Hullo, everyone! How are all of you doing this fine Monday morning? Happy for a new part? I am… đ New? Check out part one.
The week passes in impatient agony for me. Momâs at home the rest of the week, so we donât have to take Maddie to IDIA. School feels even longer and more boring than usual for me, but itâs even worse for Brooklyn, since sheâs still got a raging headache. Every time I see her wince or rube her aching head, itâs all I can do not to punch something⌠or someone. I leave a stormy look on my face so people will leave me alone.
On Saturday morning, I wake up around six, knowing that Denver will take ages to get up and get ready to go, but impatient nonetheless. I quietly go to the bathroom and shower. First dibs is always nice. It only takes me a couple of minutes to get ready, but when I get out, everyoneâs still in bed. It is Saturday, after all.
So I have a choice. Do I wait patiently, or do I wake Denver up?
Iâve never been patient, thatâs for sure.
âAlbany, go away!â Denver mumbles, flipping over and burying his face in his pillow.
I stand over him with my hands on my hips. âDo I need to get some ice water?â I threaten in a fake sweet voice.
He sits up slowly, a grumpy look on his face. âIâm older than you and Brooklyn, but youâre always bossing me around,â he grumbles. He does a zombie walk to the bathroom. I take pity on him and go down to the kitchen to pull together an easy, unruinable breakfast â also known as cereal.
Denver comes downstairs fifteen minutes later, hair wet and tousled from his shower. He goes over to the coffee machine to make his coffee, which I didnât dare to attempt. He sits down at the table, looks at me, and then pours himself a bowl of granola. âWe couldâve waited until this afternoon, so I could sleep in. Itâs not like weâre on a deadline,â he grumbles.
Oh, if only you knew. âI just canât wait,â I insist. âIf this works out⌠if itâs really her family, then sheâll be so happy.â
Denver nods reluctantly in agreement. âWell, I hope youâre right. Iâd hate to waste a trip up there for nothing.â
If he knew what was really going on, we wouldnât be going at all. But I simply nod and hurry to get the dishes cleaned up and put away as he pours his coffee into a mug for the drive. Before I know it, weâre on the road in Denverâs old fixer-upper car and headed towards White Bluff. I put one of Denverâs favorite CDs into the CD player to get him into a good mood. Iâd prefer silence and random jokes about the passing billboards and scenery, but I know how he likes music. I just hope he doesnât start singing.
A little over forty-five minutes later, we pull up in front of the address. The house looks good, well-cared for, with some really nice flowerbeds out front. Iâd guess theyâre the work of someone who loves flowers but wants to keep it easy to care for. Denver nods. âLooks like a nice place.â He turns off the car and reaches for the door handle.
I pause. âYouâre coming?â
He gives me a look like I said that I made filet mignon and chicken cordon bleu without burning it. âOf course I am. Theyâre strangers, after all.â
That I hadnât planned on. I manage a grin. âThatâs true.â Internally, Iâm screaming, What am I going to do???
We get out and head to the front door. My brain zooms through options. Is it possible I could get Denver to leave me alone with Genesis Fabel? That doesnât seem likely. And what are we going to do if IDIA has already got to her â which, in all likelihood, they have â and sheâs not even here? All the worrying is going to make me sick. Denver rings the doorbell, and we wait.
Denverâs about to ring the doorbell again when the door swings open. A lady with long, raven-black hair stands in the doorway, an adorable chubby toddler on her hip. She looks us over with a glint of suspicion in her eye. âHello,â she says, her voice a bit chilly. âWhat can I do for you?â
I step forward before Denver can say anything. âAre you Genesis Fabel?â I ask.
Her eyes narrow slightly. âWhy do you ask?â
Why is she so jumpy, if sheâs not the right person? Jen must have come and talked to her. âIâm Albany, and this is my older brother, Denver,â I explain. I do my best to look friendly and cheerful. Think like Brooklyn. âWe wanted to talk to you about a friend of ours.â
She reaches for the door handle. âIâm sorry, I canât talk right now. Iâve got a lot going on.â She begins to shut the door.
What to do? She canât do this! I panic, and I shove my foot between the door and the door frame. âNo,â I tell her firmly, narrowing my eyes. âWe need to talk to you, now. And you canât get rid of us.â