Henry walks up to a doll wearing a kilt. “Aislyn,” he says, reading her name card. “I have this outfit. I should get this doll and we can go on tour together.”
“Playing bagpipes?” I ask.
He gives me a funny look. “Nope. I’m the guitar player for Crusty Toads.”
Ah, and there it is. The reason Skye keeps him around. She has a soft spot for musicians. But she can do much better than a guy who looks like he was the inspiration for his band’s name.
“Die, you ready?”
“Yep.”
Die? I’ll ask her about that later.
“See you later, Caveman,” he says with a guffaw like he’d been saving that up since the second we were introduced.
I wouldn’t need to ask about Die, after all. He’s one of those types: Assigner of Instant Nicknames.
“Bye”—Crusty Toad—“Henry.”
My mom walks in the back door as they walk out the front. She’s carrying two armloads of groceries. “Caymen, there are a few more bags; can you get them?” She heads straight for the stairs.
“You want me to leave the store?” It sounds like a lame question, but she’s really particular about leaving the sales floor. First, because dolls are expensive and if any of them ever got stolen that would be a Big Deal. We don’t have any type of video surveillance or alarm system on the store—too expensive to maintain. Second, my mom is huge about customer service. If someone walks in, I’m not supposed to let one second go by without a greeting.
“Yes. Please.” She sounds out of breath. My mom, the queen of yoga, is out of breath? Was she running laps?
“Okay.” I glance toward the front door to make sure no one is coming and then go out back and grab the rest of the groceries. When I take them upstairs I step over the bags she dropped off right inside the door and then set mine on the counter of our dollhouse-size kitchen. That’s really the theme of our lives. Dolls. We sell them. We live in their house . . . or at least the size equivalent: three tiny rooms, one bathroom, miniature kitchen. And I’m convinced the size is the main reason my mom and I are so close. I peer around the wall and see my mom sprawled out on the couch.
“You okay, Mom?”
She sits up but doesn’t stand. “Just exhausted. Got up extra early this morning.”
I begin to unload the groceries, putting the meat and frozen apple juice in the freezer. I once asked my mom if we could get bottled juice and she told me it was too expensive. I was six. That was the first time I realized we were poor. It definitely wasn’t the last.
“Oh, sweetheart, don’t worry about unloading. I’ll do that in a minute. Will you head back to the store?”
“Sure.” On my way out the door I move the bags she had abandoned on the floor to the counter as well, then leave. It takes my brain the whole trip down the stairs to remember that I saw my mom still in bed when I left for school this morning. How was that getting up “extra early”? I look over my shoulder, up the steep set of stairs, tempted to turn around and call her bluff. But I don’t. I take my place behind the register, pull out my English reading assignment, and don’t look up until the bell on the front door jingles.
Chapter 3
One of my favorite customers ever comes through the door. She’s older but sharp and funny. Her hair is a deep red, sometimes bordering on purple, depending on how recently she had it dyed. And she always wears a scarf no matter how hot it is outside. The autumn weather occasionally justifies a scarf these days, and today’s is bright orange with purple flowers.
“Caymen,” she says with a smile.
“Hi, Mrs. Dalton.”
“Is your mom in today, honey?”
“She’s upstairs. Do you want me to get her or is there something I can help you with?”
“I had a doll on special order and wondered if she arrived yet.”
“Let me check.” I pull out a binder from the drawer beneath the register that logs orders. I find Mrs. Dalton’s name fairly easily because there are only a few entries, and most of them are hers. “It looks like it’s scheduled to arrive tomorrow, but let me call on it for you so you don’t come down here for nothing.” I place a call and find out it will arrive after noon tomorrow.
“I’m sorry to bother you. Your mother did tell me that. I was just hoping.” She smiles. “This one’s for my granddaughter. Her birthday’s in a few weeks.”
“That’s cool. I’m sure she’ll love it. How old will the lucky little girl be?”
“Sixteen.”
“Oh. The lucky . . . big girl.” I don’t know what else to say without sounding rude.
Mrs. Dalton laughs. “Don’t worry, Caymen, I have other presents for her. This gift is more to humor her grandma. I’ve gotten her a doll every year since she turned one. It’s hard for me to break a tradition no matter how old they get.”
“My mother thanks you for that.”
Mrs. Dalton laughs. She gets my jokes. Maybe because she’s a little dry herself.
“She’s the only girl so I spoil her rotten.”
“What tradition do you have for the boys?”
“A kick in the pants.”
“That’s a great tradition. I think you should get them dolls for their birthdays, too. They probably feel left out.”
She laughs. “I might have to try that.” She sad-eyes the binder on the counter like she wishes the date would magically change and her doll would be here now. She opens her purse and starts digging through it. “How’s Susan doing?”