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"Rainbowland VIII - See Me, Feel Me, Touch Me, Heal Me" by Groucho
Last Post 01 Jul 2009 02:55 PM by McPheever17. 9 Replies.
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bcollan
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13 Feb 2008 12:03 AM  

Journey once more to the magical, mythical place called Rainbowland.

Where our star Katharine has two daughters, KayCee and Pookie, and is is happily married to the loving, older veterinarian Chris. Flash back to the early days of Kat and Chris' romance as they find a way to cope with their emotional pain.


Presenting "Rainbowland VIII - See Me, Feel Me, Touch Me, Heal Me" a touching work of fanfic by our own Groucho!

"She sings so magnificantly, it's just amazing" David Foster
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13 Feb 2008 04:17 PM  

  Rainbowland VIII - See Me Feel Me Touch Me Heal Me

 

"No!" Kaycee said decisively, which was not surprising, as that had become one of her very favorite words as soon as she hit the Terrible Twos. Sometimes it seemed that would never change.

"Whattaya mean, no?" I answered, feeling somewhat exasperated. Just because I was familiar with her ways didn’t mean I liked them, especially when she wanted one thing and I wanted another. "You always enjoy going with Gramma P."

Kaycee planted herself firmly on her bed amidst a crew of stuffed animals. "I’m not ready to make nice," she elaborated, and I began to regret ever introducing her to the musical group she referred to as The Dicky Chicks, or occasionally The Chickie Dicks. She wasn’t sure, she just knew she loved listening to them and singing along. And picking up annoying phrases.

"Katharine, she’s having a chick attack again!" I yelled. "You got any suggestions?"

Ask me why we decided to spend the weekend at the new hotel that had just opened up close to Westfield Fashion Center. Once we’d rendered our home child-free, it would have been just as easy to stay there, but for reasons I couldn’t quite remember, we’d decided we needed a change of scenery, if only for a couple of days. A change, as in dinner and dancing in the hotel ballroom, access to someone else’s pool, and no flying anywhere, as it was practically up the street. Katharine had just wrapped a movie but it would be quite a while before she’d be needed for major publicity, so we were going to drop everything and indulge in two days of nothing but pair bonding. She’d just spent a week at home doing nothing but reconnecting with the kids, so we both found the prospect delightful.

The movie had filmed locally and hadn’t really required a long time to complete, but as the star, Katharine had been in practically every scene and the hours had been ferocious, but she’d had a great time. Fans of an 80’s TV mystery series called The Nightengale had been delighted to find that there was interest in resurrecting the show as a feature film, and the heroine, a singer named Abigail Knight who helped her cop boyfriend solve crimes, was perfect for Katharine. We both read the script. It had Remington Steele’s cleverness, a bit of V.I. Warshawski’s toughness, and a touch of Moonlighting’s crazy comedy. And they could actually let this version of Gail Knight do her own singing.

In a few seconds, Katharine stuck her head in the door. "Don’t worry," she said lightly. "She’ll come around as soon as Mom gets here. She always does." She had Pookie slung over her hip, all dressed and packed and evidently behaving like the little blonde angel she resembled.

"You got the easy half," I grumbled.

"This time. Remember the first time we decided to have Mom take her instead of Kaycee?"

"Yeah," I said with a little chortle. "You’d have thought we were selling her to the gypsies. The kid definitely inherited your lungs. She may never need a microphone."

"Got her future all planned for her, Dad?" Katharine said mischievously.

"Well, wouldn’t you be surprised if neither one of them decided to get into music?" I said. "Don’t you suppose it’s in their genes or something?"

"Yeah, that’s probably why Kaycee likes to put splints and band-aids on all of her stuffed animals."

"That’s not genetic. That’s just being smart enough to know what it takes to make people fuss over you and go ‘Aw-w-w, isn’t that cute?’ "

"Well, that’s one of the things I wanted from you, Mr. Three College Degrees," Katharine said. "Kids with 20-20 uncorrected eyesight and the kind of a brain that lets them enjoy school."

"There’s nothing wrong with your brain," I said. "It just gets a little…overwhelmed sometimes, and you need to slow down, take a deep breath, and remember how to process things in order."

"I still turn words around sometimes," she said, frowning at Pookie as though she was trying to look through her blonde mop and see if all the little wheels under the skull were turning correctly.

I knew exactly what she was thinking. "So she didn’t start talking as early as Kaycee did," I said. "She’ll catch up. First kids are often more verbal, because for a long time it was just them and the adults, no other kids to babble at and pick up bad habits from."

"You know what I saw on TV the other day?" Katharine said without waiting for an answer. "This ad for—oh, I don’t know, something or other—and they said that one out of every 150 babies is born autistic. That’s pretty bad odds, you know that? You don’t think there’s any chance—"

"She is not autistic!" I said. "For Godssake, she relates to people."

"So why doesn’t she talk?"

"I don’t know. Maybe she doesn’t have anything to say."

"Don’t be a smartass. What if it’s serious and we’re just missing something? That happens. It happened to me when I was little."

"Okay, I’ve got another reason for you. Because she’s not Kaycee. Kaycee wants everything yesterday. She’s always been that way. She’s done everything fast from the day she was born."

"Yeah, she popped right out and Pookie took two days and scared the crap out of everybody."

