Read How I Spent My Summer Vacation Online
Authors: Gillian Roberts
Tags: #Suspense, #General Fiction
How I Spent My Summer Vacation by Gillian Roberts
How I Spent My Summer Vacation
By Gillian Roberts
Copyright 2012 by Judith Greber
Cover Copyright 2012 by Ginny Glass and Untreed Reads Publishing
The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright. Either the publisher (Untreed Reads) or author may enforce copyrights to the fullest extent.
Previously published in print, 1994.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold, reproduced or transmitted by any means in any form or given away to other people without specific permission from the author and/or publisher. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to the living or dead is entirely coincidental.
Also by Gillian Roberts and Untreed Reads Publishing
Caught Dead in Philadelphia
Philly Stakes
I’d Rather Be in Philadelphia
With Friends Like These
I intended to keep the Amanda Pepper books “timeless” and I thought that I wrote them in an unspecific “now.” Little did I understand that no matter the writer’s intention, some of the specifics of “now” will manage to weave their way into the story.
Revisiting the book now, I realize that
How I Spent My Summer Vacation
is sprinkled with names that were newsworthy and familiar when the book was written and much less so now: Anita Hill, Sally Jessy Raphael, the Brady Bunch, and Bert Parks. Luckily, none of those people (real or fictional) play a significant role in the book, nor does Perestroika or Sensurround, both of which are things of the past.
One thing that hasn’t changed, however, is human greed and the misery it can produce, and another is how exhausting and financially unrewarding a teacher’s life can be. Put them together, and we have Amanda’s less than stellar “vacation.”
I hope you enjoy the book—and I hope your vacations are nothing at all like Amanda’s.
Gillian Roberts
April 2012
For Joy Hockman—
cherished friend,
location scout,
and co-conspirator
THE SCHOOL YEAR IS MONTHS shorter than the calendar’s, which makes people think a teacher’s job is easy, cushy. Actually, summer vacation is a public safety requirement. Rising temperatures bring the unstable mix of teachers and pupils to a near-lethal boil and necessitate a cool-down period. Otherwise, there’d be no survivors with whom to start future endurance experiments.
Two days into my vacation, I was still on the critical list—battle-scarred and shell-shocked—and afraid the condition might be chronic.
I felt so miserable I knew I needed to do a lot of thinking about my life—lives, professional and personal—and what I was doing wrong with them. The trouble was, whenever I so much as thought about the need to think, my brain developed hives and I was filled with a sense of futility and dread.
“You look horrible,” my friend Sasha said. We were taking what I had hoped would be a restorative, old-fashioned Sunday stroll through Ye Olde Philadelphia. “Why don’t you get a real job, with real people?” she asked. “What is the point of growing up if you then revisit adolescence over and over for the rest of your life? Get a job with adults!” Sasha waved her arms for emphasis.
I tried to imagine a worklife with peers. People who saw me as an equal, not as an obstacle to be outwitted. People who weren’t always testing me or preparing defenses, excuses, or requests. Partners. Team players.
Power lunches. Networking. Ladder-climbing.
Give me a break.
We reached Head House Square, former meat and produce market, current star of camera-ready Colorful Colonial Philadelphia. A table under a cappuccino sign was available. This wasn’t a stroke of luck, but indication that summer weather—even real spring weather—had not yet staggered into Philadelphia. Still, we sat down.
It was chilly for early June, and lounging outside was purely symbolic, but I was on my summer vacation and I was going to behave as such. I shivered, ordered, and looked around. The wide cobbled street in front of us was bisected by the former marketplace. Where Colonial chickens and pigs were once hawked there now were objets d’craft: silver bangles, nouveau-native earrings, tooled leather backpacks, and recidivist tie-dyed garments. Whole cycles of fashions and fads had died and been resuscitated while I tried in vain to convince teenagers to punctuate.
I wondered if someday our current markets—say, 7-Elevens—would be converted into craft-laden tourist destinations, with yet more tie-dyed shirts filling shelves now holding Ding Dongs.
“I’ll be fine,” I told Sasha, who was urging vocational counseling. “I need to decompress. I guess I just want to be
alone
. Present company and present moment excluded, of course.”
The waitress brought us cappuccinos and a plate of biscotti.
“You
vant
to be a
lawn
,” Sasha drawled. “Forgotten your Garbo clichés?”
“But I vouldn’t
vant
to be a
lawn
. Given my druthers, I’d
vant
to be a
beach
.”
“There are those who think you are one already, Mandy. Present company not necessarily excluded.”
A beach. The image shimmered in front of me. The ocean. Nothing was more restorative than the primal soup. Saltwater slapping onto sand while seabirds shrieked and circled… Even imagining it made me feel better. I saw myself alone, tall dunes behind me, a book on my lap, salt air and solitude rejuvenating me.
“On the other hand,” Sasha said, “the plus of your job is the humongous vacation. Tomorrow, I’m back to work, while you—”
“As if ninety percent of your daily life weren’t a variation on playtime, while mine—”
“Beach, beach, beach,” she said softly.
“Sorry. But the trick is, we’re paid too little to enjoy that humongous vacation. I have two weeks,” I explained, “before I have to teach summer school.”
“I forgot. Too bad. So what are you doing with them?”
