Read Sister of the Bride Online

Authors: Beverly Cleary

Sister of the Bride (6 page)

Bill pulled the umbrella out of his jacket and collapsed it before he kicked the stand under his scooter and left it parked at the curb. He sat down on the top step with the ease of someone sitting on a chair in the living room. Apparently he expected no explanation for not being invited into the house.

Barbara ran around to the back door. In the kitchen she found Gordy eating tuna fish out of the can with Buster at his feet. “You know Mother doesn't like you to do that,” she scolded. “She wants you to make a sandwich if you are going to eat tuna.”

Gordy ignored this. “I didn't know you liked ham,” he remarked, presenting Buster with a flake of tuna fish on the tip of his finger.

“Ham?” Barbara was flinging open cupboard doors in search of something, anything, to feed Bill before he got away.

“You just rode home with a cunning ham.” Gordy laughed heartily at his own poor joke and scraped the bottom of the tuna fish can with a spoon.

“If I couldn't make a better joke than that, I'd keep still.”

Barbara had a feeling the nickname would stick. From now on Bill Cunningham would be known in the MacLane household as the Cunning Ham, just as Rosemary's Humphrey had been known as Old Fleetfoot. She found the cookie jar empty. Gordy again. The cookie jar was always empty. She found a half a bag of corn chips that Gordy had missed, or perhaps had not got to yet, and poured two glasses of milk, which she set on a tray and carried out the front door. Bill was still sitting on the step. She set the tray down and sat beside it. “Have some corn chips and a glass of milk,” she said hospitably.

“Thanks,” said Bill, and crunched into a handful of corn chips.

“Isn't it funny?” remarked Barbara. “I was planning to bake some cookies this afternoon.” Now
why did I have to go and say a thing like that? she asked herself. It was simply not true. She had not baked cookies since her junior high school cooking class.

Bill looked interested. “You were?”

Now Barbara was stuck with her fib. “Yes. The cookie jar is empty.” This was certainly true. Since her mother had gone back to teaching, it was almost always empty.

“My mother never bakes cookies,” said Bill, and Barbara thought he sounded as if he wished she did.

“Doesn't she like to bake?” asked Barbara.

“I don't know. Anyway, she doesn't have time. She has this big career and everything. She's pretty tired when she gets home.” He reached for another handful of corn chips.

Mrs. Cunningham's career was well known in Bayview. She commuted to San Francisco, where she wrote advertising copy for a chain of women's clothing stores. She was always the most fashionably dressed commuter at the bus station, and her clothing always looked brand-new, as if she had bought it only the day before. This was in sharp contrast to the housewives of Bayview, who were seen about town in comfortably baggy slacks on
cold days and in cotton blouses and skirts on warm days.

“We eat out a lot,” continued Bill, “but the store pays Mom so much she can't turn them down. Every time she tries to quit they give her more money.”

Barbara could not find anything to say to this. Her family almost never ate in restaurants; and although she knew her mother and father could always use more money, they seemed satisfied with their pay as teachers. Her mother, she knew, was teaching because teachers were needed and not because she wanted more money, although of course the extra income was welcome, especially since Rosemary was in college.

“Anyway, Mom bought me the Vespa,” said Bill.

Barbara was a little shocked by this statement. In her family a gift came from both parents, no matter which one earned the money that paid for it.

“But it sure would be nice if she baked cookies once in a while,” continued Bill, searching the bag for the last of the corn chips.

Barbara began to feel sorry for him. She pictured him going home hungry to a cold house. At least in winter it might be cold, if his mother turned the furnace off before she went to work, but that was
not probable since she earned so much money. At this time of year, even though it was raining, the weather was not very cold. She tried, but it was almost impossible to feel completely sorry for a boy like Bill.

“Well, I won't keep you any longer.” Bill rose and opened his big black umbrella.

Barbara did not want him to go so soon. “Oh, you weren't keeping me from anything.”

“The cookies,” Bill reminded her.

“Oh—yes,” said Barbara hastily. She considered for a moment before she added, “Drop by for a handful sometime.” She was satisfied that she had struck the right casual note. She did not want him to think she was trying to trap him with cookies for bait.

“Thank you, ma'am.” Bill managed to bow with a flourish and hold his umbrella over his head at the same time. “This was a lot better than eating a bag of French fries at the drugstore. See you soon.” With that he stuck the umbrella handle down the back of his neck, mounted his Vespa, and was off down the hill with a wave and a backward grin.

Barbara watched the umbrella disappear around a bend in the road and, still smiling, she turned and walked into the house. Bill Cunningham. The
last boy she had ever expected to notice her. She liked him. She really did. She liked him the way she liked the fizz in ginger ale and the cherry on a sundae. That was Bill Cunningham, and maybe this was the beginning of love. What fun it would be if someday they could look back and say, “We fell in love—plunk, just like that—while a stop light changed from red to green.”