"See? They just have different styles," I said, anxious to find something to say that might make Katharine feel better. Setbacks in her own life she could handle, but anything affecting the kids kept her up nights, whether it should or not.

"Are you talking about me?" Kaycee wanted to know.

"Yes," Katharine said. "You’re a little girl in a hurry. So why don’t you hurry and get ready to go with Grandma? Speaking of which, I think I just heard her come in."

"And I think I heard Ildie drive up. Come on, Chickie."

"No," Kaycee said, quite predictably.

"Maybe she’d rather swap and go with Ildie," I said. "Then she’d have three people to alternately charm and terrorize. She’d love it."

"Oh shut UP," Katharine said. "This is going to be tricky enough as it is."

"What’s tissic? What’s that mean?" Kaycee asked.

"And you’re always on ME to watch my mouth around the kids," I said. "Now what?"

Katharine rolled her eyes at me. "How should I know? Help me!"

"We were just discussing why Pookie doesn’t seem to want to talk," I said, sidestepping the question. "And it occurs to me that a lot of the time, you seem to know what she wants better than we do. But you know what? I think you should just let her make her own needs known. Maybe then she’ll start talking to us."

"No," Kaycee said. "She’ll just get mad and scream. I don’t like it when she screams."

"Nobody does, Honey," Katharine said. "That’s why she needs to learn to talk."

"Hi, guys!" Peisha called down the hall.

Kaycee dropped the stuffed chihuahua she’d been cradling and scrambled down from the bed. Flying out the door, she threw herself into Peisha’s arms babbling "Gramma P! Gramma P!"

I looked at Katharine and shrugged and she gave me an "I told you so" look.

My stepmother arrived shortly thereafter, still dressed for battle and looking quite formidable in a gray suit and heels. I loved her to death but seriously pitied anyone who had to face her in a courtroom. She and Peisha acknowledged each other, took possession of their respective charges, wished us a lovely weekend, and walked out chatting like the friends and allies they had become over the past few years.

"Well," I said happily, "that went well."

"Super," Katharine agreed. "Now, let’s go check into our little love nest and go crazy." She struck a hands-on-hips pose. "You’re going to have a remarkable weekend."

"And what are you going to have?"

"Two days of just being me, nobody crying or screaming or wanting anything from me, or telling me we need to do that one more time to get it just right—"

"Well, I can’t promise that," I said.

"That’s different."

"Because I’m special?"

"Because I can actually say no to you if I want to. But I won’t!" She slunk across the room and glued herself against me like a silent movies siren constrained to convey a vamp on the prowl in a way the audience would understand with no need for words. "I didn’t put that quite right. The point of the weekend isn’t just for me to be me, it’s for us to be us. And I’ve got a few surprises for you. Just for fun."

Our weekend was more like a day and two nights, with Saturday being our big "date night." The Baronet provided excellent food and the kind of ballroom orchestra you could dance to if you actually liked to hold onto your girl. I would tip the band leader and ask him very politely to NOT introduce Katharine and ask her to come up and sing. For one night, we were just going to be vacationers.

Friday we were just going to order room service and collapse, and I was going to get my surprise. I lounged on the bed, idly flipping through tv channels while Katharine disappeared into the bathroom. In a few minutes she called out "Find us some good music!" so I tuned the radio into a jazz/R&B station and sat back to wait.

Anita Baker was just drawing to a close on The Best Of My Love – it was that kind of a station. I turned up the volume and called out "What do you think of this?"

"Good! Now what do you think of this?"

I looked up to see a tall woman in a silky kimono with a blonde Posh Spice hairdo advancing on me, looking like she meant business. "Ho-lee sheet!" I breathed.

"It’s Do Something Different Night," she said, "or maybe I should say someone." Then she began a slow strip tease, starting with the sash.

In the background, a smooth voice was singing over a sultry beat, something about "sign your name across my heart, I want you to be my bay-ay-bee," and as the kimono slid smoothly and silkily to the floor, I forgot all about how long the week had been. Various undergarments came loose and were twirled around and pitched in my general direction, so I caught them, and then, obeying some insane impulse, wadded them up and stuck my face in them, moaning and growling like a demented creature from The Island of Dr. Moreau. This elicited the expected giggles and protests, then she dived into my lap, completely breaking character as we rolled around laughing and struggling and I wondered how the wig managed to stay on through all of that.

"You pervert," she chuckled in my ear. "I thought you were all through with blondes."

I thought better of reminding her that the whole thing had been her idea. "I am," I insisted. "Except for this one." I pushed my nose right into the hollow at the base of her neck and breathed in, then placed my lips gently on that same spot. "You know what’s right there?"

"What? A freckle? A mole?"

"No, your vocal cords."

"You know what, Mr. Medical School? You’re supposed to tell me about, oh, how smooth my skin is, or how good I smell, or something romantic."

"I was about to say, that’s a sacred place because that’s where so much beautiful music comes from. Something like that."

"Aw-w-w, that’s so sweet," she said, suddenly very serious. "Nobody’s ever said that to me before. Well, not quite like that. It almost sounds like something my mom would say—you know, that you should take good care of your instrument because it’s a sacred gift."

"We agree about that. Now I don’t want to think about your mom anymore. In fact I don’t want to think about anything." So we stopped talking and followed the cues coming from the radio. The only actual words I heard were "slowly we make love," but that was enough.

