I smiled. I really did feel safer now, even safer
 
 with them than I had felt with Geraldine. And that's
 
 what family was supposed to do for you, I thought,
 
 make you feel secure, let you know that there are
 
 people who care about you and want to protect you
 
 and love you. We'd be friends forever and ever, and
 
 there was nothing I wouldn't do for them and nothing
 
 they wouldn't do for me. It wasn't just the vodka that
 
 made me feel warm and comfortable now. It was their
 
 smiles and their laughter and their promises. We could believe in the promises we made to
 
 each other easier than those our parents made to us.
 
 Because we were all veterans of disappointment, we
 
 knew how painful it would be to disappoint each
 
 other. What better guarantees were there than the ones
 
 born out of mutual pain and respect?
 
 "To the OWP's," Misty cried, holding up her glass as if she could read my very thoughts. "One for
 
 all and all for one!"
 
 "To the OWP's," we joined, and drank down
 
 our drinks.
 
 Jade started to prepare another for all of us as
 
 the dinner arrived. We were just beginning to feel
 
 very good and be happy. The best was yet to come, I
 
 thought. My friends had helped me bury all my
 
 disappointments, forever and ever.
 
 Was I being too optimistic? Was Misty rubbing
 
 off on me? Was I turning into a dreamer? What if I
 
 was? Anything was better than what I had been, I
 
 thought. This was like being born again and there was
 
 no turning back now, never.
 
 Geraldine could rise from the grave; she could