The Red Strokes - Chapter 10A Chapter by WeekendWriterChapter 10 of my latest release, 'The Red Strokes', available on Amazon.CHAPTER TEN
The commotion, the tension, the air of sadness, together they
left me feeling beat up and haggard. I want nothing more than to go home and
barricade the door, slip into something flannel and then sit on the porch and
vegetate until it’s time for bed. It occurs to me while driving that I haven’t
cried. I feel sorrow and loss. I feel an emotional ache in my heart. But other
than one or two stray tears while watching dad’s video and welling up during
the church service, I haven’t cried. Somehow that makes me feel guilty, as if
the absence of tears means the absence of grief and in my often-simplified way
of thinking, the absence of grief equates to the absence of love. Maybe my lack
of tears is caused by a subconscious vanity. The fact is I’m not a pretty crier.
When I cry my face turns thirteen shades of mottled red and distorts until I
resemble a Shar Pei. I don’t have Mia’s petite face. When Mia cries her eyes
seem to droop on their outside corners, tears flow evenly and in straight lines
down her cheeks and somehow, her makeup never runs. And rather than the walrus
sobs that leave others feeling uncomfortable and searching for an exit her
cries sound more like whimpers, frightened puppy whimpers that have the power
to engage others in her emotion. She has a crier voice and face that cause men
and women alike to whip out their hankies and fight over who will dab her eyes
and rock her to sleep. Everyone knows that when you lose someone you love tears are
part of the package. Since I’ll have the house to myself once Val and Michelle
leave maybe that’s what I’ll do, dedicate the afternoon to a good old-fashioned
crying jag over old pictures and cheesecake. I pull into the driveway and see a man in a blue-gray suit
sitting in one of the rocking chairs on the front porch just as peaceful as if
he lived there. I shut the car off and stare straight ahead for a moment. I
look back to the porch. Still there.
Pulling my purse behind me, I step out of the car and he stands when the door
slams shut behind me. Even before I reach him, I ask, “Can I help you?” “Yes. Well, no. I live next door.” He motions to the house to my
right. “My name is Nixon. Nixon Shepard. I came by the other day.” I give him a subtle once over; So, you’re Adonis. “I believe my sister mentioned that. I’m sorry.
It’s just that… Well, I’ve had my hands full this week and I probably should
have stopped by, but"” “I’m the one who should be apologizing,” he interrupts. “When I
came by, I had no idea… it was only afterward that I learned of your father’s
passing.” He shifts his weight and extends a hand. “I went to the funeral, but
couldn’t get in so I thought I’d come by to offer my condolences in person. I
am truly sorry. I didn’t know your father, but,” he holds the pads of two
fingers together, “in a small way, I felt like I did. I’ve read everything he’s
ever written.” I accept his outstretched hand. “Thank you, very much.” I look
to the front door and then back to Nixon, who has yet to release my hand. I
ignore the temperamental voice in my head that is screaming ‘get rid of him’,
and ask, “Would you like to come in for a minute?” “No thank you.” His answer comes fast. “I mean, yes I would, but
not today.” My nerves relax in collective relief and he lets go of my hand. “I
will take a rain-check though.” I offer a less-than-excited ‘absolutely’. Truth is, to be left
alone I would have agreed to almost anything. “Great. I’ll just take my rain-check and be going then.” He
turns and quickly covers the distance between our homes with long strides
through the wet grass. I watch him for a moment and then unlock the front door. “Hey…” I turn back. “I meant to tell you, I’m sorry about the
hole my dog dug. As soon as the rain lets up I’ll be over to fill it.” “I’m not worried about it, but thanks,” I yell across the yard. He waves, turns, and takes several more brisk steps until he
reaches his driveway. I close the door, lean back against it, and let out a loud and
deep breath. * * * The first thing I do in my bedroom is remove my earrings. I’ve
never been much for jewelry anyway, but today the tiny diamond studs have acted
like spiders, their venomous bites making my earlobes itch to the point of
swelling soon after I put them in. Once I tuck the earrings away, I strip off
my clothes down to my underwear and pull on my favorite pair of stretch pants.
I top them off with a Yale hoodie and fall like fruit from a tree onto my bed.
I take several calming breaths and lie motionless while one-by-one each muscle
in my body relaxes allowing my heart rate to settle into a normal rhythm. Nixon Shepard. Such an unusual first name. Nix-on, I let it roll
off my tongue as if I’d said it hundreds of times before. Val was right; he
certainly is worth a double take, but not in the ordinary square jaw
would-only-date-a-supermodel kind of way. There are men who attract women like
ants to spilled soda not because they possess a God-bestowed beauty worthy of
gracing the covers of romance novels, but because they make women laugh.