Later I asked her where the idea for the wig had come from, and her answer surprised me, although I suppose it shouldn’t have. "I saw the strangest thing on-line," she said, idly running her fingers across my chest. "It was funny, but interesting. Somebody had found a site where you could try different hairstyles on any picture you wanted to, and they’d used one of me, from a photo shoot I did a long time ago, and they put about half a dozen different looks on me. Some of them were terrible, but the one with the short straight blonde hair actually didn’t look too bad."

"So you just decided to go blonde?"

"I don’t know why I did it. I’ve always wondered what I’d look like as a blonde, and I just wanted to see how you’d react."

"Why do I get the feeling I’m getting into damned if I do, damned if I don’t territory? Like if I liked the wig, it’s because I secretly wish I was here with some hot blonde, and if I didn’t, you’ll be upset because it was your idea and you were just trying to indulge me."

"I’m an evil woman. I shouldn’t put you in that kind of position, should I?"

"Yes you are, and no you shouldn’t. Do you know how strange it is seeing a blonde head where, well, your head ought to be?"

She pushed up on an elbow and looked at me very intently. "Was it a bad idea?"

"No. But not because I need a break from my gorgeous brunette. Or any other reason." I knew somewhere in the back of her mind was an image of me and the beautiful and very blonde Jenna Holstrum, who had been an assistant district attorney back in the days when she had very thoroughly and expertly broken my heart.

"I know," Katharine said. "If I’d had any doubts about that, I’d never have had the nerve to try to seduce you in a blonde wig."

"You know what? Just for the hell of it, I’d like to see the original. Do you think you could find it?"

"Oh lord, I don’t know. I have an idea, though. I guess we could fish around and see what happens. Wait til I find my glasses."

Eventually we tracked down the site and the thread using Katharine’s BlackBerry and I sat there grinning like an idiot at the image of Katharine in her slightly lopsided, rather elfin blonde hairdo. "That’s cute," I said. "I’m going to save that to my hard drive just as a memento of this weekend."

"You’re crazy. You can see the real thing any time you want to."

"What if I’d like to look at you during a random free moment at work?"

"Okay, that’s all I need to know. Wait… let’s look around while we’re here."

We found threads with candids from the set of Nightengale, some with pictures of the kids, polls and chatter and speculation on such subjects as what kind of movie they’d like her to do next. Then I spotted a sub-forum and had her investigate. "Holy shirt," I said. "What is all this?"

"I don’t know," Katharine said, "but you’re getting pretty good at cleaning up your language. At least that beats what you used to say. "

"The Old McDonald thread. Hmmm. Open that." We started reading, intermittently squabbling over the fact that our eyes were negotiating the tiny screen at different speeds. "They seem to think I might be a bit too old for you."

"That’s silly. Eight years isn’t that much."

"Mm-hmm. Some of them agree with you. Some don’t. Hmm. This one thinks older men make better lovers. I think I like her. Oh my god. Read this one."

"I’ve only been with one guy my whole life?"

"Yeah, she read it in a magazine interview, so it must be true."

"I never said that."

"What did you say? Do you remember? I get the feeling these guys remember more than I do. Is that weird?"

"Probably."

"You know what’s really weird?"

"Mmm," she said, not really paying attention to me. I knew I shouldn’t interrupt while she was reading something, because when she really wanted to concentrate she simply shut out the world. This wasn’t anything of earth shattering importance, but Katharine’s preferred method of learning had always been aural rather than visual, because she had learned early on that sometimes her eyes played tricks on her.

"What’s weird is being in bed with a blonde woman sitting on my lap."

"What? Oh. I am not on your lap. I’m just leaning on you. Oh good grief!"

"What? What did you find now?"

"Pictures from that creep who published all that stuff from our day at the beach. You know, during the Idol tour. The guy who caused all the trouble."

"Yeah, Duncan Dimwitz."

"Yeah. I mean—what? Anyway… oh good lord. That looks like a picture of your chest. How did they get something like that?"

"Photoshop. You can do anything."

"They’re fighting about whether they like hairy chests or not. This is bizarre."

"What a way to get your fifteen minutes of fame," I said. "But more to the point, do YOU like them?"

She frowned at me over a shoulder, squeezed one arm between us and rubbed my stomach. "I’d say that’s just about right."

"Well I’m certainly glad we settled that. By the way, are you ever going to take that thing off?"

"Hmmm?"

"The wig. Do I ever get my wife back?"

"Oh, yeah. Whatever you want. Look at this! They’re comparing you to a bunch of ‘Who Has The Best Beach Body?’ shots from Us Weekly." The screen wound its way down. "Oh my god, Christopher, this is, like, totally bizarre. I’m saying the same word over and over. There must be another word. Are my eyes deceiving me or is that six little closeups of swim trunks in a row?"

"Yup," I said, "followed by a poll. I’m sorry I ever brought this up. Let’s shut it down."

"Don’t you want to see if you won?"

"No."

"Well I do. C’mon."

"Can we just stop now, please?"

She seemed about to say something combative, then obviously thought better of it and simply leaned her head back against my shoulder. "Well anyway, I like your beach body," she said.

We put the BlackBerry away and Katharine removed the wig, shaking her head and freeing her hair, which fell down into its normal pattern around her shoulders. "I don’t think I want to do this again," she said, looking at the wig as though it might suddenly come to life, hissing and spitting and doing all manner of unnatural things. "Oh--unless you want me to, of course."

