Don't Forget to Write: A Novel(70)
Clouds blocked the sun, and I shivered as a cold wind came in from town. The handful of people still on the beach were packing up, and when I turned to look behind me, I saw why: dark clouds menaced with an approaching storm. I quickly gathered my things, but I wasn’t quite fast enough and wound up sprinting along the dune path in pelting rain that stung like needles when it hit my skin. I couldn’t see more than a few inches in front of my face, and I nearly fell as the gusts flung random debris into my path.
By the time I reached the house, I was soaking wet and shivering as the wind whipped my towel and hair furiously.
Lillian threw the front door open just as I reached for it. “Oh, you poor thing. Come in, let’s get you warm and dry.” She took my arm and pulled me inside, shutting it behind me. “Ada! I need towels!”
I looked at her curiously, wondering if Ada would yell for her not to yell room to room, but she came flying down the stairs with two bath towels, stopping short when she saw me. “Good gracious. You look like a drowned rat.”
“I feel like one,” I sniffed miserably.
Lillian took a towel from her and wrapped it around me, rubbing my shoulders with it the way my mother did when I was little and had just stepped out of the tub. “She’s ice cold,” Lillian said. “Let’s run you a bath.”
“I’m okay, really. It just came out of nowhere.”
A loud crack of thunder sounded, startling me. “Nonsense,” Lillian said. “Let’s get you warmed up. It’ll blow over quickly, and then we’ll all go have dinner tonight.”
Ada was looking out the windows that faced west toward the bay. “I think this one will last. The worst is still coming.”
“I’m going to start the bath,” Lillian said. “You come on up whenever you’re ready.” She climbed the stairs.
“Still want to replace her?” Ada asked.
I made a sour face, daring her to tell me it would cause wrinkles. “At least someone cares if I live or die.”
“Darling, I care if you die. I would have to figure out how to get your body out so the house wouldn’t smell like something out of a Faulkner story.”
I shook my head, muttering as I went up the stairs. Lillian was sitting on the side of the tub, pouring a liberal helping of bubbles into the water. “I took these from Ada,” she said, winking conspiratorially. “Let’s let that be our little secret.”
“She’ll probably smell them on me and know. She always knows.”
Lillian smiled warmly. “Well, I’ll handle that if so. Come on. Suit off. A hot bath will do its job, and you’ll feel good as new.”
She turned around to give me privacy, but I didn’t remove my towel. Was she really going to stay while I took a bath?
As if she could hear my thoughts, she said, “It’s okay, I’m a nurse.”
“But you’re not my nurse,” I said.
“That’s more than fair. I’ll be just down the hall. Holler if you need anything.”
I looked at her skeptically. “Ada always tells me not to yell room to room.”
Lillian shook her head. “Too many rules, that one. If you need anything, you just call.” She rubbed my shoulder affectionately, then left the room, closing the door behind her.
I let the towel fall to the floor and stepped out of my bathing suit, dropping it as well, then climbed into the bath. It was uncomfortably hot against my cold skin at first, but after just a minute, I was revived. I sank under the bubbles, getting the blown sand out of my hair, then came back up, lying against the edge of the tub, immersed up to my neck, the jasmine and lilac scent of the bubbles soothing my nerves, even as another thundercrack rattled the house.
Once I stepped out and wrapped a fresh towel around myself and another into a turban over my hair, I felt like myself again. I grabbed my robe from the hook on the back of the door and slipped it over my shoulders, then went down the hall to my room to dress.
I peeked out my window just in time to see lightning hit the bay. It was only a little after four, but I doubted we were going to dinner that night. Ada had been right. The sky was as dark as night.
Instead of the dress I would have worn to go out, I pulled on a pair of clam diggers and a blouse, then padded downstairs, where Lillian and Ada were talking in the living room, Lillian curled up on the corner of the sofa, her feet tucked under her, Ada in the chair perpendicular to her.
“There she is,” Lillian said. “Feeling better?”
“Much,” I said. “Thank you.” But I hesitated. “I don’t want to interrupt.”
Ada looked at me appraisingly, but Lillian gestured toward the spot on the sofa next to her. “You’re not at all, but how sweet of you. Come, sit.”
“She is a little,” Ada said.
“Hush. I want to get to know her for myself.”
I looked at Ada, imagining her breathing fire like a dragon at being told to hush, but she looked quite content.
Score one for Lillian, I thought as I sat.
“Now, Marilyn. How are you enjoying Avalon?”
“She likes the beach patrol a little too much,” Ada said.
Lillian suppressed a laugh. “Yes, your aunt told me about that debacle.”
“Debacle is certainly the word for it,” I said cautiously. “I ran into his sister in town this morning. She said they’re happily married now.”