Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
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new text, telling her to disregard the last one.
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“Okay,” I said, turning to the girls as we crossed the deck and
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stood outside the glass doors that led to Bruce’s pristine house.
Though some of the sand had fallen off them during the walk to
the house, they still didn’t look like people I would have, under
normal circumstances, invited inside my own house, let alone
someone else’s. “I need you to be
very careful
with things, okay?”
The girls just stared at me, and I decided to take this as a yes.
I pulled open the door, and the twins followed me inside. “Rosie?”
I called into the dark, cool house. While babysitting twins was
nothing I couldn’t handle, it always helped to know there was
backup around. And I had no doubt that Rosie would be able to
lend a hand in dealing with small children— after all, she’d spent
the last few years babysitting Bruce.
But only silence greeted me, and even though Rosie wasn’t
there, it probably meant that my dad and Bruce were out as well,
which might be a good thing at the moment, considering how
messy these two were.
“All right,” I said. I turned my back on the twins and closed
the door, so that neither could fall into the pool. As I made sure
the door was latched, I decided on the course of action until
Hallie returned— a nut- and- sugar- free snack, and then an im-
mediate return to the beach. “So here’s the plan,” I said turning
back to them. But I was talking to the air. Both girls had disap-
peared, leaving only sandy footprints across the carpet.
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“Okay!” I said an hour later, trying as hard as I could not to
sound as frustrated as I was. “How about we play a game?”
The twins just looked at each other, then back at me, their iden-
tical blasé expressions still in place. It had been a very long hour,
and one that was causing me to doubt my babysitting prowess.
When they had fi rst disappeared, I’d tracked them down in the
kitchen, all too close to the knives, attempting to get something
down from the highest shelf— and getting sand everywhere in
the pro cess.
I had immediately moved us to the TV room, where they had
fl opped onto the couch and basically refused to move or engage
in anything. They didn’t want to read a book, or go back to the
beach, or watch TV. All they wanted to do was complain about
how bored they were. And it was getting annoying. I was also
checking my phone with increasing frequency, hoping that
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Hallie would text me and let me know she was on her way. I was
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all too aware that Josh was going to be picking me up in a few
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hours for what was clearly not a date, and I needed to get ready
for it.
“No,” one twin— I still hadn’t been able to get them to tell me
who was who— sighed.
“Nooooooo,” the other whined. “Games are boring.”
You’re boring,
I wanted to snap back at her. But I restrained
myself. I hadn’t yet sunk to insulting kindergarteners, and saw
no reason to start now. “All right,” I said, determined to be
cheerful if it killed me. “How about—” My phone beeped with a
text, and I pulled it out, happy to be spared from trying to con-
vince them how fun it would be to vacuum the kitchen.
Hallie Bridges
4:45 PM
Hi! Things are taking a little longer to sort out than
I thought.
Might be another hour, so sorry! L
Tell the twins I said to behave!
“Who texted you?” one of the girls asked, sitting up slightly
and looking the tiniest bit interested for the fi rst time all after-
noon. “Your boyfriend?”
“No,” I said, looking over at her, a little surprised by the ques-
tion. “I don’t have a boyfriend.”
“Why not?” the other one asked.
“Because,” I said, wondering why I was defending my love
life— or lack thereof— to someone who still used a lunchbox. “It’s
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a complicated situation. And . . . well, the thing is . . .”
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“
Hallie
has a boyfriend,” the other one said, a little pityingly.
“And he’s—”
“So if it wasn’t your boyfriend, because you don’t have one,
who was it?” the fi rst twin asked, leaning a little closer to try and
see my phone’s screen.
“It was from Hallie,” I said. “She said she’s going to be an-
other hour, and that you both should behave.” The twins just
looked at each other for a long moment, but neither started freak-
ing out about the fact they were under my care for another sixty
minutes, which I took as a good sign.
“Listen,” I said, leaning forward a bit. “I have a dinner to go to
to night. It’s not a date,” I added quickly, and they just nodded,
clearly not expecting anything better from me. “So maybe you
two want to help me get ready?”
“Yeah,” one of the twins said, after a tiny pause, with a smile.
“We could do that.”
O O O
“I’m . . . not sure,” I said, looking at myself in the mirror, a little
worried. It was twenty minutes later, and I was regretting
ever making the suggestion that they “help” me. I had thought
it would be a fun project— when I was their age, I’d loved to
play with my babysitters’ makeup. But it was becoming very
clear to me that Hamptons children were different. The twins
rampaged through my closet, scoffed at most of my clothes, and
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then fi nally picked out an outfi t for me that was maybe the most
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hideous thing I’d ever put on— my running shoes, which they’d
excavated from the back of my closet, paired with a lime- green
striped top and plaid shorts. I’d told the twins I loved the look,
not wanting to insult them or hamper their creative spirit. But
now that we were in the bathroom, and they had taken over my
makeup and hair, I was feeling less generous.