"What do you mean?" I asked, stroking the dark silky strands, feeling a bit grateful for their familiarity. "Fish around online, or wear a wig?"

"Maybe both," she said, and I was struck again by how much younger she looked without makeup. Sometimes I suspected her of being one of those people with a portrait in the attic that grew old and twisted and wrinkled and ravaged while the subject walked around looking like a cameraman’s dream.

 

Rainbowland VIII – See Me, Feel Me, Touch Me, Heal Me

A fantasy that takes place somewhere over the rainbow,
in one of many possible realities involving Katharine McPhee,
her family, friends and fans

 

katpedia.com - watch and listen to Idol, pre-Idol, and post-Idol McPhee performances all in one convenient location

"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
groucho
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13 Feb 2008 04:19 PM  

For some reason my mind reached back to the summer of 2005, to a day when the coincidences had piled up in one of those unlikely heaps that make you wonder if there really is any such thing as a coincidence. We’d all been going to Disney World, until the guy who was supposed to be minding the clinic came down with a raging case of flu and couldn’t get more than ten feet away from a bathroom. So I agreed to sub for him. As I was walking in the door my cell phone began ringing. Perry had had a miracle in the form of his first solid bowel movement in 24 hours and actually felt almost human. He’d known of my plans and didn’t want to take time away from my family, he said. In fact he was in his car on his way in.

Two minutes later his call was followed by one from Katharine, who sounded much less chipper than he did. In fact something in her voice told me that the light tone she was trying to take wasn’t quite in line with the facts. Probably because of the movie Dad, Ajay and I had watched the night before, a vivid image jumped into my mind, and all I could think of was "No, really, Mom, I’m fine. Where am I calling from? Well actually I’m on top of the Empire State Building, sitting in the palm of this giant ape while a couple of biplanes buzz around trying to kill him, and it’s 86 stories down. Aside from that, everything’s just fine." Dad was convinced the original King Kong was one of the greatest movies ever made and had boundless sympathy for its hero. "It wasn’t bullets—it was beauty killed the beast!" he loved to quote. Death in the service and pursuit of Beauty seemed quote honorable to Dad.

Katharine’s beast was a tall, handsome actor with the voice of a fallen angel and about as much moral fiber, to my way of thinking. Our families had gotten together to see one of their performances of Wuthering Heights at the NoHo Arts Center and Peisha and I had managed to sneak in a short conversation about the direction of her daughter’s love life and what she thought of it, which wasn’t much. Although there had been a time when Katharine had fancied me and her mother hadn’t considered me such a great catch, in the face of Robert Landolfi’s shortcomings, I evidently looked a lot better. Actually Peisha and I had come to terms with each other quite awhile back, but at that time neither of us really thought of me in the role I later assumed. Katharine was too young and at least for a time, I was otherwise engaged.

But that was all over now, and I was clawing my way back to sanity and responsibility after spending several months in the same kind of hell Dad had experienced after the death of his wife and child many years earlier. My loss hadn’t been of nearly that magnitude, objectively speaking, but who can be objective when they’re in pain? I was functional during the daytime, but as soon as I hit the boundaries of my own little world, I shut the door, turned on the tv, and started drinking. As long as I was being useful, I was fine. If I’d had to explain it, I would have said only the grace of God kept my head clear and my hands steady at work. By Friday night, I would be a wreck. I would yank myself back to sanity Saturday afternoon in time to stumble off to karate with my son, then go to church with the family on Sunday morning, and do a good imitation of a normal human being for a few hours. Then I’d start over again.

One afternoon after fellowship hour, I was the last one out the door and lingered awhile to look at the lobby painting of Jesus and his flock of sheep. I’ve never been much for theology, but I would sometimes bring questions with me into that quiet, peaceful place, and pretend I was talking to the guy who looked so comfortable with the lamb draped around his neck, because that was someone I could understand and relate to. It worked surprisingly well. "How much longer am I going to feel like this?" I asked. "When’s it going to get better?"

I can’t say I actually heard words, but I certainly had a strong feeling that it would last until something else made me hurt worse. Then I looked up and saw Ajay standing outside the glass entry door and took careful notice of the look on his face. "You’re such a nitwit," I said to myself. "Remember how you felt when you watched your dad drinking himself to death? Look at your kid. He’s learning how to deal with his life by watching you."

That night I called Al Lowengard, who had mentored my dad through his earlier rebirth back into the human race, and talked and talked and talked. I suppose I could have talked to Dad, but something in me didn’t want to make him revisit his own dark time. So from then on, every time I felt like reaching for a bottle, I reached for the phone instead.

Now there was someone on my phone whose voice had that same hollow sound mine used to have, and I realized that something must have gone terribly wrong with Katharine and her Heathcliff.

My parents’ house was empty for the day, so we met there, and sat on the floor eating pizza and talking, and every so often she’d stop and cry, and then we’d listen to a little more Ella or Sinatra or even some incredibly old show tunes of Dad’s, and she’d get tickled at me when I’d try to sing along with Gordon Macrae, or dance around the room bawling "As we are drinking, merrily drinking, who could be thinking who we are?"

"Helluva lot of drinking songs in these old Broadway shows," I’d said.

