Nail You to Your Promises...Tuesday Tales
Ahoy Fellow Fathomers! This week our group writes to the word prompt, "nail". Would Marty ever change his mind? From Steal My Heart, book 4 WIP from The Fantasy League series.
Pl ease visit us at our main site for more interpretations of "nail".
“Good Lord, young lady, you sure make me feel my age.”
“Yeah, old man, whatever, mid-life crisis years are still
well ahead of you. Today is attributed to couch-itis.”
The fifteen mile bike ride through an expansive nature
preserve winded both of them. However, Sharlyn would never admit the truth. No
breeze, the bright green leaves still in the heating, humid air, the day proved
to be another hot one. “C’mon big brother, I’ll buy you an ice cream.”
Suddenly, it occurred to Marty he hadn’t had ice cream,
since, well, the last time with Lola. “Ice cream?”
“Yes, you know, the frozen sweet stuff that adds pounds to
your gut.”
Recalling their goodbye, when she rejected him, she wouldn’t
leave with him. She didn’t want a relationship. They were better suited as
friends, blah blah blah. Trite replayed
scenes flickered in my mind, as if veiled from a strobe light. Betraying tears
fell from Lola’s gentle face, just missing the inside edge of her bowl, almost giving
an alternative meaning to salted caramel gelato. How did I miss the analogy
then?
All I wanted was her teasing smile, the mischievous giggle, anything
telling me she wanted me too. Even a chance, just a small one, an agreement testing
the waters of our resilience. Dogged determination to find us the way she scraped out the empty, sticky bowl, looking for more,
yet invisible ice cream.
She said no because she knew everything would be exposed. I’d
find out about Sharlyn, her vile past, the ugly truth. Was she really thinking
of me? Knowing how much hurt and anger would be contained in our shared house?
The resulting separation of everything- books, silverware, my heart from my
chest.
Sharlyn sat quietly, watching me- for how long, I don’t
know. I finally met her eyes, she pretended to inspect a broken nail. “What’s
so heavy? I didn’t mean you’re getting fat or anything.”
“Silly girl, I know.” Aside from physically shaking my body
like a wet dog, I had no idea how to lose these feelings Lola continued
invoking from deep inside me.
“I know a great frozen yogurt place, that stuff’s almost
like eating nothing, or kale. Not quite the empty calories of water or
something, but you get my drift.”
“Lead the way.” I wheeled my bike toward her Jeep.
“I know girl trouble, I have radar for split tail problems.”
I couldn’t lie to Sharlyn, she knew the truth, even if she
didn’t know the details. “Memories- ice cream brought back certain memories.”
“I could apologize for bringing it up, but, why? You know, I
could say something as innocuous as, oh…yellow mustard, creating a tsunami of
heart break. Our experiences and memories are so private, and sometimes oh so
very weird.”
“I one hundred percent agree.” Our entire exchange proved
genetics ruled not only physical attributes, but personality as well. Lola
shone through her daughter more clearly than a star on a perfect night. My aching
heart received a reprieve because of charming affection. I welcomed the
happiness. “By the way, do you have an affinity for yellow mustard?”
“But, of course! What else would you put on a sandwich?”
Damn, there was her momma all over again.
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Trisha Faye