The drive had gone by quicker than anticipated. Greg stood beside Lacey, his arms folded at the front doors of the castle. His initial amazement at the majestic architecture had worn off. Greg wasnโt the patient type.
Thankfully, their collection of kids was occupied. Heโd instructed them to play a game of tag while waiting for the owners. He always wanted his kids active and contending. He knew their futures, and he most certainly depended on the competitive spirit.
โThe fuck is taking so long?โ Greg asked. โI wish I knew,โ Lacey replied.
His wife shook her head, her pink hoop earrings swaying. Her puffy blonde hair glistened in the sunshine as she reached for the zebra slap bracelet on her wrist.
โIโm getting pretty damn tired of waiting,โ he grumbled. โThey said eleven, no?โ
โThey did,โ Lacey agreed.
She unrolled her gift into its alternate stiff and flat form.
Greg grimaced. โWell, heโs got about five more minutes beforeโโ
SLAP!
The sound of the bracelet connecting with Laceyโs dainty wrist caught Greg off guard.
โJesus!โ he said. โDo you have to do that? I heard one of those things malfunctioned and poked someone right in the damn vein. Bled out right on the spot, the way I heard it.โ
Lacey continued anyway. She wanted to do it again but saw Greg was getting annoyed, so she decided to refrain.
โRelax, baby bear,โ she said. โThat story is just an urban legend. Everybody has these things. And who cares if we hang around here a little while? Theyโre paying us to be here, remember?โ
โI donโt give a shit if theyโre planning on putting the kids through college. Nobody leaves the Matthews waiting.โ
Despite the tough talk, Greg wouldnโt be budging anytime soon. Doing so went against his philosophy. The boys were supposed to generate income
โperhaps Tanya too. They werenโtย justย family; they were an investment, one that should be lucrative so long as he instilled them with the proper ethic and nudged them along. The kids reeling in three grand just to test out a stupid playground was too easy, but Greg was confident this was only the beginning.
He watched his oldest son, thirteen-year-old Bobby, get chased down by Gregโs pride and joy, CJ. He was certain CJ was going to be special from the moment he got his legs under him. The boyโs uncanny speed, muscularity, and intangible prowess were easy for the former athlete to see dollar signs behind.
Son-of-a-bitch is faster than a Ferrari. Little shit might even be faster than me,ย Greg thought.
Greg watched Bobby as he tried to close in on his tag target. He was mere inches away when CJ juked him. CJโs natural gifts frustrated his oldest, causing Bobby to give up and focus on the youngest of the litter, Kip.
It ainโt even fair to the rest of them,ย Greg chuckled to himself gleefully.
Thatโs money in the bank.
Greg saw himself in his son. CJ held the same set of attributes he had before tearing both ACLs in his third college football game. While his body had failed him, he knew that CJ wouldnโt be hindered by the same gremlin.
As he watched CJโs long slicing strides, Greg knew heโd have made one hell of a wide receiver. The kid had hands like Cris Carter and cut as sharp as Barry Sanders. But all that was too risky. He didnโt want his golden ticket to suffer the same injury that sullied Gregโs scholarship.
Although the ligament tears that ended Gregโs career had the potential to happen in any sport, he wanted CJ to do something with minimal contact. The gridiron was too violent. It wasnโt so much that Greg cared for his well-being; he just wanted to see his show horse run in as many races as possible.
When Greg pushed him into baseball, he took to it like a duck to water. With CJ at shortstop, sensational catches and double-plays were always the norm. And when he stepped up to the plate, there was always the chance that he might blast one out of the park. The natural, sporty talent that he harbored left him leaps and bounds ahead of his age group. And just as Greg had told himself, CJ was the king of whatever diamond he graced.
Bobby, on the other hand, was a painfully crushing disappointment. Greg had high expectations for his firstborn. He definitely didnโt expect a stinker. But it wasnโt like he could just return him or go back in time and have an abortion. Greg still pushed Bobby the same as all the others, but he knew there was no light at the end of his tunnel. He liked that Bobby could still beat the shit out of most kids, but he was still too fat for a pair of gloves and headgear. Toughness alone was useless to Greg in the fiscal scheme of things.
At least he ainโt a faggot,ย Greg thought. It was all his warped, bigoted brain could find to be proud of.
Bobbyโs stride stretched far further than his seven-year-old brother could. In less than a minute, Bobby, red-cheeks and all, was able to close in on him. He slapped his back with a thunderous tag and Kip fell onto the grass.
โYouโre it, dumbass,โ Bobby hollered.
He ran away unleashing a hyena-like laugh. โHey! Language!โ Lacey yelled.
It was a request sheโd made to Bobby more times than she could count.
