Chapter 5: Like great, great grandfather like great, great grand-daughter!
Once Upon A Push
Chapter 5
âGET UP!â My motherâs voice boomed up the stairs, echoing off the high ceilings. I hated the high ceilings; all they did was make me feel as If Iâd gone bonkers when I woke up. Itâd take me a minute to locate them and when I did, I had a crick in my neck from searching for the corner of the room.
â5 more minutes.â I groaned, turning my head towards the warmth of the pillow my head was resting on.
âItâs 12 oâclock. I still have to give you instructions and you have to get ready and eat, and then itâs a 30 minute drive. Iâd advise you to get up or Iâll get the cold water.â My mother said, growling.
I darted up, taking her threat seriously. Sheâs done it before. Twice actually, once when I was in middle school and she didnât know I was up the whole night crying and she woke me up by doing that and then a few weeks ago when I refused to get up. I ran to the bathroom, taking my warm shower, lathering my hair with vanilla shampoo, conditioner and matching soap.
I looked at my closet in pure curiosity. I yanked up my towel, wriggling a bit at the dampness of it. What to wear? Iâll push my motherâs suggestion away for now. I grabbed my pitch black skinny jeans and a dark blue dress shirt, and a black blazer atop of it. I know, disobeying my mother- but it still was better than a -shudder- skirt. In 2nd grade, I wore a skirt, a pretty skirt if you ask me. I was jumping around at recess like the hyper active child I was when suddenly Ben Miller ran up behind me and lifted it up, revealing my âHello Kittyâ underwear that I begged my mother to buy. I wish I just went with pants that day.
I placed my damp hair into a sloppy but neat bun, grabbing my mascara and applying it thoroughly to each of my eyes. I placed a scarf around my neck, more for weather purposes but it went well with the style. I slipped into dark blue heels, and added gray hoop earrings into my ears. I grabbed my iPhone and faux scale purse. I hated how they hurt animals and created products with their remains. Itâs gross if you ask me, wearing a dead animal.
I slipped into the living room, where my mother was on the phone. She turned towards me when she hung up and smiled brightly.
âYou⦠didnât follow my rules.â She said, glancing at my outfit. I bit my lip nervously as she examined my outfit.
âI guessâ¦You look fine, câmon.â She said, slamming me onto the couch. She handed me a clip board with at least 20 pieces of typed paper. I gave her a somewhat shocked look? What is she going to be asking her? Is this going to be like 20,000 questions?
âThatâs 20 surveys for what they want each room to look like.â She spoke, catching me off guard.
â20 rooms?!â I asked, shocked. She nodded. Were these people rich? No, you dimwit. No need to be mean.
âThey only want to do 20; the other ones arenât used as much.â She said, shrugging. I looked at my mother as if she was crazy. My house had 19 rooms, bathrooms and the main rooms included.
âBut yes, when I ask a question, you answer it with her exact words- unless she starts blabbering, then you write mainly what she says. For example- if she says âBut yes, my daughters favorite color is pink. She had a pink bicycle once in which she fell off of and needed 23 stitches.â What would you take out of that sentence?â My mother asked.
âThat her daughter likes pink.â I said it like it was a question rather than a sentence. She didnât seem to care, though. At least I got one right. My mother nodded, smiling.
âWhat about this one? âJacob likes red and green, but he doesnât like neon. He had neon braces before and they called him laser teeth. He also has a brown bunk bed that he loves, so we arenât getting rid of that.ââ My mother spoke.
âWe need brown furniture to match the bunk bed, and we need duller red and greens.â I said more confidently, smiling. She nodded, grinning widely and proudly.
âGreat! Ooh! Letâs go!â My mother said, glancing nervously at her watch. She began racing out of the house, with a mug filled with coffee, a briefcase, and her heels clacking. I followed not too far behind her.
âWho are your clients again?â I asked while flipping through the papers on my lap anxiously.
âPatricia and Oliver.â My mother answered quickly, pulling up to a large house- it wasnât even classified as a house, was it? If it had more than 20 rooms- it was a mansion.
âSo tell me again what Iâm doing.â I said, turning towards her as she quickly shut her car off. I glanced at my phone that was in my hand. 3:54P.M.
âYouâre writing down what they say.â My mother said, groaning in frustration.
âMom, itâs okay. I can do it.â I said, annoyed at her lack of confidence in me.
âLetâs go.â My mother said, pasting on her signature smile. I nodded, grabbing my bag out of the car, and slipping out into the nippy air. I shivered before pulling my blazer tighter over my arms. Our heels clacked in sync, which annoyed me so I stopped and continued- messing up the synchronization. My mother didnât seem to care or notice. She reached the door, extending her French Tipped hand that was balled into a fist to knock.
âHello.â A man said, smiling widely as he opened the door.
âCome in!â He said, kindly, smiling at me and my mother, widening the gap for us to enter.
âIâm Oliver, the husband of Patricia.â He said, once he closed the door.
âIâm Vanessa Perkins and this is my daughter Maverly.â My mother spoke, grinning.