I was wearing bright blue eyeshadow on one eye, green on
the other, dark red lipstick, and bubblegum- pink blush. The
ends of my hair were singed from when they’d gotten to the
fl atiron before I could get it away from them. I looked terrible,
and it was getting harder to keep pretending I liked what they
were doing.
“I’m hungry,” one of the twins said, dropping the blush brush
with a clatter onto the bathroom counter.
“Me too,” the other one said. They exchanged a look and then
bolted from the bathroom.
“Hey,” I called, standing up to hustle after them— and promptly
falling over and hitting the tile fl oor, hard. “Ow,” I mumbled, rub-
bing my shoulder. I looked down and saw that probably when my
eyes were closed to get mismatched eyeshadow applied, they had
tied my shoelaces together. “Girls,” I yelled after them as I tried
to undo the knots, then gave up and just pulled my feet out of the
shoes and ran downstairs.
I fi nally found them in the kitchen, both holding giant candy
bars. “Where did you get those?” I asked, then looked behind
them to a cabinet that was open. It looked like it contained what
must have been Bruce’s reserve of noncaveman food— meaning it
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was almost all sugar. “Oh, no,” I muttered, thinking about what
Hallie had told me about Olivia going crazy. Both twins grinned
at me and then bolted from the kitchen.
O O O
“Sophie?”
“No.” It was another hour later, and I was sitting on one
of the kitchen stools, holding one of the twins— I still hadn’t been
able to get them to give up their true identities— by the make-
shift leash I’d fashioned out of something called “trussing
twine” that I’d found in one of the drawers. My back was to the
cabinet that held Bruce’s secret stash. I didn’t know what Hallie
was talking about with regard to Olivia, since
both
girls seemed
to go crazy with the sugar rush.
They had been absolutely bouncing off the walls after they
inhaled the candy bars, and I tried my best to corral them, run-
ning from room to room, catching priceless art before it crashed
to the fl oor. I found myself waiting— and then hoping— for the
inevitable crash. But maybe, like a watched pot never boils, a
much- needed sugar crash never arrives, since both of them had
a huge excess of energy, all of which they seemed to want to
channel into destruction.
They’d left grubby handprints all over the white walls, had
almost fl ooded the laundry room when they’d started the washer,
and had emptied the perfectly sorted and alphabetized spice
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containers all over the kitchen.
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I had fi nally managed to catch one of the twins as she made a
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desperate grab for more Pixy Stix, and was now basically holding
her as bait, since I knew her sister would come and look for her
before too long, probably so that they could plot the downfall of
their next victim or small industrialized nation. The girls, I’d
found, were ruthless, creative, and indefatigable, like Batman
villains, only smaller. My eyes were fi xed on the kitchen clock
and on my phone, as I watched the time when Josh was supposed
to pick me up getting ever closer, and I still had no response from
Hallie.
“But
Sophie
—” the twin whined.
“Nope,” I said. I looked down at my phone again, hoping that
there would be a text from Hallie, one telling me that she was
on her way, which would mean I would have plenty of time to
take a shower, remove the horrible makeup, and put on something
else— pretty much anything else would be a marked improvement.
Getting cleaned up was extra- essential now, because in addition
to the bad hair, makeup, and clothes, I was now covered in sand,
suds, and spices, after trying to reduce the twins’ messes as
much as I could. There was a clump of tarragon that I hadn’t
been able to get totally out of my hair, it was making me sneeze
intermittently.
The twin in front of me let out a long, put- upon sigh, the kind
of which I was pretty sure I hadn’t started giving to my elders
until I was at least thirteen. “Well,” she said, huffy, “can I at least
play a game on your phone?”
I considered for a moment— since she would be right in front
of me, I would be able to intervene if the phone was in danger of
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being broken. And, frankly, playing a game on my phone sounded
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just like the kind of quiet, occupying activity that I was very
much in favor of at the moment. “Sure,” I said, not letting go of
the string as I reached for my purse and unlocked my home
screen. I handed it to her, making eye contact the way Hallie had.
“Be careful with it.”
She gave me a nod, and I realized as I watched her zip through
my pages of apps, that I probably didn’t need to be worried about
her damaging my phone. She had clearly been using one since
birth and was already a pro. A few seconds later, I heard the fa-
miliar sound track to Grand Theft Flamingo, the game that in-
volved trying to steal various exotic animals and sell them on the
black market. After a few moments of no mayhem and no escape
attempts, I could feel myself start to breathe a little easier. I
made a mental note to be sure to ask Hallie how much she was
being paid, and to tell her that, what ever it was, it should be
doubled.
I had just started to relax when two things happened at the
same time. The second twin poked her head into the kitchen, and
my phone beeped with a text.
“Text message!” the twin holding the phone squealed as I
made a judgment call and tried to move closer to her sister, so I
could maybe keep both of them in the same room for more than
a few seconds. “Wait, who’s Gem- ma?” She pronounced it wrong,
with a hard
G,
but nonetheless, it was my name. I could feel the
blood drain from my face, and I realized whoever texted me must