Cigarette Fairy, Part 2 | |
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This fictional account contains adult language and sexual themes. If such language and themes offend you, please do not read further. The persons and events described in this work are purely fictional. Any similarity to actual persons or events is strictly coincidental. Copyright 2003 by SSTORYMAN. All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this story in any form and for any purpose as long as this notice is reproduced and no financial remuneration is received, directly or indirectly, by the person reproducing or using it. THE CIGARETTE FAIRY 2. Who's the Culprit? Saturday night the Pattersons lingered at the dinner table after supper. Taylor had no choice but to be there. She couldn't use the car after being grounded. She had nowhere to go. Candice practiced soccer that afternoon and she, too was home for the evening. "I have something to say," Pamela began sternly, pushing her plate back. "I was at the grocery store today. I looked in my purse for my wallet. What do you think I found in the bottom of my purse?" Three blank stares returned to her. "This," she went on, displaying the disposable lighter. "Along with a cigarette!" No one said a word. "Somebody put a cigarette and this lighter in my purse," Pamela exploded. "It isn't funny. Taylor, after what happened yesterday is this your idea of a joke?" "No, Mom," sputtered the 16 year old, caught completely off guard. "Why accuse me? I don't mess around with your purse!" "Well someone did. You, missy, are the prime suspect. You were mad I made you smoke that cigarette yesterday. But I only did what any responsible parent would do in that situation. To take revenge by planting a cigarette in my purse is the height of cruelty." "But Mom I didn't do it," Taylor whined. "God, this is so unfair!" "Wait a minute, Pam," Mick interrupted. "She's right. Why assume she's the guilty party?" "She's the only one with a motive," Pamela shot back. "Unless you want to admit that _you_ did it, Mick?" He laughed. "Hell no, I didn't. Why would I plant a cigarette in your purse? I know how you feel about the whole subject of smoking!" "Maybe because you didn't want me to quit in the first place. Come on, you know it's true, Mick. You disagreed with what I did to Taylor yesterday. You tried to defend her. So maybe you want her to smoke, just like you didn't want me to quit years ago?" Taylor gaped at her. "Mom, what are you talking about?" She turned to her father. "Dad, what does she mean you didn't want her to quit?" Mick hung his head and said nothing. Pamela answered for him. "Taylor, it's none of your damn business. Yours either, Candice," she added, glaring at her other daughter. "Hey don't get mad at me," the 13 year old gulped. "I didn't say a thing." "Mom, what's going on?" Taylor repeated. "What disagreement are you talking about between you and Dad?" "Never mind. I shouldn't bring up ancient history. But look. Someone put a cigarette and lighter in my purse knowing I'd find 'em. I don't know if it was a subtle suggestion, an intentional temptation, or just a cruel joke. It doesn't matter. I want you all to know it really pissed me off. One of you is the culprit. I do _not_ appreciate it!" With that Pamela stood up and stormed out. Mick looked at his daughters and grinned sheepishly. "Well, girls, looks like the three of us will clear the dishes by ourselves tonight." Candice offered a lame excuse about needing to go see Nina Caldwell and split. That left Mick and Taylor to clear the table and clean up. "So, Dad, what's Mom talking about? What did she mean you didn't want her to quit? That was years ago. It sounds like she thinks you planted the cigarette in her purse to encourage her to smoke again." Mick nervously wiped his brow. He carefully put a serving bowl in the dishwasher. "Honey, to be honest, it's not something I'm comfortable talking about with you." "But Dad, Mom's accusing one of us of planting that cigarette in her purse. At first she thought I did it. But then she switched and seemed to accuse you. Dad, we both need to come clean. Openness and honesty are important. I didn't do it. Did you? And if you did, why?" Mick looked over his shoulder to make sure Pamela wasn't nearby. She wasn't. "Honey, your mom let the cat out of the bag so I'm gonna explain what happened seventeen years ago. But don't you dare tell her I told you any of this. Agreed?" Taylor nodded. "Okay. Here's what happened. I met Mom in college as you know. It was our junior