PLANS COME TOGETHER Chapter 5
This is NOT a continuation of the story.
This is the original ending.
When my editors (Alianath Iriad and Lastman416) read it, they both protested. I changed the ending.
Do you think that Joanne got a bit of a raw deal? Want to read the first version? Here it is.
TUESDAY (very early)
"
What the hell?"
said Diane. "W
ere you having sex - with Lisa?
"
We were standing just outside my room, and just down the hall from hers - not the best place to have a potentially loud discussion of my shortcomings.
- "You have a right to be upset." I said. "But there's an explanation. Unfortunately, it's a long and... complicated one. This isn't the time for me to explain. Nor the place."
Diane was in a position to wreck the rest of my plans. I was 2 for 2, at this point. But she could blow up Plans 3 and 4 - spectacularly - if she chose to make a scene. The week could end right here.
She seemed to be teetering on the edge of a knife. I didn't know her well enough to guess which way she'd tip. She really did have a right to be pissed off; she hadn't wanted to come here at all. I'd only convinced her by pleading that I wanted to get to know Amy better.
- "I suppose you deserve at least a hearing." she said, at last. "Tell me when the time and place are right for you to
try
to explain." With that, she stalked off down the hall.
Whew.
I had my priorities straight, though. I went into our room, and went to sleep.
Mike woke me just in time to get a breakfast that Bailey had covered for me. There was another just like it, so I gathered that Matt was still out cold.
I had my breakfast on the deck, watching as Bailey and Lisa got the boat out for more water skiing and tubing. I went down to join them as soon as I could.
Bailey drove, Lisa was spotting, and Diane was skiing.
- "She looks good." I observed.
- "She does, doesn't she?" said Amy.
- "You should try it. No one's going to laugh: you saw
all
of us wipe out the first time. Even Bailey."
- "It does look like fun."
- "It's amazing." said Mike.
The clincher was probably Diane's face, when she came in after a run.
- "Amy, you
have
to try it."
- "That's just what we were telling her." I said. Maybe I should have just shut up, because Diane's face immediately darkened.
Amy got into the water. Diane wanted to spot for her, so Lisa came to the dock so that she could coach. Mike watched, and I shut my face.
The first two attempts were... well, ugly. Amy didn't hold on tightly enough, and the tow rope shot out of her hands. Then she pulled too hard, dug in her skis... and again couldn't hold on. The third attempt was even worse. She sat back too far, and her skis shot out from under her.
I managed to catch Lisa's eye, and I nodded.
- "One more try, Ames." she said. "You can do this."
She couldn't.
Once more, Bailey re-positioned the boat. I'd ridden as spotter; it's not much fun to bring the boat back, over and over, as people fail to get up. But I flashed her a single finger. My
index
finger. One more? Bailey was a good sport - probably a
great
sport. She nodded.
- "One more, Amy. If you get up, I promise that we'll stop bothering you."
She actually laughed. "
There's
an incentive!"
Miracles do happen. Amy got up on her skis, and rode the water for almost a hundred yards before she fell. The splash was heroic, but she'd done it.
Bailey came around, and tried twice more to get her back up, without success. Then she simply picked up the skis, and towed Amy back in, dragging her through the water. Amy swam the last fifty yards. We gave her a round of applause.
- "That was great!" said Mike.
Amy had enough of a sense of humour to laugh. "That was atrocious!"
- "It was fun, though." I said. "Wasn't it?"
- "Yes." Amy had a nice smile, even if she was afraid to show her teeth.
Mike got a turn, and surprised everyone by getting up on the second try.
- "Yeah!" I shouted, pumping my fist.
I got a turn. It was pleasant to get up right away. It was also a nice to discover that water skiing can clear your mind. I was going to tell Diane the truth. First, she was too smart to lie to, and second, I didn't want to lie. The truth was going to work, or it wouldn't - but that was my plan.
Matt woke up in time to have a try - a total waste of gas, in my opinion, but Bailey was too nice. Matt got up long enough to wave a hand around, drop a ski, and wipe out spectacularly.
Everybody got a shot at it, including our hostess, who once again looked like a star.
Lunch was a little late, so we kept it light. Bailey then repeated a declaration, which I had obviously missed the first time because I slept in.
- "Badminton Mixed Doubles Tournament begins at 3:00! Be there, or be square!"
