Flash Lit #2 Then and Again

 

Flash Lit #2 Then and Again

I was in one of my work fugues at a coffee shop, unsuccessfully imitating a serious writer when someone called my name. I gasped.

“Gary? Good god, it IS you!  What the…how did…why are you…” I probably could’ve continued, but I just stood clumsily and threw my arms around this ghost from my past.

The embrace felt way too familiar and comfortable, or at least I knew that I should think that. Too comfortable for my own good, more like it. Still, he smelled the same—clean and woodsy—and his shoulders were still strong and straight. I saw the grey strands playing hide-and-seek through his thick black hair, and of course it was perfect. 

He spoke softly through my hair and said, “I wasn’t sure you’d be here. It seemed too easy, but I hoped…” Then he pulled me even tighter and added, “God, you smell good, Kate.”

We realized at the same time how long we’d been embracing and awkwardly took our seats. Sliding back onto the booth bench and closing my laptop, I looked up to find him leaning back in his chair, one arm slung around the back of it, and two eyes boring undeniable truth into mine. 

“You can’t be that surprised, Katy. You knew I’d find you…eventually.” There it was, that smile. THE smile that had seduced me the first time our eyes first met at a fraternity party so many years ago. Those eyes and that smile spoke of smoky and dangerous things then, and my body was reacting to them now forty years later the same way. 

It was just so easy to give him ‘eyes’ back and say, “For a long time I hoped you would. And then life kinda happened, you know?” The slight clickety-clack of my neighbor’s typing suddenly sounded like dishes falling from a server’s tray.  He leaned forward.

“Look, Kate. I know it’s been a helluva long time. More than twenty years, right? I remember seeing you and your husband at the college reunion. That’s when I knew we weren’t finished.”

“C’mon, Gary. You were happily married and so was I. Don’t….”

“I was married, Kate, but hadn’t been happy for years. And when you looked at me the way you did, I just knew. Not that you weren’t happy, but that something wasn’t over with us.”

I felt anger. Shame? Understanding? “Michael died four years ago.” I looked down at my hands resting primly on my laptop. 

Then Gary’s hands were squeezing. “I know and I’m truly sorry. Carol told me last week when I called her to get help finding you. And…Hell, Katy.  I’ve been divorced for almost fifteen years, wondering if you ever thought of me. If you ever still…”

It was different this time when I looked into his eyes. They were shimmering with tears and his face was blotchy with emotion. No seduction now. Just love. 

I squeezed his hands then and let my tears fall, daring to love him back. Again.

DANCING/FLAILING IN FRANCE

 

DANCING FLAILING IN FRANCE

She barely made it up the damned stairs, even though she wasn’t carrying her usual bags along with a stuffed backpack. Her legs weighed a ton and were reminding her that she’d just walked over 18,000 steps during the ‘school field trip’ with mostly twenty-somethings. Most of those taken had covered cobblestone streets and crumbling ancient bridge debris on steep hills. 

Amy was cursing herself that walking up three flights of stairs made her winded. Four weeks of tackling them a few times every day in her apartment in France hadn’t yet wiped out the many days at home totalling 8,000 steps daily was a feat.

Finally she made it to the uncomfortable sofa and plopped down, remembering too late that the bottom cushion was as old and worn out as she felt. Her ass hit hard and her compressed lumbar region compressed some more. “Jesus!” she cried out as her purse leapt out of her hand and across the room to slam into the one glass she hadn’t put away before she left that morning. 

She didn’t even watch the shattering happen. I don’t wanna look. I just wanna not walk anymore. I just wanna…

Her phone woke her up at 4:42 am. Groaning, she reached to see who the hell was texting her at that time in the morning. But she already knew it had to be someone from home; she was now living nine hours ahead of most of the people in the world she knew, and some of them still hadn’t figured out things. 

After she fixed a minor emergency at home, Amy shed her clothes in a weird dance into her bedroom and fell back onto her slab of a bed and her smaller slabs of pillows. Why the hell are pillows in France square and lumpy? “Shit! Now I’ll never get back to sleep.” She groaned in self-pity and performed her useless ritual of making her pillows sleep inducing. 

It was in these times that she wondered what the hell she was doing in France. She missed her comfy bed and her snuggly cat in the morning. She missed her big sofa and her big-screen TV for watching her Warriors kick ass. She missed feeding the birds and her favorite squirrel Sassy. 

She missed the easy life. The one where no thinking or inordinate planning was necessary to just do the usual daily things. She missed…..

Lying on the bed with her eyes wide open, she realized that she was doing it again. She could hear Linda Ronstadt belting out “Poor, Poor, Pitiful Me” as she stuffed a mangled square pillow imposter over her face. 

Get a grip, Amy. There’s nowhere you’d rather be and you know it.

With an eye roll and a smirk, she punched the faux pillows into submission.Tomorrow she’d be in class, faux conversing in French with classmates from at eight countries NOT hers. 

Stairs and square pillows be damned! How freaking lucky am I?