year. I fell madly in love with her the second I met her. She was gorgeous; of course she still is," he added wistfully. "But she smoked. Actually I shouldn't say 'but.' That's because one reason I was so attracted to Pamela in the beginning was her smoking." Taylor cocked her head. "God! What do you mean?" Mick cleared his throat. "This is hard for me to admit, honey. Most people think smoking's disgusting. But I didn't. I liked the fact that your mom smoked. I always did. There was just something about how she did it, so elegant, so mesmerizing ?." "Dad! God, I don't believe it. You liked it?" Mick nodded. "Yeah, Taylor, I sure did. It drove me crazy. Of course your mom smoked too much; a couple packs a day. But I loved it. She smoked so much I had lots of opportunity to be driven crazy. That's what she's referring to. After we got married and she got pregnant with you she told me she was gonna quit. I didn't object. But after you were born I casually asked when she'd start again. I sort of wanted her to start smoking again. Well, she hit the ceiling. She was mad as hell. You see, it was hard for her to quit. I guess she didn't want to face that agony a second time. We wanted more kids and she was pissed I wanted her to start smoking again because it'd mean eventually she'd have to quit all over again. She didn't want that." He paused. "We never discuss smoking anymore. But I'm sure that's why she thinks I might plant a cigarette in her purse. I didn't, but that's why she thinks I might have." "But Dad, I don't understand. Why did you _like_ Mom to smoke?" He blushed. "It's hard to explain. I guess you had to be there," he smiled with no small embarrassment. He didn't want to explain the depth of his feelings about female smoking in general or about his wife's old habit in particular. "Let's just say Mom got mad at me because I wanted her to smoke again. She knows I wouldn't be upset if she ever decided to return to it." Taylor shook her head. "Wow, this is weird. Maybe I don't want to know any more." "Yeah, honey, maybe you don't." "But Mom's on the warpath. If you didn't do it, Dad, and I didn't, who's left? Candice? I don't believe that twerp could or would. What motive did she have?" She hesitated. "God, you don't think Mom did it, do you? Do you think she's setting us up to be the heavies because secretly she wants to smoke again? Could that be it?" Mick shrugged. "Honey, I don't know. To be honest my advice is to walk on tiptoes. She's upset but maybe it'll blow over. Experience tells me you can't discuss smoking with your mom. By the way, I'm sorry for what happened to you yesterday. Your mom sometimes goes overboard if smoking's involved. I know she thought she was doing the right thing. But I felt bad for you. I want you to know that." "Thanks, Dad," the teenager smiled. She frowned. "This is all too weird. Someone around here isn't telling the truth. Somebody planted that cigarette in my jacket and then also put one in Mom's purse!" Later Taylor went to the Caldwells. Candice and Nina were in Nina's room. Instead of visiting Ashleigh, Taylor confronted her little sister. "Listen, twerp. I just talked to Dad. He swears he didn't do that to Mom and I sure as hell didn't. That leaves you. If you're trying to be funny, Candice, knock it off. I'm taking the heat and I don't like it!" Candice was a miniature version of her slender blond older sister. She shrugged. "I don't know what you're talking about. I'm not the one who got caught smoking yesterday. Don't bullshit me. You must've done it, Taylor. You're the one with the motive." The older girl glared. "I _didn't_ get caught smoking. I've never smoked. At least I never did till Mom made me." Nina listened with interest. "Hey, Taylor, I have a question. I'm serious. How was it? Smoking, I mean? Don't get mad. I'm just kinda curious." Taylor couldn't be rude to Nina like she could to her sister. "I told you guys, Nina, I don't smoke." "No, I don't mean that. I mean when your Mom made you. Was it really so bad?" Taylor sat down and sighed. "I felt awful sick. It was also humiliating." "But the smoking itself, Taylor. What was that like?" She looked at Nina. "Why are you so curious?" "I just am," shrugged the thirteen year old. "Was it really, really terrible?" "No, it wasn't. Feeling sick was terrible. But the smoking itself? It wasn't as bad as I expected. But it's hard to separate what it did to me from what the smoking was really like." Nina nodded. "I was just nosy. So do you want to do it again?" "Smoke? No. Why would I?" Again the 