Unbreakable Bonds by Carolyn Ridder Aspenson
Unbreakable
Bonds;
An Angela Panther Novel
A
Mother's Work is Never Done..
Carolyn
Aspenson's (Unfinished
Business)
latest picks up the story of Angela Panther's dealings with her dead
mom, Fran and the duo's dynamic is as delightful as ever!
Angela
had her psychic gift under control until a traumatic loss shut it
down. And now that Angela's daughter is in too deep with a boy and
her best friend Mel's husband is cheating, she needs her mom more
than ever.
Fran
knows that when you're a mom, there's no such thing as till
death do us part
and she won't rest
in peace
while there's strife in her daughter's life. Using
her nifty celestial superpowers, she's soon back in the game and
helping out, regardless of her daughter's defunct gift.
carolynridderaspenson.com
www.facebook.com/carolynridderaspensonauthor
Twitter:
@awritingwoman carolynridderaspenson@gmail.com
Chapter One
The
air in the room felt frigid and sent an icy chill deep into my bones.
Searching for comfort, I lay on the rented hospice bed, closed my
eyes, and snuggled under Ma’s floral print quilt. I breathed in her
scent, a mixture of Dove soap, Calvin Klein Eternity perfume and
stale cigarettes. The stench of death lingered in the air, trying
hard to take over my senses, but I refused to let it in. Death may
have taken my mother, but not her smell. Not yet.
“You
little thief, I know what you did now.”
I
opened my eyes and searched the room, but other than my Pit Bull,
Greyhound mix Gracie, and me, it was empty. Gracie sensed my ever so
slight movement, and laid her head back down. I saw my breath, which
wouldn’t have been a big deal except it was May, in Georgia. I
closed my eyes again.
“I
know you can hear me, Angela. Don’t you ignore me.”
I
opened my eyes again. “Ma?”
Floating
next to the bed, in the same blue nightgown she had on when she died,
was my mother, or more likely, some grief induced image of her.
“Ma?"
I laughed out loud. “What am I saying? It’s not you. You’re
dead.’
The
grief induced image spoke. “Of course I’m dead, Angela, but I
told you if I could, I’d come back. And I can so, tada, here I am.”
The
image floated up in the air, twirled around in a few circles and
floated back down.
I
closed my eyes and shook my head, trying to right my brain or maybe
shake loose the crazy, but it was pointless because when I opened my
eyes again, the talking image of my mother was still there.
“Oh
good grief, stop it. It’s not your head messing with you, Angela.
It’s me, your Ma. Now sit up and listen to me. This is important.”
As children we’re conditioned to respond to
our parents when they speak to us. We forget it as teenagers, but
somewhere between twenty and the birth of our first child, we start
acknowledging them again, maybe even believing some of what they tell
us. Apparently it was no different when you imagined their ghost
speaking to you, too. Crazy maybe, but no different.
I
rubbed my eyes. “This is a dream, so I might as well go with it."
I sat up, straightened my back, plastered a big
ol’ smile on my face, because it was a dream and I could be
happy the day my mom died, in a dream and said, “Hi Ma, how are
you?”
“You
ate my damn Hershey bars."
“Hershey bars? I dream about my dead mother
and she talks about Hershey bars. What is that?”
“Don’t you act like you don’t know what
I’m talking about, Angela."
“But
I don’t know what you’re talking about, Ma.” I shook my head
again and thought for sure I was bonkers, talking to an imaginary Ma.
“Oh
for the love of God, Angela, my Hershey bars. The ones I hid in the
back of my closet.”
Oh.
Those Hershey bars, from like, twenty years ago, at least. The
ones I did eat.
“How
do you know it was me that ate your Hershey bars? That was over
twenty years ago.”
The
apparition smirked. “I don’t know how I know, actually. I just
do. I know about all of the stuff you did, and your brothers too.
It’s all in here now.” She pointed to her, slightly transparent
head and smirked.
She
floated up to the ceiling, spun in a circle, and slowly floated back
down. “And look, I’m floating. Bet you wish you could do that,
don’t you, Angela? You know, I’d sit but I tried that before and
fell right through to the damn basement. And let me tell you, that
was not
fun. It was creepy, and it scared the crap outta me. And oh, Madone,
the dust between your two floors! Good Lord, it was nasty. You need
to clean that. No wonder Emily’s always got a snotty nose. She’s
allergic.”
“Emily
does not always have a snotty nose.” She actually did but I wasn't
going to let Ma have that one.
The
apparition started to say something, then scrutinized at the bed.
“Ah, Madone, that mattress. That was the most uncomfortable thing I
ever slept on, but don’t get me started on that. That’s a
conversation for another time.”
