Read Family Inheritance Online
Authors: Terri Ann Leidich
She gazed at Bill through the mirror and said, “I'll leave you something to eat in
the fridge.” He walked out of the bathroom, straightening his shirt. Her hands clenched
firmly around the small pillow in front of her as she pasted a smile on her face.
She raised her lips to accept his quick kiss.
Helene sat motionless for several moments after he left the room while the scent
of his cologne gently lingered. In the quiet bedroom, her hands finally stopped their
assault on the defenseless pillow as she willfully silenced her tormented mind.
After showering and preparing for her day, Helene stood in front of the mahogany
dresser, leaning close to the mirror, and examined her appearance. Her large, blue
eyes stared back at her, and she frowned at the wrinkles decorating her face. Her
blonde, shoulder-length hair accented her fair skin. Her white blouse and shorts
shone bright in the morning light. Anyone else peering at Helene through that mirror
would see an attractive woman of forty-two, but Helene saw none of those things.
Disgusted, she pinched less than an inch of flab around her middle.
The wedding picture on the edge of the bureau caught her eye, and Helene was drawn
to the happiness in the faces of the young couple staring back at her. Gingerly,
she picked up the photograph in its crystal frame, held it close
against her heart,
walked back to the bed, and sat down as her memory took her back over two decades.
Helene had hated her childhoodâthe poverty, the abuse, the cruelness of the kids
in school making fun of the way she dressed, the way her family lived, and her father's
constant drunkenness. The minute Helene graduated from high school she'd left the
farm and eventually Minnesota, and she never looked back. She had known that college
was out of the question, but that limitation hadn't stopped her dreams and her determination
to live a life without poverty and fear. With the help of one of her teachers, she
had applied for a job behind the ticket counter with a major airline at the Minneapolis-St.
Paul airport, and to her amazement, she had been hired.
The day after graduation, Helene had loaded the few possessions she owned into the
backseat of a classmate's 1966 white Ford Mustang. With her sights set on the future,
Helene refused to turn around to look at her sisters standing on the gravel driveway
waving and crying. Helene knew her mother and father weren't watching her drive awayâthey
couldn't care lessâand she had shared the same sentiment.
Learning had come easily for Helene in her job with the airline, and so had interacting
with people. She liked watching them, imagining what their lives were like, and where
they were going. As she booked tickets for destinations all over the world, she dreamed
of moving someplace warm, someplace far away from the state that held few good memories
for her. After a year with the airline, Helene had learned about a position at the
airport in Atlanta, Georgia. Immediately, she had known she wanted to move there.
When news of her transfer came through, she felt as though she was living a dream,
and the move to Georgia happened quickly and easily.
Helene had immediately fallen in love with Georgia and felt that she was a Georgian
by choice instead of birth. Life was simple but good as Helene planned her future.
She'd often think back to the catalog pages of her youth and the world her imagination
had designedâa world filled with love and beautiful surroundings. Even in the midst
of a childhood filled with pain and lack, she knew a better life was possible, and
her determination to have that life kept her on the path to that destination. In
the beginning, her apartment
was bare, but she window-shopped and planned exactly
what she wanted it to look like, and week by week, she was making that dream come
true.
Helene hadn't dated much in high school. She kept to herself and people seemed to
know not to cross the invisible but solid wall she had erected around her. When she
moved to Georgia, her heart expanded and she was more open to the world and experiences,
and men started asking her out. But she refused the majority of offers. Even though
she was far away from home and lived on her own, it hadn't changed her mind about
relationships or marriage. She would never let herself end up like her mother, so
marriage was the furthest thing from her mind. Until she met Bill Foster.
It had been an ordinary day at the ticket counter, with lines of travelers going
all over the world. She'd just finished checking in an elderly woman, who was flying
to California to see her grandchildren, and placed the suitcases on the conveyer
belt behind her. When she stepped back to help the next person in line, she was met
with the bluest eyes she had ever seen. Helene had never believed in love at first
sight until that moment. It had been hard to breathe and concentrate as she helped
Bill with his ticket to Boston, told him his departure gate, and put his suitcase
onto the conveyor belt.
Helene assumed she would never see him again, but when she went on her break fifteen
minutes later, Bill was waiting for her. She walked with him to his departure gate,
and they talked non-stop, as though they had so much to say and not much time to
say it. She learned that he was twenty-six and in his last year of law school. When
he graduated, he would join his father's firm in downtown Atlanta. His family roots
were firmly planted in Georgia. He'd told her that she was the most beautiful woman
he had ever seen. He took her phone number, called her every evening while he was
in Boston, and they went on their first date when he returned. Helene had fallen
deeply in love.
She had been so nervous the first time she met Bill's parents because they lived
a totally different lifestyle than the one she had grown up in. They were both professionals,
lived in a nice house, drove nice cars, and belonged to a country club. While they
were not demonstrative people, they had made her feel welcome and a part of their
family.
One year later, she and Bill had married in a big church, and it had been the wedding
of her dreams. Bill's family paid for everything she could possibly
imagine, both
in her wedding and in her life. She didn't send her family an invitation or even
let them know she was getting married. When Bill and his mother asked questions about
them, she simply said she wasn't close to her family, and they hadn't pressed her
on the subject.
After their honeymoon in Cancun, Mexico, Helene left her job at the airport and spent
her days and years creating a beautiful home and what she thought was a happy relationship.
When she became pregnant in their first year of marriage, Helene wasn't sure how
she felt about it. Children had never really been a part of the world she had wanted
to create, but the moment she had held Thomas in her arms, Helene once more fell
deeply in love.
In the beginning, Bill had doted on Thomas and been a loving, attentive husband.
