by Dawn DeBraal
gingerbread latte, recycled
Carrie
peeked out her front window through a small opening she’d made by pulling the
curtain back. She was searching for the where-a-bouts of her neighbor Mrs.
Grady. Though Mrs. Grady was a lovely woman, she never seemed to leave Carrie
and her daughter alone. Carrie’s hope was to make it to the mailbox and get her
mail today, undetected.
It
started out innocently. Mrs. Grady asked for a cup of sugar or wanted to warn
her about her dog Skippy crossing the road again, and how the wayward beagle
could be hit by a car. It didn’t help that Mrs. Grady would be standing there
with biscuits in her hand. Skippy couldn’t turn down a biscuit.
One time
Mrs. Grady made pumpkin pies from the pumpkins Carrie had tossed out, setting
them in garbage cans for pickup. When her daughter asked for a piece of the
pumpkin pie Carrie threw the whole pie in the trash explaining that Mrs. Grady
got the moldy pumpkins from the garbage, that the pie wasn’t safe. Sometime Mrs.
Grady bought too much meat, pie, cheese, insert food item here, whatever and
would bring it over in a rinsed-out jar because she was a recycling addict.
Everything was used and reused one hundred times before it ended up being
recycled again. She had lived through the Great Depression and her parents
taught her to throw out nothing.
Mrs.
Grady brought over a blouse for Carrie once. She used to wear it when she was
around Carrie’s age. It was an antique.
“Thank
you,” Carrie told her, but now every time she saw Carrie, she’d ask if she’d
worn it yet. There was no way Carrie could have worn that blouse out in public.
Carrie
pulled the curtain out further. No Mrs. Grady in the front yard, looking left
and looking right. She sighed a big sigh of relief. She was going to get her
mail by trotting out to the box as fast as she could. Slowly Carrie opened the
door feeling the warm sunshine on her head and shoulders. Carrie quietly walked
down the sidewalk with Skippy at her heels. She opened the mailbox, and there
was the check she’d been expecting. Relieved, she quietly closed the box and
made it halfway up the sidewalk when she heard the familiar.
“Yoo-hoo!”
Mrs. Grady stood at her mailbox waving at Carrie. Carrie waved and quickly
turned around heading for the house. “Carrie! Carrie dear, I have something to
tell you.” Carrie stopped in her tracks and closed her eyes mouthing a cuss word
before she turned around trying to get across the street to Mrs. Grady’s lawn
before Mrs. Grady crossed the street into Carrie’s yard. If she didn’t catch
Mrs. Grady in her own yard, a good half hour would be taken from Carries’ day
trying to extricate herself from the well-meaning woman. Carrie crossed the
street with Skippy at her heels.
“Hi,
Mrs. Grady, what did you want to talk to me about?” Carrie smiled
politely.
“Well,
you know Skippy was close to the road this morning. I had to shoo him back into
the yard. I worry about something happening to him and how your daughter would
take it.”
“I
appreciate how you look after us, Mrs. Grady. Skippy should know better. But now
that he knows you have biscuits, it’s hard for him to stay on our side of the
street.” Carrie smiled again trying to be patient.
“I
hadn’t thought about that, ” said Mrs. Grady. She clucked her tongue a few times.
“I promise not to give him any more biscuits!”
“I
would appreciate that. If you will excuse me, I have a cake in the oven.” (She
didn’t, but any port in the storm.)
“I
love cake!” hinted Mrs. Grady.
“I’ll
bring a piece by later!” offered Carrie and now she prayed she had a cake mix
with frosting in her pantry.
“Dear, did you get a chance to wear that blouse yet?” Carrie hated to
lie but she needed to get going, so she lied.
“I’m sorry Mrs. Grady, I have to go now. It’s that cake in the
oven.”
“Certainly dear!” Mrs. Grady let her go. Carrie and Skippy ran
across the street. Carrie pulled open her pantry. Thank goodness! She found cake
and frosting mix. She was glad Mrs. Grady didn’t ask what kind of cake she had.
She pulled the eggs out of the refrigerator and started to mix the batter. She
was resentful when she punched in the oven temperature. In less than an hour,
the cake was cooling, waiting for frosting. When it was cool Carrie frosted
the cake and then told her daughter she would be back in a minute; she needed to
bring a piece of cake to Mrs. Grady.
Across
the street, Carrie went with the cake on a paper plate No sense in giving Mrs.
Grady an excuse to bring back the emptied dish. She knocked on the door waiting
impatiently for Mrs. Grady to answer. There was no answer. Again, Carrie knocked
on the door, perhaps she’d fallen asleep in the chair again. She looked through
the picture window, seeing Mrs. Grady in the chair front the television which
played in an overly loud fashion. Carrie went back to the front porch and opened
the door.
