For the Sake of Chocolate, part 3

  She fell asleep thinking about how her hormones must have finally driven her mad.  She’d imagined a dictator in barbarian’s clothes kidnapping her through the ice cream freezer at the grocery store.  She must have finally gotten herself shipped off to the crazy farm.  That didn’t explain why she was warm and toasty down her left side and frozen down her right side.  Nor did it explain the rhythm of movement that had lulled her to sleep in the first place, despite the uncomfortable juxtaposition of hot and cold on her body.  The cessation of that movement had brought her back to consciousness.  She yawned and stretched, only to freeze in place when her hips and back were gripped firmly by very large hands. 

 A very deep voice rumbled from against her body.  She squeezed her eyes shut.  She recognized the barbarian’s voice even though the words were spoken in a language foreign to her.  Was she still trapped in her imagination? Or could she actually, possibly, have been dragged through some weird portal in time and place?  She shook her head, denying the possibility.  She must be crazy. That was the only explanation.

 Another male voice spoke from a few feet away, responding to her kidnapper’s query.  The one holding her responded with a grunt and then began moving again.  She slowly opened her eyes to see where she was, hoping that she was being carried by a large orderly on the psych ward.  She flinched when her eyes encountered bright, white snow. It was so bright it was blinding.  She buried her head against the man’s chest. He laughed at her, the rusty sound rumbling through her body. 

 “Wait another little while, woman.  We have arrived in the village.  Soon, you will be warm and properly dressed.”

 “Will I get one of those cute little gown’s that hang open in back to bare my backside to the world?”

 “You want your ass bare to the world?” He sounded puzzled.

 “Well, not particularly,” she admitted.  He stopped walking and she heard another person’s feet shuffling beside them.  She thought she heard a heavy door creak open in front of them.  When the man holding her moved again, she was suddenly enveloped in warmth.  It was almost too warm. There was an aroma of cooking food combined with the stench of unwashed bodies. It turned her stomach.

 “Hey, can you turn the thermostat down a notch or two.  It’s boiling in here!” She complained.

 “What is a thermostat?” The man asked.

 “Oh. I guess the room doesn’t have a separate thermostat.  OK, well, I hope that the little gown isn’t too heavy then. I don’t want to be roasting while I’m trapped in the loony bin.”

 “Woman, you make no sense with your ramblings.” He spoke rapidly to someone else in that language she couldn’t understand.  It had rolling r’s and sharp vowel sounds.  Did the staff in the mental hospital have to learn a foreign language so that they could speak to each other without their patients understanding them? She heard more voices, speaking excitedly, and more shuffling feet around her.

 She was abruptly set down and she stood awkwardly, holding the fur tight around her shoulders.  She kept her eyes closed, denying the possibility that she was anywhere but in a hospital.  From smell to touch, her senses told her she was nowhere near a cold, antiseptic, sterile environment.  Her mind rebelled at the idea that she was, in fact, in a barbarian village far from the heat of Florida where she had started her day.

Read more: Part One, Part Two

Published in: on January 10, 2008 at 9:11 am  Comments (2)  
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An Unexpected Reunion, El Fin

I finally got Mom and Dad to sit down with me on my last day at home. For once, it was quiet in the house.  My siblings had taken their families off to play in the snow. Mom had fixed a pot of coffee and put a kettle of water to heat on the stove in preparation for the return of the rest of the family.  She had poured each of us a cup of coffee before sitting down with my dad and I at the kitchen table.

“What did you need to talk to us about, Dana?” My father asked. 

“Well, this house, actually.  You are due to move South in a month and near as I can tell, you haven’t even spoken with a realtor about selling it.  How are you going to have time to get the showings and the packing and the selling done before you go to Florida?” I felt bad intruding on their business.  I was no expert on selling houses, but I knew it took more than a month!

My father patted my hand and said, “Don’t worry about it. Your mother and I have it covered.” I frowned at him.

“Truthfully, honey, the house has already been sold.  We had it on the market before Thanksgiving and had a contract signed before any of you got here for the holidays.” My mother calmly stirred her coffee as she said that.

