CHAPTER 1
Alone in New York City and not a Bob in sight. At least not
one she knew.
"To
me," Madison lifted her champagne in toast and after the modest
applaud from her inner self, she took a sip. And then another, until the glass
held only her reflection.
She
looked around the five-star hotel room.
Next to the open bottle of champagne sat a bouquet of tiger lilies and
peach roses with her novel, No More Bobs, nestled in the middle. Grand Marnier
and Cognac truffles arranged at opposite ends of the book accented
her name - Madison Lawhon like chocolate bookends.
Who'd ever have known?
Bending
slightly, she stroked a rose petal and welcomed the companionship. The delicate
scent of celebration tickled her nose and she swallowed back her excitement.
With a quick glance at her wristwatch, she backtracked the hours. Ten, nine -
bordering seven
o'clock on the West Coast.
The kids would be expecting her call.
She
kicked off her slippers, picked up the phone and entered the nine-digits. On
the table, a copy of the agenda for the morning's events reminded her why she
was there and sweat formed in her palm. Please someone answer.
"Kayla?
It's Mom." She said, relaxed in the intimacy of her daughter's voice.
"How's everything?"
"Grandma's
driving us crazy." The whisper spoke volumes.
Madison sighed, "Maybe you're driving her crazy? Put her
on the phone." Even cross-country, still a mom. Madison forced her ear to the receiver to take in the
commotion miles away. What was that crash? Who just screamed? Maybe she ought
to book an earlier flight home?
"Is
that you, Madison?"
"It's
me. So how are the kids?" She prepared for the he-did-what-to-whom and
back-in-my-day recital. No answer. Madison amplified her voice, "the kids?"
After
mom readjusted the volume on her hearing aid she spoke crisply. "Marc
scraped up his knee. He'll live. And Luke got a phone call from some
floozy." Madison sensed a proverb coming off her mother's tongue.
"The way these girls flaunt their fannies and
pierce every orifice in their bodies, it's a wonder they--"
"Come
on, they're teenagers." Madison counted the hours until she could parole the kids
from grandma's protective custody and changed the subject, a futile argument to
two different interpretations of misbehavior.
"I
still can't believe it." Madison grasped the itinerary and gazed out at the New York skyline. "I'm going to be on Awakenings tomorrow morning."
"My
little girl on my favorite talk show," Mom sent her reviews. "Your
father would be so proud and Jessica and Paul are so--oh, I can hardly wait."
Madison walked barefoot on the plush carpeting, her toes
sinking two-inches deep into the thick pile, and dropped in ecstasy on the
over-sized bed, savoring her impending nine-minute moment of fame. She floated back into the soft pillows and
stared at the ceiling, enveloped in her mother's familiar voice. So far away, yet so close.
She
closed her eyes and imagined her mother's encouragement riding on the
California bay breeze, scaling the snowcapped Rockies, dipping in the currents to tickle the stalks of corn in Iowa and crossing into New York City with barely an inhalation between sentences. Her
presence filled the room.
"I
had all the ladies in my prayer group say a special prayer so you won't be
nervous tomorrow." Mom confided.
Mom
how could you, she thought in embarrassment, and thanked her efforts with a
simple, "I'll be fine."
But
Mom was