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But there was one good thing about brunch: on Sundays, Florence left to go have it. Orla would hear her in her room—the apartment's real bedroom—agitating her phone into an endless flurry of chimes before finally using it to call someone and rave about her hangover. Vowels stood in for each other at random. "Hay gurl hay," she would whine. "Faaaack. I'm hungover as fuuuuck." The call would conclude with Florence agreeing to meet someone somewhere in twenty minutes. "Getting in a cab now," she would sign off. Then she'd sleep for another hour before clattering out the door.
The Sunday after Orla took the business card, she heard Florence through the walls, braying her way through one of these exchanges. Suddenly, Florence stopped talking, so abruptly that Orla was scared her roommate might be choking. She crawled to the foot of her bed and pulled her laptop from her desk to the comforter. She was googling the Heimlich maneuver when she heard Florence say, in the unmistakable manner of someone getting another call: "Shit. Call you right back." Orla closed her laptop. She stayed very still. There was something about the way Florence sounded that made Orla wonder who was getting through to her.
"Hi, Mommy," Florence said. There was a flinch in her voice, but a steeliness, too, like she was ducking something sharp before it could be thrown.
"What's wrong with her?" Florence went on, worry leaping into her tone. "Oh. That's no big deal. You scared me. Her paw's always like that." A pause. "Are you kidding? Put her down? She's not even sick. You just don't want to take care of her—"
The air-conditioning unit under Orla's window rattled into action. She leaped up and switched it off.
"Just don't do anything, please," Florence was saying, "until I can afford a flight home. I'll come and get her and bring her back with me—please, Mom."
Orla imagined, rather than heard, the tinny hum of someone protesting on the other end.
"I know you don't believe me," Florence said, "but I'm getting real traction. People out here love my voice. They get me. I'm meeting so many—Give me a few weeks, okay? Forget airfare to Ohio—if things keep going like this, I'll have a record contract soon. I can buy you a new house."
Another pause, then Florence rushing her words out like she regretted it, in a voice so small and beaten Orla almost ran down the hall and hugged her. "No-no-no," Florence said. "I love our house. I didn't mean it like that. It's just something famous singers do."
This time, Orla was sure she could actually hear mocking on the other end.
"Well, I think I could be," Florence said quietly.
After that, there was nothing—no sign-offs—and then Orla heard Florence pacing. Orla lifted herself off her bed, avoiding the creaky pit in the mattress, and came to sit on the ground beside her door, one shoulder and ear leaned against it.
Florence was making more calls—short ones.
"I sent you my demo a few months back—Oh, you did?"
"And you thought you might have a spot in the showcase—Oh, it was?"
"I saw your posting about needing models for—Hello?"
"Yes! That's so sweet of you. I mean, I've been working on those songs since—Oh. No. I'm sorry, I have to stop you—I'm not blonde. No, I was the brunette. Sure. I understand. I'll be at this number if you want to—Okay. Bye."
Orla held her breath, waiting for things to resume. She could picture, vaguely, the sort of people Florence must be calling: the so-called promoters and producers who were always male, who claimed to know everyone and have a hand in everything, who did all their business from their cells rather than an office, who picked up the phone on Sundays. The sort who only ever seemed to see potential in pretty girls, sidling up to them at bars to set meetings which, invariably, took place in the man's apartment.
Excerpted from Followers by Megan Angelo. Copyright © 2020 by Megan Angelo. Excerpted by permission of Graydon House. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
In youth we run into difficulties. In old age difficulties run into us
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