"Yeah, we were better off with A Tisket, A Tasket. Why is your cat butting its head against you like that?"

"She wants attention. Here, this’ll make her happy." I started scratching Carmen behind the ears, then worked my way down her back. As I neared her tail, she leaned forward and stuck her behind up at an angle.

"What is she doing?"

"Well, this may sound a little gross, but I think she’s doing what they call presenting. It’s kind of an instinct. It’s like an invitation to a tomcat."

"Is that her making all that noise?"

"Maine Coons are big kitties. They purr like buzzsaws."

Katharine wiped pizza residue off her hands and stretched. "I think your cat’s in love with you."

"She just likes having her back scratched."

"I think it’s more than that."

"Well, I’ll tell you a little secret about me. Sometimes at work we get animals that are so skittery nobody wants to go near them, so I always get the job. All I do is talk to them, then I pet them a little, and pretty soon we’re friends. Then they can get them x-rayed or anesthetized or whatever they need. It’s tricky trying to approach a creature that’s in pain, you know."

"Yeah, I’ll bet," she said, her eyes never leaving mine. "Pain can make you kind of crazy."

"And you want to bite."

"Or eat."

"Or drink."

"Chris? Will you do something for me?"

"Sure," I said. "If I can."

"You can." I waited for the rest of it. She gnawed on her lower lip and then said simply "Touch me."

See me, feel me, touch me, heal me. I didn’t know if I could do it, but it didn’t occur to me to say no.

We’d had our encounters before, and her response had been everywhere from hesitance to a more joyous abandon the times when we’d been separated by miles and months when she was in Boston. But this was different. She was different physically and every other way, and back to her former hesitance, because she didn’t look quite like the girl she’d been even a year ago. And she’d just been badly handled by someone and was in need of reassurance

And my body picked just that moment to betray me. Right when I most needed it to be a raging, hormone driven monster that would trample pitilessly over any feminine protests, it insisted on being nothing more than, well, a body. It didn’t take her long to figure out that I wasn’t all there. We’d been together before, she knew more or less how I operated, and this time, something just wasn’t operating right. She was devastated and could not hold back the tears.

"Oh, crap, don’t cry. C’mon, Sweetie, don’t do that. Please. Don’t cry." I babbled a stream of meaningless endearments and encouragement. Anything that rolled out of my mouth. "It’s not you, Sweetie. It’s not you. Honest to God. It’s me. It’s the friggin’ booze. It’s been doing this to me. You know I can’t drink. I swear to God, lately, you could plop me down in the midst of a harem full of naked showgirls all feeding me grapes and calling me darlin’ and it wouldn’t get much more out of me than a yawn. Look at me. I’m not lying just to make you feel better. I swear to God I’m not."

She smiled, which I figured was a good thing, sniffed, and reached over and patted me on the cheek. "Most guys would rather die than admit something like that about themselves," she said. "But with you, who knows? It’s just so sweet of you to want to spare my feelings."

"But I don’t want to spare you," I said. "I’d really rather—hell, I don’t know what I want to do. Except make you feel better. A lot better. And you know I can do that."

"I know," she said. "But it’s not my body that’s having the problem."

"I know that," I said, "but it’s a place to start."

So I decided I just wouldn’t worry about being passionate, I would just concentrate on being loving. And I did love her, always had, even if I was frequently unsure of the nature of the love. Or maybe that didn’t even matter. I found so many warm, soft places to kiss that nothing else seemed important. She welcomed me into all of them and guided me with movements or sounds or maybe we just read each others’ minds. Sometimes having a history with someone comes in very handy.

Afterwards I crawled up and put my mouth next to her ear. "Hey, guess what?" I said. "I think we had a miracle. My hydraulic system seems to be working again." I moved just enough to illustrate my point.

"You have the strangest way of putting things," she said with a little laugh. "But you know what? I do feel better. And I don’t mean that. Well, not entirely anyway."

"I am the magic man," I said. "I’m the one, I’m the one, the one they call The Seventh Son. Now is it my turn?"

"You bet."

"Okay. Turn over."

"What?"

"You heard me."

"No. Just come here."

She tried to put her arms around me but I sat up, shaking my head. "I’m having a notion. Indulge me."

"You can’t cure all my phobias at once," she said.

"Somebody said something to you, didn’t they?" I said, and I knew, as surely as I knew anything. "Was it Broadway Bob? Was that part of the fun of breaking up?"

"Don’t spoil this," she said, so low I almost couldn’t hear her. "Please. I don’t want to think about him."

"That’s what I’m trying to do," I said. "Whatever bad stuff got put in your head, I want to erase it. No, not erase, replace it. So you can think about him without it hurting so much. I won’t take no for an answer. Now do as I say before I get mean."

That made her laugh again. "Oh, I’ve got a picture of that. You scare me to death."

"Then do it," I said, and before she could protest again, I simply rolled her over, reached under her, and pulled her up. By that time she’d decided to cooperate, so it got easier. I’d been telling the truth, it had been awhile since anything like this had worked very well, and soon, except for my knees, my body was happier than it had been for quite some time. "Oh lord, that was great," I whispered, because my voice wasn’t quite there.

She looked over her shoulder at me. "Your list of favorite body parts must have changed. What happened?"

"I can appreciate different parts of you."

"Even the fat ones?"

"Don’t talk about yourself like that," I said. "I wouldn’t let anybody else do it, and you can’t either."

