Page 9 of A Girl Named Summer
âYou really know how to flatter a girl,â she muttered. In a louder voice she said, âDavid, why donât you bring the posters over tomorrow afternoon, and weâll get started.â
Regina stayed at the Pizza Paddle helping her father, and Gregg and Summer walked out together. Gregg was nice enough to keep his mouth shut while he drove her home, and Summer was able to make it to her room before she started to cry.
David didnât call the next morning but appeared at her front door instead, his arms loaded down with poster board and felt-tip markers. Michael was busy playing at the neighborâs, and Grandpa had gone to the shopping center. David and Summer were all alone in the house, and it was the perfect time to clear the air. The problem was that he was being so cool and aloof.
âDavid, when weâre finished with the posters, Iâd really like to talk to you about something,â Summer finally said.
David frowned and then nodded. âGregg?â
âAnd Ann,â Summer added. âOkay?â
âOkay,â David replied. He smiled his first real smile, and Summer beamed in return.
The screen door opened, and Grandpa walked in, loaded down with packages he immediately carried to his room. Summer was disappointed. Not wanting to talk to David in front of her grandfather, she decided to hurry and resolve the problem immediately. âWhat did you mean by âsort ofâ dating?â she asked, pretending great concentration on the poster in front of her.
The phone rang before David could reply. He answered it and called to her grandfather. Accepting that she would have to wait until after lunch to have her little talk with him, she stood up and stretched, and then headed for the kitchen to prepare lunch. Once Grandpa had eaten, he would probably take his nap, so the sooner the meal was done, the better. David went into the living room, sat down on the sofa, and began to thumb through the latest TV Guide.
A minute later, Summer pushed open the swinging door that connected the dining room with the kitchen and asked David to clear a spot on the table.
The next time she hurried into the room, she overheard her grandfather. He obviously didnât realize how loud he was. He was bragging on the phone about her, making outrageous statements about what a fast runner she was, and Summer had to smile. Grandpa loved to brag. David looked up at Summer and winked, and she knew that he, too, was listening to her grandfatherâs conversation.
Summer wasnât gone more than five minutes, but when she came back to the dining room, David looked at her with a frown on his face. He seemed puzzled, Summer thought. Puzzled and irritated.
She returned to the kitchen for the pitcher of lemonade, but she could hear her grandfather talking. She paused and felt the blood drain from her face when she heard her grandfather explain how she had just started running.
Michael came skipping in the back door then, full of chatter. âSummer, Iâve got a rockââ
âNot now, Michael,â she said. Her mind was racing with excuses in case David realized that she had lied to him, but it was a wasted effort. The door swung open and there he stood, glaring at her.
âHi, David,â Michael said. âIâve got a rock.â
âHi, Mike. Summer, I just heard your grandfather say youâve only been running for about a month.â He sounded surprised.
âOh, you know Grandpa likes to exaggerate,â she replied, trying to sound blasé. âDavid, will you take this pitcher into the dining room. Iâll get the chips.â
âHe said you started running after Ann Loganâs party, that Regina talked you into it.â
âMichael, go and wash your hands,â Summer stammered. âDavid, whatâs the big deal about when I started to run?â
âThe big deal? If itâs true, you lied to me,â David stated.
She tried to look disgusted and marched by David. She put the pitcher on the table and turned around, knowing that he was right behind her. She was stalling, trying to come up with a logical explanation that would appease him and not make her grandfather sound as if he had made the whole thing up.
âSummer, you know how important it is to me that we never, ever lie to each other. How can we build a good relationship if we canât trust each other?â He looked hurt.
âYouâre getting all upset over nothing,â she soothed.
âJust answer one question,â he demanded. âDid you or did you not lie to me?â
âNot exactly,â she hedged.
âWhat does ânot exactlyâ mean?â he asked sarcastically.
What was the use? she asked herself. She might as well admit the truth. âOh, all right! Yes, I did lie. But it was a little, insignificant exaggeration, not an outright whopper,â she explained.
âThen itâs true? You really only started running after Annâs party?â
He sounded incredulous. What did he want, blood? Honestly, he was being so self-righteous! Didnât he ever tell a fib?
âLook, Summer, just tell me why? I want to understand,â he said. His voice was softer now.
How could she explain? She would die before she admitted that the entire reason was Ann Logan. He was dating her now, wasnât he? How could he possibly understand? She shook her head. No, she couldnât tell him. He would never, ever understand. Boys werenât jealous like girls wereâor were they?
âSo what else have you lied to me about?â
The quietly stated question infuriated her. She turned around with fire in her eyes. âNothing! Now, itâs up to you to decide if you believe me or not.â
âHa!â he snorted.
It was the snort that did it. Summer fairly exploded. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â she yelled. âLook, I could have lied and told you that I loved your jokes, but I didnât. And the anchovies,â she suddenly remembered. âI could have said I loved them!â She ran out of the kitchen and into the dining room.
David was right on her heels. âOh, yeah? Well some people love my jokes. Ann Logan appreciates them,â he added in a loud voice.
