Your Lost Sock (Drabble)

100 Word Short Stories

It happened so fast, what more can I say? Sometimes you have to get a little lost.

See, my twin made it through just fine. He passed the hamper, swirled about in the washer, danced joyously in the dryer, and then landed softly in the clean clothes basket.

Only now the basket is empty- all the garments sorted and put away. Well, almost. Except for my mate laying there alone.

Sorry my friends, but I could not live that life anymore. I needed a vacation, time to drift away.

Wait and see however, I may reemerge.

Sincerely,

Your Lost Sock

Daisies (Drabble)

100 Word Short Stories

Wow, what am I doing?

She hesitated, but picked the flower anyway.

Daisies had always been her favorite.

So bright, cheerful, and yellow.

But daisies were also what he used to bring her on Friday nights… back when they were in love.

For the past year, moving on from such betrayal felt impossible. Her world remained rainy and gray. She had sworn off even looking at daisies.

After pruning away the excess stem, she added the bloom to her wildflower bouquet. Finally, reality wasn’t stinging so much anymore. Going forward had never felt so freeing.

The daisies were hers again.

Christmas Lights Through the Cracks

When an elderly woman suffering from memory loss inadvertently brings two unlikely families together, will this be the year they rediscover the hope and joy of Christmas?

By KL Storm

A Fiction Christmas Story

[Note: Contains brief depictions of domestic violence]

December 17, 1998

“Sean, be careful on this ice. Stop please. Don’t get too far ahead of Mommy.”

Allison huffed and puffed as she swapped the big old suitcase from one hand to the other. With the rapidly vanishing daylight not helping matters, she nearly lost her footing again in one of the many icy ruts that had been stamped into the sidewalk by previous pedestrians.

Her seven-year-old son kept on racing in front of her despite her rebukes to stay close. The hours of car travel they endured had left him wired. As agile as he was- she was still just waiting for him to take a spill and make the inevitable face plant into the ground.

Just down the sidewalk about a hundred yards, the welcome sight of a bus stop shelter came into view. How she wished the old car her friend let her take hadn’t broken down, just as she arrived in town earlier that afternoon. Still, she was thankful it got them as far as it did, and that she was even able to limp it to a service station. The repair shop had closed early that day for some strange reason, but she would just find a phone and call about it in the morning.

If she would have enough money to fix it…God only knew. That was a problem for another day. Right now, she only cared about getting Sean somewhere safe and warm for the night. 

“Go to that bus stop Sean! See the little building?”

Allison got to the translucent hut and let the suitcase drop to the ground from her numb hand, and then collapsed onto the cold steel bench under the shelter next to Sean. She pulled him close to her body.

“Are you warm enough?”

His cheeks were rosy, but to her relief he didn’t seem cold under his winter layers. He swung his legs back and forth off the edge of the bench and nodded his head.

“Good.” She glanced at the bus schedule tacked to the wall amongst the graffiti, paper advertising flyers, and lost dog posters. She breathed a sigh of relief. The next bus to the central terminal was due any minute.

“Mommy are you scared?”

Allison swallowed and felt a stab of pain deep in her chest. She didn’t like to lie, but…

 Exhaling steam into the December air before answering, she squeezed her son’s shoulder.

“No honey. We’re gonna be okay now. Trust me, okay?”

He smiled. “Okay.”

She smiled back and kissed his forehead just as the bus pulled up.

***

A short while later, the bus rumbled up to the central terminal, and they got out of the vehicle and went inside the building. She gripped Sean’s hand in hers as she walked, and he skipped. The station was warm and well lit. A busker played a guitar halfway down the length of the platform.

Allison felt some of the tension pent up in her shoulders from a mix of the cold and anxiety begin to melt away just a bit. As she neared the musician, the familiarity of the melody he picked registered in her mind.

“I heard the bells on Christmas day…” She automatically found herself singing the words to the tune under her breath, even though it had honestly been ages since she’d heard the song…or had much to do with celebrating Christmas. Ray never allowed it in his household.

Was there hope for that to change this year? Still not likely, even though he was in her rear-view mirror.

She made brief eye contact with the performer as she approached and felt compelled to put something in his tip jar. A few measly cents from the bottom of her coat pocket, it was all she could spare to make sure she still had enough for another bus fare.

She gave it to Sean and told him to put it in the man’s jar…a task that he completed with much excitement. Instruments fascinated the kid. Allison sighed…one day she would be able to afford music lessons for her son, she would make sure of it.

The bald man finished the tune and nodded to them with a faint smile of appreciation. “Thank you.”

Allison nodded and waved back shyly as she continued towards the information booth located at the far end of the building. As she approached the attendant at the kiosk, she felt her confidence in what she was doing begin to drain away. Embarrassment and shame threatened to take over, but she bit back against it. This was the strongest, most heroic thing she’d done in a long time. For Sean, and for herself. She had to keep telling herself that.