I shook my head. “Nothing. Cleaning closets.” I wouldn’t be teaching summer school if I’d had the funds to do anything else. The seabirds circling my imaginary beach turned into winged dollar signs and fluttered out of reach. What economically advantaged sadist started the myth that the best things in life were free?
“Maybe the fuzz’ll take you somewhere for R and R.”
“Very funny.” C.K. Mackenzie, aforementioned fuzz and one of the issues that made my brain itch, was a part of the problem, not its solution. One of the bits of wisdom I would have appreciated from those rolling waves concerned matters of my rapidly hardening heart. I know it’s au courant to love the process and not the goal. And even a more old-fashioned philosopher, Kahlil Gibran, had long ago urged that there be spaces in a man and woman’s togetherness. As I recall, the winds of heaven were supposed to dance between them.
But Kahlil never deigned to measure those spaces, and in my case, they sometimes felt larger than an airplane hangar, the better to let the winds of heaven howl. Much as I have enjoyed our spaces and our togetherness, much as I have focused on the process of being with Mackenzie for the past year—when his detecting duties didn’t interrupt, disrupt, and postpone that process—I would have also enjoyed the prospect of closure. Smaller spaces.
I don’t like dangling threads and unfinished stories. I am comforted knowing that a suspenseful novel will have a resolution. Why should I ask less of my own life?
Except, to really make matters impossible, I didn’t know what variety of closure I wanted. Maybe the cavernous spaces between us were my best option—or even my choice. My call. Thinking of that, admitting that, brought back the now-familiar agitated dread.
Three steps away from where we sat, a mother who looked almost as frayed as I felt shouted at a squatty kid in a hat with ear-flaps. “Stop eating! You’ll ruin your dinner!” she shrieked. “I said no more snacks! I said it over and over!”
Whatever the kid snuffled back was obscured by the bus on the corner, which emitted a flatulent sound and matching stench as it pulled away.
I willed myself away to a beach, and allowed myself to hear only the wonderful white noise of the waves. And Sasha.
“Your parents would send you a plane ticket,” she said.
“You have to be kidding. Don’t I look sufficiently stressed out?” Granted, Boca Raton had a fine Floridian beach—but all the same, time with my parents could not by any stretch of the imagination be equated with a rest. Since I’d turned thirty-one, my mother’s horror at my unmarried state had escalated beyond direct speech, as if singleness were the dirtiest or most classified of secrets. She used to worry about my sex life—mostly she worried that I managed to have one. Now, the euphemism for unmarried was
financial security.
She mailed clippings about long-term investments and, much more depressingly, about trophy wives. Nothing subtle about her message. My mission was to snag a doddering millionaire and live securely ever after.
The horrible truth was that every so often—as today, lost in my unattainable beach fantasies and not at all entranced with the teacherly lifestyle of making do—the idea didn’t sound half bad. Well, maybe not quarter bad. Although where in my daily rounds I was supposed to meet the tycoon instead of his adolescent great-grandson, I didn’t know.
“So maybe you don’t really want a beach,” Sasha said.
“Not enough to put up with my mother’s nagging. I’m thinking of installing voice mail to save her breath and long-distance charges. You know, ‘Press one to nag about my economic security. Press two to remind me that I haven’t yet produced grandchildren.’ You’re lucky your parents let you lead your own life.”
“They’re afraid I
will
get married. Again. That I’ll be like them.” Sasha’s parents had been in the divorce avant-garde. Long before it was commonplace, they split, reassembled, remarried, and redivorced unto the point of utter confusion—theirs and everyone who knew them. An inability to choose wisely or maintain relationships seemed a genetic inheritance. Sasha herself had already had two kamikaze hitchings, and her quality control, when it came to men, hadn’t improved appreciably since. “Every time I mention a man, they shudder. I told my mother about this fellow I’m going to see tomorrow—” She stopped short. “That’s it! Cinderella Pepper, you’re looking at your fairy godmother!”
I would have thought fairy godmothers were more petite. Six feet tall, with wild black hair, wearing multicolored layers of gauze and high-topped sneakers, Sasha didn’t fit the storybook image, but I listened.
“You have just won yourself an almost all-expenses paid trip to the edge of an authentic, genuine ocean! Sand included free of charge.”
“How?”
“I have a seaside shoot complete with room and meals. What’s the diff if I share my room with you? All you’ll have to spring for is what you eat, and you’d have to do that here, too.”
“Are you serious?” A genuine getaway, a beach vacation for free? The seabirds struck up the chorus in my head again.
“What are friends for?”
Sasha might bemoan the lack of a regular salary or a predictable income, but she did get to take her photographs in exotic locales now and then. I thought about shoots on the Mediterranean, or the Caribbean, or even the cold waters off Maine. Anywhere would be splendid. I’d pay for the plane tickets somehow.
The boy in the earflaps had snagged a bag of chips, and his mother, face red and puffed, shouted, “Not more
snacks!
What did I tell you? They’re
bad
for you!” She grabbed the bag from the boy and pushed a handful of chips into her own mouth. Talk about mixed messages, no wonder the kid covered his ears. By the time he’d wind up in my classroom in a few years, those leather sound barriers would have become internalized and unremovable. And I’d be expected to teach him something.