there before I go to sleep tonight just to prove it.”

  Trixie pushed through the back door. “What is going on that we’ve…oh! It must be important if you called her too.”

  “Nobody called me for anything, but I’m staying now that I know something is happening. Is Cathy all right?”

  “I’m fine.” Cathy rushed inside. “But thank God you are all here.”

  “Did he die?” Agnes asked.

  “Who?”

  Agnes threw up her hands. “Ethan the fourth!”

  “No!”

  “Well, damn! Sometimes God takes his own sweet time in answering prayers,” Agnes said.

  Trixie dropped her scrapbooking case with a thud and sat down in a kitchen chair with a plop. “Anna Ruth joined my scrapbook club. She’s trying to force me out of town. But that’s not what’s going on, is it?”

  “No, I called the summit,” Cathy said. “Marty, darlin’, promise me you will not say anything until you count to ten.”

  “Do I need to run across the street and get my shotgun?” Agnes asked.

  “Maybe,” Cathy said.

  “Oh my God! It’s serious, isn’t it?” Darla Jean crossed herself and looked up. “Sorry about that, God. I didn’t mean to take your name in vain. It just slipped out.”

  Agnes shook her head in disgust. “Hooker changed to preacher, my ass. You can’t change a leopard’s spots or think God is listening to you just because you make a cross on them big boobs! God bless! This whole area of town has gone to hell in a handbasket.”

  And that’s when the whole room went deadly quiet.

  Cathy made sure everyone was seated and had a tall glass of sweet tea before she started, and then she told them the whole story.

  Trixie couldn’t even get a cuss word to come out of her open mouth.

  Darla Jean’s mouth moved in a silent prayer. She didn’t care what Agnes said. Prayer didn’t hurt and it just might help.

  Agnes hadn’t promised anything about counting to ten or holding her temper, either. “That bitch! You can’t marry that spineless piece of shit she produced, Cathy. I won’t allow it. Your parents are dead, and you have to pay attention to me now.”

  Marty held up one finger. “One.”

  She pushed back her chair. “Two.”

  She headed for the door. “Three.”

  She slammed it so hard that the coffeepot rattled.

  “Four,” she yelled.

  They heard the Caddy’s engine fire up and the tires squeal when she backed out of the driveway. A minute passed and then a horrible noise sent them all running out the back door.

  Marty was standing beside her prized Caddy with the front end wrapped around the pecan tree in Beulah’s yard. “Ten. Now can I talk?” she asked.

  Cathy nodded.

  “Andy can ride in a wagon pulled by a mangy jackass, but he’s not putting his feet in my car.”

  “But you didn’t have to wreck it. You just got it fixed,” Cathy said.

  “And it’ll be fixed by fall again. Me and Jack will have a good time doing it, and Andy will still be a first-class sumbitch. And you’ve got a good excuse for Violet without having to get yourself in hot water with the almighty damned Prescotts.”

  Jack came running out of his house to see what the noise was all about and slapped his leg. “What in the hell have you done, Marty? We just got her fixed up.”

  “And
we can fix her up again, but not in time for the Jalapeño Jubilee parade.”

  Chapter 5

  Violet Prescott and Beulah Landry were the only two remaining charter members of the Blue-Ribbon Jalapeño Society, and their word was as good as written in stone and carried on the shoulders of the newest members to every club meeting. In the original charter, it was decreed that only twenty members could be in the club at any given time, and there had only been one amendment since it was written, and that was to allow a one-time addition to the twenty members so that both Martha and Catherine Andrews could be inducted.

  The iron-clad rules of the club involved the limit on membership, the fact that members must live within the borders of Grayson County, and that the only way a new member could come in was if someone died or moved away. The unspoken ones included dressing up for club, always wearing the pin given at the first meeting by Violet, and staying on Violet’s good side.

  Prissy Parnell’s moving away had paved the way for Anna Ruth. Before that, an open spot had been given to Anna Ruth’s Aunt Annabel when poor Edna Smith was laid to rest under an oak tree in the Cadillac Memorial Cemetery.

