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A Farewell to Yarns

A Farewell to Yarns

Titel: A Farewell to Yarns Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jill Churchill
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Wonderful Life on the late movie and crochet like crazy until midnight.
     

Seventeen
     
     
    “Hey, Mom, that’s pretty,“ Katie deigned to comment as she destroyed the living room looking for her missing social studies book the next morning. “Is it done?”
    Jane studied the afghan spread across the back of the sofa. The twelve oversized granny squares were all done and put together. It actually looked as if someone who knew how to crochet had made them, she thought proudly. “No, it gets about four rows of solid stuff around the entire outside edge, but I don’t know how to do the corners.“
    “Good-O, Mom. I think we ought to keep it,“ Mike said, joining Jane as she and Katie admired the work.
    “I think so, too, but I promised it for the bazaar.“
    “Then buy it yourself.”
    She looked at him. “You mean, pay for the yarn, do all that work, and pay to buy it besides?“
    “You did that last year with that wreath thing.“
    “Last year—“ She stopped herself from saying: Last year your father was alive, and I wasn’t worried about money. “I guess I did, didn’t I? You ready to go? Is Todd on his way down?”
    This was one of the horrible mornings when Jane drove all three kids’ car pools to school. Just as there were occasional days when she got off scot-free, there were many more when she felt she was driving every child in the country and ought to just buy a school bus and be done with it. She tried to arrange it so these days fell, like this one did, on Fridays. While it was true that the kids were hyper on Fridays, thereby increasing the risk of permanent injury to the driver’s nervous system, they were at least happy-hyper, which was far nicer than Monday mornings when they all acted like she was driving them up to the front door of the guillotine.
    She got Mike and his crowd of friends delivered to the high school, Katie and her car pool (not friends—a purely geographical arrangement made by Jane and the other mothers, which Katie mentioned critically nearly every morning) to the junior high, and Todd and his bunch to the grade school. Then she came home and collapsed at the kitchen table with a cup of coffee and the last few minutes of the Today show.
    After watching about ninety seconds of a feature on a woman who was the mother of six adopted children (three with severe disabilities), who worked as a madly successful criminal lawyer and had invented (in her spare time, they said—what spare time?) some sort of toy that was supposed to rival the Hula Hoop, Jane flipped the television off in disgust. That sort of programming ought to be censored before impressionable young girls saw it and thought such a life was actually possible and/or required of them.
    “I wonder what happens on the days when four of the kids are sick and a trial is supposed to start....“ she said aloud to Willard, who thumped his tail happily in response. “Probably uses some of that toy money to call in a squadron of babysitters.”
    As she opened pet food cans, she dialed Shelley’s number. “What time are we supposed to go to Fiona’s to start setting up?“
    “Ten.“
    “Will you have time before then to show me how to finish the afghan?”
    Shelley turned up a few minutes later, gave Jane her instructions, and sat down to watch her work. “Have you been thinking about last night?“
    “I’ve been trying not to. Oh, Shelley, I finally understand that phrase about being of two minds. Every time somebody starts going on about how much Phyllis thought of me, I feel like I ought to dash out and start interrogating people myself because of this tremendous emotional debt I didn’t even know I had. Did you notice that even Chet knew my kids’ names? That’s how much she talked about me. But then I pull myself together and realize there could be a hundred explanations for all this that I know nothing about. I mean, what do I really know about Phyllis’s life? Nothing. Chet could have some deadly enemy who killed Phyllis to get at him. For that matter, Bobby probably has perfectly awful chums in the city who were just waiting for him to get back, and one of them might have killed Phyllis by mistake. The worst is, I don’t really believe the police will ever unravel it. I talked to Uncle Jim last night—”
    She proceeded to tell Shelley about the conversation.
    “So the evidence all points to Chet?“ Shelley said when she was done.
    “No, just the circumstances. There isn’t any

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