
“You're giving me an extra ten dollars, remember?"
“I am? What for?" Jane asked, tapping her fingers on the wheel and craning her neck to see what they were doing that took so long. One of the trashmen was riffling casually through a stack of Playboys that someone had tried to throw away.
“The tanning sessions.”
Jane honked the horn. "No way."
“But you promised!"
“I didn't promise. I said I'd think about it. I have. It's too much money, and dangerous besides."
“Dangerous!" Katie scoffed.
“You'd have skin cancer by the time you're thirty-five.”
Katie flounced magnificently. "Thirty-five!Who cares by then?"
“You will. And you'll blame me."
“Oh, Mother! I'll be the color of a polar bear by November if I don't go."
“No-go, kid. Sorry.”
The trash truck finally pulled over, and Jane realized it was because they'd blocked a businessman who'd come from the opposite direction. He was worth moving for. "Male chauvinist pigs!" Jane muttered.
She joined the line of station wagons disgorg‑ ing girls in front of the junior high. Jane discovered that her predictions about there being no social contact this early were wrong. School had only been in session for three rainy autumn days, and this was the first sunny morning. Today, several of the women were out of their cars, chatting with each other. Two were dressed in sporty tennis dresses and carrying rackets. Katie glanced at them and then raked her mother with an I-told-you-so glare. "Out!" Jane ordered.
“Think about the tanning sessions, Mom.”
“I have. No. Close the door.”
The boys were dressed and watching cartoons at the kitchen table when she got back at 6:50. Mike, a gangling fifteen-year-old, swallowed the last of his orange juice and shoved back his chair when she came in the door. Through the donut he'd stuck in his mouth to free his hands, he said, "Where you been?"