  When Prissy left, Annabel had called Violet and asked if she could put her niece’s name on the ballot and Violet had told her that she’d have to take some time to think about it. After all, Anna Ruth’s mother had been from the wrong side of the tracks, so to speak. Annabel’s brother probably wouldn’t have married the poor girl if she hadn’t gotten pregnant, so it wasn’t a cut-and-dried case. And there was that little bit about her living with Andy, but he was the chief of police, which in Cadillac meant he had standing and could be useful to the club. And at that time the only other name on the ballot was Agnes Flynn, put there as usual by Beulah, who declared that Agnes was her neighbor and things would be very sticky if she didn’t nominate her.

  The next day, Violet had decided that it would be un-Christian to punish the girl for the mother’s deeds. She had, after all, married the father and stayed with him, unlike Trixie’s mamma, who came home with a baby that had her maiden name.

  The club was held the second Tuesday night of every month, and Violet always hosted it at her house. She usually chose a Halloween theme for the October meeting, but with the election just weeks away, she’d gone with red, white, and blue for patriotism. The table was laid with finger foods. Plates were red, cups were blue, and the saucers were white. The centerpiece, sitting between two tall red vases of red, white, and blue flowers, was a plate of petit cheesecakes. Some were topped with blueberries, some with cherries, and some left plain, but they were arranged to resemble the flag. Ethan would be the speaker that evening, and Violet had even borrowed the podium from the Cadillac Baptist church for him to stand behind. Clayton would introduce him, of course, and Violet would sit in a chair right behind him, symbolic of her undying support. She’d thought about a second chair for Catherine, but the woman wasn’t in the family yet, and until she was, she’d didn’t really have a place.

  Anna Ruth was the first to arrive. She was such a pretty little thing in her bright red slim skirt and matching jacket. Her blond hair was twisted up, and her eyes had just enough makeup to bring out the color.

  She came in gushing. “Everything is beautiful, Miz Violet. You’ve outdone yourself. Those little cheesecakes are so fitting with the red, white, and blue floral arrangement. And Ethan is speaking? I’d just be delighted to help with his campaign in any way I could. Remember my name when you need help stuffing envelopes or when you need someone to go door-to-door passing out cards.”

  Violet wished just one time that Catherine would show that kind of emotion. If she’d had her way, Ethan never would have asked that woman out on the first date, but Clayton assured her that the Andrewses came from old stock and it would be a good thing for his campaign.

  Violet hugged Anna Ruth. “Why, now, isn’t that the sweetest thing ever? I’ll write your name down in my book, Anna Ruth, and I will definitely be calling you.”

  “I know he’s just swamped with his classes at the school and trying to make every single function right here close to election time. I swear I don’t know how he keeps up with the professor duties at the college and do all that he has do to with the election.”

  “Yes, that’s right. And when he is elected.” Violet winked at her. “And yes, I did say when, and not if. I’m sure the college will miss him dreadfully.”

  “Oh, I know they will,” Anna Ruth said.

  The doorbell rang, and Violet opened the door. “Come right in, Catherine. Could you be a dear and man the door for me tonight? Members can be seated in the parlor for the meeting and to hear our guest speaker. Ethan, Clayton, and I have to go over a couple of the fine points of his speech in his study. Anna Ruth, you can come with me. Catherine will take care of the guests as they arrive.” She draped her arm around Anna Ruth’s shoulders, and together they headed for Ethan’s office.

  * * *

  Cathy stood beside the credenza and waited for the doorbell.

  “What’s wrong with this picture?” she muttered.

  Anna Ruth is the fair-haired glory girl, and I’m the butler. Violet scowls at me and hugs her. What in the hell is going on? That did sound like Marty, didn’t it?

  The doorbell sounded. Beulah was standing on the porch. A large-boned, gray-haired woman in the same black suit she wore every month to the club, she looked nervous.

  “Hi, Cathy. I’m not late, am I?”