Summer felt as if she had just been stabbed. âAnd you believe her?â
âSure,â David said. âSheâs an honest person.â
âAnyone who laughs at your stupid jokes is not being honest,â Summer replied.
âSo why didnât you tell me you had a date with Gregg?â he asked, suddenly switching topics.
Summer countered his question with one of her own. âWhy didnât you tell me you had a date with Ann?â
âWe donât have an agreement or anything,â he muttered. âI mean, if you want to date other boys, itâs fine with me.â
âI didnât have a date with Gregg,â Summer said. There, the truth was out.
David didnât believe her. âHa! Ann told me you were seeing Gregg. I didnât believe her until yesterday. I didnât think youâd lie about something likeââ
âIf you say âhaâ one more time, Iâm going to scream,â she interrupted.
âYou two having a difference of opinion?â Grandpaâs voice intruded on the heated argument, and both Summer and David blushed.
âAnd when I asked you if you wanted to run with me,â David continued, âI seem to remember that you said you liked to jog by yourself early in the morning so you could think things over.â
âWhat are you, a memory expert?â she snapped. She folded her arms and glared at him.
He was almost out the door when she called out, âI guess youâre going over to Annâs house.â
âMaybe,â he called back.
âThe perfect couple,â she muttered under her breath.
She couldnât look at her grandfather, still too angry that he had accidentally told David about her exaggeration. Instead, she lifted Michael and put him in his chair. She shoved a sandwich in front of him and said, âEat!â
Two hours later a phone call to Regina hadnât made Summer feel any better. When sheâd told her friend about the argument with David, Regina had said, âCouldnât you have lied your way out of it?â Summer had been too miserable to argue or defend herself.
She wa
s sick of lies. And sick of holding back the tears, too. She went up to her room right after dinner and cried until there werenât any tears left, but the release didnât make her feel any better, and she punched her pillow to vent some of her anger and frustration. The anger slowly receded, but in its stead, loneliness, aching and desolate, filled the void.
Snuggled in her blankets, she fell asleep with the thought that she wouldnât have to get up at six tomorrow morning. Who wanted to run in a dumb race, anyway?
Chapter 12
Grandpa was having none of it! âWhat do you mean youâre not going to run today?â His indignant bellow threatened to wake the entire household.
âIâve decided I donât want to be a runner,â Summer muttered into the pillow. She stared at the tiny pink flower pattern on her sheets rather than look at her grandfather. She was afraid she would see his disappointment, and she wasnât up to coping with that this early in the morning. She just wanted to be left alone, to wallow in her misery.
âYouâve invested too much to quit now. I wonât have it! Do you hear me? Take those covers off your ears, girl, and listen to me. I donât know whatâs got your feathers ruffled, but you can tell me all about it while you do your warm-up exercises. Iâm giving you just ten minutes to get down to the basement.â
Well, she wasnât going to say anything to him! He wouldnât understand anyway. No one would. Not even Regina. Hadnât Regina admitted that she, herself, had never really been in love? She was lucky, Summer decided as she reluctantly threw the covers off and began to dress. Loving someone was the pits.
She stomped down the basement steps a few minutes later.
âWhat is the matter with you?â her grandfather asked. âYour legs cramping up on you again?â
He seemed very concerned, and Summer almost squealed her frustration when she saw him reach for the ever-ready bottle of liniment. âIâm okay,â she snapped. âI just donât feel like running today.â
âCanât miss a single day. Youâre on a schedule, remember?â
âGrandpa, I want to quit. Canât you understand that?â
âI wonât hear of it. Youâre just out of sorts today. Now, tell me why.â It wasnât a suggestion but a demand, and his large bulk was blocking her only escape, the stairs. It didnât look as if she would be going anywhere until she talked to him.
âI saw David with Ann yesterday afternoon. Heâs dating her regularly now, I just know it! And itâs all your fault, Grandpa!â She was busy doing her thirty sit-ups and gasped with each word. âIf it was anyone else in the whole world, I donât think Iâd care as much. But Ann Loganâ¦â
âHow is all this my fault?â
âDavid heard you tell the truth when you were on the phone, and I lied to him. If you hadnât said anythingââ
âIf you hadnât lied,â her grandfather interrupted. âThatâs the heart of it, isnât it, now?â
âOkay, okay, so I lied. I canât stand Ann Logan. Sheâs always telling lies, and it hasnât hurt her any. And she always takes my boyfriends away,â she lied.
âJealous,â her grandfather replied in a tone that suggested more than a little disgust. âYouâre entirely too young to get serious over a boy, young lady. Plenty of time for that later on.â
Sheâd known he wouldnât understand, and she rolled her eyes heavenward in irritation. âWell, I donât own him, thatâs for sure. But I thought he liked being with me. Guess I was wrong. Iâm just a lying, boring person,â she added. She was feeling extremely sorry for herselfâand she didnât mind one bit.
âNonsense! Of course David likes being with you. Youâve just disappointed him. Heâll come around,â her grandfather insisted. He seemed exasperated with the entire conversation.
