Story Time: Ivy Remembers Gasoline PT. III

fiction

I was nervous to finish this!!! I did an almost complete rewrite of THE END because the first one was really blah. This one is far less blah. I think all good fiction feels a little like fact, so thank you for coming along with me and imagining a world that is likely far away from us (unless you’re a cool criminal-adjacent who is constantly on the run). Otherwise, I tried to make it feel as real as it can feel 4 us normies, which has been a labor of love. The only reason I know this is good is because I have had to read it a zillion times and STILL find it interesting, which I do (and I get bored a lot). It’s weird and cool to think I have a little audience, but you’re the best little audience there is. Please continue to share with people and text me and message me and comment what you think – I love to hear more from you. Part 3, the end of an era, let’s fucking do it.

PART THREE

When Ivy and Otis got home, they decided they would return to Old Lady’s house. They wanted to see how she made other treats with the blueberries they loved so. Almost every day for two summers, Ivy and Otis spent afternoons there. Otis’ clumsy fingers scraped excess off of cups of sugar while Ivy parroted Old Lady’s instructions to him. Ivy practiced her script writing labels for jars. She was proud of the way the ‘b’ for blueberry looked. Quickly, they learned to make pies, jams, and other delicacies. Otis was impatient in every other part of his life, yet he would sit cross-legged in front of the oven to watch pie dough bake. Ivy and Otis were positively convinced that what they witnessed in the kitchen was magic. Ivy laughed aloud just thinking about how many blueberries they must’ve eaten in those years. How they never got tired of the taste, she wasn’t sure.

Ivy recalled Old Lady saying, “There are lotsa ways to taste their sweetness but a million ways to make em’ tart. You gotta know how to get what you want outta them.” At the time, Ivy tried numbering each way they learned. 

Old Lady never asked them about their parents. She seemed to sense that it wasn’t relevant to their relationship, which was already filled with quiet joy and understanding. Ivy hadn’t realized how much they cherished Old Lady’s guidance. The feeling of being watched over wasn’t something she knew she needed until she had it. Ivy and Otis were able to keep their secret until it was time to go. Goodbye always came too soon, but Ivy didn’t know if there would ever be enough time in Sunflower. The day before they left, Otis and Ivy tried to make their own blueberry jam at home. They gathered their ingredients, saw the sugar boil, and added fresh berries from the patch. Ivy made sure to mix in the grate of ginger and a pinch of salt. She let Otis write the label in his clumsy print. Attached to the glass mason jar, they’d left a note:

Thank you, Old Lady. We liked blueberries before but you make them taste extra good and now we LOVE them. You taught us a lot about cooking. You make our summers so happy. We want to spend more time with you but we have to leave for Illinois. 😦 Here is our own jar of jam we made for you. It doesn’t taste as good as yours but we will keep practicing. We will miss you a lot.

Love, Ivy and Otis ❤ ❤ ❤

Ivy cried the entire car ride to Illinois. Her happy secret began to rot inside her, turning to poison. 

She pulled herself from that memory. She had lost track of time and now the sun hung low above the horizon, the sky was beginning to bruise purple and orange. Ivy’s body ached, she noticed that her stomach had started to rumble, it had been so many hours since she last ate. Her eyes flicked to a billboard that read, “The Arch Diner at next exit – 24 HRS – Great Food, Good Company.” Stops were supposed to be kept at a minimum, one of the first things her employer taught her so long ago, meaning that Ivy spent little time in public settings. She generally avoided anything that could lead someone to pick her face out of a crowd, or more consequentially, a lineup. The Arch would have to do for now because she had to eat, she rationalized. It was step one on the hierarchy of needs.

