Icing On The Cake. Laura Castoro

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you say it was business I want you to know I took a whole day to sightsee.”

      “Mom, that was four years ago and you were scoping out relocation sites in case you went into merger with that Savannah frozen-dough plant.” Sarah reaches out to touch my arm. “I’m sorry if it’s still a sore subject.”

      “Just because they backed out on the deal without even a discussion? Of course not.”

      Out of habit I break the roll open with a thumb through the crust, expecting a moist but lightly risen center. Instead it’s damply dense. Clearly, it baked at too high a temperature and without enough moisture.

      Disappointed, I lay it aside. “Okay, so I don’t do down time well. What’s the issue?”

      “Let’s see. Health? Mental regeneration? Health? Refreshment of the soul? Health? A social life? Health?”

      “Enough with the health. My doctor says I’m fine.”

      “Really? When was the last time you saw a doctor?”

      I look up as a waiter puts my order before me, hoping to avoid the trap I dug myself by mentioning my doctor. I’ve canceled my yearly checkup three times in a row. With my small-business insurance, I need to be deathly ill to be covered.

      “Look, sweetie. I do appreciate your concern but I’m doing fine.”

      “What’s this you’re eating, Mom?” Sarah picks up half of my sandwich and lifts a brow. “Is that pork?”

      “It’s an Italian roast pork panini with organic basil pesto. Organic, get it?”

      She shudders delicately and puts it down. “At your age, pork should be a rare indulgence, not a midweek lunch.”

      I hunker down in my chair as she forks the first portion of her field greens salad. “I don’t eat this sort of thing often. This just sounded good and—”

      “—I’m tired and wanted to give myself a little pick-me-up,” she finishes for me. “I know that speech, Mom. You’ve used it all my life. For chocolate. For ice cream.” Sarah shakes her head. “You’re in need of far too many pick-me-ups lately.”

      I gaze longingly at the lovely pork sandwich I was relishing, get instead a mental picture of myself in paper-towel bikini, and put it down. “Fine. No pork.” I snap my fingers to gain the attention of the waitress nearby. “Bring me a field greens salad. No dressing.” I turn back to Sarah. “Happy now?”

      Sarah reaches to squeeze my hand. “You don’t have to tell me. I know it’s got to be hard, with Dad and Brandi announcing that they’re trying to have a baby.”

      “Baby! Baby?”

      Now it’s Sarah’s turn to look stricken. “I thought you knew. Oh, Mom, Brandi called me last week. She’s always wanted a child…. Oh, damn!”

      “No, it’s fine.” I reach for my pork sandwich, the indulgence of which has just been justified by Sarah’s revelation. “What’s the big deal, right?”

      Sarah leans forward. “I’m so sorry, Mom. She said Dad would call you before they left for their vacation in New Mexico. I should have broached the news more gently.”

      I wonder if news of this sort has a gentle approach.

      A sudden too-tight sensation of warmth flames up inside me. Fricking great! A hot-flash reminder that I’m rapidly leaving the baby-maker category she’s snugly in the middle of.

      As I reach for my water I notice Sarah chewing her lip. “How upset are you?”

      She shrugs. “I’m grown. What’s another family member, more or less?”

      “And Riley?”

      “Riley’s being Riley.”

      Which means Riley is furious. So, on to the next bit of family news. “Dating anyone?”

      “Sort of.” Sarah frowns but says nothing as I pick up my sandwich again. “He’s a commodities dealer for the state of Montana.” Her shy smile says volumes that I’m not suppose to comment on. “At the moment he’s in Great Falls for a grain growers meeting.”

      “Interesting. And Riley?”

      Sarah rolls her eyes.

      Unlike her sister, who vets men as if she were trying to buy a condo on the Upper East Side, Riley’s man-radar tracks exclusively for Mr. Wrong. No matter their backgrounds, the men in Riley’s life are inevitably the same: emotionally unavailable, self-centered and generally relationship-phobic. She says nice men are boring. I say relationships shouldn’t have to end with dramatic statements like “Come near me again and I’ll set your hair on fire!” That one was aimed at a Goth high school boyfriend with skin the color of an altar candle and black hair that looked like an untwisted wick.

      I tell her there are other types of men out there. I hope she will eventually discover this the way she discovered that a pierced tongue wasn’t worth the cost of repairing the shattered enamel of her teeth.

      “What’s wrong with Riley’s new man?”

      “He’s an ex-con.”

      I inhale for a big whaaaat? But the exhale never comes. In fact, the involuntary inhale seems to have sucked in more than a breath. That bite of pork panini has gone down the tube, my breathing tube to be exact.

      A bit of pandemonium ensues while I’m slapped on the back by my daughter and then the nearest male waiter subjects me to the very undignified Heimlich. Thankfully the sandwich dislodges after only one try, and I’m left gasping and red-faced but generally okay.

      Wiping my streaming eyes, I take my seat and then manage to rasp out, “I guess you were right about pork being a killer.”

      Sarah nods, her smile only at half power, and reaches for her ringing phone.

      “Hello?” Her expression goes strange, her face gray, in response to whatever she hears.

      Instantly, I know it’s not good. Without a word she jerks the phone from her ear and holds it out to me. “Oh, Mom!”

      I take it, certain it’s Riley in some sort of jam, again.

      But it’s her, Brandi with a over the i, hysterical on the other end of a lousy-reception cell phone call.

      “It’s Ted—Oh, God! He like—fell!” That’s all I hear before the connection is lost.

      

      Ted’s funeral was yesterday. I went. I owed him that much. And my girls needed me. Riley and Sarah each clutched an arm so tight the circulation all but stopped in my fingers. She was there, of course, the center of all the attention in a broad-brim hat and veil as she sobbed softly into a monogrammed handkerchief during the service. We were relegated to bystander status. This, when you think of it, Is our fate since the divorce. We are part of the past life of a passed life.

      We didn’t really exchange words with her. Okay, I admit that I did find myself

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