She finished her note to her family and left it on the kitchen counter.
"Frozen spaghetti and red beans and rice in freezer... two containers of each...microwave instructions on top....half of a pan of cornbread in fridge...make sure Brutus goes out 3 times a day...I'm on my cell...see you Sunday!" She'd signed it in her flowing cursive, with a heart by her name. She thought for a moment and checked the microwave. Filthy. She wetted a sponge in the sink and glanced at the clock. Where were they?
Brutus, her miniature yorkie, yipped as a white Lincoln Navigator pulled into the driveway.
Bonnie emerged from the passenger side. With each step she took toward the door, her breasts bounced in the slinky purple sundress, a lovely, loping bounce. Her nipples, even the areolas, were outlined through the thin fabric. There were braids in her wavy brown hair at each temple, gathered together in a clasp at the back, making a sort of wreath above her golden tiger earrings. Bonnie's smile gleamed white across her freckled face as Sue opened the door for her.
"Hey! I like what you've done! Your hair!" Bonnie exclaimed. Sue's hair was cut shorter, to just below her chin. And she had gone into the salon to have it colored auburn, but had capriciously chosen a copper color instead. It was styled with a part on the side. She looked younger, and it made her feel younger.
Bonnie walked with her to the rear of the car. The rear hatch of the Navigator had a purple and gold fleur-de-lis sticker on it. Everyone seemed to have one since the days after Katrina. Sue opened it and stowed her suitcase in the back with the girls' suitcases.
Mary Beth looked back from behind the wheel. On either side of her head, she wore small, whimsical ponytails in her short blonde hair. On anyone else, it would have looked cartoonish, but not Mary Beth. "Girl Sailor" by the Shins was playing in the car.
"Hey, girl, like your hair," Mary Beth called from behind her large framed sun glasses. At her age, Sue liked to be addressed as 'girl' more and more.
Sue did look great. The royal blue halter dress was shorter and flimsier than she normally wore, something she wouldn't have dared to wear in town. She didn't care about the beginnings of spider veins. The girls were headed out of town on a girls-only trip. And not the kind of girls' trip she would occasionally take to the Outlet Mall in Foley with her frumpy, dour sisters. This was going to be different.
Bonnie came up from the rear of the Navigator. "Here, Sue," she said getting in the back seat, "You sit up front, I'll take the back."
Sue climbed into the front seat. Mary Beth had on a red Henley T-shirt with the sleeves pushed up, and short khaki shorts. A can of diet coke sweated cold between her legs.
Bonnie got in and unstrapped the carseat and moved it to the very back. In an old paper bag from a happy meal, she gathered up stray french fries and toy wrappers. She collected the children's books with their thick cardboard pages. and reached across the seat to place them with the carseat.
"Sorry, Bon," Mary Beth said from behind her big framed sun glasses. "I meant to tidy up back there, but time got away from me."
"No prob, babe," Bonnie replied. She was still bent over the back of the seat, straightening up. Her short purple dress had ridden up, exposing the bottom of her bare ass. Sue thought, "Bonnie was right about that. The queen of commando."
Mary Beth took a sip from her diet coke and placed it back between her legs. Putting the big Lincoln in reverse, she used the heel of her hand to turn the wheel, and they backed out of the driveway. They pulled out of the neighborhood, past the live oaks and the rows of white, pink and purple flowered crepe myrtles. Soon they were hurtling up the on-ramp onto the interstate. They merged into the main flow of traffic. Keeping her eyes on the road, Mary Beth said, "I hope you don't mind that we chose New Orleans. We love the beach, but with the spill, it was iffy. " It had been the talk around town all summer.
Sue spoke up. "New Orleans sounds great, and thanks for inviting me along. Any chance to get away to anywhere is fine with me. Has anybody heard anything about the beaches?"
Bonnie was leaning forward with a forearm on the back of each seat. "Mom and them went to Gulf Shores last week. They said the oil really wasn't that bad. Mostly little tar balls."
"That's what I heard. I'm sure we'd have had a good time, but I still love New Orleans best of all," Mary Beth replied. "We'll do the beach next time." They were past the water park, past the city limits. The dull green of late summer in south Louisiana raced past them. It was beyond hot.
A little red sports car darted from the right lane into the left in front of them, then swerved back into the right lane. The driver had his cell phone to his ear. "Well that was ballsy," Mary Beth muttered. She flipped her turn indicator on briefly as she eased back into the right lane in front of an ancient man in a ratty old pickup. The truck droned along like it was powered by a lawn mower engine. Traffic was moving smoothly now. 'That's Not My Name' by the Ting-tings came on. Mary Beth was in mid-sip of her diet coke, but exclaimed 'Hmp!' into the can, and hurriedly set it down in the console and turned up the radio. Sue had never heard it, but Mary Beth and Bonnie sang along, getting especially loud with the part...'With nothing to consider they forget my NAME, NAme, Name, name....' Bonnie was dancing from the waist up, snapping her fingers, Mary Beth swaying her shoulders.
Mary Beth's cell phone rang. She checked the number and reluctantly turned down the volume
"Hi Meg. What's up?...yeah, I'd planned on about 200...Order a centerpiece from the florist....enough jambalaya for 200, salad and rolls, too. The punch is just Sprite and lime sherbet....It's two weeks away, don't worry...Tell you what, I'll handle it on Monday. Alright. No problem. Bye." She turned to Sue and explained, "I'm president of the PTA."
Sue adjusted her seatbelt and sat side ways in her seat. "So what's on the agenda? This weekend, I mean"
"Let's see," Mary Beth ticked off the plans, rocking her head slightly with each item. "Check in this afternoon, dinner at seven tonight. Story time tonight. Sleep in tomorrow morning, then shopping. Spa appointments at three Saturday afternoon. Dinner uptown tomorrow night..."
"Story time?" Sue asked. She had images in her head of slumber parties as a girl, and ghost stories, and as she and her friends got older, stories about boys. Once, she and her best friend, Shannon, had practiced kissing, just to see how it was done.
Bonnie interrupted her thoughts. "Whenever we go on a girls' trip, at night we have story time...it can be a fantasy, or it can be something that really happened."
"Are they usually about sex?" Sue asked, though she already knew the answer.