13 year old shrugged. "I don't know. My parents smoke all the time. They don't seem to want to quit. They told Ashleigh they don't care if she wants to smoke." Taylor nodded. "Your mom told me. But that's not exactly it. Your mom said she doesn't want Ashleigh to smoke; she just won't forbid it if Ashleigh wants to start." Nina nodded. "Here's why I'm curious. Something about smoking must be really great. Otherwise my parents wouldn't keep doing it even though it's bad for 'em. That's why I'm curious what _you_ thought, Taylor. I wanted to know if you'd do it again." She giggled. "Boy, _that'd_ piss your mom off! Imagine how she'd feel if she turned you into a smoker by forcing you to smoke your first cigarette! Wow, that'd be too funny!" A light went on. "Yeah Nina, you're right. It _would_ be funny, wouldn't it?" "Uh-oh. What are thinking, Taylor?" Candice asked. "You have that look. You're thinking something!" Taylor ignored her little sister. "Nina, you're smart," she smiled, condescendingly patting the younger Caldwell girl on the head. "I'm pissed about what Mom did to me. I've been looking for some way to get even. She thinks the cigarette in her purse was my doing but it's not." She glared at Candice. "Despite your 'I'm innocent' shit, twerp, you might've done it to get me in deeper trouble." She shook her head. "Anyway, Nina, what you suggested might be the way to get revenge. Maybe at some point I'll casually mention to Mom that I've started smoking and that I never wanted to take it up until she introduced me to it. I'll tell her I don't think I ever want to quit. She'll feel so guilty. God, it'll be great!" Candice rolled her eyes. "Yeah, and you'll get grounded for the rest of your life!" "So you'd start smoking just to get even with your mom?" Nina gasped in disbelief. "Course not," Taylor laughed. "But I can make Mom _think_ I do and think that her punishing me made me want to smoke. Hmm, I don't know. I'll see." She stared at Candice. "Anyway, twerp, my driving privileges got suspended for a week. I'm afraid that ultimately Mom will blame me for the cigarette that this cigarette fairy put in her purse. So what do I have to lose? Probably nothing. Whatever I do I'll get blamed for everything. I might just think about doing it to get some retribution." What Taylor didn't realize was that the cigarette fairy, as she referred to it, was about to get some help from a completely unexpected source. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- An uneasy truce remained in place in the Patterson household that weekend. On Monday everyone but Candice went to work. Pamela had an appointment with a prospective client about an office lease. Most of her real estate work involved residential homes. This was a female doctor looking to hire a realtor to find her a new office for a growing psychiatric practice. Pamela was eager to get into the commercial real estate market and this could be her big chance. Dr. Sheryl Richardson was an attractive psychiatrist in her early thirties. Pamela liked her immediately. Sheryl was funny but at the same time professional. Pamela understood why this pleasant female psychiatrist needed a larger office to accommodate her expanding practice. But before making a decision to hire Pamela, Sheryl asked if they could drive around together to look at several potential office buildings. Pamela used her car to take clients out to look at properties. Her minivan was nice but not too fancy. After all, no one wanted a realtor who drove an overly expensive car paid for by all her hefty real estate commissions! Sheryl Richardson opened the minivan's passenger door and got in. As Pamela started the engine Sheryl reached down and picked up something off the floor. It was a half empty pack of Marlboro Lights 100's! "Ah, Pamela, I see you smoke?" Pamela was aghast. "Oh my God! No! How did that get there?" Sheryl laughed. "Don't apologize, Pamela. It doesn't bother me if you do smoke." "But I don't," Pamela desperately replied. "I really don't!" She was horrified this prospective client thought she was a smoker. Sheryl hadn't retained her yet and Pamela feared this could kill her chances! "Uh, those must be my daughter's," she lamely added, frantically looking for a plausible explanation to explain her prospective client's incredible discovery. Sheryl laughed. "Come on, Pam. That's the oldest and lamest excuse in the book! I'm not buying. First, you're not old enough to have a daughter that smokes. Second, I told you I don't mind. Not at all. In fact, do you want the