"Well—"

"Well nothing. There’s nothing wrong with you." To illustrate my point, I leaned up, stroking her back as I did, then leaned over and kissed her right on the bottom, which made her dissolve into a fit of giggles. "Sounds like you’re feeling better," I said.

We got ourselves straightened up and then just sat there on the floor, grinning at each other and pretending to fight over the last piece of pizza. "When’s the family due home?" she asked.

"Not sure. Glad they didn’t decide to come home early, though. Oh frack. I wasn’t quite prepared for that to happen, and I don’t think you were either. This isn’t gonna come back and bite us both in the butt, is it?"

"You’ve got butts on the brain today," she said, starting to laugh again.

"You know what I mean."

"I know. I probably should be more concerned than I am, but I don’t think the timing’s right."

"What if you’re wrong?"

"I’ll deal with that when it happens. I don’t think it’s gonna happen."

"Stay here and spend the day with me," I said, needing to change the subject to something I could handle. "We’ll think of something to do. Then tonight Ajay can tell you all about Disney World."

"You know what I’d like to do?"

"Can’t imagine."

"Could we go visit the clinic? I’d like to see where you work."

"Really? Well, just remember, there’s a lot of sick and battered little critters there, plus the boarders, who may just be lonesome for home but they can get pitiful too. You know how you get with animals."

Saturdays were always busy and Perry Wheeler was glad of the help. He was young but a permanent member of the staff, whereas Dr. Mackey, although older and more experienced, just helped out at peak times. Sometimes that caused a bit of friction, which I was usually able to help smooth over. Katharine had a way with animals and was able to help out the vet techs as they did routine maintenance, clipping claws and administering vaccines. She seemed to be enjoying herself immensely. "Starting to think you missed your true calling?" I teased.

"Maybe. But I don’t think I’m ready to give up yet."

We left before closing time and went back to my apartment, where it came out that Katharine had been having notions about the American Idol auditions. But that would mean getting to San Francisco and possibly spending some time there. She wasn’t quite sure how that would work.

"I may have an idea," I said. "May. Not sure. If you wouldn’t mind some company."

"Mind? Are you kidding?" We were having a pig-out day and were sitting in my tiny breakfast nook spooning down a slushy mixture of chocolate and butter pecan ice cream. She licked her spoon and waved it triumphantly at me. "Are you talking about yourself?"

"Well, yeah. My stepmom’s son lives there and might be able to put up with us for a few days. I’d have to check it out. Uh, he’s an artist and lives with this guy who’s kind of a cut-throat lawyer, but he’s a nut job for their two little dachshunds. I think that’s why Ildie likes him, because they’re just alike. She teases Mike by singing him a chorus of ‘I want a guy just like the girl who married dear old dad.’ In fact when Jenna dumped me, she told me it was probably too much to expect that both of her boys would find a nice lawyer to marry."

"Ildie’s such a character. I know she loves you, but you just never know what’s going to come out of her mouth."

"Yeah, kinda like someone else I know."

"Oh, shut up. Is Mike the skinny dark-haired guy in some of the pictures I saw at your folks’ house?"

"Yeah, and the big beefy blond guy is Loren, her son-in-law. Or something. Hell, I don’t know what’s politically correct."

"Me neither. Oh well. You think they’d have room for us?"

"Sure, they’ve got a big house with space for two dogs. You ever seen a long-haired dachshund?"

"Didn’t know there was such a thing."

"There is. Stick with me, kid. There’s no end to what you might learn."

She wound up spending the night and we learned that my hydraulics were well on their way to recovery. But I couldn’t promise her much more than that. Not at that point in time. Fragile as we both were, we still managed to have a pretty sane, although short, discussion about the people who had been the source of our distress.

Jenna, I deduced, might never trust any living creature with fewer than four legs and would never let anyone in as far as I needed to be. My problem was that I couldn’t stop imagining the two of us in the kind of relationship Dad and Ildie had. But my stepmom had been to the Emerald City and found a heart, which worked very well after she’d set her axe down and settled into the rest of her life outside the courtroom. Jenna, evidently, had not, but some dreams die hard. And Robert’s only feature that outstripped his ego was his temper.

"Sometimes he actually scared me," she said, snuggling up closer to me in bed. " I mean, he would just get this look in his eyes and you could almost see yourself sailing through the air."

"He ever hurt you?"

"No, not really. Mostly just scared me. Anything could set him off. I think that’s what they call being mercurial."

"That’s what I call being an asshole. You needed me to put a few good moves on him. Kick him a good one in the kneecap, maybe. ‘If a man can’t stand, a man can’t fight,’ " I said in my best Sam Elliott imitation, which wasn’t easy because I don’t have anything like his burry, rumbling voice.

"Roadhouse!" she said gleefully. "I loved that movie, except for the violent parts. Patrick Swayze was so gorgeous."

"Roadhouse indeed. Sweetie, if anybody ever hurts you, don’t tell me unless you’re giving me permission to kill them, okay?"

She gave a big sigh. "You know what you sound like? Big Brother to the rescue. You just can’t get over that, can you?"

I waited far too long to answer. So I tried to put a little different spin on it. "Look at it like this. I’m still kind of in a damaged condition, you might say. There’s just not enough of me to give somebody else and feel like it’s a fair trade."

