Tabitha clucks her tongue, and I become mesmerized by her eyelash extensions. They almost touch her eyebrows. Isn’t that uncomfortable? They have to be heavy. I wonder if her eyelids ever get sore. I’m hit with sudden inspiration to pen an article on the top dangers of eyelash extensions.
“Information has been coming home for weeks about Galaxy Day. It’s a big event. But I know some parents—or caretakers—are too busy with their own lives.”
I’ve got to give it to Tabitha—she’s no dummy. That dart strikes exactly where she means it to, and I take a moment to breathe and count the No Parking signs along the fence ahead of me. I won’t snap and give her the satisfaction of seeing me upset.
Maybe on paper, I’m Jo’s legal guardian, her conservator. But that’s just the official title, and anyway, it’s my business. I’ve done the best I can by Jo, and I happen to think it’s pretty darn good—broken toilets aside. We’re happy. I love her to pieces, and she knows it.
“I can’t help out with every activity, Tabby.” She bristles at the nickname, which gives me a stupidly large sense of pleasure. Cars start passing me on the left, and I’m getting dirty looks. Like I have any choice in holding up the line. I can’t move until Tabby closes the back door, which she doesn’t seem to have any interest in doing.
“You mean any activity. I believe you are the only parent—sorry, caretaker—who hasn’t volunteered in at least some capacity at the school. We make time for what’s important, Linda.”
“Did you get that line out of a fortune cookie?”
She glares. Tabby’s husband is the sole doctor at Sheet Cake’s family practice. Which means Tabitha has choices: work, not work, volunteer, get expensive eyelash extensions, harass other, lesser moms—excuse me, caretakers—in the carpool line.
I hope her extensions make all her natural lashes fall out. That makes me feel mean. Fine—I wish half of her natural lashes fall out.
Tabitha gives me a faux pitying look I’d like to remove from her face with the plastic ice scraper in my glove compartment. Considering it rarely freezes in Sheet Cake, it would be a great use for the thing.
“It must be hard to balance it all,” Tabby says, and I can see her winding up her pitch. Looks like a fastball. “That’s probably why your sister wants to take custody of Jo.”
I was wrong. It’s a curveball, and I swing wildly and miss.
“Rachel is not going to get custody of Jo.”
“That’s not what I hear. But it’s a good thing. Babies belong with their mamas. You’ve done a good job; now it’s time to let Jo’s real mama step in.”
I wonder if murdering Tabby would hurt my chances of keeping Jo. Nah, it would simply be considered a public service.
Then it hits me. Ashlee said I should try to be more involved with Jo’s school. I grit my teeth, hoping I don’t break a molar. I definitely can’t afford a dentist this month. Or this year.
You can do this, Lindy. Just try not to look into her eyelashes, lest you be turned to stone.
“Actually, I’d love to help with Galaxy Day.”
Tabby blinks in surprise, her giant lashes waving like antennae. “Really? Are you sure you can spare the time?”
I already regret this decision. She’s liable to stick me with some kind of horrible duty like sharpening ten thousand pencils with a hand-held sharpener.
I heave an exaggerated sigh. “I just said I would help. Now, I need to go, Tabby. Do you mind letting go of my door?”
“Important journalistic pieces to write?”
That or today’s article comparing the Jonas brothers to the Hanson brothers. “Yes. That whole pesky having a job thing. You wouldn’t know.”