tinted bulbs, but Star thought it would make the house
 
 look too much like a bordello. In the end we agreed
 
 on a lighter shade of blue for the hallways and Misty,
 
 who seemed inexhinstible, decided to start on that
 
 /> while Star went out back to finish dressing up
 
 Geraldine's grave with the plants and bushes we had
 
 purchased. We were going to hang my new curtains,
 
 too, before the end of the day.
 
 Jade was the first to grow tired of the work and
 
 began to complain about being hungry so we planned
 
 what we would order in from the nearest Chinese
 
 restaurant. Then they each called home to say they were staying at my house for dinner. Only Star's Granny was actually home to receive the call. Jade's mother was at a dinner meeting already and Misty's mother had left word with her answering service that
 
 she was going to a movie with one of her girlfriends. "I thought you were getting permission to stay
 
 with her overnight anyway," Star reminded Misty. "I was. I mean I will. I thought it would be
 
 easier to ask from here and not have to answer any
 
 questions about it," she explained.
 
 'Well, Granny said I can stay for dinner," Star
 
 declared, and then looked to me, "but only if you
 
 promise to come to our house for one of her homecooked meals. I told her you would and she said
 
 tomorrow night. One thing about my granny, she
 
 doesn't dwell in the world of fluff. None of this 'we'll
 
 do lunch or dinner' stuff. If you say you will, she pins
 
 you down to being real. You can stay over, too," she
 
 added.
 
 Jade and Misty both nodded with looks in their
 
 eyes that told me how much they wished they lived in
 
 Granny's world rather than their own.
 
 "Do you have anything to drink here?" Jade
 
 suddenly asked. It was as if just the suggestion of
 
 something dark and unpleasant had to be kept out any