“Shh, quiet or my mom will hear you.”
Tracy Westbrook whispered to the throng of teens waiting for her in the
alley. “And quit shining your flashlight
at the windows or I’m gonna get caught.”
She tiptoed
out of her house and crept through the yard.
A mere foot away from the alley, the flood lights clicked on and Mrs. Westbrook
poked her head out the back door.
“Tracy Ann! You get your butt back in this house right
now!”
A collective
groan rose from the alley as the herd shuffled away. Tracy’s boyfriend, Kurt, mouthed, “See ya tomorrow
at school” before disappearing. With angry
tears brimming in her eyes, Tracy stomped back into the house and slammed the
door.
“I hope you’re happy, Mother. I’m the only one who won’t be there tonight.
You completely humiliated me!”
“Tracy, I told you before…there was
an incident at the beach and it is too dangerous. I made it very clear that you
were not allowed to go out tonight but you tried to go anyway. Now you can be
humiliated and grounded. Go to your room!”
The battle raged on for several hours
until, finally, drained and cried out; Tracy fell asleep. The next morning, after hitting the snooze
button several times, she stood under the steamy shower and tried to pry her
puffy eyes open. She spent a few extra
minutes applying makeup to conceal the damage before storming downstairs to
make a cup of coffee. Just to spite her
mother, she poured the entire pot into her travel mug then stomped out to the
front porch to wait for Kurt to pick her up.
Ever since they became a couple, he always picked her up for
school. She checked the time and realized
he was running later than normal. She
sent Kurt a text asking where he was but did not get an immediate reply. What if
he hooked up with Tiffany Maxwell at the beach party last night, Tracy
wondered; that slut has had her eye on
him for weeks, now. As her mind
churned out one horrible scenario after another, she grew increasingly anxious. Her phone call to Kurt went unanswered so she
left a frantic message begging him not to dump her for Tiffany or “any of the
other skanks” at the beach. Paranoid and
furious, she raced back inside the house to scream at her mother, yet
again.
“Thanks to you, Mother, now I’m going
to be late for school and I probably lost my boyfriend to
one of those hoes at the beach last night!” Tracy angrily screamed up the
stairs.
“Tracy, enough of the dramatics….honestly,
I am at my limit with you.” Her weary mother replied. “If Kurt thinks so little
of you that he would cheat on you, just because you weren’t allowed to go to
that party, then you’re better off without him.”
“That’s such a stupid mom thing to
say! Why can’t you just….”
Tracy’s
sentence was cut off by the sound of someone pounding loudly on the front door. Believing it to be Kurt, she raced to the
door only to be stunned by an angry tirade.
“Where is he? I know you two were together last night so don’t
bother with the innocent act, girly. He
is in BIG TROUBLE. Kurt? Kurt!” His mom screamed at the top of her
lungs. “Get out here…now!”
Startled by
the screaming, Tracy remained silent.
Mrs. Westbrook raced downstairs to find out who was shouting. Though she’d never met the woman
face-to-face, she recognized Kurt’s mom, who continued to lash out at Tracy,
screaming insults and curses. The
haggard woman looked like she’d been partying all night, just like her son, and
it was common knowledge that she worked at the Gentlemen’s Club just off the
highway.
“Excuse me,” Mrs. Westbrook
interrupted. “How dare you burst into my home and scream at my daughter! For your information, Tracy was home last
night with me. I would not let her go out with your son…and those other
delinquents he calls friends. Maybe if
you spent more time at home with your son instead of swinging from a pole, you’d
know where Kurt is but that is not my problem, nor is it Tracy’s. Now get out before I call the police!”
“He’s really not here? Please, do you know where he is? I’m worried
sick.”
Kurt’s
mother, typically hardened by alcohol and narcotics, broke down into pitiful
sobs. She confessed to working late the
previous night but insisted that Kurt had never stayed out all night without
calling.
“I know what you think… but Kurt
really is a good kid,” she bawled. “He’s
not like me. He wouldn’t just…Look, this
morning I saw something on the news about dead bodies found on the beach. Kurt was at the beach last night. My boy…my baby boy…”
Wiping away
the mascara streaks and tears; she straightened up, smoothed her micro-miniskirt
and left without another word.
Mrs. Westbrook drove Tracy to school but
the news vans and swarms of reporters buzzing around the parking lot told them
everything they’d suspected. There had
been more deaths on the beach and, most likely, Kurt was one of them. Without stopping, Tracy’s mother turned
around and drove straight home.
“C’mon, baby girl, we’re both
playing hooky today.”
**Please come back Monday, March 31st for the next installment of Ocean**
**Please come back Monday, March 31st for the next installment of Ocean**
I am hooked!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Bonnie! I am so glad you're enjoying it.
DeleteThis is SOOO good!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Reyna! I've been having such a great time writing this one. I'm thrilled you like it!
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