Another
time?
“And
I hated that chair.” She pointed to the one next to the bed. “You
should have brought my chair up here instead. I was dying and you
wanted me to sit in that chair? What with that uncomfortable bed and
ugly chair, my back was killing me.” She smiled at her own joke,
but I sat there stunned, and watched the apparition’s lips move, my
own mouth gaping, as I tried to get my mind and my eyes to agree on
what floated in front of me.
“Ah,
Madone. Stop looking at me like that, Angela Frances Palanca. You act
like you’ve never seen a ghost.”
“Ma,
I haven’t ever seen a ghost, and my name is Angela Panther, not
Palanca. You know that.” My mother always called me Angela Palanca,
and it drove both my father and me batty. She said I was the closest
thing to a true Italian she could create, and felt I deserved the
honor of an Italian last name. She never liked Richter, my maiden
name, because she said it was too
damned German.
“And
that recliner of yours was falling apart. I was afraid you’d hurt
yourself in it. Besides, it was ugly, and I was sort of embarrassed
to put it in the dining room.” I shook my head again. “And you’re
not real, you’re in my head. I watched them take your body away,
and I know for a fact you weren’t breathing, because I checked.”
Realizing
that I was actually having a discussion with someone who could not
possibly be real, I pinched myself to wake up from what was clearly
some kind of whacked-out dream.
“Stop
that, you know you bruise easily. You don’t want to look like a
battered wife at my funeral, do you?”
Funeral?
I had no intention of talking about
my mother’s funeral with a figment of my imagination. I sat for a
minute, speechless, which for me was a huge challenge.
“They
almost dropped you on the driveway, you know.” I giggled, and then
realized what I was doing, and immediately felt guilty, for a second.
Ma
scrunched her eyebrows and frowned. “I know. I saw that. You’d
think they’d be more careful with my body, what with you standing
there and all. There you were, my daughter, watching them take away
my lifeless, battered body, and I almost went flying off that cart. I
wanted to give them a what for, and believe me, I tried, but I felt
strange, all dizzy and lightheaded. Sort of like that time I had
those lemon drop drinks at your brother’s wedding. You know, the
ones in those little glasses? Ah, that was a fun night. I haven’t
danced like that in years. I could have done without the throwing up
the next day, though, that’s for sure.”
Lifeless,
battered body? What a dramatic
apparition I’d imagined.
I
sat up and rubbed my eyes and considered pinching myself again, but
decided the figment was right, I didn’t want to be all bruised for
the funeral.
There
I sat, in the middle of the night, feeling wide awake, but clearly
dreaming. I considered telling her to stay on topic, seeing as
dreams didn't last very long, and maybe my subconscious needed my
dream to process her death but I didn't. “This is just a dream."
I tried to convince myself the apparition wasn’t real.
She
threw her hands up in the air. “Again with the dreaming. It’s not
a dream, Angela. You’re awake, and I’m here, in the flesh.” She
held her transparent hand up and examined it. “Okay, so not exactly
in the flesh, but you know what I mean.”
This wasn’t my mother, I knew this, because my
mother died today, in my house, in this bed, in a dining room turned
bedroom. I was there. I watched it happen. She had lung cancer, or,
as she liked to call it, the big C.
And today, as her body slowly shut down, and her mind floated in and
out of consciousness, I talked to her. I told her everything I lacked
the courage to say before, when she could talk back and acknowledge
my fear of losing her. And I kept talking as I watched her chest rise
and fall, slower and slower, until it finally stilled. I talked to
her as she died, and because I still had so much more to say, I kept
talking for hours after her body shut down. I told her how much I
loved her, how much she impacted my life. I told her how much she
drove me absolutely crazy, and yet I couldn’t imagine my life
without her.
So
this wasn’t Ma, couldn’t possibly be. “You’re dead.”
The
figment of my imagination shook her head and frowned, then moved
closer, and looked me straight in the eye. I could see through her to
the candelabra on the wall. Wow, it was dusty. When was it last
dusted?
“Of
course I’m dead, Angela. I’m a ghost.”
I
shook my head, trying hard not to believe her, but I just didn’t
feel like I was sleeping, so God help me, I did.
My
name is Angela Panther and I see dead people. Well, one dead person,
that is, and frankly, one was enough.
###
“Honey,
it’s time to wake up.” My husband, Jake, shook me softly. “We
have to go to the funeral home. Come on, your brothers will be there
soon. Wake up.” He shook me a little harder.
I
sat up. “Where’s Ma?”
He studied me, his expression a mix of sadness
and compassion. “I know this is hard but it’s going to be okay.”
