![]() |
Tommy mets the girls, deals with problems and goes to school. |
Chapter 2 How Hard Can It Be? âOh, how rude. Iâm Bliss and this is my sister Hope. We are very happy that you can see and hear us. Few people can, you know. Iâm not sure if that means we are getting stronger or you are very strong. I mean no one has ever seen or heard us before. Here, we will help you clean up this mess.â Bliss focused on the drawer that held neatly folded wash clothes and dish towels. The drawer flew up, clothes and towels flew in every direction across the room. Tommy began to shout for her to stop, trying to grab them out of the air, Hope giggled and clapped her hands. Ben moaned his distress. âOh my. That wasnât a very good idea, now was it.â Bliss admitted as the last of the towels fell to the floor. ââDonât do anything else. Donât help, just be still.â Tommy growled. The room was suddenly empty of the girls presence. Some of the angry boiling through Tommyâs veins cooled. âWow, that was easier than I thought. Who were they?â Tommy said to himself as he looked around at the devastation that used to be his momâs neat and clean kitchen. Mom would have a fit and never believe two flying, magic girls did that. âBen, get out from under that table and help me. Mom and Dad are going to be home in a couple of hours and we have got to clean this up before they get here.â They worked until all evidence of the mystery girls were gone. They agreed that they would say nothing about the girls because they couldnât answer the questions that were sure to follow. Ben talked about what had happened before Tommy got there. He told how Hope had warned Bliss they were making a mess, but Bliss wonât listen. They agreed no one would ever believe them, it was too weird, so they would forget about it. It was a pack. The next week was busy with preparing for school. Football, guitar and his lawn service were already keeping Tommy busy but adding the things his parents thought were important like new school clothes and school supplies were a lot of pressure. Finding clothes that were in style that he and his parents agreed on was almost impossible. Finding out whose homeroom he had and who his best friends had was important. They had found out this afternoon and Tommy wasnât happy. Billy and Tommy usually were in the same homeroom but every once in a while Billy would end up in Jackâs homeroom class. This was one of those years. Tommy was bummed about it. That evening at dinner Tommy complained to his father saying he knew if they had three classes per grade level the teachers would split best friends up just for spite. Mike rolled his eyes and said âAs much as teachers and principles would like to plot and plan to make your lifesâ miserable thatâs not how it works. And, no, Iâm not going to explain it to you. But there is a reason Billy was moved.â Tommy glared at his father for answering his question before he had the satisfaction of asking it. Mike tried to make it better by adding âAbby is going to be in your class thatâs good isnât it?â âMay I be excused?â Tommy asked as he pushed away from the table and went to his room. School was the next day. He was angry at Abby. It was her fault Billy wasnât in his class. If she hadnât come to town Billy would still be in his homeroom, he just knew it. He walked into his room to see his clothes that had been laid out to be ironed burning under the iron. Smoke billowed out from under the iron. âNo!â Tommy growled at the image of Bliss who was trying in vain to lift the iron. He ran to the iron and pushed at Blissâs image. His hand went through her before she escaped. He lifted the iron and set it on the ironing board before reaching for the plug to make sure it as off. Bliss had escaped and joined Hope in the ceilingâs corner. They floated, huddled together relieved to see Tommy. Tommy waved his hand in front of his face trying to clear the smoke. He opened the bedroom window and whispered âWhat where you thinking?â âI wanted to help.â Bliss said bobbing her head which made her ponytail bounce. She and Hope both had on Abbyâs cloths. Bliss looked to be wearing the green shirt and shorts she was wearing when he met Abby. Hope was wearing the skirt and blouse Abby had on at church. âTomorrowâs a big day, you know. School, I know things. We overheard your parents talking and school is important. You really should be looking sharp for a day like that. I wish I could go to school. Do you think we could go with you?â âNo. Didnât I say not to help me? Why are you back? Who are you?â Tommy asked. Good grief, I sound like Abby. Donât think about her now. Tommy warned himself he needed to deal with the crisis in front of him or above him as he glared up at the girls. âWell, yes you might have suggested we be less helpful. We told you, we are Bliss and Hope. Is your memory faulty? I really donât know if I can help with a faulty memory but I would give it a go, tell you things youâve forgotten. Iâm not sure how good my memory is though, because weâre, Hope and I, are not sure who we are, where weâre from or why weâre here, you see.