Read Give and Take Online

Authors: Laura Dower

Give and Take (9 page)

“So I’ll see you later then, okay?” Aimee said. “E me.

Fiona waved. “See you later, Maddie. Let’s talk later tonight.”

As Madison walked away she felt her stomach flip-flop. Were Aimee and Fiona becoming better friends
without
Madison? Or was Madison just being paranoid? She
had
been spending a lot of time away for volunteering. Was that how the switch happened?

Walking along the empty winter sidewalk, Madison realized that understanding her BFFs or her family took a lot of work—especially around the holidays. Would she ever get it? She reknotted the scarf and hurried home to Blueberry Street.

By the time she arrived on her front porch, the snow had either blown away or turned to instant slush. Madison kicked a little off her shoe and went inside. Naturally, Phin rushed to the door.

“Stop panting, Phinnie,” Madison said, trying to calm him down. “I know you’re happy to see me, but—”

“Hi, Maddie,” Mom said, walking into the hallway. “I just got off the phone with Gramma Helen. She sends you her love.”

Madison dropped her orange bag onto the floor, took off her wet shoes, and plopped onto the living room sofa.

“Mom, can we talk?” she asked.

Mom plopped down next to Madison. “Sure, what about?” she said.

“How come you never told me that much about Grampa Max?” Madison asked.

“Oh,” Mom replied. “He was a sweet man.”

“That’s
all
you remember about him?” Madison said. “That’s so lame, Mom.”

“Okay, let me think. Just before you were born, Grampa Max used to make me things. He built me a rocking chair and footstool. You know the one I have in the bedroom. He painted my name and your father’s name on it. He was going to paint your name, but …”

Mom looked into Madison’s eyes.

“You know the end. He died right before you were born,” she said.

Madison curled into her mom’s side and looked up at her face. “So what happened?” she asked. “When he died, I mean.”

“It was very sad. Max was like a dad to me, too,”

Mom admitted. “I missed him for a long time. We named you Madison in honor of him, with the letter M.”

“Tell me more,” Madison pleaded.

“The main thing about Grampa Max was that he always gave of himself—in his own way. It’s so important to give to people you care about. He knew what to say at all the right moments …” Mom’s voice trailed off. “Unlike your father, who is always—”

“Mom!” Madison yelped. “Why do you have to say that about Dad?”

Mom covered her mouth. “It slipped out. I’m sorry.”

“It’s always slipping out,” Madison said. “Dad isn’t such a bad guy, is he? Why did you marry him if you think that? Why do you always have to tell me things like that?”

“Maddie, don’t worry. I loved him,” Mom said. “You know that. Your father and I can be perfectly civil to one another.”

“Then why have you been fighting for the last few weeks?” Madison asked.

“Fighting?” Mom chuckled.

“Yes, and every time you mention him, you get annoyed,” Madison said.

“We have not been fighting,” Mom said.

Madison rolled her eyes. “Some Christmas,” she muttered under her breath. “What a joke.”

“What did you say?” Mom asked. “Maddie, I really think—”

“Mom, since you say giving is so important, then will you give me something?” Madison asked.

“Of course I will. What is it, honey bear?”

“Will you go to the Winter Jubilee concert—”

Mom interrupted. “Of course I will! You know that!”

“No, no. I wasn’t finished. Will you go to the Winter Jubilee concert—with Dad?” Madison asked. “I already asked him and he said he would have no problem going with you.”

Mom closed her eyes and sighed. “Madison,” she said slowly. “You know that I can’t do that.”

“Why not?” Madison asked, sitting upright. “You just said—”

“Don’t play games, Maddie,” Mom said. “Okay? Maybe your dad and I are not getting along all that great right now, but I don’t wish to force the issue.”

Madison stood up and backed away from Mom. She picked up her bag and turned toward the staircase.

“Madison, come back here,” Mom said. “We didn’t finish talking.”

“Yes we did.” Madison shot Mom a look and went upstairs anyway.

“MADDIE!” Mom shouted. “Come back right now.”