Barbara considered Bill and wondered what her father thought of him. There was one good thing—Bill's name usually appeared on the honor roll—and, considering her father's attitude toward grades, anyone's grades, Barbara felt this was a real bonanza. She could not think of a single thing about Bill that her father could object to. He was a good student, he took part in school activities—but not to the extent that he could be called a big activity man—he was lively and full of fun, but he never got into trouble. He was, to use a phrase Rosemary used a lot since she went away to college, well-adjusted. There was however his Vespa to think about. Barbara wondered how her parents would feel about her riding around town on a motor scooter, but she quickly dismissed this small worry. If Rosemary had permission to get married, surely she could have permission to ride on a Vespa.

Barbara went into the house and took a quick inventory of the kitchen cupboards for cookie ingredients. There were no nuts or raisins, which eliminated a lot of recipes right there.

“I had an old dog. His name was Blue,” sang Gordy from his room.

Barbara began to read cookie recipes. Brownies were out. She had no nuts. Checkerboard cookies. Too difficult. Refrigerator cookies. She did not want to wait for the dough to chill. Oatmeal cookies. Well…maybe. They weren't really good without raisins. Snicker-doodles. She liked the name. Sugar, flour, shortening, egg…roll into balls the size of a walnut…dip in sugar and cinnamon. They sounded good, and the recipe made four dozen. Gordy would probably smell the cinnamon while they were baking and demand some, but she should be able to hide most of them….

Barbara got out a mixing bowl and measuring cup, but before she set about baking snicker-doodles for Bill Cunningham, she added raisins and walnuts to the shopping list on the cupboard door. “I'm falling in love,” she whispered experimentally to herself, and found the words comfortable on her tongue.

The next evening, while Mrs. MacLane and Barbara lingered at the table and Mr. MacLane was enjoying his after-dinner cigar, Mrs. MacLane asked, “What are we going to do about Greg's family? We can't put it off any longer.”

Barbara knew at least some of the answers, because she had skimmed through the book about weddings from the library. “The wedding book says the groom's family calls on the bride's family,” she informed her mother.

“I know,” said Mrs. MacLane, “but if they are going to drive fifty miles to call, it seems as if we should offer them a meal. And if we are going to do that, I think we should simply ask them to
come for supper in the first place.” No one had anything to say to this suggestion, so she continued. “I wonder what the Aldredges are like.”

“Rosemary says Greg's father has made a lot of money in the luggage business,” volunteered Barbara, “but he's not terribly intellectual.”

Her father scowled through a cloud of cigar smoke. “And since when did I raise my daughter to be a snob?” he asked.

“Now what on earth did Rosemary mean by a remark like that?” demanded Mrs. MacLane.

“Oh…you know…” said Barbara vaguely. “He doesn't go to museums and concerts and things like that.”

“And neither did Rosemary until she went away to college,” Mrs. MacLane pointed out. “And if that is her definition of culture, I'm afraid your father and I don't measure up either. At least not for a long time. Not since we had three children.”

“He's probably been too busy earning money, so he could educate his family,” said Mr. MacLane, leaning back in his chair once more. “The poor fellow probably hasn't had time to do anything else, with three children in college. Too busy keeping his nose to the grindstone.”

“Greg has supported himself since he went into the air force,” Barbara informed her father.

“Well, don't keep us in suspense. Tell us all,” said Mrs. MacLane. “What did Rosemary say about Greg's mother?”

“Oh, she's all right, I guess,” said Barbara. “Anyway, Rosemary says Greg doesn't let her bother him anymore. He's very mature about it. She used to bother him until he went into the air force, but he's past that stage now. He says she's a nice gal.” Barbara was not prepared for her parents' reaction to this bit of information.

“Well!” said her mother.

“I'll be darned,” said her father.

Barbara was anxious to make her parents understand. “But Rosemary says it's important to rebel against your parents. Otherwise, nobody ever grows up.”

“Oh, she does, does she?” Mr. MacLane knocked the ash off his cigar into the ashtray Barbara had fetched when dessert was finished.

“I suppose in a way she's right,” reflected Mrs. MacLane, “but somehow I don't like her to be so blunt about it.”

“It seems to me,” said Mr. MacLane, “that ever
since Rosemary has been going to the university she has been talking like someone who has read a book on psychology.”

“I don't know why,” puzzled Mrs. MacLane. “She isn't even taking psychology.”

Barbara had the explanation. “But her roommate is. Millie is majoring in psychology. Rosemary learns a lot from her.”

“How nice,” said Mrs. MacLane dryly. “I am so glad we are to share in the benefits of Millie's college education.”