â Bliss said. Hope giggled. âWhy are you wearing Abbyâs clothes?â Tommy asked. âWell, you think about her all the time. We see her in your mind. Did you know you think of little else?â Bliss asked. âWe wanted to look ⌠I donât know really, we just thought weâd try it?â Bliss asked as Hope giggled as she curtsied in Abbyâs skirt. âDoes she talk?â he pointed to Hope. âOh, never mind. Maybe I shouldnât ask who are you, you arenât real, but you are real. Maybe I should ask what are you?â âWell, that. We...you see... that is... it is...one canât always...oh, honestly...we donât really know ourselves. We think weâre girls, donât you?â Bliss shrugged. âWe must not be bad girls because we donât want bad things. We only want good things. We just havenât exactly figured out how to make good things happened but we are learning. We learned today that we are not strong enough to iron shirts. But we will get stronger, if we can only learn how. Do you think we can learn that at your school?â âGreat.â Tommy threw himself down on his bed ignoring the question. The girls stood over him watching him. âI hate my life.â Tommy moaned. The girls vanished leaving the room cool and empty. A minute later he heard Ben scream like a girl and moaned again, knowing the girls had popped in on him. He went ahead moved over because Ben was going to stick to him like glue tonight. When his door opened seconds later he turned over to face the wall so Ben wonât see the smile on his face. He couldnât help it. Bliss and Hope were a pain but they didnât mean to be, sort of like Ben. There was nothing scary about those two, they were just annoying girls. The school halls were a loud crowded madness. They smelled of disinfectant, old socks and fresh baked bread all at once. Yes, school had started. What was that smell, perfume? The girls were wearing perfume? Well, some of them were, it was kinda pretty. When did Melissaâs lips get shiny? They werenât shiny at church? Dang, why did Sara hit me? So what if I didnât say hi, I never said hi before school. Is that Abby? He had never seen her with her hair down, even at church it was in a pony tail. Man it was long. Those were red highlights. At least she had on shoes. âYa might wanna shut your mouth, dude.â Billy laughed beside him. Tommy glared at him. âShe is pretty. But she talks to much.â âThey all talk to much.â Tommy smiled. âAnd questions. They ask questions you canât answer, which is okay cause they ainât gonna give ya time to think of the answer anyhow. They get worse ever year, I swear they do.â Billy complained. âHow do you know?â Tommy asked. âCalled Melissa last night. Gave me a headache, thatâs for sure.â Billy confessed. âWhatâd she say?â Tommy asked watching Abby. âWho knows, canât hear as fast as that girl talks. Jeans look good this year.â he laughed looking at Melissa as the bell rang and they separated to go into class. Tommy had to agree. Leave it to Billy to point it out to him. The assigned seating was given, Jones and Nelson only had one problem that Tommy could see Melissa Mallory. Abby and Melissa did not seem to share Tommyâs feelings. They giggled and whispered and passed notes back and forth completely leaving him out of the loop. Could this get any worse? He looked at the corner of the room in frustration. Worse was in the corner of the room. Waving back at him were Bliss and Hope. âNo.â he whispered. âMr. Nelson, do you have something to share with the class?â Ms. Roberson asked. Tommy continued to stare at the ceiling corner in disbelief. This could not be happening. Hope whispered into Tommyâs mind Give me a second and Iâll have you fixed right as rain. Youâll be having the perfect excuse to suggest to Ms. Roberson for you and Melissa switch seats. You can do that? Tommy thought. I said so didnât I? Hope giggled back. Are we talking without talking? Tommy asked. I believe it to be so. Hope placed her small hands over her heart. Cool. thought Tommy. âMr. Nelson.â the teacher repeated. âIâm sorry Ms. Roberson. I thought uh... I forgot something, but I remembered it. Sorry.â Hope went to work putting thought after thought into Melissaâs mind, that she just had to tell Abby that very minute. She couldnât wait. Ms. Roberson warned the girls once but Melissa couldnât stop herself. Every little thought she had, had to be shared that very second. Ms. Roberson told Melissa she would be sent to the office if she didnât stop talking immediately. Melissa told Tommy what to say. Tommy raised his hand. Ms. Roberson called on Tommy âMs. Roberson, Melissa is usually pretty good in school. Abbyâs her new friend maybe if I sat between them they couldnât talk so much. I donât want Melissa to get in trouble even if she is a pain in the ... well you know.