Greg watched Kip like a scout before draft day. His brother had given him a decent shot in the lungs, and heโd taken a tough tumble. Despite being disappointed with his boy getting caught, the blow and fall didnโt faze Kip. The jury was still out on his overall potentialโhe was too young for Greg to figureโbut at least he could take some pride in his sonโs toughness.
Welp, he ainโt no pussy, thatโs for damn sure.
Kip lifted himself off the ground and looked to his sister Tanya, pegging her as the easiest catch.
Upon seeing Kip key in on her, Tanya readied herself. The nine-year-old coyly positioned her body beside an extravagant cement birdbath at the center of the lawn.
Fuckinโ birds got a better shower here than I do at home,ย Greg thought.
When Kip charged in, Tanya tactfully sidestepped the boy and made her way around the fixture.
โWhy is she playing with them again?โ Lacey asked. โI dunno, โcause theyโre kids?โ Greg reasoned.
โI justโฆ I donโt want her thinking sheโs going to be something sheโs not.โ
โSeriously? Sheโs just messing around.โ
As shallow as Greg could be, even he was a bit shocked that his wife was irked by Tanya mixing it up. His buzz was also wearing off, making him just more argumentative than he normally was.
โWeโve been letting her mess around with them too much,โ Lacey whined โNow sheโs talking about swimming lessons.โ
Lacey and her daughter locked eyes momentarily. Tanyaโs shoulderโs tightened and her eyes drifted as she grew distracted by her motherโs scowl of disapproval. The dirty looks were nothing new. Sheโd seen them many times before and even grown somewhat accustomed to absorbing her glares of displeasure.
Routine didnโt make them hurt any less though.
Tanyaโs mother had a vision for her, but theย lastย thing Tanya wanted to do was stand on the sidelines of a sport she didnโt care about. She wasnโt looking for an eventual suitor; she wanted to compete. The idea of cheerleading felt low and idiotic. It disheartened her that it was the only thing her mother believed her to be capable of.
What Lacey surmised was best mattered little to Tanya. She mightโve been young, but she was already old enough to understand that no one, not even the woman she came out of, was going to control her.
Tanya didnโt need her motherโs belief; she had her own.
She envisioned herself swimming with the best of them, or maybe competing in gymnastics which sheโd taken an interest in recently. Tanya hoped that her mom might be asking her father about the lessons theyโd discussed at the table that morning.
Tanya wasnโt sure what more evidence they needed from her. At the YMCA she was the fastest in the water, but her parents were never there. How could they even know? They used the club more as a babysitter for Tanya than a means to support her passion. It allowed her father to focus more on training her brothers, and left her mother to do whatever it was she did in her free time. It worked like a charm when the investment pricing
was low. But now Laceyโs babysitter had become more expensive than it was worth.
Sheโd show them.
Sheโd show themย right now.
Tanya only relinquished a meager amount of her attention toward her motherโs cancerous attitude. She yearned to watch her failures bloom, but today, she would have to wait.
As Kip closed in on her, Tanya let him get close enough to think he had her dead to rights. But as Kip blasted full-speed ahead, Tanya pivoted her body and went tumbling sideways. Planting her palm on the ground, her cartwheel successfully evaded the tag. As she landed on her feet in perfect form, Kip found himself sliding belly-first past the birdbath, over the impeccable front lawn.
โWhoa, did you see that?โ Greg asked. โMaybe thereโs something to it. Itโs only normal for her to have a hobby. All the boys do. Hell, she might even be a little better than you think. Maybe she deserves those lessons after all.โ
โYouโre going overboard now,โ Lacey replied. โAm I?โ
Lacey gritted her teeth.
The move Tanya had shown off was impressive, a trick she mightโve even been able to use in cheer if Lacey could somehow break her daughterโs will. But it didnโt help convince Greg that the costly lessons might not be worth it. If anything, it was an argument in favor of the investment.
Greg and Lacey were alike in how they viewed the children that matched their gender. All Lacey wanted was a daughter that would follow in her footsteps. But she never expected Tanya to have her own ideas or have a stronger mind than the rest of her siblings. She couldnโt be molded to simply worship those within her familial circumference just because they shared the same bloodline.
โShe got lucky,โ Lacey grumbled. โThe sooner she realizes that, the easier itโll be. Sheโs not like the boys. Sheโs thinking Olympics, but sheย should beย thinking pom-poms.โ
Greg chewed on the thought for a moment before a jock grin graced his face.
โI remember you in those tight-ass outfits. Fuck, you were something else, baby doll.โ
A beam of joy crept up on Laceyโs face, matching her love. โIs that right?โ
โThatโs right.โ
The intimate memory was abruptly disturbed by the sound of tires slowly churning through the gravel.
Greg and Lacey turned their attention to the vehicle heading in their direction.
โHey! Timeout!โ Greg yelled. โWatch out for the car! I canโt afford to have any of you getting hurt!โ