She made her way to the next exit towards The Arch. She found it quickly off the highway; the big, neon sign that sat above the establishment was hard to miss. The parking lot was moderately filled with cars ranging from pick up trucks to family sedans. A mixed crowd, she noted to herself, because she couldn’t help but analyze the clientele before heading in. Jumping out of the car, she landed wobbly on the ground. Her legs felt like jelly from sitting for so long. Her black boots crunched against the gravel as she walked towards the door, which gave a friendly chime when she pulled it open. The diner looked like it hadn’t been changed since the ’80s, one of the walls was made entirely of mirrored glass. A disco ball hung from above the bar, and the bar stools themselves were a worn, powdery blue. There were glass dessert cases everywhere, with huge, gaudy three-layered cakes that she imagined had been sitting there for quite some time. Still, her stomach growled. No one greeted her, waitresses were buzzing around with coffee and creamer in their hands, tending to the other customers.

A fair amount was going on and that comforted Ivy, making her feel like it would be easy to be invisible. She took her own seat, snagging an empty booth in one of the back corners. She sat on the peeling lavender cushioned bench and picked up the ten-page laminated menu. Flipping through, she was drawn to the breakfast section even though it was evening by now. She wanted over-easy eggs and crispy bacon and pancakes. Her mouth watered as she closed the menu. At that moment, a young waitress appeared at her table. Her nametag read, “June,” and she couldn’t have been older than twenty, with bleach blonde hair tied in a messy ponytail, thick black eyeliner, and a nose ring too big for her petite nose. 

“Hi, I’m June! I’ll be your server. Thank you for comin’ to the Arch Diner today, what can I get for you?” she chirped, but Ivy heard the tiredness laced in her voice. June had probably been working since before sunrise.

Ivy told June her order, asking for the bacon to be extra crispy, and June nodded dutifully.

“And on the pancakes, miss, we have banana nut, blueberry, or plain?”

Ivy smiled tightly because she almost saw Otis’ face and then Old Lady’s. The feeling threatened to pull her under, suddenly. June offered Ivy a well-meaning nod, but confusion set behind her eyes, “Miss?”

“Blueberry would be good,” Ivy snapped the menu closed and handed it to the waitress. 

It would probably taste like shit compared to what she remembered from her childhood, but Ivy could settle for the fake stuff.

Ivy took to watching the disco ball spin above the bar while she waited for her food. The spinning took her into a quiet trance, relieving her after the day she had had. She liked watching where the light reflected and moved across the room as the disco ball revolved.

She was barely present, which was why Ivy was caught off guard when her employer stepped into her view, instantly sending her entire body and mind into frenzied panic.

He gave a low whistle. “You look tired, Ivy. Do you mind…?” he gestured to the seat opposite her in the booth but sat down before she could say anything, stretching one arm across the seat while he tapped his finger gently on the table with his other hand. The tapping might have been a tick he had, but Ivy hadn’t been around him enough to conclude what it meant. Lazing in the corner of the booth, he was threatening and calm at once, which unsettled her. She liked even less that she didn’t see him coming. Making critical observations was her whole job these past few years and because she let herself relax, she lost the opportunity to think a few seconds ahead of him. She would regret losing those seconds, later on. Sitting erect, Ivy watched him through wary eyes, her heart pounding against her ribcage.

Her employer was traditionally handsome in a way that intrigued Ivy when they first met. Before, when she was more lost and angry than she had the language for and too young to realize. Now, his features seemed cold and menacing. Her employer knew this, she bet, and leveraged it often. He had a face to cut yourself on. 

“It’s impolite to ignore my calls,” he started. It wasn’t a question, but Ivy heard him demanding an explanation. She said nothing, and tried to make her face stony and impassive. She prayed to God it was working. Ivy didn’t have to wonder how long they could’ve sat like that because June cut into the silence. She returned to the table with a tray of steaming food and oogled Ivy’s employer as she set the plate in front of Ivy gently.

 A slow blush crept up June’s neck. “And for you, handsome?” she asked, slightly pitching up her voice to sound more feminine. 

 “Nothing, thank you. We’re sharing,” he replied smoothly and winked, sending June away. 