â Ms Roberson was listen to Hope in her head when she said âAnd thatâs the truth of it.â The class room exploded with laughter and so did Ms Roberson. Embarrassed at what she had said before thinking she corrected herself by saying âI meant, I understand what you are trying to say and switch seats with Miss Mallory, please.â Melissa and Tommy switched seats, Melissa mouthed thank you as they did. They soon broke for lunch and headed for their lockers to put away their morning books which had been issued and reviewed. Tommy and Abby had lockers side by side and Melissaâs was below Abbyâs. Melissa threw her things in and dashed off to meet up with MaryAnn and save a seat for Abby who was taking too long to organize her locker. âThanks for keeping Melissa out of trouble in there. Do you always help girls?â âNo. I help friends. Are you about through Iâll walk you to the lunch room.â Tommy smiled down at her. Tommy gently shut his locker and Abby slammed hers shut. Abbyâs hair caught in her locker and the combination automatically spun when she tried to pull it free. âOuch. Oh, fix it. Itâs stuck. Itâs pulling. It hurts.â Tears filled her eyes as she hopped from one foot the other pulling her hair even more. âI can see that. Be still and stop pulling.â Tommy placed his hand between her shoulder blades the way he did Ben when Ben got himself worked up. Abby stilled. âWhatâs the combination?â âI donât know. It hurts.â âOkay. Whereâs the combination?â âI donât know. It hurts.â âOkay. Do you think itâs in your purse? You check your pockets, Iâll check your purse.â âYou canât look in my purse.â Abby gasped. âDo you want to stay stuck in the locker or do you want me to look in your purse?â Tommy was getting frustrated with the situation. How could he fix it for her if she didnât let him. After a momentâs hesitation Abby handed over her purse answering. âFine. Look.â Abby began digging in her pockets and Tommy looked in her purse. Abby found the combination in her front pocket. âHere, now get out of my purse. Open the locker. Hurry.â she ordered. Tommy wanted to comment on her bad attitude but he wasnât sure what he wanted to say so he opened the locker without a word. Abby took the combination from him, took her purse, stiffly said âThank you.â and walked away like he had done something wrong. âWait up.â His long legs caught up in three steps but he could tell she was walking fast for her short legs. âWhatâs wrong?â âNothing.â Abby keep her eyes straight ahead. âWeâre late to lunch.â âThatâs not the problem. Whatâs wrong?â Tommy asked stopping her in front of the lunch room doors. âI...I didnât want you to look in my purse. Thatâs all.â Abby still had tears in her eyes. It tore at him to see the tears brimming in her green eyes. He wanted her to laugh, to be happy and smile for him. âGirls donât like guys me their purses, got it?â âGeez, I do now.â Tommy still blocked the door to lunch room âIâm a boy so Iâm slow, ya know. Letâs make sure I got it. You like guys to open lockers when your hairâs stuck. Oh, and catchinâ fallinâ bowls, thatâs okay, but not purses, donât look in those. Is that right? Do you like guys to open doors?â He raised his eyebrows at her, she grinned. That was closer he could get a smile or at least try he turned on the worst hick accent he could muster and said âCause my ma taught me how, ya know. But Iâm a boy so I could slam it in your face. But if you want me to do that your gonna have to say so, cause Iâm slow and I wonât think of it myself. Just say the word if ya want me to be rude, but donât you be tellinâ my pa or heâd be taken me to the wood shed for sure.â That got the giggle he was looking for and he opened the door for them to eat lunch. The lunch line was mostly gone by the time they got in there. They had wasted a lot of time. Mondayâs were Tommyâs favorite lunch day because the dessert was your choice of ice cream bars. Tommy was explaining this to Abby as they went through the line. He told her that at the end of the line there was a freezer and it would be full of trays with your choice of great ice cream bars. She just had to pick the one she wanted. His problem was picking just one. He liked them all. Abby was impressed in Dallas they didnât get to choose, you got what you got. Tommy opened the freezer prepared to pull out a fudge bomb thinking he might wish for an Eskimo Pie later he turned to ask Abby if he could get something down for her. She was pointing at the freezer with that round mouth of hers. He turned back just in time to see a tray of Eskimo pies dump onto his lunch tray. âNo.