Monkey Wrench. Nancy Martin
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With a guilty pang, Susannah held her grandmother’s hand a little longer. “I’ll be back on Christmas Day, Granny Rose. I just won’t be here for all the parties beforehand.”
“Not even for your birthday?”
Susannah’s birthday fell just a week before Christmas and had been the family excuse for a large pre-Christmas gathering ever since Susannah was born. The famous Atkins party was one of the social events of the season for the whole town of Tyler.
“I can’t celebrate with you this year, I’m sorry.” Hearing the wistful note in Rose’s voice caused Susannah’s heart to ache, but she said, “Roger bought the tickets, you see, without remembering my usual plans to be in Tyler for the week before Christmas. I hated to disappoint him, Granny Rose.”
“Why? He disappoints you all the time.” Rose released Susannah’s hand and returned to the stove.
“He doesn’t mean to disappoint me. He’s just forgetful. He’s a busy man.”
“Too busy to be kind?” Rose sent her a short-tempered frown.
“I won’t defend Roger today,” Susannah said patiently, having endured Rose’s low opinion of Roger Selby for a long time. “Roger and I understand each other, and that’s what matters. Subject closed. I’d rather hear about you.”
“I’m fine,” Rose said at once, spooning cocoa into a saucepan full of milk.
“Joe says—”
“Oh, what does Joe know? I had a little episode, that’s all.”
“An episode?” Susannah echoed. “That sounds like a euphemism for something very bad.”
“It wasn’t.” Rose shook a dash of cinnamon into the warming milk and reached for the bottle of vanilla from the open shelf over her head. “I just...I didn’t feel well for a couple of hours. Maybe it was the flu.”
“What happened, exactly?”
“I felt light-headed. Then, I...well, all right, I admit I blacked out.”
“Good heavens! That’s more than the flu!”
“Joe was here,” Rose said hastily. “So I wasn’t alone. It hasn’t happened again. I’m fine now.”
Her concern heightened, Susannah asked, “But what caused it? Have you been taking your blood-pressure medicine?”
Rose flipped her hand. “Off and on. When I need it.”
“Granny Rose!” Truly angry, Susannah rapped the table with her knuckles. “You’re supposed to take that medication regularly! It’s not something you pop into your system now and then—”
“I’ve been feeling well without it.”
“When was the last time you saw your doctor?”
“I have an appointment scheduled in January.”
“That’s not answering my question. When was the last time?”
Rose didn’t respond, pretending to concentrate on the seemingly intricate task of stirring hot cocoa with the long-handled spoon. Frustrated, Susannah leaned forward on her elbows, trying to think of a way to force her grandmother to take care of herself. It seemed very odd, though, for Rose had been Susannah’s parent for most of her life. To reverse roles and become her grandmother’s caretaker felt...well, presumptuous. Until now, Rose had been perfectly capable of taking care of herself. What right did Susannah have to march in and take over?
“Look,” Susannah said, endeavoring to keep her voice steady, “it’s not my place to order you around. You’re a grown woman with common sense, and you know you should take your medicine and see your doctor regularly. But for some reason you’re not taking care of yourself, Granny Rose. That upsets me.”
Impatiently, Rose said, “I promise to see Dr. Phelps after Christmas.”
“Why not immediately? I’m sure he’d squeeze you into his schedule right this minute if—”
“I don’t need to see him now.”
“But if—”
“I’m fine, and that’s final! Go on your vacation and have a wonderful time, Susannah. After Christmas, you can come see Dr. Phelps with me, if you’re still upset. But I’m not going to budge until then, do you hear me? I’m fine!”
Susannah glared at her grandmother’s turned back. “Granny Rose, are you afraid you’ll spoil my silly vacation if you’re sick?”
Rose was saved from answering that question. A thump sounded on the stairs, and a lofty baritone voice carried to the women in the kitchen, singing, “‘Angels we have heard on high, sweetly singing o’er the plain....”’
Then Joe appeared, filling the kitchen doorway with his tall frame and broad shoulders. His gaze traveled swiftly to Susannah, and he lifted his brows as if to ask how everything was going. Susannah frowned and shook her head.
Rose turned from the stove. “You don’t look much like an angel, Joe, but you can sing like one. Want a cookie?”
“As many as you can spare,” he said cheerfully.
“Sit down, then. This cocoa is almost ready.”
“Smells great.”
Joe eased his body into the wooden chair opposite Susannah’s, and he continued to watch her face while Rose’s back was turned. “So,” he said, “you two get everything worked out?”
“Yes,” said Rose.
“No,” said Susannah dourly.
“That’s what I like to hear,” Joe responded, reaching a long arm to snatch a cookie off the nearby countertop. “Détente, right?”
“The matter is closed,” Rose said with authority. “Now we’re free to talk about you two.”
“There’s nothing to talk about, Granny Rose.” Susannah glowered at Joe, who grinned back at her before taking a sizable chomp out of his cookie. “Nothing whatever.”
“There certainly is, dear. Given a chance, you and Joe might really hit it off.”
To Joe, Susannah said, “She’s just doing this so we’ll leave her alone about her health. I don’t know why she feels she needs to matchmake for me. I’m very busy in Milwaukee.”
“Not the right kind of busy,” Rose said. “Have you ever seen her show, Joe? It’s really wonderful. Last week, Suzie showed how to make Christmas wreaths out of corn husks, how to roast a goose with sage leaves stuffed under the skin and how to make cranberry preserves in crystal glasses to give to your friends. Trouble is, Suzie’s apartment has a front door hardly big enough to hang a wreath, she’d never roast a goose for herself alone, and I’ll bet her friends in the city would rather eat caviar than cranberry preserves.”