truth? I'm absolutely delighted that you smoke. You see, I do, too. Yeah, believe it or not, I'm a smoker. And God, I must say it'd be great having a realtor who smokes so I won't have to abstain when I'm around her." Pamela gasped. "You smoke, Sheryl? But you're a doctor ??" "Yeah, but I'm a psychiatrist, not a heart surgeon," she laughed. She brushed her blond hair off her face. "I smoked back when I was a nurse before I went to medical school. God, did I ever! Recently I finally started up again. Damn, I sure missed it, too. Actually, that's one of the reasons why I need a bigger office. My practice is growing by leaps and bounds and I do want a nicer office in a better location. But frankly I also want a place where I can dedicate a backroom as a smoking room." She grinned. "It kills me that my assistant and I can't easily sneak out for smoke breaks where we are now." Pamela was speechless. Dr. Sheryl Richardson was a successful psychiatrist. It never occurred to her that she smoked. She didn't _look_ like a smoker. Pamela didn't know what to say. "Well, I'm sure I can help you find what you're looking for," she mumbled. "Great," Sheryl sighed happily. "That settles it then. I liked you anyway, Pam. You seem level headed. But now that I know you smoke, too, well, I'd definitely prefer working with you instead of some other real estate broker. We smokers have to hang together, you know." Pamela gulped and nodded. She was stuck. She didn't want to lose the chance to have Sheryl as a client. Maybe she could just play along and let Sheryl keep assuming she was a smoker. "Well then, that's great, Sheryl," she smiled weakly. "I have a couple properties to show you this morning. I suspect you'll be very happy with one of them." Sheryl nodded. "That sounds great, Pam. Listen, do you mind terribly if I have a cigarette right now? I'd really like one. You know?" Pamela gulped again. "Uh, I usually don't smoke in my car," she fibbed. "You know, I have to drive clients around. I don't want to alienate anyone with the smell." "Ah, yes, I understand," Sheryl agreed. "Fine. But after we see the properties we definitely need to find a restaurant or café where can sit down and smoke together while we talk about what I'm going to do. Yeah, this will work out great for me, Pam. I'm so pleased!" "Yeah, me, too," Pamela nodded apprehensively. "It's wonderful." ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Taylor left the Gap at eleven. She was scheduled for an early lunch. She walked to the food court inside the mall to decide what she wanted to eat. The restaurants weren't busy. It was too early. Beside her was Bonnie, another sales clerk taking an early lunch. Bonnie was an 18 year old brunette, pretty and a couple inches shorter than the taller Taylor. She didn't know Bonnie well but it didn't matter. Mostly she was someone to eat with. They settled on a hamburger place. Taylor opened her purse to pay for lunch. She saw it. Beneath her wallet, in the bottom of her purse, were two cigarettes and a disposable lighter! "I didn't know you smoked, Taylor," Bonnie grinned as Taylor stared at her unexpected find. "God, that's great. We can sit outside and smoke together after we eat!" Taylor gasped. "Shit. I don't believe it. It's happened again!" Bonnie headed toward one of the food court tables. "What happened?" "I don't believe it," she groaned. "Everyone at our house is being attacked by cigarette fairies." And she told Bonnie all about the peculiar events of the last several days. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheryl and Pamela left the second office complex on the north end of town. "Not bad," the psychiatrist nodded. "Not bad at all, Pam. But I'm not sure either of them is what I'm looking for. Maybe we can stop for a bite to eat and talk about it?" "Fine," Pamela smiled nervously. She was glad some chemistry was developing with Dr. Richardson. They clearly hit it off and there was no hint of Sheryl talking to another realtor. Pamela felt she had the client, assuming she found something Sheryl liked well enough to sign a lease. They pulled in the parking lot of a popular chain restaurant. "Oh no," Sheryl exclaimed. "Not here. It's all non-smoking. This place doesn't have a smoking section." She smiled at her realtor. "We need to go somewhere we can smoke. Right?" "Oh, yeah, right," Pamela nodded. "Of course." She turned around and headed toward a bar and grille in the same mall complex. She was pretty sure it had a smoking section. Sheryl got out of the car and grabbed the