Six Feet Over It Read Online Free Page A

Six Feet Over It
Book: Six Feet Over It Read Online Free
Author: Jennifer Longo
Tags: Humor, Humorous, Literature & Fiction, Children's Books, Family, Family Life, Children's eBooks, Death & Dying, Friendship, Teen & Young Adult, Social & Family Issues, Growing Up & Facts of Life, Friendship; Social Skills & School Life, Difficult Discussions
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our afternoons singing “Parácuaro, Song of My Father,” and exchanging diálogos such as:
    Me: ¿Te gusta musica?
    Ken Dale, my Spanish partner: Sí, yo prefiero Sade. Mucho gusto “Smooth Operator.”
    Me: Sí. Yo también.
    Ken Dale: ¿Vamos a la playa ahora? ¿O quizás Taco Bell?
    Me: Bueno! Sí, como no. ¡Vamos!
    I consider my limited vocabulary, my frequent use of los when I mean las, and my complete lack of interest in why Wade’s interested in my language skills.
    “Sure,” I sigh. “I guess.”
    “Fantastic!” he practically sings. “ ¡Fantastico! Study hard, I have a feeling it’s gonna come in handy. Might be worth a bonus in your salary, if you know what I mean.”
    “No. What?”
    “Just what I said!”
    “Okay, doesn’t ‘bonus’ mean extra money?”
    He winks. “That’s right!”
    “So … extra money, that’s what you mean. ”
    “Yes!”
    “Then what’s with the winking? Who doesn’t know what a bonus means?”
    “It’s cemetery jargon!”
    What? “Bonuses are not cemetery jargon!”
    He hangs happily out the trailer window, laughing. Not at me—he just loves being the funniest person he’s ever met. I start again toward the house.
    “Leigh!”
    I turn back.
    “You around Saturday? First thing?”
    “Saturday?”
    “Yeah.”
    “ This Saturday.”
    “Yes, keep up! The nursery charges extra for weekend delivery. Help me load the truck—five minutes. Ten, tops.”
    I drop my backpack. “Saturday.”
    “Yes!”
    I pull my ponytail out, wrap the hair tie around my wrist.
    “I guess I could ask Kai …” He hems.
    “Okay, fine,” I say. “Just wake me up.”
    “Good!”
    He jiggles the windowsill, messes with a loose bolt.
    “You know Saturday is my birthday, right?”
    A loaded pause.
    “Well, obviously!” he says, though his tone tells a different story. “Of course! That’s why, you know, I can’t have you here to ruin … the surprise.”
    “Oh, really?”
    “Sure! So we’re on? Saturday early?”
    I nod.
    “You’re a good girl!” He waves a socket wrench at me, ducks back inside the trailer.
    Eyes up, I march over the mistake headstones. Safe in the house, I slam the door shut.
    Waves crash. Gulls cry.
    I drop my backpack on a chair, swallow two glasses of water, and follow the sound of pounding surf down the long hall to the laundry room, where Meredith perches on a stool before an easel, ferociously intent on the canvas before her.
    Landlocked and yearning for the ocean, helplessly shanghaied by Wade’s ninja graveyard purchase, Meredith had one foot out the Manderleys before the first moving box was unpacked. She proclaimed absolution from anything even remotely related to the graves from day one. The minute we moved into Sierrawood, Operation This Woman Is an Island kicked into high gear. She went to work turning the laundry room at the back of the house into a tiny art studio, where she spends her days listening to record albums with titles such as Ocean Shore Sound Effects for Stage and Screen, filling the air with a predictable tide, the acrid scent of acetone, and the walls with seascape after seascape, all framed with weather-worn driftwood.
    Wade loves to justify his hijinks like he’s done us all a big favor— It’s a solid investment, guaranteed income, you love it! —but has realized at last that with Meredith, he is skating on very, very thin ice, ice with a bunch of long-dead bodies floating beneath it. So he leaves her alone to Miss Havisham it up in the laundry room and makes rules such as No Talking About the Graveyard in the House When Your Mother Is Home. Which is fine by me.
    I lean in the doorway and watch her paint.
    “How was school?”
    “Dumb.”
    “Oh, good.”
    Wist, wist, wist. She pulls fog up from foamy waves with a fan brush, wist ing it into a restless violet sky.
    “Kai said to pick her up if it gets dark.”
    She brushes up some white gesso, moves it around her palette.
    “Well,” she says, “I’m
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