Chapter 9: Jennifer
Ed and Jen came in and found us embracing, Millie commiserating with me because of the predicament I had just described to her, broke and being forced into kowtowing to a rich girl in order to hold on to my job. I pulled my head away from Millie, hoping to alert her that we had company. She misunderstood and thinking that my intention was to kiss her, she closed her eyes and pushed her lips into mine.
"Ahem!" Jen said rudely interrupting what was becoming a very tender moment between her sister and me. Millie looked up and seeing that we were being watched, became unsettled.
"What are you looking at? Can't we have some privacy?" Millie asked in a disturbed tone.
"What do you think you're doing in my house?" Jen shot back at her sister.
Ed began laughing; seemingly amused at his wife's irritation of finding her sister in the arms of her former boyfriend.
"And you," Millie said, pointing at Ed. "How can you be so cruel to your own brother?"
"What do you mean by that?" Jen asked her sister, becoming even more confrontational. "We've taken Benny in. Ed's given him a job and I'm helping him negotiate his way through the mess he's gotten himself in. How can you say we've been cruel to him?"
"Your husband," Millie said before pausing for effect, "is forcing Ben to become a gigolo and threatening loss of work if he's unsuccessful," she said, standing up and pulling me with her.
Jen's mouth flew open. "Never would my husband..."she paused, thoughtfully and looked at Ed. "Is that what you meant by that suggestive remark? Did you really use loss of employment to intimidate Benny?"
"It was...I mean...a business decision," my brother stammered.
I guided Millie past Ed and Jen, toward the back door where I grabbed a jacket and helped her with her coat. As we left the house I heard Jen berating Ed. "So he made some mistakes. That's not an excuse for taking advantage of him. How can you even think of mistreating him after everything he gave you? He's not a bad person; it was that woman's fault."
"What does she mean? What did you give him?" Millie asked when we got outside, heading for her car.
"I relinquished my share of out parent's estate because I owed Ed for paying my college tuition," I said, opening the driver's door.
"Oh, yes, I remember that now," she said as she got in the car. I shut the door and went around to the other side and got in. The car, a small Nisan, was cold inside. We sat in the bucket seats, staring out the front window at the cluster of new homes.
I snickered and Millie turned to look at me, questioning as if to say, "what?"
"At the time, I thought I was only relinquishing my share of the house. I didn't know about those other houses. From the looks of things Ed made a handsome profit."
"Do you have any idea how much profit?"
"I can't even estimate," I said, trying to shake the hollow feeling inside. The six large homes all had a view of the lake. "The land was free because my parents had owned it for years. If the houses sold quickly it could amount to one hundred thousand or more per house, I suppose."
"They sold quickly. I remember Jennifer and Ed took a Hawaiian vacation a few months after your dad died."
I didn't respond to learning that my brother and ex-girlfriend had taken a vacation. I was lost in my own thoughts, remembering the months it took me to reach the decision to relinquish my part of the estate. It was my way of repaying Ed for financing three years of college tuition. Ed had built the homes; he deserved the profits. He and Jen also deserved a vacation after caring for my father.
Seeing Jen's aggravation at finding Millie and me together was disturbing. What difference did it make to her if we gravitated toward one another? But seeing her accuse her husband for treating me unfairly was downright scary. This was not like her at all. I was seeing a side of Jen that I had never known before. She had even kissed me this morning.
Millie was watching me, probably wondering what I was thinking. I decided to come clean. "Miss Hawley, I have a confession. My plan was to string you along for six weeks or until we finished Beverly's remodel job."
"I understood why you couldn't be seen in public with me. That's not to say I liked it, but I...what do you mean by stringing me along?" she asked, sounding alarmed.
"I was planning on using you."
Millie laughed. "You're not alone in that. I was planning on using you, too."
I signed heavily, "Wait, that's not what I meant. My plan involved gaining your trust to find out dirt on my brother and your sister. I believe Ed paid my college tuition so Jen and I would be separated for months at a time. I think he saw us together and wanted to take her away from me."
"What's that got to do with using me?"
"You're probably the only one who would know how it happened between them. I got their letters on November the fourteenth, four years ago, but I believe it had been going on a long time before then and they thought they had to tell me before I came home for Thanksgiving."
Millie was quietly looking out the front window, like she hadn't been listening. "I'm sorry, Ben, I can't help you. I was away at school and when I came home that summer I was too busy trying to get over a guy to notice what was going on around me. Your brother may have been sniffing around her, but I can't be sure. You'll have to ask them."
"I'm sorry...about the guy, I mean. I know how painful it can be."
She turned to me, eyes sparkling. "Thanks. Are you talking about getting over Jen or the other one?"
"I don't think I'll ever get over Jen, but you know what?"
"What?"
"She kissed me today," I said, regretting immediately that I had been so forthcoming.
Millie pretended not to hear what I had said. "What about the other one?"
"Veronica was good for me. She helped me keep my mind off losing Jen for over three years. I miss her, but I know I'm better off without her. What about you? Did you ever get over the guy?"
There was a long silent pause before she spoke. "No, but I'm working on it."
"Miss Hawley?"
"Yes, Mister Crumbly?"
"Will you go to dinner with me tomorrow night?"
She chuckled and there was a catch in her voice. "In public?"
"Yes, in public."
"I thought you were broke."
"I don't have a car, but I have six un-cashed pay checks and a new credit card," I said, reaching over and rubbing her shoulder.
"Do you think that's wise to use a new credit card? Isn't that what got into trouble?"
"I don't actually have the plastic yet, but I have enough cash to take you to dinner."
She moved over, placed her hand on my chest the same way Jen had done that morning and kissed me, twice, the same as Jen had done. "I'd love to go to dinner with you, in public. What time should I pick you up?" she asked, moving back to her seat.
I got out and went around to the driver's door. She rolled the window down.