But when Thomas was a toddler, Bill stayed away from home more and more often, blaming
it on a heavy workload. Then she'd found the lipstick on his shirt. The first time
she told herself there was a reason. But when she could no longer ignore the signs
of infidelity, she had dropped to her knees and sobbed. From that point on, Thomas
had become her world, and she accepted the fact that her relationship wasn't perfect,
but Bill and Thomas were all she had.
Her mind coming back to the present, she put the picture back on the dresser and
quickly glanced at herself in the mirror again. Then she left the bedroom and walked
down the back stairs that led to the large kitchen, with its marble countertops and
hanging racks of copper pots and pans. She smiled as she heard the oldies station
playing, “Shake, Rattle, and Roll.”
Soft laughter spilled from her lips as she stopped at the bottom of the stairs to
watch Lily, her housekeeper and cook, shake her hips, dance to the music, and sing
along to the song. Lily was a contradiction in motion in her freshly ironed flower-printed
dress, her golden-brown skin glowing, and neat braids of hair wrapped around the
back of her head.
When Lily spotted Helene, she danced over to her, grabbed her hand, and twirled her
around. Helene tried to pull her hand away and resist the playfulness, but soon Lily
had her dancing. When the song ended, Lily patted her hair and said with a smile,
“You're just in time for a cup a tea and a fresh muffin.”
Laughing, Helene sat down at the cheery, little breakfast nook in the large
kitchen.
Lily was the closest Helene had ever come to having a loving, caring mother. She
often gladly relaxed into the security of Lily's love.
Over the steaming cup of tea, Lily eyed Helene carefully as she stated, “I'm making
Mr. Bill's favorite chicken for dinner tonight. Thought maybe just the two of you
could have a nice, quiet dinner, and Mr. Thomas and I could rent a movie. Haven't
sat down and talked with that young one in a whileâseems to always be off doing something
or going somewhere.” Lily paused for a moment. “Thought a rest would do him good.
And you and Mr. Bill need more quiet time.”
“Nice thought, but Bill's working late again. Thomas should be home for dinner, though.”
Just as Helene was ready to bite into her muffin, the phone rang and Lily answered
it. She listened for a few seconds, then handed the phone to Helene. “It's Mr. Thomas's
school. They want to talk about Thomas's excessive absences.”
A lump darted into
Helene's throat.
What excessive absences? He goes to school every day.
“This is Mrs. Foster.”
“Hello, Mrs. Foster, this is Vivian Middleton from Thomas's school. We're very concerned
about Thomas missing so much school. He has brought in all of his absence slips signed
by you, but we wanted to make sure it was you who signed them.”
Helene's thoughts were spinning.
What is she talking about? What absences? What permission
slips?
“Mrs. Foster?”
“Oh, yes . . . I signed them. He seems to be catching every bug this season.”
I just
lied. Why am I lying for my son?
Yet, she knew why. Something had to be wrong and
she wasn't about to make it worse.
“Well, as long as you know about the absences.”
“Yes, I do. Everything is fine,” Helene assured her. “He's in school today, isn't
he?” She closed her eyes, waiting for the answer.
“Yes, he is, Mrs. Foster, but we're very concerned about his grades. Thomas's numerous
absences have put him behind. Something needs to be done.”
Helene's thoughts were trying to catch up with what she was hearing. How much school
had Thomas missed and why didn't she know he was missing
school? Thomas had always
loved school and had been a good student.
What's happening with my son? And why didn't
I know about it?
“Let me talk with Thomas when he gets home today. We'll come up with a plan and I'll
get back to you.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Foster.”
After Helene hung up the phone, she slumped against the wall, worry and concern flooding
her mind. She thought of calling Bill, but he'd probably just get angry at Thomas,
and she didn't want to deal with that. She could talk with Thomas, but would he tell
her the truth? And when had he started lying to her? Something was wrong, and she
had to find out what it was.
She spent most of the day curled up on her bed or sitting quietly in the sunroom,
barely responding to Lily's attempts at conversation. Memories of Thomas as a little
boy kept dancing through her mind. They had been so close. He had excelled in school,
and their times together had been playful and fun. When had it all changed? What
had gone wrong? When in the world had he started skipping school? And why? As much
as she tried to deny the fact that her son's behavior was far from normal and acceptable,
she knew better.
As afternoon turned to evening, Helene walked into the kitchen where Lily was making
a cake. Thomas wasn't home yet. At five-thirty, she called Thomas's best friend Chuck
to see if Thomas had stopped by after school but Chuck hadn't seen Thomas since their
last class together, which was just after lunch.
“What if something has happened?” she asked Lily. “What if he's been in a car accident,
and he's lying somewhere breathing his last breath and calling for his mother? What
ifâ”
“Now whoa there,” Lily interrupted. “Don't you think you're going a little fast in
your worrying? Yes'm, all those things do happen in this world of ours, and we gotta
be aware of them, but not everything that happens is bad.”
At seven o'clock, without saying a word, Lily set two places at the counter that
separated the large kitchen from the adjoining family area with its leather sofas
and big stone fireplace. She filled the plates and motioned for Helene to sit down
on one of the comfortable bar stools that edged up to the counter where they often
had tea or shared a snack in the middle of the day. Helene reluctantly sat down,
picked up the fork, and began to nibble at her food.
Lily pulled out the stool next to her, sat down, and placed her hand over
Helene's
with a look that told Helene how much Lily cared about her, Bill, and Thomas. “It
will be fine.”
“I've got to make it fine, Lily. I just have to!”
It wasn't until after sunset that a car pulled into the driveway. Lights flashed
across the kitchen windows and disappeared into the garage. They both seemed to be
holding their breath as footsteps approached the back door and the knob turned.
Thomas entered with a crooked grin on his face. His eyes were bloodshot. “Hi, guys”
was all he said as he moved through the kitchen toward the stairs at the back of
the house.