Now, as much as I appreciate the fine work you did on “Madison” (the smiling, the helpfulness, the use of complete multiword sentences), I can’t help but ponder your sinister plans for the world. Okay, you’re a publicist. What exactly does that mean? What are you about? What’s your job? What’s HER job?
Naturally I tried asking the pod girl myself, but she claims to be under a restrictive verbal confidentiality agreement (typical alien response). So if you could paint me a picture in broad strokes, without spilling any client secrets, I’d be much appreciative. I was going to send my husband over there to shake some answers out of you, but I was afraid he’d come back all clean-cut and smiling.
Oddly,
Jean
PS — I might send him anyway. You do replace husbands, right?
Silly woman. And silly Madison. I had yet to give her a shred of confidential information. What I gave her, apparently, was an excuse to be vague and secretive with her mother. I would definitely send Jean a broad-strokes overview as soon as I had the time and the brain power.
In the meantime, I figured one flippant note deserved another:
>you’re a publicist. What exactly does that mean?
>What are you about?
I’m the best there is at what I do, but what I do isn’t very nice.
Evenly,
Scott
(yes, we replace husbands)
That should make her eyes pop, and not because it was strange and cryptic but because she’d know exactly what I was talking about. This was Marvel Girl, a flamboyant X-Men reader if there ever was one. I, however, was more of a closet case. Now, with one classic Wolverine quote, I’d just outed myself.
Before I could close out of my e-mail application, my inbox chimed with a new message. Not only was Jean an odd creature, she was an odd creature of the night.
Thank you for your order. Your item will be arriving shortly.
I assumed that meant she was about to gift me with comic books. She probably wouldn’t stop until she paid off her debt of gratitude. Very unnecessary. If that was the scheme, I’d have to nip it in the bud. Tomorrow. Sleep in bed now. Nip in bud tomorrow.
________________
The second time I’d returned from Alonso’s office, on Tuesday afternoon, I found Madison crouched outside my door, waiting for me. And waiting. And waiting. I had a lot of time to anticipate her reaction. I wagered an even split between super-hot fury and ice-cold silence.
Amazingly, she was tepid. “Hey.”
“I’m so sorry,” I gushed, “I had a meeting on the other side of town—”
“It’s okay.”
“It’s never going to happen again.”
“Scott, it’s okay. I figured you were running late.”
Right. I wished I could relax, but I could see the scale of the tempest she was holding back. Although her hair was down today, she was once again dressed to the nines. Stylish black blouse. Professional gray skirt. High-heeled shoes. She must have raided her mother’s closet. She also must have gotten a good deal of ribbing from her classmates. How upsetting it must have been to see all that thought and effort waste away in an empty hallway. Yet even now she fought to proclaim her maturity. I figured the best thing I could do, for both of us, was reinforce the façade.
“You have thick skin,” I said as I unlocked my apartment door. “When I was thirteen, I took everything personally. Even when the Falklands were invaded. I just knew it had something to do with my acne.”
All Madison could offer was a quivering half-smile. She was trying so damn hard to defuse herself, but she was losing the battle. Poor kid.
“Come in,” I said.
With her jaw clenched tight, she marched in ahead of me.
“Do you want anything to drink?” I asked. “Apple juice?”
She plopped down at the far end of my couch, dropped her book bag, and hunched forward. We both knew that if she opened her mouth now, it’d all come spilling out.
“Madison, I’m really sorry.”
She waved me off. No! Wrong way! Go back! Good point. I wasn’t helping with my pity. I opted to give her some space and let her work it out herself, but by the time I retreated to the kitchenette, I could hear her quick, wet breaths.
Shit. This was the second time today I made someone cry. My duller instincts told me to sit down next to her. To pat her back or something. Anything.
You know what I noticed about you, Scott? You never really touch anyone.
I hadn’t noticed it myself until Harmony brought it up. At the time I took it as flattery, considering that it meant “Please touch me.” But now I saw the flip side to her observation. I saw a glimpse of Gracie toward the end of our relationship. The look in her eyes that screamed I need more from you! even as her mouth was telling me that everything was fine.
After a few tense moments, I reentered the living room and faced Madison from the easy chair.
“I’m sorry,” she said through a curtain of hanging hair.
“I’m the one who screwed up.”
“No. I’m sorry for this,” she said, sniffing. “I’m just being stupid.”
“You’re not being stupid.”
“Yes I am. I was just… I thought I did something yesterday to disappoint you. Or piss you off.”
“Of course not. Madison—”
“No, I know. I know now. But while I was waiting…God, I do this all the time. I fill my head with these black thoughts, even when I know they’re bullshit.”
“Well,” I stated lamely, “that either makes you an insecure adult or a normal teenager.”
She finally looked up at me. “See, that’s exactly why I didn’t want to lose it in front of you. Everyone’s tiptoeing around us now, like we’re all just Annabelle Shanes waiting to happen. I didn’t… The last thing I want is to freak you out.”
I couldn’t help but chuckle at this wonderful girl. The way her explosive mind worked. This was Gracie’s field, not mine. She was the Jane Goodall of the teen market. She spent hours each day watching them in their natural habitat, absorbing their lingo, tracking their spending habits. Personally, I didn’t get her fascination, in the same way I didn’t get cat people. But that was long before Madison scratched at my door.
She crossed her arms and looked down at her knees. “Thanks for laughing at me.”
“No, hon. It’s not you. I swear. I feel for you. It’s just…” I laughed again. “I can only imagine what they’re putting you through at school.”
She shook her head, groaning. “You have no idea. We have special assemblies every day. They’ve posted armed guards on one side of the hallway and emergency psychologists on the other. And a girl can’t even reach into her bag for an Altoid without twelve people ducking.”
Now I really laughed. Madison fought her own grin.
“It’s not funny,” she said, tossing a couch pillow. “It’s your fault!”
“Me? What did I do?”
“You work with the media, and they’re the ones who make us all crazy with these end-of-the-world panic stories!”
“Well, that’s hardly my fault. That’s hardly even their fault. We had mass hysteria long before we had mass media. You think television was to blame for the Salem witch hunts?”
“Yes.”
“See, now you’re just being silly.”
She cracked a weak laugh, then rubbed her eyes with her sleeve. I hurried to the kitchen and retrieved a box of tissues. This time I hunkered down next to her.
“You’re the only person in my life who makes sense,” she told me, sniffling. “Everyone else is scrambling around like they don’t have a clue. But you seem to have a handle on everything.”