But Madison was already at the top of the stairs with Phin following close behind. She scooped up the dog, scurried into her bedroom, and slammed the door.

Madison pressed an ear to the door, waiting for the sound of Mom’s footsteps. Was she coming up? Madison regretted having mentioned the concert. She’d wanted to ask for days, even when she knew what Mom’s answer would be: NO.

But she still hoped it might be different.

“MADDIE!” Mom’s voice echoed all through the house. “Madison Francesca Finn! I want to talk to you!”

Madison crawled onto her bed with Phin and pretended not to hear.

These holidays were getting less and less cheery by the minute.

Chapter 9

From: Bigwheels

To: MadFinn

Subject: Parents

Date: Thurs 13 Dec 1:14 PM

I’m home sick from school! I have a fever for 3 days and my nose looks like a tomato. Have you been sick at all this winter? I think the flu stinks.

:-~1

So I guess IOU an apology for not writing sooner, especially since it sounds like ur having parental meltdown a little bit. Sorry about that. I know what it’s like, for sure. But it seems so funny for your parents to still be mad at each other when they already got divorced, right?

I think you should stop worrying so much about them. At least you don’t have to listen to them argue anymore. You just hear one side and then the other. That’s a little bit better than eavesdropping on screaming matches. That’s what I listen to sometimes.

Can u ignore them? I mean it is their problem and not yours, right? My head is all stuffed from my cold so maybe my brain is clogged and I can’t come up with the greatest advice. Write back and tell me what happens with the concert. I hope they both do go. It’s the holidays—they have to be there! Good luck.

Yours till the nose blows,

Victoria aka Bigwheels

P.S. That lady at the place ur volunteering sounds so nice. I’m sure she’ll love the concert at least.

Madison was relieved to finally hear back from her keypal. She’d been waiting for days. She hit
REPLY
immediately.

From: MadFinn

To: Bigwheels

Subject: Re: Parents

Date: Thurs 13 Dec 4:24 PM

I just got home from school and singing practice for the Jubilee concert and I got ur e-msg. THANX SOOOO MUCH. It couldn’t have come @ a better time. My mom was just in my room a minute ago acting all normal and completely forgetting the fact that we had this HUGE fight last night. I didn’t talk to her @ breakfast before school this morning and barely said hello when I came home.

To make life even wackier, my BFFs are acting distant around me these days and I don’t know why. Do you ever feel like friends suddenly like each other better than they like you? Aimee and Fiona are acting like they’re the best buds and I’m the third wheel.

Aren’t the holidays supposed to be the time when everyone is NICER to one another? Not in my universe I guess. BTW: I’ve been so busy that I dunno what is going on with that guy Hart either. Sometimes I get this vibe that he likes me, and then he talks to some other girls. Whatever! I’m off to do my homework!

Hope ur cold gets better soon. Don’t blow it (ha ha).

I will write back with concert news.

Yours till the candy canes,

Maddie

Madison hit
SEND
and headed for the TweenBlurt.com home page. She noticed that the site had colorful articles posted on holiday crafts and cooking. Maybe there would be an idea for Mom or Dad’s gift on the site? Madison needed to think of something clever—fast.

She could hear Mom talking on the telephone downstairs with someone from work. Was Bigwheels right? Could she just ignore Mom and Dad?

Madison opened her orange bag and took out her blank loose-leaf notebook. She’d scribbled notes to herself earlier that day.

Math pgs. 45 and 92—turn in problem sets!!!

Send e-mail to Gramma Helen.

Get gifts for M & D.

Look up Alzheime’s.

She had every intention of finishing her homework first, but Madison grew distracted by the other items on her list. She opened the TweenBlurt.com search engine and plugged in the word
Alzheimer’s.
It was hard to spell.

Up popped a list.

1 – 10 of about 9,100,000. Search took 0.13 seconds.

Time to surf.

The first site Madison clicked was the “official” site for the Alzheimer’s Association. Its busy home page directed Madison to a FAQ page. She knew that meant “Frequently Asked Questions.” Exiting that screen, Madison selected a new site … and then another one. Webpages were listed in foreign languages like French and Japanese. The amount of information was overwhelming. Madison was not quite sure what to read first.

Phinnie had nestled his warm little pug body in between Madison’s ankles, his favorite spot to fall asleep while she did her homework each night. Unfortunately, as Madison leaned over to pet him, she hit the
POWER
button on her computer by mistake.

“Bummer!” she cried, waiting impatiently for the laptop to boot up again. When the screen came up, she logged onto TweenBlurt.com once more.

But before she could go back to the Alzheimer’s search pages, Madison quickly checked to see who else was online.

“Who’s in the fishbowl?” Madison asked Phinnie, who had jumped into her lap. Awkwardly, Madison pressed keys and clicked the button marked “Friends Online.” A few names popped up:

Balletgrl

DantheMan

Suresh00

TheEggMan

Wetwinz

Her keypal wasn’t there, but a bunch of other friends were. Dan, Egg, Suresh, Aimee, and Fiona had all logged into a chat room.

“I can’t believe it! They created a chat room and didn’t invite me again?” Madison said out loud. Instead of leaving Aimee and Fiona alone online like she had the previous time, Madison decided to surprise them. She’d show up in the chat room even if she hadn’t been invited.

: I cant believe she doesn’t know

: whew

: M was acting weird tho

: w-e, DGT it’ll be fine

Did they know she was there?

: Maddie!

She had wanted to be sneaky and stay invisible but the moment Madison entered the chat room her name popped up on the screen—flashing red.

Her BFFs recognized it immediately.

: OMG! Maddie?

: hi u guys

: what r u doing here???

: that is so crazy!!!

: I was just checking email and I saw u were online so I came into the lobby

: did u c what we were saying

: DID u C?

: not really? Y?

: just wondering

: CSL!!!! This is soooo random

: Y didn’t u ask me to chat?

: duh maddie we didn’t know ur online

: were just talking about math problems right Aim? Ur not in our class n e way

: ok well what were u REALLY talking about?

: what I said

: Maddie its no biggie

Madison couldn’t understand why they didn’t just include her in their conversation. Why couldn’t they just tell her the truth?

: talk now

: no I have to go

: r u ok?

: don’t go!!!

: *poof*

She could feel tears welling up in her eyes, but Madison quickly grabbed a tissue and wiped them. From the moment she had entered the chat room, Madison sensed it was a mistake. Not only had Aimee and Fiona been inside the room alone—but they were there talking about Madison.

Madison shut down the computer and ran downstairs to the living room phone. She needed to talk to someone. Mom was out of the question. Who else could she call?

Egg. He’d snap her out of this.

She grabbed a can of root beer from the refrigerator and planted herself on the sofa. She’d just picked up the phone and was about to dial—when she heard voices. Mom was on the extension.

“Fran, I wish you would just listen to me,” a man said.

Dad.

“Jeff, I have had enough of this. You promised, you broke your promise. Now I think you owe her a little more than an e-mail apology,” the woman said.

Mom.

Madison moved to replace the receiver and get off the phone. From the tone of their voices, the conversation wasn’t going very well. She didn’t want to hear more talk about the ski-trip-gone-bad or school or other subjects that Mom and Dad liked to argue about.

But she didn’t hang up.

For some reason Madison stayed on the phone, holding her breath and listening closer. She was eavesdropping for the second time in one day.

“Enough!” Mom screamed. “I don’t want to have this conversation, Jeff. Not again. As it is, Madison thinks we’re fighting.”

“I know,” Dad said. “She talked to me at dinner.”

“Oh really! And I suppose you blame me? Do you and your girlfriend have something to say about it?” Mom said.

Other books

The Bancroft Strategy by Robert Ludlum
Cold Blue by Gary Neece
Alice-Miranda Shines Bright 8 by Jacqueline Harvey
Mad for Love by Elizabeth Essex
Voodoo Kiss by Jayde Scott
Menage by Jan Springer


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024