Angelina Bonaparte Mysteries Box Set by Nanci Rathbun (reading books for 4 year olds txt) π

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- Author: Nanci Rathbun
Read book online Β«Angelina Bonaparte Mysteries Box Set by Nanci Rathbun (reading books for 4 year olds txt) πΒ». Author - Nanci Rathbun
At my elbow, a waiter asked, βWine, maβam?β I nodded and he filled my glass. My kids know how I hate being called βmaβam.β David grinned at me from across the table, and I saw a tiny movement of the tablecloth that made me think Elaine poked him.
The meal was served, chicken marsala with rice and veggies. Not the best, but at least it was hot. Papa asked Kevin what he did for a living, and was suitably impressed to find out that his PT work involved a lot of the families in the room. Score points for our side. Emma and Elaine began a side conversation about school starting and how glad theyβd be to have a momentβs peace at home. I smiled, remembering Emma as a little girl, whining at me through the last weeks of summerββIβm bored.β Emma and John have little Angela, now eight and the apple of my eye. David and Elaine have ten-year-old twin boys, Patrick (the Anglicized form of Pasquale, for my dad) and Donald (for Elaineβs dad). Those two are holy terrors. What one doesnβt come up with, the other one does. Itβs only fair, though, since David ran me ragged all through high school. The parentsβ curse, that you should have a child just like yourself, certainly came back to haunt him.
As we chatted about the start of school and shopping for school clothes, shoes and supplies, I caught Kevin watching me. βMy grandkids,β I said, defiant.
βI figured,β he replied. Then he leaned over to reach the basket of rolls, put his lips to my ear, and whispered, βDid you get married at fifteen?β
βBless you,β was all I could say. After all, at thirty-eight, he was closer to my kidsβ age than to mine.
As coffee and dessert were served, the lights dimmed and the speeches began. First, a nationally-produced film on the work of the Muscular Dystrophy Association, with stories guaranteed to evoke a tear. Then a speaker from the local chapter, who spoke of the higher prevalence of the disease as one moves away from the equator, and among women, and among those aged twenty to fifty. Of the difficulty in diagnosing. Of the limited treatment options. And lastly, the stories of families living with the disease and not only surviving, but thriving in love. I dabbed surreptitiously at my eyes, careful not to smear my mascara. I didnβt want to look like a raccoon when the lights came up.
The band was well-known locally, a staple of the lakefront festivals and clubs. They started out with an old Sinatra tune, βIβll See You in My Dreams.β Before Kevin had a chance to ask, Papa rose and held out his hand to me. Ever the gentleman, he extracted a clean white linen hanky from his breast pocket and draped it carefully across his right hand so that, as we danced, he wouldnβt contact my bare back. We swung into a slow rhythm. I remembered him dancing with me as a toddler, my stockinged feet perched on the tops of his wing-tips as he moved across the living room floor. I think my mama was still alive then, for I can vaguely hear her laugh, soft and melodious, as she clapped her hands.
βSo, Angelina, you like this man?β Papaβs question interrupted my reverie.
βHeβs a nice guy, Papa. Yes, I like him.β
βBut heβs not the one for you, Angel.β Papa shook his head. βYou need a man you can respect, who wonβt back down and let you have your way.β
I leaned back slightly and looked Papa in the face. βKevin and I have had no major disagreements yet. Maybe he wonβt back down. And anyway, whatβs wrong with a woman getting her way, sometimes?β
He just shook his head.
Itβs hard for a woman born in the fifties and raised pre-Friedan to navigate the post-feminist waters. I often feel like I have a foot in both camps and no real place to rest in either one. The Eisenhower-era family standards that I was raised with betrayed me, but I wasnβt able to shake them entirely. Papa knew.
It turned into a pleasant evening, dancing with Kevin and Papa and Fausto, with David and John, with friends and acquaintances. I let myself enjoy and refused to contemplate what might happen later. When Terry headed for the ladiesβ room, I grabbed my bag and followed her. In the hallway, I stopped her and asked, βSo, Aunt Terry, whatβs up with Fausto? Anything you want to tell me? Or ask?β
Emma rounded the corner and joined us.βYeah, Aunt Terry, you secretive little devil. How come you never told us you were dating?β
She blushed and stammered and finally came out with, βWeβve only been out once before. For a drink.β
Blu, I thought.
βWhat do you think of him?β she asked.
Emma and I exchanged glances. βWell,β I started, βhe seems nice. Polite. Do you like him? Thatβs whatβs important.β
βI honestly donβt know,β she admitted. βI havenβt been on a date for fifty years. I donβt know how to do this.β Her voice rose and she sounded like she was starting to panic.
I took her hand and patted it, and Emma put an arm around her shoulders. βJust take it slow, Terry. At your own pace. If you feel like seeing him, good. If you donβt, tell him βnot today.β He needs to respect your wishes in this matter.β I was sounding like Papa, lecturing me as a teenager. βHave you known him long?β
βHis wife, Maria, and I went to school together. Heβs a little older. Maria died two years ago, and I think heβs lonely. But honestly, Angie, Emma, I donβt know if I want to change my life like this. I donβt know if Iβm up to it.β She looked at me for reassurance.
βAny woman who can run Papaβs house and manage a teenaged rebel like me, and walk with Father Groppi in civil rights marches, and teach literacy and raise money for the retired
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