4

I’ve seen Fiddler on the Roof.
There was this one lady, Yente, who was the
matchmaker—that was her job in the village.
Right now I’m the matchmaker.
Maybe I’ve found my calling …

“Hey, girl,” Marla says as I walk into Perk Me Up! after school the next day. “Jessica is at the computer corner.”

Marla said she put in the computers because people wanted to be connected to the Internet and their e-mail no matter where they are. And if they want free, convenient Internet while they’re drinking her coffee, all the better.

I stand behind Jessica. “What are you doing?”

Her hands are busy clicking away. “Checking Mitch’s e-mail.”

“Sneaky, Jess. How’d you get his password?”

“I have my ways. See, that bitch Roxanne is e-mailing him,” Jess says, pointing to the screen.

Oooh, gossip. I know it’s bad, but gossip is seriously addictive and underrated. “What does she say?”

“Just that she needs help in biology, yadda yadda.”

“You better watch out for her,” I say. “Now get off the computer so I can check something.”

“I’m still mad at you, you know.”

Me? Innocent, little me? “You’ll get over it. Besides, whatever I did was probably for your own good.”

“You took me to the dog park knowing Mitch would be there. Stop meddling in my life.”

I huff. “I’m Jewish, what do you expect? I was born to meddle.”

Jessica shakes her head. Okay, so she has more Jewish blood because both her parents are Jewish and my dad is the one who gave me my Jewish genes. My mom gave me good fashion sense genes.

While Jessica goes to the bathroom, I quickly check the PJSN website and log into my father’s profile.

Oh. My. God.

I’ve got thirty-seven responses from women who want to date me … I mean, my dad. And, checking the home page, my dad has gotten the most hits on the PJSN website in the past twenty-four hours.

It brings popularity to a whole new level.

I’m almost giddy (does anyone use that word anymore??) as I scan the responses of women.

Three make sexual innuendos. They’re out.

Ten live in the suburbs. Definitely out.

Five don’t put their pictures on the site. Questionable. What if the supposed woman is a man?

Seven are over fifty. Ten have more than two kids. Out. Out. My dad can hardly handle me. How would he be able to handle a whole tribe?

That leaves two.

One is in human resources, the other a lawyer. I e-mail both of them and ask them if they want to have coffee sometime. Okay, it’s a little creepy asking women out on dates. But even more daunting is having to manipulate my dad somehow to get him to go on the date. I know meeting for coffee isn’t the most original date, but at least it’s not a dinner or lunch where you have to sit and talk the entire time, waiting for that uncomfortable silence when you both want to escape.

“Does your dad know about this?”

I shriek and scold Jessica. “Didn’t your mother tell you it’s not nice to sneak up on people?”

“No.”

My best friend shakes her head and puts her hand over her eyes. “Please tell me you didn’t sign your dad up for an online dating service.”

“I didn’t sign my dad up for an online dating service.”

“You’re lying, Amy.”

“Of course I’m lying.”

“Amy, one of these days your little plans are gonna backfire and come crashing in your face.”

“Oh, ye of little faith,” I say. “My dad will have a girlfriend by Passover.”

“Oh, ye of too many scatterbrained ideas,” Jess says. “Your head is getting bigger than your boobs.”

“Shut up. Haven’t you ever needed something you didn’t want?”

“Yeah, a flu shot. And it hurt me way more than it hurt my mom who made me get one.”

Jessica doesn’t understand. “You don’t expect me to sit around as my mom makes babies with Marc while my dad stays alone for the rest of his life, do you?” It makes me sad thinking he’s pining for my mom.

“Your dad doesn’t seem to mind,” Jess says.

I turn in my chair and face her. I admit my dad doesn’t outwardly show his unhappiness, but it’s in there. Deep down. And he’s starting to age. “He’s got a few gray hairs already.”

“Your parents are way younger than mine, Amy. My dad is totally bald and my mom’s almost fifty and is totally white . . . well, underneath all of the hair dye she’s as white as a snowball.”

“Great. In a few years my mom’ll turn gray and people will think my little sister or brother is my own kid. They’ll think my mom is the grandma.”

“People in their late thirties have babies all the time. Don’t stress about it.”

I put my hands over my heart. “Me, stress? I never stress about anything.”

Jess raises her eyebrows at me and chuckles. Because we both know it’s not true.

My cell phone is ringing. I click the little green button. It’s my dad. “Hey, Aba.”

“Amy, I just took my clients out for dinner. I’m about to pay the bill.”

“So?”

“So,” he says in a distressed voice. “Do you by any chance know where my credit card is?”

Oh, no. I forgot to put it back in his wallet after my run-in with Geek Boy. “Umm … Aba … you’re not gonna believe this—”