Bailey had made the teams, but excluded herself. "Hey, I'm the undefeated singles champ! You guys have to earn a match with me."
She put Lisa, the female runner-up, with the lowest-ranked male: Matt. Amy had finished next; she got the second-ranked male as a partner: Mike. I was the top male, and the last-place female was Diane.
Shit. I couldn't complain, because I'd asked Bailey to put us together. I couldn't fault her ranking logic, either. There was just a little awkwardness because Diane probably wanted to kill me. Bailey announced the first match: Diane and me against Lisa and Matt.
- "Here's a weird suggestion." I said. "How about we just temporarily forget what we have to talk about, and just go out and win this thing?"
I'd struck a nerve. Diane
was
competitive.
We took an early lead, and then fell behind. Matt wanted into Lisa's pants, so he was doing what she told him, instead of trying for kill shots. With the score 9-7 for them, I huddled with Lisa.
- "Put everything on the right side. Matt's backhand is terrible." Diane nodded.
We got one point from that, as Matt lofted a powder puff backhand that I smashed into the ground. Then Lisa made an error, and put one into the net. Tie score. 9-9.
"We've got them." I said.
I was wrong. Diane made a nice shot, putting us at match point. But Lisa dropped a really pretty shot just over the net which I couldn't return. 10-10.
- "So what now, genius?" said my partner.
- "Keep sending it to Matt. He'll gift us a point."
That strategy almost backfired: Matt slammed one that hit me in the chest. Game point. But he put the next one out of bounds by a mile, and Diane actually smiled before she remembered that she was angry at me, and changed that smile to a scowl.
We kept hitting it to Matt. He made a bad backhand return, which fell out of bounds. We sent our next return to Matt, and Lisa decided to try to go for it. Her racquet clashed with Matt's, and the birdie fell between them.
- "Fuuuck!" shouted Lisa.
Diane did a weird little victory dance.
After a short break, Bailey had Diane and me play Mike and Amy, who managed to convince all of us that their previous play in singles had been a fluke. On at least three occasions, Mike and Amy let a shot straight down the middle fall to the ground untouched, because they were leaving it to their partner.
Or maybe we won easily because Diane didn't make a single error, and returned everything that came to her side.
- "You guys make a great team!" said Bailey. She didn't catch Diane's reaction (a scowl), but I did, because it was aimed at me.
Lisa and Matt wanted to play Mike and Amy for second place, but it was getting close to dinner time, so most of us opted for a quick swim to freshen up and clean off the sweat.
Diane managed to catch my eye. She was one of those people who can raise one eyebrow without moving the other.
- "When?" she asked.
- "After dinner." I said.
- "What if they want to play name that tune again?"
- "Then after that."
- "Fine."
I was back on barbecue duty, because we were having kebabs. Chicken or beef on a skewer, mixed with green and red peppers, onions, and huge mushrooms. There were vegetarian skewers for Amy. Bailey and Lisa put the skewers together, and Mike ferried them out to me, while Matt stood beside me and drank beer. Diane and Amy made a huge mound of quinoa - because it was good for us.
Bailey was quite upset when she remembered (in the middle of the meal) that Amy was a vegetarian.
- "Ah! I forgot! Why didn't anybody remind me? Amy, we should have gone shopping today."
- "It's okay, Bailey. I'm not religious about it, or anything. I'm not a vegan. It's more of a preference."
- "I can't have you living on salads, girl!" said our hostess. "We'll go into the Corners tomorrow and see what vegetarian option we can come up. Oh, I'm so sorry I forgot."
- "I didn't want to put you to any trouble. Really: you don't have to go shopping tomorrow."
- "Yes, we do. Besides, we need more gas for the boat. So it's no trouble at all."
Clean-up went quickly. Diane had been correct: the majority vote afterwards (with Matt dissenting) was for name that tune: the 2000s.
I did
not
have high hopes for my team.
Diane got the first song, Crazy by Gnarls Barkley. She and Amy exchanged a high five, and then simultaneously said "Danger Mouse!"
Bailey identified Snoop Dogg next, but didn't know the song. I think that my mouth was hanging open; I had a hard time imagining her listening to Hip Hop or Rap.
- "Steve liked him." she said, by way of explanation.
Mike got us on the board by nailing Beautiful Day by U2.
- "There!" I said. "No U2 at all in the 80s and 90s, but
now
they show up?"