half empty pack of Marlboro Lights 100's she found earlier on the floor. "Don't worry, Pam, I have yours," she quipped. "I'll bring 'em with me." "Thanks, Sheryl. You're a dear." They walked into the bar and grille. A large smoking section was located to the left of the hostess stand. Sheryl smiled at the young greeter and announced, "Two for smoking!" Pamela didn't know what to do. Sheryl believed she smoked and that belief was a key factor in her decision to use her. Now she simply assumed the two of them would smoke together and share some girl talk over lunch. This was the moment of decision. Pamela quickly had to decide how to handle the sticky mess she found herself in. They settled in at a table as the waitress took drink orders. Sheryl ordered a Bud Light. Pamela asked for iced tea and Sheryl cut in. "Honey, ignore that. Bring my girlfriend a Bud Light." She smiled at Pamela. "I'm off work today, Pam, and I need a beer. So if I drink you have to, too. Chalk it up to client development. Okay?" Pamela smiled politely. "Yeah, sure. Bud Light's fine for me." Sheryl pulled a leather cigarette pouch from her purse and set it on the table next to what was supposedly Pamela's pack of Marlboro Lights 100's. "First I gotta pee," she giggled impishly. "I'll be back. Don't wait for me. Go ahead and light up without me if you need to." She headed off to the ladies room. Pamela picked up Sheryl's leather cigarette pouch to examine it. It was an elegant accouterment; the leather covering the case was expensive. The lighter inside the side pouch was classy and monogrammed. She sighed. In the old days she had one like it, she remembered. Her leather cigarette case was navy blue, though, and it ?. "I'm back," Sheryl interrupted, sitting down again. "You can have one of my cigarettes if you prefer," she smiled graciously. "I don't mind." "No thanks, I was just admiring your case," Pamela said. She uneasily handed it back across the table. "It's a nice one. Reminds me of one I had a long time ago." Sheryl nodded and opened her pouch. With long, supple fingers she slowly withdrew an all white, 100 millimeter cigarette, a full flavored Benson & Hedges 100. She giggled. "I don't know about you, Pamela, but I'm really ready to smoke. God, it's so nice to deal with another professional woman who totally understands that common need we have. Don't you think?" Pamela nodded solemnly. She desperately wanted this client. She needed Sheryl Richardson's business. She had no choice but to join her and do something she hadn't done in ages, something she swore she'd never do again. Under her breath she cursed her daughter or husband or whoever the hell put the half empty pack of Marlboro Lights 100's in her car. But she still had to do it. If she wanted Sheryl as a client she had to at least pretend to smoke! Trying to act nonchalant she smiled and picked up the Marlboro Lights 100's. She shook one out. Her hands trembled slightly. She inserted the long white cigarette into her lips. She hoped her nervousness wasn't too apparent. She nodded casually. "Hey, Sheryl, can I use your lighter? I'm not sure what happened to mine." "Oh yeah, sure," Sheryl smiled. She passed Pamela hers. "No problem." Pamela looked over her client's lighter. It was a damned expensive little device! The lighter was small, made of fourteen carat gold with her initials inscribed on the side. Pamela clicked it. A small flame erupted. Slowly she guided it toward the unlit cigarette hanging from her lips. Contact! She felt smoke in her mouth. It didn't feel that strange. Back when she was younger she executed that exact exercise a million times. Her cheeks collapsed out of habit and she self-consciously smiled at her companion. Without thinking she sucked smoke down into her lungs. The feeling was overwhelming. After not smoking for 17 years the smoke felt incredibly potent down inside her chest. But Pamela intentionally played it totally cool. She casually passed the gold lighter back to Sheryl, pursed her lips with a sly smile, and directed a thin plume of exhaled smoke toward the ceiling. Sheryl nodded approvingly, clearly admiring her realtor's adept smoking style. "God, nicotine is amazing, isn't it, Pamela? It always hits the spot, doesn't it?" Pamela tapped a non-existent ash in the table ashtray. She was nervous. She held her cigarette by her head. Smoke wafted directly into her face. She kept smiling. "Oh yeah, Sheryl, absolutely," she confidently answered. "It sure does hit the spot!" |
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