Mr. MacLane exhaled a large blue cloud of smoke. “Well, let me tell you something. Someday some mother is going to rebel against her children; and when she does, I will be the first to contribute to a statue in her honor, to be placed downtown in the center of the plaza. A bronze statue. And each year on Mother's Day I shall personally lay a wreath at her feet.”

“Oh, Dad.” Barbara's tone implied, Don't be silly. “Rosemary says—”

Mrs. MacLane interrupted. Apparently she did not want to hear any more of what Rosemary had to say. “At least we know Greg's mother is a nice gal. Or so Greg says. Shall we ask the Aldredges for Sunday night supper or shall we not? If we do we
had better have them soon, because June is coming closer every day.”

“Sure,” agreed Mr. MacLane expansively. “The old man and I ought to get along just fine. We can talk about baseball and other nonintellectual subjects.”

“Dad, please don't make a big thing out of what Greg said.” Barbara was impatient, more with herself than with her father. Knowing her father's talent for worrying a subject the way a dog worries a bone, she never should have repeated verbatim what Rosemary had confided, but somehow the remarks about Greg's parents had sounded different when Rosemary had made them. Barbara had been impressed by Rosemary's and Greg's adult, detached attitude. They had seemed so emancipated, so mature. But now she was no longer certain. Maybe they were just disloyal.

“Who's making a big thing of it?” Mr. MacLane asked in his jovial after-dinner manner. “You said Rosemary said Greg's father wasn't terribly intellectual. Well, neither am I. And, I might add, neither is Rosemary.”

“Oh, Dad. You are, too, making a big thing out of it,” Barbara informed him. “I'm sorry I ever mentioned it. Just forget all about it.” But she knew her
father would not. This was too good a topic for his talent for banter.

There was a slight frown mark between Mrs. MacLane's eyebrows. “What do you suppose Greg has told his family about us?” she wondered aloud. “He really doesn't know us very well, and there's no telling what he may think or what Rosemary may have told him.”

“She probably says her father is a little crude, but a good egg,” suggested Mr. MacLane. “And she probably says condescendingly that you are a good kid who doesn't use her mind.” Mr. MacLane had never let Rosemary forget that she had once said the trouble with the members of her mother's club was they did not use their minds.

“I can't believe she'd say a thing like that,” said Mrs. MacLane.

“Why not?” her husband wanted to know. “Kids nowadays feel they can say anything about their parents. This makes them well-adjusted, as Rosemary would probably say.”

“For one thing, now that I have gone back to teaching, I think she has finally conceded that I do use my mind,” said Mrs. MacLane.

What about me? Barbara began to wonder. What had Rosemary told Greg about his future sister-in-
law? She rummaged through Rosemary's secondhand psychology jargon for phrases that might fit. Something like, “Barbara's all right but she's terribly immature.” Or, “Barbara's all right but she can't get along with Gordy. Sibling rivalry, you know. She feels insecure.” Then Greg would pass this along to his family, who would arrive expecting a very young girl quarreling with her brother. Barbara resolved to stop quarreling with Gordy at once. When the Aldredges arrived, she would be so poised and so grown-up that they would leave, asking one another, “Was that the girl Greg said was immature? Impossible! She and her brother got along beautifully.” Yes, Barbara was going to have to watch her step.

That same evening Mrs. MacLane composed half a dozen drafts of a gracious note to Greg's mother and father, inviting them to come for supper Sunday evening. She read all versions aloud to Mr. MacLane, and when they agreed on the wording, the letter was written and mailed. Two days later an equally gracious note arrived accepting the invitation.

The acceptance precipitated a flurry of house cleaning and silver polishing. “This is supposed to be a friendly visit, not an inspection,” Mr. MacLane reminded his wife.

Mrs. MacLane laid down the dust cloth and sighed. “I know, but I can't keep things looking the way they should when I'm teaching.”

Barbara thought guiltily of the fluff of dust she had shoved back under her bed with her toe, and went to get the dust mop.

By late Sunday afternoon the house was shining, Gordy had been persuaded into his gray suit, the table was set, and the salad greens were chilling in a plastic bag in the refrigerator. The family was ready for what Mr. MacLane persisted in referring to as the big powwow.

“Dad, please take off that green eyeshade,” pleaded Barbara, trying to see the house and her parents through Rosemary's eyes. “You know Rosemary doesn't like you to wear it when her friends come here.”

“They will have to take me as I am,” said her father, but he removed the eyeshade and tossed it into his rolltop desk on the sun porch. When he was not looking, Barbara closed the top of the desk.

At six thirty the doorbell rang, and Mrs. MacLane went to answer it. “Mr. and Mrs. Aldredge!” she exclaimed. “I'm so happy to meet you at last. We've been hearing so much about you.”