  “No, darlin’, you are not a bit late. We are sitting in the parlor for the meeting. Just go on in and save me a seat beside you. Marty won’t be coming tonight.”

  “Oh, dear.” Beulah wrung at her hands. “That puts Violet in a stew.”

  “Not tonight. She’s all worked up over Ethan’s speech,” Cathy whispered.

  When everyone was seated in the parlor, Violet made her entrance between Ethan and Clayton, walking down the aisle between the folding chairs like a queen. She sat between Anna Ruth and Annabel and beamed while Clayton gave the introductory speech and glowed while Ethan spoke of his plans to improve the whole district.

  Anna Ruth got all misty-eyed and flushed at several places in his speech.

  Beulah kept stealing glances through the door at the cherry cheesecakes.

  And Cathy was so busy thinking about whether to top out the crape myrtles or let them get taller for another year that she didn’t hear a word of what he said. She thought he might introduce her as his fiancée at the end of his speech, but he didn’t. And she’d worn her brand-new navy blue straight skirt with the little short jacket to match and her mother’s pearl necklace. She’d even shaved her legs for the second day in a row and put on panty hose.

  “And now before we go to the refreshment table, we have to pin our newest member. Anna Ruth, would you please come forward and accept the pin that says you are a member of the Blue-Ribbon Jalapeño Society?”

  Anna Ruth dabbed at a tear. “Thank you for voting me into the club. I can’t tell you how pleased I am or how much I will slave for this club.”

  Violet fastened the pin to the lapel of her jacket, and everyone clapped. Cathy felt guilty putting her hands together, but she managed a few claps before settling them back in her lap.

  The refreshment and gossiping stage of the club lasted thirty minutes and then everyone was expected to go home. Anna Ruth kept watching the clock and was the first to air-kiss Violet and gush on and on about what a lovely time she’d had. Evidently, she had no intentions of making a mistake at her first formal club meeting.

  She shook Ethan’s hand for the third time and offered again to support him and stressed “in any way.” Cathy hung back until they were all gone and waited until she caught Ethan coming out of the kitchen alone.

  “I’d like a word, in private,” she whispered and laced her fingers in his.

  He nodded toward his office and almost shut the door, leaving it open by two inches in case his mother came searching for them. A politician couldn’t be too c
areful, not even with his future wife. He planted one of those dry kisses on her forehead and said, “You look very pretty today, sweetheart.”

  Her chin quivered. “Thank you, but I want to tell you something and it is very difficult for me to say.”

  He dropped her hand and touched her chin. “What is it, sweetheart? Please don’t tell me you are getting cold feet about the wedding.”

  “No, but I will not live in the same house with your mother. I want us to have our own house. I don’t care how small it is at first. I just want to be like a normal newly wedded couple and—”

  Ethan dropped her hands. “That’s unreasonable.”

  “But—” she said.

  The door swung open and Violet came into the room like an unwanted odor. “Here are the love birds sneaking away for a moment together. That’s so sweet, but Clayton needs you in the parlor to go over the next speech you’ll be giving on Friday night. And before I forget, Catherine, we are to see Annabel about the cake Friday night. She just told me that she would be ready for us then. Now Ethan, you go on to the parlor and I’ll walk Catherine to the door.”

  He made a hasty escape out the door.

  Violet tucked her arm in Cathy’s and led her into the foyer and toward the front door. “Darlin’, you did fairly well today with your outfit, but please don’t wear that on the press day. I’m thinking maybe something in a royal blue would be good with your hair and eyes. Pearls are so out, especially the ones that are aged. Maybe a scarf instead of a necklace and a flag pin on your lapel would be just the thing. Oh, and we need to make a date soon for your wedding dress. I’m thinking old-fashioned with a high collar and pointed sleeves. That would show the voters that you are serious about your job as a politician’s wife.”

  Cathy was on the porch and the door had shut behind her before she could say a single word.

  * * *

  Trixie parked her car beside Andy’s at the far end of the Walmart parking lot, threw her bags into the backseat, and got into the passenger’s seat.

 

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