 He turned his attention back to Ivy. 

“Maybe I will rephrase. It’s dangerous to ignore my phone calls. You’re bright Ivy, so you know that. Do you want your job to be more dangerous? I’m sure we could find room for that somewhere.”

She pinched herself beneath the table and found her voice.

“It was an accident, I couldn’t get to it in time to answer. I thought it wouldn’t be smart to call you back.” The lie came out easily, and she was surprised her voice didn’t shake. He leaned forward, folding his hands together on the table, as if he was speaking to her in confidence.

 “I don’t really believe you. And God,” he gave a slight, dissapointed shake of his head, “I want to. You’re one of my favorites because you ask the least questions. The things you’ve done for me, Ivy ⁠— well, I feel like we’re bonded for life.”

Ivy’s stomach rolled. She looked down at the food getting cold, the flying saucer sized blueberry pancakes sitting there, turning stale.

 “Go ahead, eat,” he waved his hand towards her plate.

 “I’m okay, I just —”

 “Eat,” he commanded, and Ivy picked up a fork and stabbed it into an over-easy egg, making the yolk ooze onto the plate. She had lost her appetite as soon as she saw him but she lifted the fork to her mouth.  

 “Now, you know people don’t exactly quit in this line of work. And I’d be…” he paused, eyes floating towards the ceiling and one hand rubbing against his clean shaven jaw, searching for the right word. 

“I’d be upset to know that’s what you wanted to do, especially since we’ve helped each other so much over the years. Is that what you want to do, Ivy?”

Before she could reply, he held up a finger,” Ah-ah, wait. I have some information for you. Decisions are worth nothing when they’re uninformed — You never told me you had a brother!” He teased, like the news was good gossip.

Ivy’s felt murderous and cold all the way from her head to her toes. She stilled, every hair on her body standing straight up. 

“You’re good at keeping secrets, which is generally a plus, except when they’re from me. Let’s see… Otis said he was just about to graduate college, a double major in engineering and classical studies, whatever that is. He’s got a lovely little girlfriend. He’s clever, maybe he gets that from you. Funny, too, but it seems a sense of humor doesn’t run in the family. Maybe just a little too trusting of strangers, though,” he leveled his gaze on her, and she could hear him thinking, “Checkmate.”

“How did you speak to him? Where is he?” she ventured carefully, trying not to show how much she wanted to stab the fork through his esophagus and run. She also tried to conceal how pleased she was to hear about Otis’ life, her mind feasted on those little details, all the while she still couldn’t envision his face all grown up. That her employer could’ve had that chance before she did, she figured she could dig the fork a little deeper.

Her employer gave her a wry smirk. Ivy was being baited, and she knew because she had done it so many times before. The veiled threats tried to keep her in the dark, not knowing she was comfortable there. But Otis was another subject entirely. Her heart ached for her brother, who she would always imagine as an annoying, smiling, googly-eyed kid. The same kid who led their bush explorations and would cry first whenever they got in trouble, letting Ivy know it was okay to unravel. She left him at seventeen and had never stopped leaving. Ivy stupidly blamed her parents for being sick with travel when all along, she had inherited the illness, too. Otis was the only one who hadn’t. How rare to find someone who could teach you things across time and space. Ivy was learning from her little brother, even in his absence.

“Now, why would I lay all my cards out on the table for you, when you’ve been less than honest with me about your loose ends? He’s safe at school. But you do know how terribly good we are at disturbing safety.”

Her employer rolled his eyes to indicate his boredom, “I’m sorry, this is blackmail one-oh-one; I’m sure you’ve done this dozens of times, so let’s skip this part to the part where I tell you what you’re going to do next. Like old times.”

He produced a glossy postcard seemingly out of nowhere and slid it across the table towards Ivy. It read, “Greetings from Massachusetts” in block print and was decorated with the state’s most famous attractions. Mostly things she didn’t recognize. Throughout all her traveling, she hadn’t ever been to Massachusetts. 

