Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
Orphan Train

Orphan Train

Titel: Orphan Train
Autoren: Christina Baker Kline
Vom Netzwerk:
think what she really wanted was to see what was in those boxes one
     last time. And remember those parts of her life. So I’m glad, actually, that I was
     able to help her find these things. I feel like I did something important.”
    She hears footsteps in the upstairs hall—Vivian must be on her way downstairs. “Hey,
     I’ve gotta go. I’m making breakfast.” She flicks on the gas burner to warm the oatmeal,
     pouring a little skim milk into it and stirring.
    Jack sighs. “You’re a major pain in the ass, did you know that?”
    “I keep telling you that, but you don’t want to believe me.”
    “I believe you now,” he says.
    A FEW DAYS AFTER M OLLY ARRIVES AT V IVIAN ’ S , SHE TEXTS R ALPH to let him know where she is.
    He texts back: Call me.
    So she calls. “What’s up?”
    “You need to come back so we can deal with this.”
    “Nah, that’s okay.”
    “You can’t just run away,” he says. “We’ll all be in a pile of shit if you do.”
    “I didn’t run away. You kicked me out.”
    “No, we didn’t.” He sighs. “There are protocols. Child Protective Services are going
     to be all over your ass. So will the police, if this gets out. You have to go through
     the system.”
    “I think I’m done with the system.”
    “You’re seventeen. You’re not done with the system till the system is done with you.”
    “So don’t tell them.”
    “You mean lie?”
    “No. Just . . . don’t tell them.”
    He’s silent for a moment. Then he says, “You doing okay?”
    “Yup.”
    “That lady is okay with you being there?”
    “Uh-huh.”
    He grunts. “I’m guessing she’s not a certified foster care provider.”
    “Not . . . technically.”
    “Not technically.” He laughs drily. “Shit. Well, maybe you’re right. No need to do
     anything drastic. When’re you eighteen, again?”
    “Soon.”
    “So if it’s not hurting us . . . and it’s not hurting you . . .”
    “That money comes in handy, huh?”
    He’s silent again, and for a moment Molly thinks he’s hung up on her. Then he says,
     “Rich old lady. Big house. You’ve done pretty well for yourself. You probably don’t
     want us to report you missing.”
    “So . . . I still live with you, then?”
    “Technically,” he says. “Okay with you?”
    “Okay with me. Give Dina my best.”
    “I’ll be sure to do that,” he says.
    T ERRY IS NOT PARTICULARLY HAPPY TO FIND M OLLY IN THE HOUSE on Monday morning. “What’s this?” she says, her voice a sharp exclamation. Jack hasn’t
     told her about Molly’s new living arrangements; apparently he was hoping the situation
     would somehow magically resolve itself before his mother found out.
    “I’ve invited Molly to stay,” Vivian announces. “And she has graciously accepted.”
    “So she’s not . . .” Terry starts, looking back and forth between them. “Why aren’t
     you at the Thibodeaus’?” she asks Molly.
    “It’s a little complicated there right now,” Molly says.
    “What does that mean?”
    “Things are—unsettled,” Vivian says. “And I’m perfectly happy to let her bunk in a
     spare room for the moment.”
    “What about school?”
    “Of course she’ll go to school. Why wouldn’t she?”
    “This is very . . . charitable of you, Vivi, but I imagine the authorities—”
    “It’s all worked out. She’s staying with me,” Vivian says firmly. “What else am I
     going to do with all these rooms? Open a bed-and-breakfast?”
    Molly’s room is on the second floor, facing the ocean, down a long hall at the opposite
     side of the house from Vivian’s. In the window in Molly’s bathroom, also on the ocean
     side, a light cotton curtain dances constantly in the breeze, sucked toward the screen
     and out again, billowing toward the sink, an amiable ghostly presence.
    How long has it been since anyone slept in this room? Molly wonders. Years and years
     and years.
    Her belongings, all that she brought with her from the Thibodeaus’, fill a scant three
     shelves in the closet. Vivian insists that she take an antique rolltop desk from the
     parlor and set it up in the bedroom across the hall from hers so she can study for
     finals. No sense in confining yourself to one room when there are all these options,
     is there?
    Options. She can sleep with the door open, wander around freely, come and go without someone
     watching her every move. She hadn’t realized how much of a toll the years of judgment
     and criticism, implied
Vom Netzwerk:

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher