Tuesday Tales Get My Number
Ahoy Fellow Fathomers! It's time for Tuesday Tales.
A group of writers gather together and give our interpretation of a specific word prompt each week. Once per month, we even write to an image. You never know what you might encounter when you get inside our minds. This week our group writes to the word- number. This will be an excerpt from my new WIP for a new romance contemporary, What the Storm Didn't Take.
Enjoy!~
A group of writers gather together and give our interpretation of a specific word prompt each week. Once per month, we even write to an image. You never know what you might encounter when you get inside our minds. This week our group writes to the word- number. This will be an excerpt from my new WIP for a new romance contemporary, What the Storm Didn't Take.
Enjoy!~
No one asked me about
Conner. He walked over beside my mother after our little discussion, increasing
the distance between the two of us should anyone try to hook us up in their
imagination. But, ironically, he knew many of the people there. He’d lived
there for the first fifteen years of his life. He walked among the helpers,
trying to find where he should start. From a distance I saw him shaking hands
and hugging the friends he hadn’t seen in years.
I kept waiting for
someone to look over to me, questioningly, accusingly.
Waiting for the
gossip bomb to explode. They had my number.
Where were the sly,
sideways glances?
The glances never
happened, at least I don’t think anyone raised eyebrows or exchanged wink wink nudge nudge’s.
I could have a friend
too, and that was okay.
Getting after the
work, we all pulled together, babying these trees and getting them into their
new permanent homes. One crew put fertilizer into freshly dug holes, more
followed with buckets of water to drench the new roots, settling them into the
ground. All day, tirelessly, we worked, taking natural breaks for water,
sandwiches, and my mom’s cookies. Our friends circled around my idea, and
helped me bring the living memorial to life.
Conner and I crossed
working paths every so often. Eventually, he had dirt smudges on his nose, and
the appearance took me back-
“We gotta dig these worms if we want bait. My allowance
run dry and I don’t think you have any money in your pockets, do you?” Conner
kept jamming the shovel into the ground, digging for our fish bait. Usually, he
did this job, while I watched. Sweat poured down his hairline, into his eyes,
the July sun was unusually strong for that early in the day. He wiped the sweat
off with a bare hand, mixing dirt with the trickles. He had mud streaks all
over his face. I didn’t laugh, I held the bucket for the wiggly payday when he
found one after the other. I better not make fun, or he’d hand me the shovel
and make me dig.
He finally stopped when we had about two dozen crawlers
in the bucket. “Now, we can go. I ain’t got all day. You did bring the
sandwiches, didn’t you?”
“Of course I brought the sandwiches. I even brought some
of mom’s cookies.”
“Good deal, let’s go!”
Mom’s cookies,
Conner’s unwavering loyalty, our friends’ devotion, Garrett’s memorial…that did
it. I finally started to cry. Excusing myself quickly for the truck, I needed
privacy. The present was a heavy place to be in, the memories- both good and
bad were incredibly suffocating.
It’s been a year, it doesn’t seem possible. You’ve been gone a
year, and I’m carrying this grief around like a fifty pound sack of feed. It’s
heavy, so heavy, but, I can’t put it down. I haven’t gotten where I need to
be.
Why does it feel like such a burden? Nothing about you
should be a burden. You were my husband, we have a family. I wish I could shake this hefty sorrow, but, it just
won’t let me be. I gulped trying to take in some air.
Mom knocked on the
truck window. I sat inside, letting the vents blast me with relief.
“Are you okay,
honey?” She asked as I rolled down the window.
“I’m fine, just a
little overwhelmed.”
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