 She flipped it over and saw an address written in black permanent marker.

 “What’s this?”

“Where you’re going next. You’re going to meet me here,” he tapped his finger against the address, “by dusk tomorrow. I’ll be a chaperone for your next assignment since it seems you want someone to watch over you. I’ve left something in your car that will be helpful for our adventure. I trust you to follow my instructions,” he hesitated and then shrugged carelessly, “For all that trust is worth.”

Her employer stood up and took a wallet out of his back pocket, fishing out a hundred-dollar bill, five times more than what the meal cost. He tossed the bill onto the center of the table and quipped with a slight tilt of his head, “I liked June.” Her employer nodded once at Ivy, a silent goodbye, and turned to leave her there.

She held her breath until she heard the door chime as he pushed through and left. She hated her employer, she wasn’t sure she knew that until now. And she hated being in the business of secrets; it made her numb. All Ivy could think sitting alone in this shitty diner, was exactly how alone she had been and for how long. That morning she had set a house on fire. Tomorrow, Ivy didn’t know what she would be doing — or who she would have to be to do it. Unfamiliar wetness traced down her cheek, and she flicked it away with her finger.

Ivy left The Arch and headed towards the parking lot to her car. Opening the door, she settled into the driver’s seat, which was practically molded to her shape by now. Her head fell against the steering wheel, and she listened to the grasshoppers chirp from outside the car. She was bone tired. Every kind of tired she experienced before this moment was a diluted shade of this feeling. Ivy was homesick without anywhere to miss. Old Lady, who was probably dead by now, came to mind. The only friend Ivy and Otis ever made together. It brought Ivy the slightest warmth to know she and Otis had an equal piece of her.

The thought of him being caught up in any of this wracked her with guilt. Out of the corner of her eye, she noticed something on the passenger seat. She looked to her right and saw a medium-sized, square-shaped black box; it was clearly whatever gift her employer was talking about. 

She grabbed the box and brought it to her lap, removing the lid. Neatly placed inside was a black semi-automatic handgun with the magazine next to it. Ivy’s heart stopped. As she brought the box closer for inspection, a chill ran down her spine. The moonlight glinted off of the gunmetal. She could kill her employer. Ivy carefully removed a manila envelope from underneath the gun. Inside, was a forged Massachusetts state ID made for her and an envelope full of money.

“Fuck,” she whispered. Ivy closed the envelope gently.

She started to wail alone in the car, slamming her hands against the steering wheel as she screamed with everything she had inside her. She held it as long as she could and then yelled a little bit more. Ivy didn’t give a fuck that a mom standing in the parking lot was pulling her two staring kids into their car. She would probably scream too if she found this on her passenger seat.

The gun was a promise of something darker than she could stomach. Usually, you can only see turning points in your life long after you’ve passed them. But with a gun on her lap, Ivy saw a new path laid out before her. It wouldn’t be like the last time. If she took it, she was guaranteed to lose herself completely.

She removed the postcard from her pocket and turned it over in her hand. Massachusetts. She thought of The Boston Red Sox and pilgrims and clam chowder and the witches of Salem. There was something else that nagged her, though. Her employer said Otis was in his last year at college. Ivy never planned on going to school, so she knew very little about higher education. Ivy knew Harvard was somewhere in Massachusetts. Then, there was a Boston University, or maybe it was Boston College she had heard of? She ran her fingers across the word and then what she was trying to remember hit her: it was one of the states with the most universities and colleges in the US. Otis once told her that at the dinner table before she left for good. He had big dreams of going to Tufts, he had said, kicking his feet under the table, a habit he never shook from when he was little.