He hugged me and it felt good, comforting. I let him hold me a little
longer, and then I remembered the night before.
“No,”
I told him, pulled away, and rubbed the sleep fog from my eyes. “Ma.
She was here. Last night. I know she’s dead, but she was here. I
saw her.” I grabbed his shoulders, trying to show him how serious I
was and whispered, “She told me she’s a ghost.”
His
eyes widened and all of the sadness and compassion flew right out the
dining room window. Jake was a fantabulous husband, and supported me
in ways that often tried his patience, but to see the gray area of
what he considered to be only black and white was asking too much.
Fantabulous and all, he had his limits.
“Ang,
it wasn’t Fran. It was a dream. I’ve read that kind of stuff
happens. People dream about the person who died and think it’s
real.” He made a small attempt at comforting coos, but they just
sounded like our cat before she died.
I
pushed away from him and got up. “Stop it. You sound like a sick
cat, and I need coffee.” My mind barely worked without a good
night’s sleep, but without coffee, even the simplest conversations
were practically impossible. Besides, it wasn’t the time to get
into a debate about the hereafter. I walked to the kitchen to pour
myself a cup of coffee and said a silent thank you to Jake for making
a pot. I would have said it out loud but I was a little miffed at him
for discounting my ghostly experience.
Jake
was kind enough to get our two kids, Emily and Josh, off to school
while I slept. I felt a sense of relief for not having to deal with
them and then felt a little guilty for that. They left me a handmade
card near the coffeepot knowing I’d be sure to see it there. It had
red hearts and sad faces drawn all over the front, most likely by
Josh, because he drew eyes with eyelashes. The inside of it read,
“We’re sorry for your loss. We loved Grandma and miss her.”
They
weren’t here last night. I knew it was Ma’s last day, and Jake
and I didn’t want them to see her die, so we made arrangements for
them to spend the evening with friends. Jake picked them up after the
funeral home took Ma. I lacked the energy and courage to talk to
them, so Jake asked them to give me some alone time.
The
card was sweet, and I got a lump in my throat just reading it even
though I was sure they’d never work for Hallmark.
“What
time is it?” I asked, and then checked the clock. “It’s ten
a.m. What the – we have to be at the funeral home at eleven
fifteen.” I finished pouring my coffee, took a huge gulp, and
cursed myself as it burned my throat, then rushed upstairs to get
ready.
We
arrived at the funeral home just before eleven fifteen. My long,
blond hair was pulled into a ponytail since I didn’t have time to
style it. I didn’t have on an ounce of makeup and was dressed like
a typical soccer mom heading to a yoga class. Normally I wouldn’t
go to an appointment like that but considering the fact that my
mother just died, I didn’t really give a crap.
We
walked in through the front doors into a sitting area I’m sure was
meant to seem comforting and inviting but instead felt like a
grandparents’ family room, old fashioned and overstuffed. The couch
was a ridiculously huge, twenty years outdated, 1980s floral print of
mauve and gray, flanked with humongous pillows in matching solid
colors. There were two matching and equally uncomfortable looking
chairs and ugly, ornate tables that didn’t match, intermixed with
the seating. A few magazines and tissue boxes sat on the tables. I
grabbed a couple tissues just in case I needed them later. Overhead,
soft music played, and I was sure they thought it made someone in my
position feel better, but mostly it was just annoying.
Carnations
in various colors sat in vases on stands around the lobby, attacking
my nasal passages like an old woman drenched in White Diamonds
perfume. Almost instantly I had a sensory overload headache. The
entire room smacked of old people, but I guess it should since it was
really mostly old people who died. Jake crinkled his nose at the
smells, too. We both moved quickly as we followed the signs to the
assistant funeral director’s office, almost like we were running
from a skunk. I silenced my cell phone, knowing my best friend, Mel,
would probably text. I’d talked to her just after Ma passed but not
since. I was sure she’d check on me sooner rather than later.
Before
Ma died, we talked about what she wanted, and I promised her I’d
honor her requests. They were simple. She wanted to be cremated and
buried with my grandparents in Chicago. Since we lived in the suburbs
of Atlanta, we’d have her body cremated here but her memorial and
burial would be handled separately.
My
brothers, John and Paul, were already in the assistant director’s
office. There was a spread of coffee and its fixings set out on the
conference table, and I made a beeline for it. I’d have an IV of
caffeine inserted into my wrist if it were socially acceptable.
Actually, forget socially acceptable. I’d do it even if it weren’t.
Coffee for me was like sex to a twenty-year-old man – never too
much and never too often.