“It’s already sold?” I shouted. “You didn’t even tell any of us your plans until we were all here!  You didn’t even give any of us the option to buy it from you?”  I could feel the blood rushing to my face and knew my cheeks were bright with anger.

“Dana. We didn’t want any of you to be saddled with this place.  You all have lives of your own elsewhere.” My father said this quietly, cutting into the rant that was getting ready to spill from my mouth.  I snapped my mouth shut and stared at him.

“The family that bought the house has small children and they need more room.  This house will work well for them,” my mother said.

“But what about my family?” I asked, with tears spilling down my cheeks.  I felt lost, knowing that the house I’d grown up in, the bridge down the hill, the porch swing, my mom’s Sun Room, it was all going to be in another family. It’d never be here for me again.  It felt as if someone had taken the rug from beneath my feet.  I had lost all sense of grounding, all sense of knowing where I belonged.

“We’re still your family, honey.  Nothing can change the love your dad and I have for you or the love your siblings have for you.” My mom came around the table to put her arm around my shoulders. I shook my head at her, sniffling against the tears that refused to stay inside.

“That’s not what I mean, Mom!  What about MY family!? What about MY children and my husband? They won’t know this place? They’ll have no idea of my roots without this place.”

“Why does this matter so much, Dana?” My father seemed perplexed, as he often was when confronted with one of his daughters in tears.

I did my best to stifle my tears. My mother handed me a tissue and I cleaned myself up, sucking back the sobs that were trying to escape.  Finally I looked up at my parents.  My mom’s hand rested on my shoulder and my dad sat across the table, cradling his mug of coffee.

“I was going to talk to you about buying the house.  I wanted to be the next owner.” I sighed heavily.  “Nevermind though.  I guess it wasn’t in the cards, anyhow.” I got up and hurried up to my room.  Once there, I began throwing my things into my suitcase and carry on bag.  I had an hour or two to go before I had to leave for the airport, but I was ready to leave right then.  I muttered to myself, angry about the stupid dreams I’d allowed myself to have and the goals I’d set for myself which had all been destined to fail.

When all of my clothes and toiletries and gifts I’d received had been haphazardly shoved into one bag or another, I collapsed on the bed, causing the bags to tumble to the floor and spill their contents. I rested my elbows on my knees and my head in my hands and I cried, oblivious to the mess now scattered on the floor at my feet.  I would never be able to “come home” again after this.  In another month, this would be some other family’s haven, some other daughter’s roots. 

A light tap on the half open door warned me that someone was there.  I turned my head away, so that whoever it was couldn’t see my red nose and my wet cheeks.  After clearing his throat, he said, “I, uh, came over to see you.  Your mom said that your flight was leaving this afternoon.”  I turned to look at Simon, my eyes widened with shock at seeing him.  I couldn’t find any words to say to him.  I had purposefully not told him that I was leaving that day.

“Were you going to say goodbye, Dana?” He frowned at me from the doorway, where he leaned against the doorjamb.

I looked away again and sighed. “No, I wasn’t going to say goodbye.” I whispered.  I hadn’t wanted to make it “goodbye” because I wanted to see him again soon. I hadn’t wanted to put an end on the possible future ahead of us.  I was scared that saying goodbye would be the end for us.

“I see.  I was just a distraction while you were on vacation?  Just a bit of a walk down memory lane while you were home for the holidays?” His voice was rough.  I knew I’d hurt him without meaning to. 

“No!” I cried.  “It isn’t like that.  Please believe me, it’s not.” I stood up in protest.

He picked his way through the mess of clothes and books that had spilled from my suitcase and stood right in front me.  He did not touch me at all, he just stood there looking down at me.  A frown creased his forehead, questions glared from his eyes and his mouth was stretched thin, hiding all of the soft smiles he had had for me in the last few days.

“Make me believe it, Dana.  Help to understand what you were thinking.  Because right now, all I know is that when we first began talking again, you seemed on the same page with me.  We were ready to try again, ready to figure out what the spark that’s still between us could mean.” I nodded hopefully, trying to silently tell him that I was there with him.