“It’s in Medford. Did you know Medford had one of the biggest successful bank robberies and jewel heists in history?” he asked Ivy. “Well,” he reconsidered, forking mashed potatoes into his mouth, “maybe successful isn’t the right word, they did get caught later on.” Ivy hadn’t known any of that but she wasn’t interested in his fact; her mind was already on the road. She had been planning on breaking the news she would be leaving soon.

Ivy believed Otis was capable of getting in wherever he wanted. What were the chances that he was at Tufts now, living his life happily with his girlfriend? She couldn’t be sure. One thing she did know, they were both trapped by her employer now.

She looked down at the gun in her lap and seeing her employers face in her mind, closed the box and placed it back on the passenger seat. Ivy took the postcard, balancing it behind her stick shift so when she looked down she could see, “WELCOME TO MASSACHUSETTS.” Ivy would sacrifice everything she was to save Otis and that feeling alone was enough to propel her across the country and back one hundred times.

She sensed the connection to her brother, almost physically, for the first time in many years. Ivy realized, it was the only permanent place she’d known, where she could return to every version of themselves they’d been. Where little, innocent Ivy and tiny, curious Otis still played together. The siblings each grew different over the years and yet, more the same. This was the place she was homesick for, all this time.

What she learned in this car, maybe what she had been learning all her life, was that all roads only lead her to herself. Ivy looked back so often because she forgot she carried the past with her. No piece of Ivy could be lost to fire. The relief that understanding brought was immeasurable.

She stuck her key into the ignition, and the car hummed, turning alive. Ivy cast a long look at the box that concealed the gun, her mind scaffolding together a loose plan. Tonight, for the first time ever, Ivy left looking forward.

THE END

STORY TIME: Ivy Remembers Gasoline Pt. II

fiction

Welcome back! To anyone that is still reading: that’s so cool, thank you! I have little to say except I hope you enjoy Part II. (If you were wondering, there were some segments of the 2015 version that made it in here, too.)

PART TWO 

All the circumstances in her life made it so Ivy was not very good at making friends, she’d thought for many years. That wasn’t the truth, though. Every time she tried to draw a direct relationship between her constant moving and her prickliness, Otis ruined it. Her little brother was almost literally a human magnet. Miraculously, they were born perfect foils to one another, and it was apparent even in childhood. A new friend was brought home every day for dinner, and Ivy watched the ease with which Otis laughed and conversed. Her brother was always sad to see his friends leave, but with a bittersweet resignation wise beyond his years. Frankly, it was annoying.

Meanwhile, Ivy’s report cards usually mentioned some unusually intense attachment to her teachers. She’d always liked adults for how fully formed they seemed, even physically. She thought that if you stopped growing, you could stop changing, too. She prayed to have the chance one day.  

“Don’t you like getting to see different places?” Otis asked her on the day she turned sixteen.

This was when they lived in Hood River, Oregon. What Ivy remembered most about Hood River was how worn in her rainboots got and the smell of wet concrete and dirt. Ivy and Otis walked along one of the more beautiful, less vigorous trails closest to their home. Her parents suggested she go on a “birthday walk” with her brother. Happy residents of Hood River liked to enjoy the outdoors in all of its glorious splendor. Going on a birthday walk was precisely the kind of thing someone from Hood River would do. Ivy wasn’t from Hood River, though. She didn’t quite feel like she was from anywhere.

“I said,” Otis gestured around him with a walking stick he had picked up a few hundred feet ago, “don’t you like getting to see different places?”

Considering his question, she picked up a walking stick of her own. She liked what she could see from Hood River. Snow-capped Mount Hood framed the town. The view was prettiest when the full moon hung fat and milky above the mountain. It looked so beautiful to Ivy that it also looked fake. She imagined a crew wheeling out the moon on a flatbed and hanging it in the right spot like an ornament on a Christmas tree. She understood the point of Otis’ question. He was daring her to choose one good thing about their situation, which she would describe as an ever-changing sea of chaos. She saw the opportunity her brother was giving her to connect. His vision of the world was filled with grief like her, but wonder too—more than she knew how to handle. Tree branch shadows danced across his earnest face as he waited for her answer. Ivy wasn’t sure who she would be if she became a little more like Otis. That was the thing about foils; they had to move in opposition to be understood. She was too cowardly to bridge the gap. In her usual fashion, Ivy just gave him a shrug, disappointing both of them. 

