Good morning,
I really need to write some more short stories. I was searching through my list of what I'd posted and I wasn't finding many that weren't just shared. Today's story was first published here in 2017. I had hoped that by now I would have finished the book about Kelsey and her family, but I haven't. I've written a few other stories about them, but not the full book.
This week has been busy. Haven't they all been this way? I taught yesterday, and babysat my nieces and nephews last evening. And KDWC started yesterday. I worked in the nursery on Wednesday night, so I didn't get much written then. However, on Monday and Tuesday I was able to write 2k words each day. That was fun. I ended up writing more in March than I had ever written in a month before. We'll see what April looks like.
Anyway, here's your story, or the first part of it anyway. Enjoy!
Feeling foolish, Kelsey ducked her head and stared at her sandal as she spun it around with her toe on the wooded floor of the neat living room.
An uncomfortable silence pervaded the room for thirty seconds before Zoe laughed. “Of course I think that going outside in this rain would be fun. Who cares about our hair. Come on, Kelsey, let’s go.” Springing to her feet, Zoe almost skipped across the floor and pulled the blushing girl to her feet.
No one else made a move to join them as they disappeared from the room.
Once the two girls were alone in the hall, Kelsey stopped short. “You don’t have to go outside, Zoe,” she whispered. “I just made that suggestion because the others wanted something new to do, and Candace kept vetoing every sensible idea. I–”
“I know.” There was a merry twinkle in the taller girl’s eyes. “Candace likes to rule the girls, and most of them are more than willing to follow her lead. But she’s not the only leader. I’m just glad you did suggest this. I’ve been longing to get out in the rain all day!”
“You have?” And Kelsey eyed the well-dressed girl in astonishment.
“Yep.” At Kelsey’s continued stare, Zoe went on. “Look Kels, just because I come from a family with considerable means doesn’t necessarily signify that I’m a snob.” Her grin took away the sting such blunt words might have caused. “Now come on, let’s go have some fun.”
Leaving their sandals on the covered porch, the two girls, one from the upper, wealthier side of town and the one from the other side of the tracks, ran down the steps and into the light summer rain.
Kelsey loved the rain. Tipping her head back, she squinted her eyes against the drops. With a toss of her head that freed her red hair from the confines of bobby pins, she laughed in pure delight.
“Oh, this is fun!” Zoe exclaimed. “Kels, do you ever stomp in the puddles?”
“Of course! Where are they?” And Kelsey, feeling that for the first time in years she might have a friend, blinked the drops from her lashes and hurried over to Zoe who was standing before a large puddle. “Come on, let’s jump on the count of three.”
“All right. One, two, three!”
The splash sent the water as high as their knees and caused both girls to laugh merrily.
After several minutes of enjoying the puddle and the rain, Kelsey ventured to remark, “I love to walk in the rain.”
“Barefoot?”
“Uh huh.”
“All right, where shall we go?” questioned Zoe, apparently ready for anything.
Kelsey looked around. “I don’t know. I’m not in this part of town very often. At home I like to walk down to the creek and watch the water. Sometimes I go visit old Mrs. Mead. She always has a fire going on rainy days and I get dried off there and listen to her tell stories.”
“Oh, Kels, that sounds like fun. How far away is Mrs. Mead’s house?”
Kelsey raised her eyebrows. “Too far for us to walk.”
Zoe looked disappointed, but she shrugged and said, “Oh, well. Let’s walk down to the drug store. We could get something to drink there.”
At that suggestion, Kelsey burst into laughter. “Zoe, we look like a couple of drowned rats! We’d never hear the end of it at school if we did such a thing, for someone we know is bound to be there with it being Saturday!”
Reaching up, Zoe pushed back a bit of her dark hair which was plastered to her face. “I suppose so, but don’t you think we could walk down to the stream? It’s not too far from here.”
Looking back toward the house, Kelsey hesitated. “I wish some of the other girls would come out,” she remarked softly. “I feel sort of bad going out and leaving them.”
“Well, don’t feel bad. Aunt Olive invited all of us girls so we could enjoy the day together. She loves both her nieces, but she knows Candace can be a snob and overly bossy. Suppose we run around to the kitchen, I’m sure Aunt Olive will be in there, and we can ask her.”
With a feeling of relief, Kelsey nodded and squeezed Zoe’s hand as hers was taken in a friendly clasp.
Aunt Olive was indeed in the kitchen and stared in astonishment at the two girls standing on her back porch before she began to laugh heartily. “Oh, girls, are you having fun?”
“Yes, Aunt Olive,” Zoe nodded. “But Kels and I want to walk down to the stream, but we want to know if you think it would be rude to run off and leave the others.”
“Didn’t they want to join you?”
Zoe shrugged. “Candace is in one of her moods, and I don’t know if we can convince any of the others to join us or not. But may we take a walk, Aunt Olive? You have no idea how delightful this rain is!”
“Suppose I go and find out if any of the others want to go too.”
Zoe nodded quickly and Aunt Olive disappeared.
“I don’t think anyone will come, do you?” Zoe asked in low tones.
Kelsey shrugged. The afternoon was not starting off as she had thought it would. Well, it had started off with the usual stiff circle of girls, and one in particular who didn’t want to do anything, but things had rapidly changed.
I like it! :) -Charis
ReplyDeleteThanks, Charis. :)
DeleteOO, good beginning!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kats. :)
Delete