"Okay. I’ve got it."

The way she said that made my semi-healed heart want to break all over again. "I’m here, I’ll always be here. You’ll always have a part of my heart that no one else can claim. That’s all I’ve got to give right now."

"What part?"

"Uh… left ventricle? Okay, okay…"

She leaned over, kissed me on the cheek and said "I know I can always count on you, but I also know that I have to learn to handle stuff myself. I just don’t know how yet. But I can’t always run to you. I’ve got stuff to think out , and I think maybe I really need to talk to Mom. You remember what happened when I saw you at the pool party? I’d just come home and told my folks I wasn’t going back to school, and you can imagine how happy they were about that, and I had all these big ideas about how I was going to get some acting cred and break into the movies… Well, that didn’t go so well, and then there was you."

"What do you mean by that?"

"Well, my last semester in school you might say I kind of majored in boys, because I finally started taking you seriously. You were with Jenna and you’d turned me loose on the world and I was supposed to go break hearts and make you proud, right?"

"Well, I wouldn’t put it like—"

"But it didn’t work, because I didn’t give a hoot about them. And then all those casting directors didn’t give a hoot about me. And then you showed up at that party and that was all I needed. No wonder I went off and barfed my guts out. By the way, where was Jenna? Why didn’t she come with you?"

"Didn’t feel like hanging around with a bunch of veterinarians, I guess. Even rich ones like Al. Are you telling me you didn’t just come home to go on auditions?"

"You got it. I figured I might not have much of a chance with you, but I had none at all if I was in Boston and you were in L.A."

"And then along came Mr. Broadway?"

"Yup. And at first he was just so nice, and so attentive. I just ate it up. Of course I didn’t realize how quick he got bored with women or that he picked a new one every show he was in."

"Aw, Chickie… I just keep letting you down, don’t I?"

"No," she said quickly. "No, not at all. You keep picking me up. And I’ve got to stop letting you do that. I have to learn how to help myself." Maybe it was the background music that got her to feeling reflective, although I’m not sure why an old remastered version of Rise Steven’s Carmen would do that. "I just had the weirdest thought. About us."

"Well, spill it."

"It’s like we were both trying to stop from bleeding to death, so we just got close and bled into each other for awhile. That sounds yucky, but you know what? It fits. And it kinda worked, but I don’t know if it’s very healthy for us in the long run." She wiggled around until we were sort of perpendicular to each other with her knees pulled up and her head propped up against my chest, which she rubbed idly as she talked. It seemed to give her an odd kind of comfort, sort of like petting a cat. "You know, it’s easy to tell when I’ve been spending a lot of time around you. I start thinking like you and talking like you."

"Is that bad?"

"With you? No. I just have to be careful what I’m absorbing from who."

"You mean the old ‘I’ll be anything you want me to be’ syndrome?"

"Well, I sure learned a lot about football when I was dating a Notre Dame Knight."

I had to chuckle at that one. "Is that why you wanted to visit the clinic? To impress me?"

"No, you know I’ve always loved animals."

"You’re telling me the chicken came before the egg on that one."

"More like the family dog came before the veterinarian. But we’re still going to San Francisco, right?"

She’d obviously had enough of revelations for one day so I just let it drop."If I can arrange it."

Of course I did, and the rest is history.

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13 Feb 2008 04:20 PM  

The weekend was wonderful, the hotel staff treated us like royalty, and even being recognized by a few fans turned into more of a plus than a minus. We arrived home to find Dad and Kaycee sitting on the floor playing some kind of card game, which I’m sure was being made up from moment to moment, but that didn’t seem to keep either of them from enjoying it. "I got trumps!" she announced, throwing down several cards and raking in an even bigger pile of them. "I win!"

"How much?"

"Two dollars!"

"Fair enough," Dad said, digging in his wallet, but his debts were forgotten in the excitement when she discovered that we were home.

"You can pay her later," I said, peeling Kaycee off my leg so I could pick her up.

"Knowing her, she’ll be keeping track of every penny," Katharine said. "By the way, didn’t you leave with someone else? I mean Ildie did."

"They decided to swap," Dad said with a shrug that indicated plainly that he had no idea why womenfolk did a lot of what they did, but it was okay with him. "I think they figured it would be good to stop borrowing the kid that looked like the one they raised and just have a little variety. Well, that’s not quite how it was with Ildie, but you know what I mean."

"Me and Grampa had a date last night," Kaycee said proudly. "We went out to a restaurant! By ourselves!"

Peisha arrived shortly with Pookie in tow. "We have something to show you," she said, sounding somewhat conspiratorial. "You’re not going to believe this. We’re going to need the piano. Now if this little squirt decides to make a liar out of me--"

"I’m almost afraid to ask," Katharine said.

"Don’t ask, just listen," Peisha said, seating herself at the piano with Pookie on her lap, which seemed a bit awkward, but what did I know. She played a few chords of a When You Wish Upon A Star. "Okay, Little Miss, are you going to do your trick for Mom and Dad?"

Pookie kicked her feet and remained silent.

"I guess I’ll have to jump start her," Peisha said, and began singing. Pookie began humming along with her, then singing nonsense syllables perfectly in tune. I looked at Katharine and raised my eyebrows at her in a silent comment. She did the same back at me. Then my mouth dropped open as words began emerging from that little mouth that had, to date, not had much of a relationship with language at all, to the point where her mother was starting to worry about her.