They’re able and willing to laugh at themselves; they smile often and in the
face of adversity, and are astute enough to realize that laughter is the way
into a woman’s panties. An unexpected and well-delivered punch line is almost
as good as having one hand up her shirt. I know this because that is exactly
how Scotty got me into bed the first time. Then there are men who women fall all over because they’re
interesting by either vocation or breadth of knowledge on topics the average
person knows" and usually cares " nothing about. Nixon Shepard is definitely an
attractive man, but not because his face is the material cologne advertisements
are made of or because he rapid-fires sidesplitting jokes although I did note
his underlying sense of humor. I think it’s the extraordinarily ordinary thing he
has going on that enhances his warm green eyes. He has paid two visits in just
as many days to apologize for one hole, while the neighbors on the other side
of me have never paid a visit or apologized and their dog has been using the
back corner of my yard as his own personal toilet since they moved in four
years ago. I’ve been meaning to say something to them. On any other day Nixon Shepard would be a most tantalizing
vision to fall asleep to, but today, I decide to put him to the back of my mind
and save him for a day when I’m not saturated with negative thoughts and
feelings. One day, when most of this is behind me, I’ll stumble over today’s
encounter in my mind and open up the memory like a present forgotten underneath
the Christmas tree. Sprawled like a starfish I’m not sure how long I’ve been lying
on the bed when the doorbell jars me awake. Groggy and unable to remember
whether I locked the front door when I got home, I manage to pull together and
hoist myself off the bed, each clumsy step a race between me and the second chime
of my annoying doorbell. * * * “All I’m saying is that it might be therapeutic… Hi Lilah.”
Barely stopping long enough to take a breath, Michelle continues. “And whether
or not you want to believe it, I can
manage without you.” Val casts a raised-brow glance, cocking her head to one side. Michelle adds, “For a week or so.” I ask, “What’s going on?” “Michelle thinks I haven’t mourned properly and that by staying
here"with you"I will rid the tears from the deepest corners of my soul.” “You know I don’t like it when you patronize me,” Michelle says. Val throws a leg over a stool at the island. “And you know I
don’t like it when you mother me.” “Why don’t you?” I ask. “Seriously, I’ve seen you only a handful
of times since you moved away. I’d love to spend some time with you.” I turn to
Michelle and extend an arm. “Both of you. I have plenty of vacation time
coming.” “We have friends looking after the inn and the dogs. They’re
great, but they leave for vacation in two day. One of us has to go back, but
that doesn’t mean we both have to. I think Val should stay and spend some time
with her family. Am I wrong?” Ouch. Three
small words that when translated mean, ‘pick a side’. “Listen, it’s not my
place to say who should do what. But, it’s an open invitation, for one or
both.” A look passes between them before they each turn toward the
front door. “I wonder who that could be,” I say, as I head in the direction of
the knock. “Probably a disgruntled fan who couldn’t get into the funeral.”
Michelle shakes her head as if to disagree, but Val continues. “Seriously,
every celebrity has their own little following of crazies. Make sure you use
the spyhole before you open it.” The chance of Val being right about crazies at the door is
remote at best, but something makes me lift up on my toes and give a peek
through the small, round hole. I’m limited as to what I can see, but I immediately recognizes
the bright flowers splashed across the white dress worn by the dark-skinned
mystery girl at the funeral. I turn back and shrug before opening the door to
my guest. “Hello. Can I help you?” I ask. For a stretched-out second the young girl stares in silence. She
wrings her hands and shifts her weight, never taking her eyes off me. When she
finally speaks, her voice sounds fragile. “Are you Lilah?” I nod. “My name is Avery Alice, but everyone just calls me Avery. I’d
like to talk to you, if I may.” She lets her hands drop to her sides and
straightens her posture. I open the door a bit further. “Sure. Come in.” For the first time, the young girl’s shoulders relax and she
looks away. When she looks back, she says, “Thank you. Let me get my
grandmother and I’ll be right back.” The girl turns away and I look past her barely able to make out
a body in the passenger seat, the window tint keeping me from seeing any
detail. I close the door all but a couple inches and turn back to Val and
Michelle. “That’s the same girl that stopped by the other day,” Val says.
“Seems she was hell-bent on seeing you.” “She was also at the funeral. I’m not sure how she got in, but
she kept to herself and disappeared ahead of the crowd.” I roll that over in my
mind. “A fan?” “Doubtful,” Val says. “Val’s right,” Michelle adds. “Young girls read books like
Twilight, not criminal thrillers.” I hear footsteps on the porch. “What then?” I ask, as I open the
door. My body falls still and my heartbeat quickens. In an instant,
I’m taken back almost twenty years, a flood of emotion welling up inside of me.
Although there is an age span of five or six decades, standing side-by-side
with their arms interlocked the resemblance is striking. I reach up and touch
the imaginary hand squeezing my throat and blink ahead of the first tear and
the only two words I’m able to say. “Heddie Mae?” © 2014 WeekendWriter |
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Added on August 1, 2014 Last Updated on August 1, 2014 Tags: Women's Fiction, Mainstream, Family Author
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