We certainly have, thought Barbara, looking over the parents of the groom while trying not to appear as if she were inspecting them. The father was a ruddy, tweedy man, who was exchanging a hearty handshake with Mr. MacLane. Lots of golf, Barbara decided, and maybe hunting and fishing, too. He did not look like a man whose nose was worn down by a grindstone to keep his children in college. She turned her attention to Greg's mother, who was wearing a mink stole and a splashy silk print that only a very slim woman could wear. Barbara mentally summed her up as a pointed person—pointed features, pointed shoes, pointed fingernails. Barbara felt disloyal even thinking it, but Greg's mother made her own mother look plump and a little dowdy.

“We think a lot of Greg,” Mrs. MacLane was saying. “He's a fine boy.”

“Yes, a fine boy,” echoed Mr. MacLane. “A boy to be proud of.”

“And Rosemary is a darling girl,” said the mother of the groom. “We couldn't be happier. The first time I met her I knew that this was the girl who was going to be my daughter-in-law.”

When the mink stole was laid on the bed and the two families were seated in the living room, there
was a sudden silence that both mothers rushed to fill.

“Greg says—” began Mrs. Aldredge.

“Rosemary says—” began Mrs. MacLane. Both women stopped and laughed.

Mr. MacLane felt this conversation needed masculine guidance. He turned to Greg's father and said, “I hear you are a baseball fan. How do you think the Giants will finish this year?”

Barbara darted a suspicious glance at her father. She thought from the remark he had made when this evening was being planned that perhaps he was trying to be funny, but apparently he was not. He was only following a well-known masculine axiom: When in doubt, bring up baseball. The two mothers exchanged sympathetic smiles.

“The odds are that they will finish second behind the Dodgers,” said Mr. Aldredge, settling comfortably back in his chair as if he and Mr. MacLane discussed baseball every night of the week, “but it seems to me that with the pitchers they've got and the stronger bench, they should finish either first or second.”

Mrs. MacLane excused herself to look at something in the oven. Barbara caught Mrs. Aldredge's glance sliding from the end of the sofa, which
Buster had clawed to a woolly fringe, to the carpet, and then to the lamp shades. It was a shrewd glance, as if she was assigning price tags to everything in the room. I don't think I like her, Barbara thought suddenly.

“I'm not so sure about that,” Mr. MacLane was saying. “I think the Dodgers are a stronger all-around club, and if the hitters come through they'll take it.”

Barbara felt that she was being immature. She should be making conversation with Greg's mother, who must have felt that she should be talking to the sister of the bride, because she smiled at Barbara and said, “You certainly look like Rosemary. I would have known you as her sister anywhere.”

Striving to look poised and mature, Barbara returned the smile. It was always so hard to know what to say to this commonplace remark that everyone made. Her impulse was to say, Yes, but my hair is naturally curly. She dismissed this remark as lacking in maturity and answered lamely, “I guess we do look quite a bit alike.” She wished her mother would return to steer the conversation where it belonged—on the wedding.

Mr. Aldredge was saying, “I think the two new
pitchers will mean eight to ten more wins, and the manager isn't experimenting with positions the way he did last year.”

The wedding, thought Barbara, you are here to talk about the wedding. Then she had an inspiration. “Do Greg and his brother look alike?” she asked Mrs. Aldredge, hoping she sounded both mature and secure.

“Quite a bit,” answered the mother of the groom. “Bob is taller. It used to bother Greg when the boys were younger. He didn't like being shorter than his younger brother.”

Barbara was pleased with this bit of information about the brother, who was sure to be the best man. She liked tall boys, as long as they were not as tall as Tootie Bodger.

“Well, don't forget the wind is going to favor the home team, and that will mean another five to eight games,” Greg's father was saying, and Barbara knew that once the men started talking about the wind at Candlestick Park, they were good for another half hour. They would have to discuss how the ballpark should never have been built where it was in the first place and all the possibilities for remodeling it. It was a conversation she had heard many times and did not want to
hear again at this particular moment.

“If you will excuse me, I think I had better help my mother,” Barbara said to Mrs. Aldredge.

“Is there anything I can do to help?” Mrs. Aldredge asked.

“No, thank you,” answered Barbara.

As she left the room Mrs. Aldredge was saying, “Now Ed, don't you think—”

“Mother,” whispered Barbara in the kitchen, “
why
did you let Dad get started on baseball? They're here to talk about the wedding.”

“They're here to get acquainted, and baseball is as good a subject as any. At least the men have that much in common.” She lifted a lid, salted something in a saucepan, and then fanned her flushed face with a pot holder. “Empty the salad greens out of the plastic bag, will you, dear? The dressing is in the refrigerator.”

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