My
oldest brother John lived nearby, and was with Ma and me when she
passed. Paul lived in Indiana and didn’t make it here in time to
say goodbye. I could see the angst and regret on his face. I said hi,
hugged both of them, and turned toward my chair so I wouldn’t cry.
Crying in front of my brothers made me appear weak and I refused to
let that happen.
“Ma
wanted to be cremated and buried with her parents,” I told the
assistant funeral director, a short, squat man, with a bad comb-over
and a blue paisley tie that didn’t quite fit over a mid-section
that rivaled Santa’s.
“Yes,
your brothers told me,” said Comb-over. “It is our policy to
return the remains to the loved ones for proper burial if our
services are not being used.”
We
all nodded in agreement, and then Paul asked Comb-over if he could
see our mother.
Comb-over
gave us what must have been his really sympathetic face. “Oh, no.
No. I’m sorry. It is against our policy to allow family back into
the crematorium. You understand.”
Paul
nodded his understanding.
Seriously?
“Excuse
me. My brother wasn’t able to see our mom before she died. He lives
out of state and couldn’t get here, so I’m sure you can make an
exception. I mean, it is our mother and we are paying you after all.”
Jake
smirked in my direction, liking my passive aggressive technique, and
I gave him a quick smile.
“Well. ” Comb-over back-pedaled. “I’ll
see what I can do.” He then gave us what was obviously his, I
am not making enough money for this job face,
excused himself and closed the door behind him. A chill filled the
air, and I hugged my arms to my chest for warmth.
My
brother's mouths gaped. “Well, it’s a stupid rule and someone had
to call him on it.”
Paul
nodded. “Thanks."
I
nodded and then saw my mother floating behind him, smiling, too. I
shook my head to clear the image but it didn't work. She was still
there.
“You’re such a good girl. I knew you loved
your brother."
“Uh,
I guess I do.”
Paul
tilted his head. “You guess you do what?”
Well,
crap. For a brief second I considered saying, sorry
I was talking to the ghost of our mother, who, by the way, is
floating behind you, but instead went
with, “Look behind you,” as I pointed behind them.
They
did. “What?” Paul asked.
Ma
winked at me and laughed. They couldn’t see her.
“Oh,
nothing. I thought there was a spider or something on the wall,
sorry.”
Probably
it wasn’t a good time to tell my brothers I could see our dead
mother and I wasn’t sure there would ever be a good time for
something of that nature.
Paul
started to say something again, but Comb-over walked back in. The man
may have been a fashion nightmare, but his timing was impeccable. He
coughed lightly and straightened his tie. “We don’t normally
allow anyone into the crematorium, but given the circumstances, we’ll
make an exception.”
We.
Uh huh. We, as in the big boss, I bet. I smiled my I
won smile and thanked him. Comb-over
explained since our mother was being cremated, they didn’t prepare
her body as they would for a traditional burial. I assumed that meant
she’s not made up and nodded my understanding. He walked over to
the closed door behind my brothers and walked right through my
mother.
She
shuddered. “Oh, Madone, that was creepy.”
I
concentrated on the wall and searched for the imaginary spider and
tried to ignore her.
Through
the doorway I saw my mother lying on a gurney, the mother that wasn’t
floating in the room with me, that is. My eyes shot back and forth
between the horizontal Ma and the floating Ma. This was all a little
confusing. First I had one Ma, and then she died. Now I had a dead Ma
and a ghost Ma. If they both started talking to me, I’d get right
up and drive myself straight to the loony bin. I stood up and shook
off the crazy. “Ah, Paul, you can go first.” He did.
The
fact that I took control of the meeting was not lost on me. As the
youngest of the siblings, my brothers always considered me the baby,
never quite aging me past a toddler in their mind so for them to
acquiesce authority in this situation was surprising. I wrote it off
to their shock and grief at losing Ma and expected the newfound
respect to burn out quicker than a birthday candle. But I would be
lying if I didn’t admit to enjoying it just a little.
We
all said our goodbyes to my mother. I couldn’t hear their private
whispered words, but I could hear Ma responding. Not the Ma lying on
the gurney, the ghost one. As I said, it was confusing. Like the loud
Italian woman she was in life, her raspy, I’ve
had one thousand too many cigarettes,
voice enveloped the room, for me at least, since apparently I was the
only one who could hear her. “Oh Pauly, it’s okay. I’m not mad
that you weren’t here. Don’t be upset. It’s okay.”
I
always knew he was her favorite.
Paul
and I haven’t always had the smoothest of relationships. In fact,
as a child he wanted me dead. No, really. He tried so hard to make it
happen he actually pushed me in front of slow moving cars three
times. I was lucky to suffer only emotional, not physical, damage.