Allison took a deep breath. “Hi, I’m not from around here.” She paused and tried to keep her voice low. “Can you tell me, um… where the closest and cheapest motel is?”

The attendant reached behind him for a bus schedule pamphlet. “South Street Motel. Take bus number eight to stop five, and you can’t miss it. The next bus should be here in twenty minutes.”

She took the pamphlet from the attendant. She didn’t exactly have a great feeling about this motel, but it would have to do. “Thank you so much.”

She turned back to Sean and led him away from the kiosk. She nodded to a nearby bench against the wall. “C’mon, let’s go sit over there, we need to wait a bit for our next bus.”

Allison felt resistance against her arm as Sean balked. His face contorted into an expression she knew too well.

“Mommy, I have to go potty.”

Allison sighed and looked around for restroom signs. Luckily there was one and she began to walk towards it

“Ok bud, we’re going right now.

Once inside the women’s bathroom with Sean and her cumbersome suitcase, she ushered him into a stall and stood right outside of it to hold the door shut and wait.

As she stood there, she noticed an unattended purse sitting on the edge of one of the sinks. Then an elderly woman with long white hair ambled out of one of the other stalls. She looked frazzled, lost, and kept turning around in circles.

Allison bit her lip. Maybe the purse was hers, that might make sense.

“Uh, hi there ma’am…is everything okay?”

She threw her hands up in the air. “My keys…I can’t find them. They’re gone!”

Allison frowned. She heard Sean flush the toilet. “Is that your handbag right there at the sink? Maybe your keys are in there?”

A big smile spread across the woman’s face. “Oh yes! That’s my purse! Fiddlesticks, silly old me.”

She went for it and began rummaging through the compartments, picking up odds and ends and dropping much of the contents into the sink and onto the filthy floor. She produced a hairbrush from the bag and then fixated her attention of her reflection in the mirror as she repeatedly ran the bristles through her long snowy locks. 

Still no keys? Hmm…

Allison found herself at loss for words, so she turned her attention back to her son.

“You all done in there, Sean? Do you need help?” 

“Nope. All done!”

“Good job, kiddo.”

Allison opened the stall door, ushered him towards the sinks, and gave him a boost so he could reach to wash his hands. Sean looked over at the old lady who was still standing there brushing her hair.

“Hi!” He flapped his hand at her.

She stopped brushing mid stroke and stared at Sean. First her face looked blank, then Allison noticed her lips trembling, then she began to smile. She looked at Allison and clasped her hands together in front of her chest. Her eyes grew shiny with moisture.

“By golly. I can’t believe it…You’ve come back! My dear, you’re home!”

In a split second, she lunged towards Sean and Allison and tried to reach out and touch them.

Allison’s heart began to race and the hair on her neck stood up on end. What? None of this made sense. Flung into panic mode, she snatched Sean backwards and clutched him to her body.

No, no, no. Nobody’s supposed to know us here. Impossible.

“Hey now, back off,” she snapped as she turned away. “I don’t know you.”

She made a run for the bathroom door with Sean whimpering and dashed back out into public view in the main terminal.

Breathe…It’s just an old lady. What’s she gonna do to us? She tried to calm herself with some rational thought, but it didn’t work. Instead, the memory of her psychotic now ex-husband lunging at her in the barnyard with a cattle prod flashed through her mind.

Allison looked back over her shoulder and saw the elderly woman exiting the bathroom as well. Thankfully, she moved at the pace of a turtle.

She gripped at Sean’s arm. “Come on, let’s keep walking. I think I see our bus outside.”

“But momma,” Sean whined. “Legs tired!” He kept looking back over his shoulder too.

As Allison kept walking away to keep distance from the lady, she noticed the man who had been playing guitar earlier coming towards her. His focus was on not on her though.

“Mom! There you are, I was getting worried…come please. I’m packing up for the day.”

 Allison stopped in her tracks and turned to look behind her one more time. He was clearly talking to the old lady on her tail… his mom apparently?

“Nathan, look! I found Ruth! It’s our sweet Ruthie and little Jack too. She came back! Oh, I always knew God would bring her back to us.”

She had on the brightest smile as she pointed at Allison and Sean. Allison bristled again and wanted to bolt.

The man pressed his palm to his forehead as he made uneasy eye contact with Allison. He looked bewildered. Maybe he sensed that Allison was spooked.

“Oh, dear me. Miss, I’m so sorry about this. I-”

 Allison found herself paralyzed. She couldn’t speak.

The man reached for the lady’s wrinkled hand and gently pulled her away from Allison. “Wow, that’s wonderful. Okay Mom, easy now… here, let’s give them some space.”

She frowned at him. “No Nathan, they’re coming home with us…forever. They must.”

The man looked at Allison again. “Please, don’t mind her,” he said in a hushed tone. “She’s my mother in-law…her memory…it just tends to get jumbled these days.”