“Mrs. Grady? It’s me! Carrie! I have your cake!” There was something
strangely different. Carrie went over and turned the television off, kneeling in
front of Mrs. Grady. She touched her arm.
“Mrs. Grady? Are you alright?” By mere touch, Carrie realized that
Mrs. Grady was no longer in the land of the living. She grabbed the phone and
dialed 9-1-1. The EMTs checked Mrs. Grady’s vitals, she was gone. She was 93
years old. They called the coroner who interviewed Carrie. Carrie was ashamed
when she realized she didn’t know much about Mrs. Grady. They’d been neighbors
for years. Carrie remembered she had a son, but also believed he died of a heart
attack last year. He was a bachelor; he never married.
“She called him Butch. I think his name might have been. Ummmm, Richard! Richard
that’s it!” The Coroner called Goodhue’s Funeral Home. They came out and picked
up Mrs. Grady.
“What
about her cat?” asked Carrie. The coroner said he didn’t have anything to do
with that. Carrie looked in the cupboards and found the cat food. She opened a
can and put it on the plate in the kitchen. She told the policeman she would look
after the cat until they found Mrs. Grady’s next of kin.
Carrie
looked in on Chester every day. The cat was so lonely. She cleaned the litter
box and took Mrs. Grady’s garbage out to the curb on pick-up day. She felt sorry
for Chester, so she put him in the cat carrier and brought him to her house,
came back over for the litter box and food. A week later Carrie got a call from
Mrs. Grady’s lawyer. She let him know she was caring for Chester and would do so
until someone claimed him. She had to admit that she was falling for the big
orange tabby. Chester was clumsy and friendly. He snuggled up with her on the
couch along with Skippy every evening and slept with her daughter at night.
Sometime during the week of care, she decided she had fallen for Chester and the
place he’d made in their family.
Two
weeks went by. Mrs. Grady’s attorney called her again. He’d found a distant
relative, but they were not interested in taking Mrs. Grady’s cat. Carrie let
the attorney know that she had bonded with Chester and she would love to have
him live with her from now on. The attorney seemed very pleased with that
decision.
Another
week went by when the attorney asked if he could stop by Carrie’s home. He’d
like the extra key to Mrs. Grady’s house. Carrie agreed to meet with him and
relinquish the key. It was given to her in case of an emergency many years ago.
The attorney arranged the time for their appointment. On Monday Mr. Kirkland,
Mrs. Grady’s attorney, arrived at Carrie’s house at the agreed upon time. Carrie
had the key laying out on the table to give to the attorney. He thanked her for
caring for the house. The attorney accepted the key letting her know that Mrs.
Grady’s great-nephew had inherited the house and would be selling it soon. He
then asked to sit down and drew out additional paperwork, directing Carrie to
sit down.
“Mrs. Grady had no one. She barely knew her great-nephew but felt he
should have her house. Chester was her only family, and you, as her neighbor.”
Carrie cringed a little. She thought of all the times she grudgingly gave a
little time to Mrs. Grady. “Mrs. Grady put a stipulation in her will, that
whoever accepted the care of Chester, would get all of her money.” Chester took
that moment to jump into Carrie’s lap and lay down.
“Money?” Carrie said uncertainly as she stroked the cat.
“Yes, Mrs. Grady was quite a wealthy woman. She has left you over
$750,000 dollars!” Carrie was in shock.
“But her great-nephew,” She started to protest.
“The will was very clear. Someone had to come forward out of the
kindness of their heart to adopt Chester without the knowledge of the money. You
did that. You had no knowledge of the will, you agreed to watch Chester until
someone could be found to adopt him. The great nephew did not want Chester but
wanted the house. So, you inherit her money.”
Carrie
closed the door after Mr. Kirkland left. Still in shock. She didn’t feel worthy
of accepting Mrs. Grady’s generosity. She did come to love the cat
though.
A
for-sale sign went up on Mrs. Grady’s house. It sold rather quickly. Carrie was
outside with Skippy and Chester planting flowers when the moving van pulled up.
A short time later a group of motorcyclists pulled up, at least twenty of them.
They started to carry the stuff out of the moving van and into the house. A
pickup truck pulled up with a keg of beer in the back. Someone turned up the
radio. Carrie rolled her eyes sighing. She dialed the number on the sign across
the street.
“Hello, Landford Realty? I’d like to put my house up for sale, you just
sold one across the street. Tomorrow would be great.” Carrie waved at the new
neighbors who lifted their red cups to her. What did she care? She had $750,000
coming in any day now.
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