Attempted murders aside, my heart ached for him now. The guilt of not
being there when Ma passed would haunt him forever, though I couldn’t
help but wonder if that was easier than being haunted by her ghost.
###
An
hour later, the four of us sat with coffee in hand, at Starbucks.
Coffee made everything seem better, if only a little. Before we left
the funeral home, Paul asked Comb-over to let us know when Ma’s
body was cremated. I preferred not to know, but everyone handles
death differently and Paul needed what he needed so I didn’t argue.
Admittedly, backing away from an argument with Paul was a new thing
for me. Ma’s death had really messed with my brain.
We
were discussing the arrangements of her burial when I got the call.
Comb-over told me they’d started, and as I nodded to Jake and my
brothers, a heavy sadness filled the air.
I
disconnected from the call and stayed on task. “Okay. When should
we go to Chicago?”
“That’s
a good question,” John, the over thinker of us siblings, said.
“I’ll call the cemetery later today and find out if we can bury
Mom with Grandma and Grandpa. If they won’t let us, we’ll have to
figure out what else to do. I was thinking maybe we could each take a
portion of her remains and do something with our kids to honor her.”
Oh,
no. No, no, no. That was not going to happen. I promised Ma I’d do
this for her and I’ll be damned if I didn’t do it right.
Especially since she was haunting me. There was no way I would to
spend the rest of my waking days with the ghost of my mother pissed
off because we didn’t honor her final wish. No way.
“It’s
okay,” I blurted out before Paul agreed with John. “Ma was
worried about the same thing, so we called the cemetery a few weeks
ago and found out that it’s fine.” I took a quick breath and
hoped God wouldn’t strike me dead for lying.
“They
told me that as long as we’re not getting a stone, the plots are
ours to do with as we please. Except for digging up our grandparents,
that is.” I checked the sky, but still no lightning. Phew.
My
brothers nodded. “Okay.”
Dodged
that bullet. What’s wrong with a few little lies? This was what Ma
wanted and eventually I’d tell them the truth, once she was buried
and we were on our way home. Or maybe next year. What’s the saying?
Ask for forgiveness, not permission. That’s what I’d do,
eventually.
I
offered to make the memorial arrangements even though we all knew
they’d have asked me to do it anyway.
I
filled them in on my call to our cousin. “I already called Roxanne,
who said she’d make the rounds of calls, and since the funeral home
here said they would put the obituary in the Chicago papers, that’s
covered. Does the weekend after next work? That gives us all time to
plan accordingly.”
“I
don’t see a problem with that, but I’ll have to check with
Elizabeth and see what her schedule is,” John said.
Jake
nodded in agreement with his eyes still glued to the screen of his
iPhone.
Paul
nodded too. “Let’s go through all of our pictures of Mom. I can
make a video with music, and we can show it at her memorial.”
We
all agreed that was a great idea and made plans to confirm the date
over email by tonight. My brothers left Jake and me there to share
our addiction to the warm, smooth taste of coffee. We got refills
before we headed home, too.
The
rest of the day I was on autopilot and truth be told I couldn’t
remember much of it. One minute Jake and I were getting coffee and
the next it was after ten p.m. I kissed Jake goodnight and went
upstairs and checked on the kids, who were already blissfully sound
asleep.
“It’s
done,” I texted Mel after I settled under the covers.
“I’m
sorry,” she texted back. “Do you need anything?”
“No,
I’m okay. Going to bed. I’m tired.”
“K. I’m here if you need me. (HUGS).”
Amazon purchase link:
Barnes & Noble purchase link:
Carolyn
Ridder Aspenson is
the Amazon and Barnes & Noble best selling author of Unfinished
Business; An Angela Panther Novel,
Unbreakable Bonds; An
Angela Panther Novel,
the novella Santa's
Gift, a Cumming Christmas Novella
and The Quick Start
Weight Loss Program.
An
avid fitness buff, Carolyn writes a monthly health and fitness column
for Northside Woman
Magazine as well as
regular weekly news articles for various Atlanta area media outlets
including the Forsyth
Herald, the Milton
Herald, the Revue
and News, and the
Johns Creek Herald.
Her works have also been published in Countyline
Magazine and various
Internet publications.
A
native of Indiana, for over eighteen years Carolyn called the
northwest Chicago suburbs home. She now resides in the Atlanta area
with her husband, three kids, two dogs and cat.
carolynridderaspenson.com
www.facebook.com/carolynridderaspensonauthor
Twitter:
@awritingwoman carolynridderaspenson@gmail.com
Thank you for posting about my book! I appreciate it!
ReplyDelete