"Just shut up and get in the car Jackie. I'm getting tired of dragging your ass all over town. Why can't you get a license like everyone else?"
That would be my best friend Kevin, talking to his little sister, Jackie.
I just shook my head as she climbed into the back seat and sat there quietly, looking down at the floorboard. Kevin and I were two years older than Jackie and she had been a pain in our asses since she was six and started riding the school bus with us. She was quiet and so shy that it was painful to watch her sometimes. And here we were, once again, driving her to the mall because she didn't have a license yet.
The main problem was that Jackie was a real sweetheart and try as I might I could never stay angry with her. She was tall, thin, gangly and she had just a hint of an overbite. She always had a serious look on her face; I rarely saw her smile and hardly ever heard her laugh. Her brown hair and eyes were nothing that would grab a guy's attention and she dressed so conservatively that I couldn't remember the last time I had seen her wearing anything but long skirts, long sleeve blouses and sweaters. Even today, in early September, when the heat and humidity can be stifling in upstate South Carolina, she had a sweater on.
Pulling up to the Macy's entrance Kevin rolled to a stop and let Jackie out. She leaned down and asked him if he could come back when she called to pick her up and take her home.
"Like I've got a choice? If I say no, mom will have a fit. It's not that damn difficult Jackie; you study, you practice, you take a test and get a driver's license!" Kevin said angrily as he dropped the car into gear again and pulled away so quickly that the tires chirped, and Jackie had to jump out of the way of the car.
"Jesus Christ Dude! She's your sister." I said in her defense as we pulled away.
"So, what? I'm tired of hauling her ass everywhere." Kevin said angrily.
"I know, but still." I said, letting it drop.
"I'm tired of it."
"Yeah." I said quietly, not wanting to annoy him any further.
"So, what are your plans for the weekend?" he asked as we sat at a traffic light.
"I'm going to dress up like a tree and go play in the woods."
"Drill weekend huh?"
"Yep." I replied, watching the mall disappear in the passenger side mirror.
"I swear to God I will never understand why you did that."
"There are days that I wonder about it myself." as the mall completely disappeared from the mirror I added, "Speaking of which, I have to be at the unit tomorrow afternoon for drill, can you drop me off at my house, so I can pack my stuff?"
"No problem Lance Corporal Holland sir. Kevin's taxi service at your disposal!"
"Bite me Bitch." I said laughing at him as he turned and headed for my house.
I walked inside the front door to find my mother standing in the living room with the phone to her ear. She was pacing back and forth with a highly irritated look on her face but when she saw me looking at her she smiled softly and held up a finger to let me know she wouldn't be long. A moment later she spoke to the person she was on the phone with, using my arrival as an excuse to hang up.
"That was the shop, your car is ready; do you want me to take you to pick it up?"
"Yes, please." I said, relieved that I wouldn't have to rely on anyone else for transportation.
"Hang on, let me grab my purse." Mom replied as she walked into the kitchen.
"Hey Mom, can I ask you something?"
"Sure Honey, what is it?" she answered as she reappeared.
"Have you ever done something so out of character that your friends and family thought you were crazy?"
"Well, there was Mardi Gras in 1979. I walked away with a lot of beads that year." she said, with a huge grin as she blew me a kiss.
"EWW!" I replied, feigning disgust and laughing at the same time.
"What's on your mind Sweetie?" she asked as we walked outside and headed for her mini-van.
"Well, I was thinking about asking someone out and if I do, everyone is going to flip." I said as I climbed inside.
Mom was in the process of buckling her seatbelt when she paused and looked at me. Smiling she clicked the belt in place, then placed the key in the ignition. After she started the engine and backed the van out of the driveway she looked over at me a second time then burst out laughing.
"What?" I asked, really confused by her reaction.
"Jackie is a lovely young lady Matthew. Kevin and the rest of your friends will get over it soon enough."
"How did you figure that out so fast?" I asked her, blushing furiously.
"Mommy magic." she replied as she put the van in drive and pulled away from the house.
"Huh?"
"She is the only girl that I know of who would cause your friends to freak out if you went out with her."
"Oh." I replied, mainly because it was all I had to say.
"Lots of beads huh?" I asked, trying to change the subject as we rode in awkward silence after her statement.
"Tons of them. Me and the twins were busy that night!" she replied, squishing her boobs together with her upper arms.
"Eww!" I responded again, this time meaning it.
"Don't ask questions you don't want the answers to Matt. I wasn't always your mom."
"You win!" I said quickly, now desperate to find a PG-13 subject to talk about.
Mom glanced at me and winking she turned the radio up and started singing along with Travis Tritt's newest release. We pulled into the parking lot of the shop just as the song finished and walked to the counter to pay for the repair work they had done. The service advisor told Mom that he had seen a lot worse damage done to a car when it hit a deer. Then he happily handed over the keys as she signed the check from the insurance company.
As I walked toward my car Mom laughed and told me to try to keep from killing Bambi again, then kissed me on the cheek and climbed back into her van to head home. I on the other hand, climbed into my car and headed for the mall. It took me thirty minutes to find Jackie and true to her nature, when I did find her, she was curled up at a table in the back of a bookstore reading a JRR Tolkien novel.
"Hey." I said, startling her so badly that she dropped the book she was reading.
"What are you doing here?" she asked as she bent down to retrieve it.
"Nice to see you too Jackie." I said, sitting down beside her.
"I'm sorry Matt, you frightened me."
"Sorry about that. Do you still need that ride home?"
"Yeah. I was about to call mom to have someone come pick me up."