“Over the last few days though, you’ve seemed to pull farther and farther away from me.  You refused the cuddle on the hammock.  You ran as soon as you could from the domesticity of playing with my kids and talking with my parents.  And the phone calls from the last couple of days have been short and stilted, as if you had run out of things to say to me.” He was speaking very softly. If I hadn’t been watching his mouth form the words, I might have missed parts of what he said.  I could feel the tears rising again and shut my eyes to keep them back.

I whispered, “I’m scared, Simon.”  His hands softly wrapped around my upper arms, just above my elbows.  I kept my eyes tightly shut. He gave my arms a gentle shake and then laughed softly, bitterly.

“Didn’t we just have the conversation about what to do about overwhelming feelings? We talked about how you should share them with me, so that we could work through it all together, didn’t we? I could swear we just talked about how you should have done that all those years ago!” He leaned his forehead against mine.  I opened my eyes and met his gaze.

“Yes, but…that was when we were together.  I should have said something then.  Now…what are we doing now?”

“I thought we were together again, trying to make a relationship again.”

“Were we?”I pulled my head away from his, arching my body back away from his body to look at his face better.  He slowly released me and took a step back, tripping over one of my black stiletto heeled boots that was on top of the pile on the floor.  He surveyed the floor and my things scattered everywhere and shook his head.

“You never used to be so messy, Dana.” He said teasingly.  Then he squatted down, gently placing my boots and sweaters back into the suitcase they’d fallen out of.  He came across a pair of my lacy panties and picked them up gently, between two fingers.  “These are different than what you used to wear too.” He grinned up at me.

I turned red and tried to snatch the panties from him, but he simply dropped them into the suitcase with the other things and moved the whole thing out of the way. Then he knelt on one knee in front of me and reached into his pocket.  My eyes widened as I took in how his position and the seriousness that was settling over his face.  He cleared his throat and looked up at me. 

He couldn’t be about to propose, could he?  what was he thinking?  What would I say?  What should I say? The tears were quiet behind my eyes but my head was racing, panicking.  I plopped back onto the bed and stared at him.

“Did you know that I was going to propose to you the next time I saw you, before we broke up in college?  I had already bought the ring and all.” He pulled a jeweler’s box out of his pocket and cradled it in his hands.  I covered my mouth to contain my gasp.

He looked up at me and raised an eyebrow.  I shook my head, and through my hand I said, “I never knew.”

“I had taken my life savings and bought you the best ring I could afford.  It was a cheap gold plated band with a chip for a diamond.  It wasn’t even worth what I spent on it when I tried to resell it.” He snorted.  I sniffed.  The tears were flowing again and I couldn’t stop them.  I could imagine how it must have hurt him when I’d broken up with him for no reason he could tell.  My heart hurt for him.

“I’m sorry,” I whispered.  He shrugged and smiled at me.

“I’m kind of glad.” I raised an eyebrow at him.  He flicked open the box in his hand and looked down at the contents.  Then he smiled up at me again.  Alarm bells were jingling in my head and sirens were wailing in my ears.  Too much, too fast, they seemed to be screaming.

“I’m glad because I can offer you more now.” He paused, turning the ring box to face me and offering it up to me. “Dana, I love you. I have for years.  I hope you feel the same. I think you do.  Will you marry me?”

I didn’t even look at the ring.  It could have been tin and glass for all I cared.  I saw only Simon, with his love shining out of his eyes and his mouth smiling warmly at me.  With a cry, I launched myself at him.  We fell backwards to the floor, arms wrapped around each other, legs tangled.  I was laughing, and crying, and totally incoherent.  The alarm bells and sirens had been silenced, though.  The panic had given way to a joy I hadn’t remembered that I could feel.  I just hugged him to me, closing my eyes and whispering thanks to whatever powers had caused us to meet at the grocery store a couple of weeks ago. 

“Is that a yes?” He whispered in my ear. I nodded and whispered “yes!” back at him. Then he captured my lips in a kiss.  I sighed in pleasure and surrendered myself to it.  He abruptly pulled back and I opened my eyes to stare at him in question. He just chuckled and shook his head and then began to stand up.  He pulled me along with him.

“I have something else to tell you.”

“More? I don’t think I can stand any more today.  I hope it’s not something that will make me cry, because I don’t think I can handle any more strong emotions today.” I sighed.