âNo, he doesnât. If he did, he wouldnât have gotten all upset over such a stupid, little thing. Heâs not very understanding, now that I think about it.â¦â
Suddenly Summer wanted to run, to make herself go the limit. To make herself hurt as much on the outside as she was hurting on the inside. Maybe she would just keel over from exhaustion, and the ache deep inside would stop. It was certainly worth a try. At least she would be able to get away from her grandfather and his lecture. âIâm going to run after all.â
âNever doubted it,â her grandfather answered with a grin. âWork off some of that self-pity. Jealousy is a destructive emotion, Summer. Get rid of it.â
Those words kept repeating themselves inside her head as she raced around the circular path that edged the park. She passed the regulars and literally sailed by the jogging Luke. Summer became obsessed with going faster and faster. The pain in her side registered a brief complaint and then subsided. Summer ignored it, her fellow runners, and the beautiful scenery, concentrating with all her might on catching the wind and finding sweet numbness from her pain.
âYou taking some new vitamins, Summer?â Luke asked when he caught up with her. They were running side by side, Summer quite effortlessly, while Luke pushed and panted.
âNo,â she answered. âJust trying to work off a little hostility.â
âYouâre fast. Ever been timed?â he asked when they stopped to rest.
âNot really,â Summer replied. âMy grandfather clocked me when I first started, but I was really slow then.â
âYouâre sure fast now. How long you been running?â There was admiration in his voice, and a tinge of pride crept into Summerâs spine.
âJust since the start of vacation,â she answered.
âYouâre kidding!â He shook his head and laughed. âYouâre crazy if you donât go out for track next year. I think you could set new records.â
Summer really wasnât interested. âAre you entered in the Regis Run, Luke?â
âYes, what about you?â
âIâm supposed to run, but I donât know if I will.â
âYouâre out of your mind if you donât, Summer. Iâve never seen a girl run that fast,â he praised. âYou ought to go for it. You could win. Honest.â
âSuch optimism.â She chuckled. âYou sound just like my grandfather. Iâve never run in a race before, and I donât know how fast everyone else will be. They might all leave me at the starting gate. I just donâtâ¦â
She could feel herself blushing and closed her eyes. The conflicting emotions were confusing.
âYou donât what?â he asked.
âI donât want to make a fool of myself and come in last.â
âLast? Not a chance. I donât think you have any idea how good you are, but take my word for it. Boy, are you going to surprise some people.â
Summer realized he was serious. Now her interest was really piqued. âWhat do you mean?â
âThereâs always a group that enters all the cash races, and they take the top prizes. I call them the pros. But youâre just like a dark horse. No one has ever heard of you. Youâre going to stun them.â
âYou really think so, Luke? Youâre not just saying that to be nice?â She didnât even listen to his response, for her mind was filled with pictures of David and Ann, and the looks of astonishment on their faces if she did finish in the top ten. Excitement surged through her. Was it just wishful thinking, or was there really a chance?
âItâs a sure thing, Summer. Look, tomorrow Iâll bring a stopwatch and time you. Then youâll believe me.â
âSounds good to me,â she replied with a grin.
âHey, Iâm starved. Letâs go get some doughnuts and work on your strategy.â
Lukeâs words were like a healing balm to her injured pride. There wasnât any physical attraction between the two of them, but he was so easy to talk to. Of course, she couldnât tell him about David. Still, it felt good to have someone take such an interest in her. The ache of losing David was still terribly fresh, just like a raw wound. She analyzed her situation on her way home. She would never be the same, she realized with a little self-pity, but she would survive. But, then, what if she didnât survive? What if something t
ragic happened to her before David could make amends. That grim thought spiraled into pictures of David kneeling before her casket, weeping and begging for forgiveness after she was dead and gone and it was too late. Heâd be sorry then, wouldnât he?
âAnd I thought you were my best friend!â The accusation was issued in a high-pitched voice. Regina, hands on her hips, stood on Summerâs front porch, glaring her anger.
Summer was in no mood for guessing games. She didnât have the faintest idea what Regina was blustering about. Her head was throbbing from Michaelâs constant chatter and from the trauma of thinking about David and Ann being together.
âCome on into the kitchen,â she suggested. âIâve got to do the dishes.â
âIâll help, you traitor,â Regina muttered, following behind her.
âWhat are you talking about?â
âLuke,â Regina announced. âThatâs who Iâm talking about.â
âWhat about him?â Summer asked. âWhy am I a traitor?â
âHave a nice breakfast date?â she asked sarcastically.
âGive me a break. Today has been the pits. Just tell me what youâre talking about.â
âDid you or did you not go out with Luke this morning?â Now Regina sounded hurt, and Summer finally gave her full attention.
âWho told you I had a date with Luke?â She would have laughed then, or at the very least snorted, but the expression on her friendâs face suggested she better not.
âGregg saw you,â Regina said. âAnd when he described the guy you were with, I knew it was Luke. David doesnât have blond hair.â
âOh, for heavenâs sake. Luke and I just walked over to the doughnut shop after we ran today. And,â Summer continued, âwe talked about you some of the time. Where were you, by the way? You were supposed to run today, remember?â
âI know, but I forgot to set my alarm clock,â she said. âYou really talked about me?â
She wore a sheepish expression, and Summer smiled.