â he growled. Well, that didnât go as planned did it Bliss? Sorry Tommy. Hope sighed. No indeed, what do you think I do wrong? Bliss asked. He looked in the corner there were Bliss waved and Hope shrugged.. What are you doing here? Tommy thought. We think your Abby is cute as a button. But you should really avoid her purse dear. Hope answered. I donât care what you think. Why did you dump that tray of ice cream out and why are you here. Tommy glared his thoughts back. I didnât do it. Besides, you thought you wanted more ice cream I heard you think it and so did Bliss. You knew we wanted to come to school, did you forget? We can help you. We will work on that memory problem with you. We got you seated closer to Abby didnât we? We are learning a great deal in your school. We are learning to speak like a native. Dude is fun word. It can be used for both boys and girls right?â Tommy growled in frustration. The room cooled as they vanished. âDid you see that? Oh my goodness. That was wild. No one will believe it.â Abby was talking non-stop. The lunch ladies were gathering around her. Tommy was too busy talking to Hope to worry about Abby or the lunch ladies. He was going to the office for sure and he didnât even do anything. âTommy didnât touch that tray. I swear he really, really didnât do it. He was reaching for the one above it and that one just came down. Look at the mess it made. I think heâs in shock. Donât you think heâs in shock? He hasnât said a word. He keeps looking at the ceiling like heâs mad at the ceiling or something. Should we get him to the nurse. We do have a school nurse donât we? Is it a law or something to have a nurse? Tommy?â Abby reached for him. Her eyes were wide with wonder. âAre you okay?â âWhat? Oh, yeah.â Tommy frowned at Abby with frustration. Abby frowned back with concern. âSorry. Did I see what?â Tommy picked up the tray off the floor. As he tried to place the tray back in the freezer Abby rolled her eyes âThe tray moron. What else? I mean it came tumbling down at you. I think itâs broke. Donât you?â âNo. I donât.â at her puzzled look he said âDonât ask.â He started putting ice cream up and apologized to the lunch ladies who were muttering about children and cleaning up after them. âGo eat with Melissa if you want, I got this. Iâm not that hungry any more.â Abby started picking up ice cream handing them to him as he put them away. He smiled but didnât say anything âYou seem mad. Do ya want ta talk about it?â âNope.â âOkay, then. I canât eat either, thatâs what happens when my friends are upset. I canât eat ya know.â When Tommy frowned at Abby she grinned at him and her eyes twinkled so bright he couldnât help but smile. Were did that smile come from? He didnât want to smile. Why did she make him smile? They finished putting up all the extra ice creams Tommy grabbed two fudge bombs and nodded to Abby to lead the way. They joined Melissa. Abby went immediately into telling Melissa about what happened. Tommy ate his fudge bomb and watched Abbyâs melt in her hand, as she talked in girl short hand to Melissa. Out of mercy for both the slow agonizing death of the fudge bomb and Abbyâs hands he traded his empty stick and a napkin for Abbyâs dripping fudge bomb and devoured the dripping mess. Abby didnât stop talking. This was kind of cool. When Melissa looked at him and said âReally?â once he nodded to swallow the cold wad of ice cream in his mouth she took it as a yes and ignore him again. He tried it the next time she asked him that âReally?â question and it worked again. No more visits from Bliss and Hope before the bell rang to end signal the end of the school day. Tommy did discover he liked Melissa sitting behind him and using him to pass notes. Every time she wanted to pass one up she would scratch his back and he would stretch putting his hands behind his head. Melissa would slip the note into his hand. He would cover the note and bring his hands back to the front of his desk. The best part was getting the note to Abby. He would tap her on the back. She would lean up in her seat and he would slip it under the edge of her rear end. Yes, sixth grade was going to be just fine. Tommy found Ben after school they changed into their football practice uniforms and they walked to football practice. âHow was your first day, Buddy?â Tommy asked. âGood. I got the new teacher Miss Angel, sheâs a hottie.â Ben grinned as he told his big brother all about the new teacher. âDonât tell Dad that.â Tommy warned hitting Ben in the stomach with his shoulder pads. âWhat, Iâm stupid? How bout you?â hitting Tommy back. Like Ben, Tommy gave him a short version of the day. But he knew he had to tell him about the ice cream incident because Abby told Melissa which was like announcing it on the school intercom. Everyone at school would know before tomorrow. Ben grabbed Tommyâs arm. âI canât handle them following me around school. I canât.â he panicked. âRelax. They didnât follow you. They followed me. If they follow you just say âgo bother Tommyâ in your head, not out loud, just in your head and they will. Trust me. Hope looks for a chance to bug me. Bliss is always causing trouble with Hope. Besides, I got to sit were I wanted because of them so, see, itâs not all bad.â Right after they turned the corner onto the football field Ben stopped in his tracks. |