Killer Blonde

Read Killer Blonde for Free Online Page A

Book: Read Killer Blonde for Free Online
Authors: Laura Levine
called My Dinner with Jerry Lewis, about the time he wound up sitting next to the comic at a Beverly Hills coffee shop. (Jerry is a big tipper, in case you were wondering.)
    He finished to a round of polite applause, and then Mrs. Pechter raised her hand.
    “Mrs. Pechter,” I nodded. “What’ve you got?”
    She cleared her throat, and read the title of her piece:
    “Once Around the Lake, Morris.”
    It was one of the gems. A touching story about her husband Morris, and their summer vacations in the Catskill Mountains. Every night after dinner in the hotel dining room, Mrs. Pechter would turn to her husband and ask, “Once around the lake, Morris?” “My pleasure, Rose,” Mr. Pechter would reply. And the two of them would walk around the lake. Holding hands under the stars, they’d talk. About their day. About their kids. About their lives. “I never felt closer to him than on those walks,” she read. “They were the best part of my marriage.” Then one night after just such a walk, they went back to their cabin where Mr. Pechter sat down in an Adirondack chair and died.
    “I thought I’d never get over it,” she read, her voice wavering with emotion, “but eventually, I did. Maybe not completely, but enough to keep going.” Two months later, her daughter gave birth to a little boy. And they named him Morris. He grew up, Mrs. Pechter confided, to be her favorite grandson. “A wonderful boy,” she said, “who takes me out for dinner every week. And after dinner, I turn to him and say, ‘Once around the lake, Morris?’ And he says, ‘My pleasure, Grandma.’ Of course, there’s never a lake outside the restaurant. But we walk around the block, holding hands. And wherever my Morris is, I know he’s smiling.”
    When she was through, I had tears in my eyes. It was just so damn touching. What a contrast to SueEllen’s blather. Would I ever, I wondered, meet a Morris of my own?
    As if in answer to my question, Mrs. Pechter took me aside after class and said, “You know my grandson Morris? The one I wrote about? He’s an accountant. Very comfortable.”
    She smiled proudly.
    “That’s wonderful,” I said.
    “And single.”
    “Oh?”
    “I thought maybe he could call you up for a date.”
    My smile froze. Whoa, Nelly. Yes, I know I said I wanted to meet a Morris of my own, but I didn’t mean an actual guy named Morris. Call me shallow, but my dream man is not an accountant named Morris. He’s an artist named Zane, or a chef named Sergio.
    “Gee, that’s awfully sweet of you, Mrs. Pechter, but—”
    But what? What the heck was I going to say to her? I don’t date accountants named Morris?
    “—but I’m seeing someone.”
    “You have a boyfriend?” She seemed surprised, a fact which I found vaguely insulting.
    “Yes, I do.”
    “What does he do, this boyfriend of yours?”
    “Uh, he’s an actor.”
    It was the first thing that popped into my mind. I remembered the termite impersonator Kandi wanted to fix me up with, so I used him as my phantom boyfriend.
    “An actor? Have I seen him in anything?”
    “Actually, he plays a termite on a cartoon show.”
    “Oy,” was her eloquent response. “You’re dating a termite?”
    What was wrong with me? Why couldn’t I have said I was dating a doctor?
    “Hey, you forgot your flower.”
    Mr. Goldman was at my side, holding out the rose from Mrs. Sobol’s funeral wreath.
    “Oh, right,” I said, taking it gingerly.
    “So how about it, cookie?” he winked/blinked. “You want to come to the movies with me on Saturday?”
    Saturday night was movie night at Shalom.
    “They’re playing Sleeping in Seattle.”
    “Sleepless in Seattle, Abe,” Mrs. Pechter corrected. “Not sleeping.”
    “Sleepless, sleeping. Who cares? You wanna come with me, cookie?”
    “She can’t, Abe. She’s already got a boyfriend.”
    “She does?”
    Why was everybody so damned surprised?
    “In that case,” he said, “I want my flower back.”
    He took his

Similar Books

All for a Song

Allison Pittman

The Day to Remember

Jessica Wood

Driving the King

Ravi Howard

The Boyfriend League

Rachel Hawthorne

Blood Ties

Sophie McKenzie