A throbbing began behind Ivy’s eyes. Even though all four windows were down, the gasoline hung thick in the air. Otis’ question hummed in her head. Would she admit her love for a place they’d lived? Before she could decide, the center console began to emit a muffled ring, sending an ice-cold shiver down her spine. She kept her burner phone there, along with some mints and loose hair ties. It was easier for her to reach the phone if her console was empty but Ivy also couldn’t remember how to make clutter anymore. The burner phone was her tether to her employer, allowing them to talk when she was out on the field. After a few uses, she was supposed to get rid of it without telling him how. Making things disappear had become a talent of Ivy’s.

The phone didn’t often ring, only in situations when Ivy needed to know something to help her finish a job or start a new one. She usually felt neutral about these phone calls, so why had she been holding her breath since it rang? 

The thought of letting it ring itself out had never crossed her mind, but with every second that ticked by, she was allowing it to happen, now. Taking another gasoline inhale, she held her breath, not fumbling her right hand frantically into the console to answer like she should’ve done. Ivy indulged in self-sabotage every so often, and mostly by accident. It reminded her she had something to lose. How accidental this time was, Ivy wasn’t sure.

And then a memory of a town came to her, answering Otis’ question years too late. The echo of this place cracked the pit lodged in her stomach since ignoring the phone call. Sunflower, Mississippi. She’d lived there for two and a half years when she was eleven, and that was a lifetime then. At that age, what Ivy liked best was the way Sunflower, Mississippi, felt in her mouth. She loved how all the “s'” slid out fast and snake-like. It made her think about the sizzling hot summers spent there, hot enough to cook an egg on the sidewalk. Once, she and Otis had done that. Her brother made sure to sprinkle salt and pepper on it, so it tasted good to the ants. 

During Sunflower summers, Ivy and Otis were tasked with entertaining themselves. Sunflower was a tiny country town, and there weren’t many other kids who lived nearby. Leave it to her parents to find the most desolate areas to move to. Ivy and Otis stuck to each other like glue. In hindsight, Ivy guessed they had made a good pair. Otis’ bravery, coupled with Ivy’s smarts, kept their adventures exciting and mostly trouble-free. 

For fun, Ivy and Otis liked to do “bush investigations” where they’d inspect patches of shrubbery for bugs and other curiosities. It became their daily activity and they were happy to have a mission to complete. On one particularly lucky day of investigation, they’d found a spot of wild blueberries. She snorted to herself at how in awe they were of their finding.

The two of them stared at the patch with wide eyes. Perhaps not coincidentally, their stomachs growled. They’d found all kinds of things over the summer, but these edible gems stood out as by far the most delicious. They hesitated in eating them; Ivy knew you couldn’t just devour good looking, wild fruit.

 “What if these are like a blueberry’s evil twin? Like it looks just like it, but they’re not? I don’t know, Otis…” Ivy trailed off with a furrow in her brow.

Before she could reach any conclusions, Otis plucked a berry from the bush and smashed it against a rock. Ivy looked on confusedly as he brought the stone to his nose and inhaled deeply, both nostrils flaring wide and circular. 

He reported his observations seriously, “It smells like what mom puts on our peanut butter and jelly.” And before Ivy could protest, he dipped his finger into the berry mush and put it to his tongue. “Tastes like it too.” 

Even to overly suspicious Ivy, Otis had made it seem okay. She cautiously picked a berry off a branch, wiping it on her shirt for no apparent reason. Ivy popped it in her mouth and let the orb burst on her tongue. They were definitely blueberries. That was pretty much the end for the berries on that bush; Ivy remembered they couldn’t stop eating them. She and her brother had their fill, tossing them into each other’s mouths and trying the unripe ones just to see how the taste changed over time. 

