8
“I’m thirsty, Mommy.”
“It’s the Chinese food. It always makes you
thirsty. Have another drink of water.”
“I don’t want water. I’m tired of water.
Can’t I have some juice?”
“I’m sorry, honey, but I didn’t get a chance
to do any shopping. The only thing to drink around here is some
wine and you can’t have that. I’ll get you some juice in the
morning. I promise.”
“Oh, okay.”
Vicky slumped in her chair and folded her
arms over her chest. She wanted juice instead of water and she
wanted to watch something else besides these dumb news shows. First
the six o’clock news, then something called the network news, and
Mr. Grossman—he wasn’t her uncle; why did he want her to call him
Uncle Abe?—talking, talking, talking. She’d much rather be watching
The Brady Bunch. She had seen them all at
least twice, some three or four times. She liked the show. Nothing
bad ever happened. Not like the news.
Her tongue felt dry. If only she had some
juice…
She remembered the orange—the one she had
saved from her playhouse this morning. That would taste so
delicious now.
Without a word she got up from her chair and
slipped into the bedroom she and Mommy would be sharing tonight.
Her Ms. Jelliroll Carry Case was on the floor of the closet.
Kneeling in the dim light of the room, she opened it and pulled the
orange out. It felt so cool in her hand. Just the smell made her
mouth water. This was going to taste so good.
She bent over by the screened window and dug
her thumb into the thick skin until it broke through, then she
began peeling. Juice squirted all over her hands as she tore a
section loose and bit into it. Juice, sweet and tangy, gushed onto
her tongue. Delicious! She pushed the rest
of the section into her mouth and was tearing another free when she
noticed something funny about the taste. It wasn’t a bad taste, but
it wasn’t a good taste either. She took a bite of the second
section. It tasted the same.
Suddenly she was frightened. What if the
orange was rotten? Maybe that’s why Jack wouldn’t let her have any
this morning. What if it made her sick?
Panicked, Vicky bent and shoved the rest of
the orange under the bed—she’d sneak it into the garbage later when
she had a chance. Then she strolled as casually as she could out of
the room and over to the bathroom, where she washed the juice off
her hands and drank a Dixie Cup full of water.
She hoped she didn’t get a stomach ache.
Mommy would be awfully mad if she found out about sneaking the
orange. But more than anything, Vicky prayed she didn’t throw up.
Throwing up was the worst thing in the world.
Vicky returned to the living room, averting
her face so no one could see it. She felt guilty. One look at her
and Mommy would know something was wrong. The weather lady was
saying that tomorrow was going to be hot and dry and sunny again,
and Mr. Grossman started talking about drought and people fighting
over water. She sat down and hoped they’d let her watch The Partridge Family after this.