Simon grinned, and tugged me to the door and down the stairs.  My mom and dad were still in the kitchen and they looked at me with concern on their faces.  Simon turned to me and said, “Where did the ring go?” I shrugged and slid my hand into his. “Who cares?” I grinned at him.  He laughed and said, “I was going to show it to your folks!” “Oh well.”

“Are you ok, Dana?” My mom asked.  She looked questioningly between me and Simon.

“Yes, I think I’ll be ok, Mom.” I squeezed Simon’s hand. “Simon asked me to marry him!”

My mom clasped her hands in front of her chest and smiled at us. My father stood up and walked over to us. He stuck out his hand to shake Simon’s hand and said, “Take good care of her, son.” Simon nodded and said, “Yes sir, I will.”

“Oh, but this is wonderful! That means the house will stay in our family after all!” My mom grinned at Simon.  He shifted on his feet and looked down at me. I looked between them both, raising my eyebrows.

“What do you mean, Mom?” I asked.

“Didn’t he tell you?” She glared at Simon and he shook his head.

“I hadn’t gotten that far yet.” He looked at me, “I, um, I bought your parents’ house last month.  It was before I knew you’d be in town for the holidays, even…” I let go of his hand and walked to the kitchen door to look out the window towards the woods that hid the bridge.  I sighed.

“Dana?  We can sell it if you want.  We can live wherever you’d like, even out West if you can’t bear to move back here.”  He came up to stand behind me, his hands settling on my hips.  He whispered, “Dana?”

Tears were threatening again and I was having trouble getting words out.  Finally, I managed to whisper, “You’re going to have to trim the woods back to the bridge before Effie starts dating, you know.” He laughed and hugged me. He whispered, “I love you,” into my ear and we stood there looking down the grassy hillside to the woods.  With his arms tight around me, I felt content and happier than I had in many years.

Read the whole story here: Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six, Part Seven, Part Eight, Part Nine, and Part Ten

Published in: on January 2, 2008 at 3:59 pm  Comments (2)  
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An Unexpected Reunion, Part Ten

“He’s a nice guy.”

“But what does that mean?” My friend wailed across the phone line.  I had called her to let her know when I was
flying back home and to see if she’d pick me up at the airport. Somehow, though, we had gotten on to the subject of
Simon.

“I don’t know…he’s just a good guy.” I shrugged and rolled my eyes.

“Has he given you flowers?” She asked.

“No, not recently.” I replied. Not since our high school prom, I thought.

“Has he thrown his coat over a puddle so you don’t have to walk in the water?” She shouted.

I laughed and said, “No, I don’t think he’s ever done that.”

“What makes him a good guy, a nice guy, then?!” She questioned.

“I don’t know, Gina.  He adores his daughters, he respects his elders, he respects my boundaries, he wears decent
clothes, his house feels like a home, I can bring him home to my family and they all love him.  Does any of that
help?”

“Back up.  What boundaries did you set?  He’s this fantastic guy, you’ve known him for years, what boundaries could
you possibly set?”

“Gina, why are you so strung up about this?”  I could not remember a time when she’d sounded so excited about
something other than one of her boyfriends.

“Dana! You haven’t had a boyfriend in years and now you’re telling me about some guy back in your hometown. Of course
I’m excited for you!  Are you going to move back there?  Is he going to move out here? Tell me more!”  She had me married off to Simon already, I realized.

“We haven’t talked about any of that.  I’m not even sure if it’s that serious yet, or if it ever will be.”

“But you want it to get that serious, don’t you?” She asked in a surprisingly quiet voice.

“Honestly, I think I do.  He’s the only guy who has ever made me dream of happily ever after, you know?”

“Honey, why are you coming back here then?  You should stay there and see where it goes.”

“I have a job, and an apartment, and a cat there, remember?” It was so tempting to start thinking of moving back to
my home town.  I wish I had given it serious consideration years ago so that I could have spent more time with my parents before they moved to Florida. I sighed.

“Get a job there, get an apartment there, and move the monster cat along with all of your other stuff.” It sounded so simple when Gina suggested it.  Yet so overwhelming when I thought of actually doing it.

“I take it you and Cally haven’t been getting along?” I asked.