Otis and Ivy came home with their fingers stained deep indigo. Scrubbing their hands viciously in the bathroom when they got back, they promised not to tell their parents. Of course, they knew their parents wouldn’t care. Even so, having a secret gave them something to take care of together. A secret that beautiful and delicious couldn’t hurt. 

Happy secrets are so hard to come by now, Ivy mused.

Ivy and Otis stole away to their patch as much as possible, gorging themselves on blueberries and staining their tongues blue. On their umpteenth time picking berries, they heard a gravelly voice call to them, “So, y’all are the ones who keep emptying my patch.” 

They froze immediately, lifting their heads away from their berries, they saw an older woman standing a few feet away. She really was old as time; her wrinkled face was a deep, rich brown, and she had dark, deep-set eyes. Her hair was in a small, tightly coiled afro on her head. Trying to fill in the details of her face was difficult after all this time. She’d bet she’d know the Lady’s face if she saw it again. When grasping for more features, she couldn’t stop going back to the old Lady’s big floral green mumu. Ivy only remembered that detail because she’d learned that word from her mom and found it funny. 

The rest of the encounter played in her mind.

The Old Lady’s hands were on her wide hips, and she looked disapproving, but not angry. She wasn’t a mean lady. Ivy didn’t know how she knew this, but she knew. Unable to handle being caught, Otis began crying in big, blubbery sobs. He was so bad at being in trouble. Good thing Ivy was steelier; she had pulled him closer protectively, their two blueberry-covered hands clasped together.

“Nah, don’t cry. No need for tears, now. I’ve just been wondering who’s stopping me from making all my jams and pies. I know they taste good,” she offered, plucking one off the bush herself for eating. 

Silently nodding, Ivy’s hand involuntarily crept up to the bush to eat another too. The Old Lady said it was okay, hadn’t she? 

“Do y’all wanna see what I do wit’ em? I live just there,” she pointed to a couple of hundred yards east of the patch and not too far from their house. Ivy figured they were neighbors, actually. That seemed safe enough. Otis stopped crying as quickly as he started, tugging at Ivy’s hand. He sniffled and looked up toward Ivy, intrigued by the mention of sweets. She had contemplated Old Lady’s offer for less time than was probably appropriate for following a stranger home. Still, she enjoyed turning the decision over in her mind, liked the feeling of standing on the edge of a choice that was hers to make. 

“We’ll go with you.” Ivy declared pridefully.

 They trailed behind Old Lady hand in hand. As they stepped onto the porch, a big gust of hot Mississippi wind blew a windchime, and the sound reminded Ivy of a magic wand. To add to her excitement, they tasted sugar in the air before they even got to its source. Old Lady led them into the kitchen where Ivy and Otis saw dozens of jam jars sitting on her counter. Strewn about were materials for writing out labels, ribbons, the Old Lady’s red script on stickers. Lived-in was not a phrase they had at the time, but it’s how Ivy would describe Old Lady’s house now. There was a warm chaos to it that felt… right for Old Lady, even after just meeting her. 

As a peace offering, Old Lady served them peanut butter and blueberry jelly sandwiches, which were crustless for good measure. It tasted just like their mom made but much better. Otis kicked his feet absentmindedly while he ate, a sign that he was happy. 

“Good ain’t it?” Old Lady nodded toward Ivy’s hand clutching the sandwich. “The secret is a grate of ginger and a pinch of salt. You gotta have salt and spice. Makes the sweet taste better.” 

Ivy and Otis didn’t much care what she meant by that as long as they could come for more.

The sound of the call Ivy ignored crept back into her mind and her posture stiffened involuntarily.

“Shit,” she muttered out loud to no one in particular.