I thought I was going to burst out laughing at some of the mispronunciations—you have to admit, the notion of weeing on a star is rather comical—but then realized I had tears in my eyes. The little silent child, who would occasionally come up with one word, and that usually accompanied by some kind of gesture, like the semi-language of the tribe in Clan of the Cave Bear, was actually singing a song—not every word, but to hear her actually articulating two or three lines was almost overwhelming.

Katharine had her hands up to her face like someone miming Home Alone in a game of charades. I heard a muffled "Oh my god" emerging from behind the hands. "Mom, how did you get her to do that?"

"I didn’t," Peisha said. "She just started doing it, like she did just now. Humming, singing la-la-la’s, and then making words. I didn’t really do a thing. She was just ready, I suppose."

"Well," I said, "now we have to find out if she’s going to talk or just sing to us."

"The two skills do operate rather independently of each other," Peisha said.

"Like with that fellow who had a bad stutter when he talked but sang perfectly," Katharine said.

"Mel Tillis," Peisha said. "I guess we’ll just have to wait and see. But it’s a start."

"I can do that," Kaycee insisted. I guess golden moments aren’t supposed to last too long.

"I know you can, Sweetpea," I said. "But Pookie couldn’t until now. We’re just surprised."

Sensing trouble brewing, Peisha said, "You know what I think? I’m just thinking it might be time for somebody to start having some piano lessons. What do you think, Mom?"

Katharine sniffed and took a deep breath. "I can tell you’ve been through this before," she said. "I think that sounds like an A-number-one idea. What do you think, Kaycee?"

"You mean me? I’m somebody?"

"Yes, you," Peisha said. "To start with, we’ll have to get together and find you a keyboard that’s the right size for your hands."

Kaycee was fairly bouncing out of my arms. "Yay, yay, yay! I’m gonna play piano!"

"Pay pano," Pookie said softly, laying her head back and looking up at Peisha.

"Damn," Dad said, "now all we need is for somebody to say ‘God bless us everyone!’ "

That struck us all funny, because my dad is the furthest thing from a cynic I could ever imagine. Still, every life, even the bleakest, has a few of those moments here and there where it seems like a dream has come true. Mine has had more than a few. And I don’t even remember wishing on a star.

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"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
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13 Feb 2008 04:29 PM  

I FORGOT TO WRITE "THE END" AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PREVIOUS POST. AND I CANNOT GET THE TEXT TO STOP JUMPING AROUND IN THE FIRST PART OF THE STORY, SO THE TITLE APPEARS AT THE END OF THE POST.

Just for the record, in story #7, when they first meet, Chris is in highschool, so he's 8 years older than her. If anybody was wondering.

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"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
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17 Feb 2008 05:32 PM  

You posted it!  Yay!  At least it got to be in its proper home.  I hope whoever is out there that used to read these hasn't forgotten about this folder.

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19 Feb 2008 06:54 PM  
well, I posted a little reminder in the Chat folder, but people will get here if they feel like it. Things are a little slow in reality right now so I thought this might be a good time to inject a note of unreality.

By the way, I invite comments, even if someone has a bone to pick. F'rinstance, since writing the first one of these, I decided there was no way she would have gone off to NYC without her kids, no matter what, so the entire premise of that story was faulty. But too late, it's done now. I was almost surprised that no one ever mentioned that. I guess people just get in and go with the flow, which is okay too. They're meant to be enjoyed.
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"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
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19 Jun 2008 09:24 PM  
Yay! I haven't been on here for a while, but I came straight to look if there was any new ones...took me a little bit to find the folder again, but yay! I love your stories.
Kat Pack #1422

Kat's Comment to me:

"Lauren,
don't worry about your gift and not getting on time. That is sooo sweet but you didn't have to do that. I really appreciate it. I read your comment and it really touched me. I'm happy you enjoyed your first season of Idol. I mostly thank you for all your support. It means more than anything. I just love that people are enjoying the music. Keep in touch and thanks again. Cute page too!
kat"

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20 Jun 2008 06:31 PM  
Glad you enjoy the series. The next one is underway but reality keeps getting in the way, to the tune of getting house repairs done and a lot of other nonsense... In #9, the reader is bouncing between the present, where Pookie is a few months past where we left her in #8, and the future, where she's all grown up and a budding rock star who is going to play a club called P3 in San Francisco, which will mean something to any Charmed aficionados in the audience.
katpedia.com - watch and listen to Idol, pre-Idol, and post-Idol McPhee performances all in one convenient location

"And everything around her is a silver pool of light... She makes you calm, she holds you captivated in her palm"
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01 Jul 2009 02:55 PM  
I'll be heading to that story in oh... about 3 mins. lol. First, in your stories you almost always have something that applies to me but is kind of unknown to other people, which is really cool. The Selena song reference in I think it was #5 and now P3 from Charmed! yayyyy! =D Ok, going to read #9 now!
Kat Pack #1422

Kat's Comment to me:

"Lauren,
don't worry about your gift and not getting on time. That is sooo sweet but you didn't have to do that. I really appreciate it. I read your comment and it really touched me. I'm happy you enjoyed your first season of Idol. I mostly thank you for all your support. It means more than anything. I just love that people are enjoying the music. Keep in touch and thanks again. Cute page too!
kat"

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