âGreat. My wife should be here in a minute, until then- make yourselves at home. Sheâs going to do all of the talking, I just stand around making sure he she doesnât extend the budget too much!â He said, jokingly. My mother replied with a laugh, keeping a lightly conversation between the two before it slowly faded off and he turned his gaze towards me.
âI have a son your age!â Oliver said, turning towards me. I smiled. âWhatâs his name?â I asked, raising an eyebrow.
âHis name is-.â He began but was cut off from his wife who walked into the room. For whatever reason, it annoyed me that he just stopped mid-sentence.
âIâm Patricia! You can call me Patty,â She said, extending a hand to my mother, who took it with a large smile sitting upon her face. Iâm told that I look like my mother.
âVanessa Perkins, Interior Designer.â My mother replied, smiling as well.
âIâm Maverly.â I announced awkwardly as she grabbed my hand in her small, fragile one. She had one heck of a handshake, might I add.
âItâs nice to meet you, Maverly, Vanessa. Letâs get down to business.â She said, smiling lightly. She brushed her dirty blonde hair out of her face with her index finger and thumb.
âSo this living room will be gray and burgundy, with hints of black here and there. I would like the pillows to stand out and the couch should be thin and not bulgy, thatâs unattractive and unprofessional. Iâd like a rug, as well with paintings that stand out as well. As you can see, this room is pretty dull.â Patty spoke, pointing along the walls and hard wood floor as she spoke.
I wrote everything neatly but quickly, making sure to get every detail included. As we moved onto the kitchen, my hand was cramping but I quickly fixed that problem by wringing my hands together repeatedly. She explained everything in so much detail. As we got to the second to last room, my hand was partly numb and I felt like it was going to drop off of my arm any minute. How did Maria do this for a job? She probably recorded it and went back to it later, idiot. Stop harassing me, conscious!
Weâd already done 2 bathrooms, 1 kitchen, 2 living rooms, their bedroom, 5 guest rooms, a dining room, a game room, a computer room, a conference room, a walk in closet, a basement, and a coat room.
Patty knocked on the door and a sleepy groan escaped from the other side, echoing loudly. I thought I heard him say something along the lines of âGo away, Mom,â but my ears could be deceiving me.
âExcuse my son, heâs asleep still.â She said sounding embarrassed.
âOh please, my daughter will sleep all day if you let her.â My mother said, grinning. Surprisingly, the two women laughed. They were real laughs and not those âKill me nowâ type of laughs.
âYeah, do you think you can come back tomorrow and interview him? He wants his room his way this time. He said that last time I made it âtoo girlieâ and his bathroom also needs redecorating.â She said, hopefully.
âI canât. Iâm so sorry. Butâ¦â Cue my motherâs pleading looks toward me. I immediately gave in.
âSure.â I muttered. If I wouldâve put up a fight then I wouldâve been grounded for a very long time.
âThank you, Maverly. My daughter could do it if youâd like.â My mother insisted.
âAs long as you donât try anything on my son. A pretty lady like you makes me nervous for my son.â Patty said, grinning and winking.
âI wonât.â I said, turning bright red. Did she just say that? Ha, sheâs funny.
âOkay. Well, thatâs all there is. You can stay for coffee if youâd like.â Patty offered, smiling hopefully.
âSure.â My mother said, smiling.
___
âWhat school do you attend, Maverly?â Oliver asked, smiling.
âI go to Morrison High.â I replied, blinking. I stirred the cup of coffee with the fancy red stirring straw.
âDaniel goes there, too. Do you like it?â Oliver said.
âYes, very much.â I replied. I scraped along my mind thinking of a Daniel that I know. There was a Danny in senior year. That could be him. I glanced at Oliver and Patricia, thinking back to Daniel who looked nothing like the two. He was a red head, a ginger, and he had dark brown eyes.
âWhere do you fit in with the groups of High School?â Oliver questioned.
âIâm... uh⦠an average, I guess. I like to study but not enough to be classified as a âgeekâ or ânerdâ and I donât play sports, so âjockâ or âcheerleaderâ is out, and Iâm not a partier or skater. So Iâm not âwild.â I replied, shrugging. They nodded in approval.
âDo you like the Mall?â Patty asked, leaning closer to me.
âLove it. I actually go there often." I replied. It was the truth. I mainly liked it for their amazing arcade on the 2nd floor. I also love the food court, but I seem guy like whenever I say that.
"That's great!" Patty said, continuing conversation with my mother. I just sat there imagining what my future would be like. Would I like comfortably or would I be rich? Probably comfortable. Will I be happy? Definitely, maybe not always, but most of the time. And isn't that what matters?
___
The drive home was quiet, though I knew my mother was proud of me. She trusted me to go to the most sacred place of her work- a clientâs home, and not just any client. The clients, the one sheâd been keeping her eyes on since the days when I first learned to walk. Since the day the company was given to her, being a plain furniture company at first- she changed it up- making her own furniture and offering to redo their homes, soon she remade the company into an interior design studio- but they still sold furniture. She couldnât rip out the little shreds that my great grandpa has sewn into the company.