A few days later Fletcher got a second call from Gwyneth. They wanted to invite Sorrel that Friday night. It would be just Sorrel, Gwyneth, and Hannah. They'd get together, chat, and perhaps go out for drinks. Fletcher hadn't expected a second call so soon. He didn't know what to say so he stalled. He made up a story that Sorrel might be busy, and he'd have her call back.
When Sorrel got word she called back saying she'd be delighted to go over. She suggested an early start, say 7:00. Gwyneth agreed; the time and date had been set, Friday at 7:00.
Just as Sorrel and Marion had planned when Friday rolled around at 5:30 Sorrel called back. She explained Fletcher and Mary were both away and Byron had the boys. She couldn't leave Marion home alone all night. Would it be all right if she brought her along?
Gwyneth hadn't planned for that, but agreed. Perhaps, Sorrel suggested, the four of them could find something they all could do?
It had been settled. Sorrel would have a chaperon. Whatever plans Gwyneth and Hannah originally had arranged would, by necessity, have to be put on hold.
The drive to Gwyneth's went quietly. Marion and Sorrel were both a little anxious about the evening. Sorrel wanted to keep Marion as much in the dark as she could about her circumstances, but she knew Gwyneth was a talker and a digger.
Marion was a digger too. She still knew very little about Sorrel's situation. She hoped to gain a little more insight through Gwyneth, a woman she knew to be incapable of keeping anything quiet.
They reached Gwyneth's at 7:00 sharp. The two hostesses had snacks and drinks on the table. There were chips, dip, and other munchies. Drinks included an array of whiskeys and nonalcoholic sodas. When asked Sorrel eschewed anything stronger than a white wine. Her excuse being that later she'd have to drive Marion home and Fletcher would kill her if she got loopy and tried to drive with his daughter in the car.
Sorrel's excuses made sense, but still didn't sit well with Hannah and Gwyneth, both of whom wanted to get Sorrel loose. Their original plan was to get her loose enough to consider a three way, but with Marion around and that being out; they still hoped to get her at least high enough to open up about what was happening with regard to her future. That still wouldn't deter them from pumping as much information from their two guests as possible. In fact, Gwyneth figured, Marion might be a better source of information than Sorrel.
Everyone agreed to sit and chat a while, and maybe later play some cards; but instead of bridge, poker turned out to be the game of choice. Sorrel at first was reluctant to let Marion get involved in any gambling games, afraid of what Fletcher's reaction might be, but she was overruled by the collective suasion of the other three.
Chat time revealed very little. Gwyneth was something of a crafts freak, and went on and on about flower baskets, sewing, and, of all things, the new loom she'd bought. Hannah was a health nut, sports like handball, golf, and aerobics kept her free time covered. Marion was the real pistol. There wasn't anything she didn't have at least a passing interest in, from lacrosse and baseball, to reading and poetry she dabbled in almost everything and anything. Sorrel figured that made sense. Marion was only fourteen. Everything was new to her. Sorrel acknowledged her only non-business interests had been puzzles like math games and crosswords.
Out of small talk the ladies at last agreed to go to the gaming table and try their luck at cards. While Hannah, Sorrel, and Marion collected around the table, Gwyneth put in a pizza and got the cards.
They played nickel and dime poker for a little over an hour, but no one really got an upper hand. Hannah won the most pots, but Marion won the biggest. By 9:00 the party seemed to be running out of steam. It was about that time Marion got a bright idea.
Marion got a new kind of game started, "I'm tired of playing for money. Why don't we up the ante?"
Gwyneth saw the possibilities, "Why don't we keep playing cards, but throw in a new wrinkle?"
Sorrel's antenna went up.
Hannah prevented any possible rebuttal, "Let's play poker 'truth or dare'?"
"What?" asked Gwyneth?
This was the opportunity Marion envisioned and she grabbed it, "Sure, say I win a hand. I turn to one of you and ask a question or make a dare. You get to choose between the question and the dare."
Sorrel remonstrated, "I don't know."
"Sure, it'll be fun," countered Hannah.
Sorrel had been overruled, but not before she got a condition injected that the challenges and questions had to be harmless; nothing too personal.
The truth or dare poker went along harmlessly for several rounds, but there was this sense of inevitability that sooner or later the questioning was going to turn to Sorrel.
After winning a hand of five-card draw Gwyneth asked, "Sorrel I have a question for you."
Sorrel had been playing along, and so far no one had tried to pry, "Yes?"
"How has Fletcher been treating you since the party at Steve's?"
Sorrel's eyes widened, "No special way."
That was the question Marion had been looking for. It ended the game then and there. She looked at Gwyneth, "How is my Dad supposed to treat her?"
Gwyneth looked at Sorrel, "You want to answer that or should I?"
Sorrel was in no way interested in making any personal contributions to this line of conversation. She thought she'd let the topic die on its own, "You can."
Gwyneth looked at Marion, "Your father is supposed to be punishing her."
Marion figured something like that, but had no clue beyond her own imagination, "Oh he is punishing her, he makes her take out the trash, wash the clothes, do the dishes, and baby sit."
Hannah was the on site bitch for the evening, "Really, I would have expected a lot worse, I mean after what she's done."
Sorrel tried to change the subject, "That's it, time to change the subject."
The door was ajar, and Marion kicked it in. Completely forgetting the affect it might have on the rest of the evening, her father, or any future relationship she might have with Sorrel she asked, "What was Sorrel supposed to have done?"
Gwyneth responded incredulously, "You don't know?"
"No I don't," replied Marion.
Hannah, smiling malevolently, started to say something.
Sorrel pushed her chair back, "Hannah no."
"You don't think she has a right to know?" queried Gwyneth.
"That's her father's call not yours or mine," answered Sorrel.
Looking back and forth between Sorrel, Gwyneth, and Hannah Marion interrupted, "No tell me now."
Sorrel, her voice an octave higher, said, "Let your father do that Marion. He will if you ask him."
Marion wanted to know, and she wanted to know right away. She was a good kid, and she was mature for fourteen, but her adolescent need for immediate gratification was overwhelming her normally good judgment. She looked at Gwyneth, "Tell me."
Sorrel looked at Marion, "If you drop this now, I promise I'll tell you myself later."