"Okay, I'll go with you!"
"Seriously?"
"Yes, I'm serious."
"But what about your mom? I thought you always spend Christmas together."
"We do. Or at least we always have. But I'm 21 years old, and if I want to spend Christmas with my boyfriend, then that's what I'm going to do."
She sounded confident, but inside she was anything but sure of herself. She'd never not spent Christmas with her family and as much as she wanted to be with her boyfriend, it was killing her not to be able to see her mom. Making things worse, she knew she wouldn't have the courage to tell her mother the truth which was silly because she was a junior in college and 21 years old. But she couldn't bear to say she was choosing some guy her mom had never met over her own mother.
"This is gonna be so great, baby! You're gonna love Phoenix this time of year and my parents can't wait to meet you."
"Well, we've been dating for six months now, and this seems like the right time to finally meet them, so...yeah, let's do this!"
Gayle Lancaster knew this wasn't going to be easy. She'd only lied to her mother once before, and it had involved a boy then, too. Just like in the movies, she'd snuck out of her room at night and spent several hours with a boy she thought she couldn't live without. She knew this was different as she was actually falling in love with Drew, but she couldn't bear to tell her mom she was going home with him rather than spending Christmas with her. With less than a week to go before she was expected home, she was going to have to pick up the phone and call and do so very soon. And...lie to her mom.
"I'm really glad you're going home with me, Gayle, but I know you said your dad's been gone for what, maybe a year now?"
"More like 18 months, but yeah, that's about right. Why?"
"I don't know. I just feel a little guilty. Does she have friends around? Does she date yet? I guess what I'm wondering is this—is this really gonna hurt her?"
Gayle already felt like crying, but she'd made up her mind. She was going to Phoenix with Drew.
"She's dated a few times and she has friends." Gayle hesitated knowing how much it was going to hurt her mom then said, "She'll be okay."
She was scrolling through pics of her family on her phone trying to assuage her guilt, but it was only making things worse.
"Can I see?" Drew said standing up and reaching out for her phone.
"Oh, sure." Gayle handed it to him then Drew sat back down.
"She's really pretty. And very young looking. How old is she?"
"My mom's 50, but she's like some kind of freak of nature, you know?"
"I dunno, she looks maybe 50 to me," he said trying hard not to sound disagreeable. He turned the phone around to show her the photo he was looking and Gayle laughed.
"What's so funny?" Drew asked.
"That's not my mom. That's her mom. That's my grandmother."
He turned the phone back around, looked it again, looked at Gayle, then back at the picture on the screen.
"Okay. Hold on. This woman...the woman in this picture...this really nice-looking woman with blonde hair and smooth skin is your grandmother?"
Gayle sighed and said, "Yes, it is. Here, let me show you something." She got up and sat next to her boyfriend then scrolled through some pics.
"Okay, see this one?"
"Damn! She's hot!" he said before it hit him that was also her grandmother only from many years ago.
"It's okay. She was hot. I hate saying it, but she still kind of is. Anyway...that was her 22 years ago when she was 50. Same age as my mom is now."
"Damn! This is...unbelievable! Both of my grandmothers look like grandmas. You know, gray hair, wrinkles, a little extra weight. Your grandma looks like a damn model. And although I'm not a math major that makes her around...75 or so?"
Gayle laughed and said, "She's 72 to be exact. That's why I'm hoping and praying I have the same genetics because if I do, then in 30 years I'll still look this good." She found some pics of her mom she took over the summer and handed him the phone.
"Oh, holy shit! That's your mom?" He said even more incredulous than he'd been over pics of her grandmother. "Seriously? That woman is 50? Come on. No way!"
"Yes...way," Gayle told her. "Both of them are amazing, right?"
"I've never seen women that age look like this," he told her truthfully.
"Give me the phone," she said. She Googled 'Donna Mills' then handed it to him. "How old do you think this actress is?"
"Um...like 45 or so?"
"Try 75."
"What the...?"
"Okay, now check this out. I know you know this woman." She found Raquel Welch's pic and did the same thing.
"Yeah, of course I know who that is. Um...okay, she's gotta be like...60 or so by now, but damn, she's still gorgeous."
"Try 76."
Drew was shaking his head unable to process any of this. "Those pics have to be photoshopped. They have to be."
"I can't speak for whether or not the pics have been retouched, but I've seen them both on TV within the last year and that's exactly how they look. I can speak for my mother and her mom and honest to God, they really are that amazing. I could Google a dozen other women over 65 who look 40. They're rare, but they're out there."
"That makes no sense," he said. "Okay, my mom is 53 and she looks well, like she's 53. I don't look at my mom that way, but come on, she's not 'hot.' Sorry, but...your mom is." He fidgeted then said, "Jesus, Gayle. Even your grandmother is kind of hot, God forgive me for saying that."
Gayle laughed again and said, "They both take really good care of themselves and my grandmother has had some work done even though you can't tell. But most of it is due to really good genetics so that's why I'm hopeful I have their genes."
"Your grandmother's face doesn't look the way most women do who've had work done. You know, all 'swept back' or the eyes bulging out or the lips look all swollen. I honestly can't tell."
"That's why I said she's a 'freak of nature'. My mom too, to be completely honest."
"I'm not sure how to say this, and please don't take it the wrong way, but your mom won't have any trouble finding another husband if that's what she wants."
"Thank you—I think," Gayle said with a smiling knowing what Drew meant. "But it's not that simple. She's gone out a few times, and while looks aren't everything, she said it's really depressing looking at most guys her age."
Gayle laughed yet again and told Drew, "It's not like her standards are outrageously high. She only asks that they have a reasonably flat stomach and most of their hair and...all of their teeth." She saw Drew give her a look. "I threw in the teeth thing, okay? But my point is she's no snob. In fact, she's the nicest, most down-to-earth person I know. I don't think it's unreasonable to expect someone you date to be at least minimally attractive to you. Do you?"
"Oh, so are you saying I'm only minimally attractive to you?" he said in a teasing kind of voice as he grabbed her and started tickling her.
Gayle shrieked and said, "Stop that! You know how ticklish I am! Drew! Stop!"
She was looking into his eyes when he stopped. Gayle stopped laughing and said, "You are way more than minimally attractive. You are freaking hot."
"Hot enough to come to bed with me?" he said before kissing her.
"Mmmm. Definitely," she purred as they moved over to the bed in his dorm room before making love for the second time that day.
The following evening, Gayle was spared having to make the phone call she was dreading when her mom called her first.
"Hi, honey! How's school going?" he mother said cheerfully.
"Great, Mom! How are you?"
"Me? Wonderful! I've got everything laid out and ready to go. As soon as you get home we can start putting up the decorations! You know, I've really been excited about Christmas this year after last year being so hard with your father gone and all. I can't wait for us to start decorating, baking, and going shopping! So when are you coming home?"
Gayle took a deep breath and after some hemming and hawing told her, "I think I wanna maybe hang out here over the break."
"In...Seattle? In your apartment? Alone? I...I don't understand," her mom said. "Is something wrong, honey?"
"Wrong? No. Of course not, Mom. I just don't feel like flying all the way to Florida then turning around and flying back to school. Besides, there's tons of stuff to do around here. Stuff I haven't had a chance to do because I'm always in class or studying." Gayle was an excellent student so at least this part of her story was true.