“Don’t get me started.  Let’s just say both the cat and I will be happy to have you back,” Gina said. “But that’s besides the point!  How does this ‘nice guy’ feel about you? Does he want you to move back?”

“I don’t know.  We avoided talking about the future the last time we talked.  I think it’s as hard for him to believe as it is for me.  He’s been married, and he has children!  It seems crazy to think about getting back together with an old girlfriend.  It’s certainly crazy to indulge in a casual affair, what with the babies to think about.  I’m so confused about it all.”  Just a few days ago, I’d been sure about what I was doing.  Marry Simon, move into my parents’ house, carry on with life. It was a good plan.  I wasn’t so sure anymore about the path I was supposed to take, and I didn’t like that.  I’d always been the sort to make plans, have goals and to accomplish them.  Simon always seemed to throw all of my self-discipline to the winds.

“Well, it will all come out alright in the end.  You’ll see.  I’ll be at the airport to pick you up tomorrow night. We’ll talk about it all then, right?”

“Yeah, tomorrow.  Thanks, Gina.”

“Hey, no problem.  What are friends for?  Take care of yourself, ok?”  I said the same to her and we hung up. 

I leaned my head against the wall behind me and closed my eyes.  I had to figure out what I was doing about that Simon thing.  Was I crazy to think of marrying him?  Maybe all we had left were memories.  There were only so many times we could relive the good ol’ days, no matter how good they felt.
 
I was curled up in the windowseat in mom’s sun room for quite awhile, thinking.  I kept trying to wrap my head around the idea of moving back and dating Simon seriously.  Somehow, it all seemed like a silly girl’s dream compared to what reality had been the other day at his house.

Effie and I had played while Simon took care of Bridget.  I tried to chat with his parents but his mom seemed tentative about talking with me too much.  Eventually, I’d given up and given my goodbyes.  Simon and I hadn’t had another minute alone once Bridget had woken up and we’d only spoken in snatched phone conversations since then.  It was time for me to pack up and head back to real life now.  And my real life didn’t include a boyfriend, especially one who had children.  I sighed. 

“Any thing you want to talk about?” I jumped when my mom’s voice interrupted my thoughts.  I looked over at her, sitting in her rocking chair.  She’d pulled it around to face the window seat.  She raised an eyebrow at me.

“Um…no, I don’t think so.” She’d always had an uncanny way of knowing when one of us kids was worried about something. 

“It’s been good to see Simon again after all these years,” she said.

“Yes, it has. It was crazy coincidence to run into him at the store like I did.”

“Crazy coincidence or meddling fate?” She asked.

“Aw, mom.  You don’t believe in fate, do you?” I studied her face carefully and she shrugged.

“I think we can determine our own fate, but I also think the world likes to give us gifts if we are open to them.  Perhaps meeting Simon again after so long was one of those gifts of the world.”  She lifted an eyebrow at me.

“It gave us a chance to close up some loose ends, that’s all. We talked about some things that had been left unsaid years ago.”

“That is a gift, true.  Have you ever been in love, Dana?”

I frowned at my mom, wondering where she was going with this conversation. “Sure, Mom.  You know I have.”

She nodded, “With Simon, right?  Have there been other loves?”

“No, Mom. You probably would have heard about them if there had been.  You know that.”

“Well, I’ve always believed that true love will wait.  If it was right ten years ago, it could still be right today. You both have different lives now, but if you can learn to weave those lives together, you may find you have something built to last.”

I snorted, “Mom, you sound like a tired commercial, full of cliches.”

She shrugged and smiled, “Possibly.  Cliches are often so true they become overused.  Does that make them any less true?”  She rose from her chair and walked away.  “Just think about it, Dana.  Just because you and Simon have been in different worlds for years does not mean you can’t build a world together now.”

I shook my head and sighed.  My mom could be very wise, and we certainly all turned to her for advice, but it wasn’t like her to give so much unsolicited advice.  I closed my eyes again and drifted back into my thoughts.

Read the whole story here: Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six, Part Seven, Part Eight, Part Nine, Part Ten, and El Fin

Published in: on January 2, 2008 at 11:01 am  Comments (2)  
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