The joyous look on the confused woman’s face turned into one of distress. She groped at the air in Sean’s direction one more time. “Jack dear, don’t you want a hug? Grandma just wants a hug; it’s been too long!”

That was the breaking point for Allison. She gritted her teeth. “No. No hugs. Get the heck away from us.”

With a burst of adrenaline-fueled strength, she scooped Sean up, threw him over her shoulder, and took off running for the closest exit that led to the outdoor section of the platform.

Relief washed over her as she spotted bus number eight waiting in a nearby bay.

Thank God. We’re outta here.

She got on board, paid the fare, and then collapsed into the nearest seat with Sean. It wasn’t until the bus was already leaving the terminal and turning onto Main Street that Allison had a devastating realization.

In her haste to get away from the ridiculous situation…she’d dropped her suitcase and left it behind in the station!

The dam broke. She covered her face with her hands and desperately tried to stop the tears. But she couldn’t.

How much more stupid can I get? I shouldn’t have snapped like that…shouldn’t have run. What am I even doing here? Why do I even try anymore?

The twinkling of the Christmas lights that decked the downtown shops along the road that the bus traveled felt like they were mocking her in some sort of way. There was nothing holly jolly about it.

Now she and her son really had next to nothing but clothes on their backs.

***

Allison awoke the next morning, staring up at moldy water rings in the ceiling tiles.

Where am I?

Her disorientation only lasted a few seconds before the events of the previous day came flooding back. Her hasty exodus from her small hometown thanks to Ray coming around to “win her back”, AKA…stalk her. A broken-down car. The crazy old lady from the bus terminal bathroom. Her lost luggage…and then finally checking into the roach infested motel. 

She sat up, rubbed her eyes, and turned her neck to check on Sean lying next to her. He still slept peacefully and seeing him in that state calmed her nerves too. She took advantage of the extra moments of quiet and laid back down until Sean started to awaken.

After a shower and a filling breakfast from the soup kitchen across the street, it was time to try to call the bus station and see if anyone had turned her bag in to the lost and found. She determined to maintain some hope that people would still be kind enough to do the right thing, rather than just run off with or ransack her meager belongings.

Of course, the phone in the motel room didn’t work right, so she went to the payphone outside of the motel lobby.

Much to her delight and relief, someone had indeed turned in a suitcase that sounded a lot like hers! Now she just needed to go back and claim it. An uneasy feeling stirred in the pit of her stomach, as she thought about the station and the strange events of the night before. She didn’t feel so much frightened now as she did guilty for how she reacted to and spoke to that woman and her son in-law.

She wished she hadn’t snapped and acted so cold. That wasn’t like her normally. She let the stress of everything get the best of her last night.

 If the man happened to be playing carols again that day when she went back to retrieve her bag, she would go apologize. She couldn’t let the circumstances of her failed marriage make her into a completely rotten human being.

A few hours later, Allison and Sean walked off the bus and back into the bustling terminal. The attendant at the information kiosk directed them to a dark, creepy staircase that brought them down to the damp basement where the main office and lost and found was located.

When she recovered her bag, she was relieved that the contents appeared undisturbed. Allison felt a little closer to getting ahead in life. At least back to where she was, with clean clothes to wear so she could present herself better and go and start looking for work.

Back up in the main platform area of the station, she scanned around the crowd of people congregated around for any sign of the man from the night before. At first glance, it looked like a Salvation Army bell ringer was set up in the approximate area that the man had his instruments staged in previously.

“Look Momma! It’s the guitar man.”

Allison whirled around in a circle. How strange that Sean remembered, noticed and seemed to know that was exactly who she was looking for…she hadn’t said a word about it. But alas, there he was. She spotted him in the direction Sean pointed. Just a little further down the platform this time.

“Wow, there he is indeed.”

Her heart began to pound as she stepped closer. What would he say? Would he be mad at her? Maybe he’d just ignore her all together.

He knelt on the ground, rummaging through a duffel bag of stuff. His back faced her as she approached. She just stood there cautiously and waited for him to get up and turned around. He did, and they made eye contact. He squinted at her at first, looking confused.

“Uh, hi again,” Allison mumbled as Sean twisted her hand in an awkward position. She put her suitcase down on the ground.

“Oh! Well, what do you know…hello there…” His voice trailed off. He gestured to her suitcase, and a small smile formed on his face. “I’m so glad you got that back. I felt bad when I gave it to security last night. I knew you’d be worried it was stolen.” He shook his head. “Been there, done that.”

She felt herself blushing. “Thank you so much for turning it in…really, you have no idea.” She hesitated for a few seconds. “Look, I’m so sorry about last night, I was rude to you and your mother. I panicked.”

He sighed and shook his head. “No, no…don’t beat yourself up about it, I get it. I’m sorry about that. I didn’t see that coming from her and it was rather extreme. She’s never acted out like that before.”

A sudden posture of sorrow overtook the man. “Ruth and Jack…they were my wife and little boy. They are never coming back…we buried them five years ago this month.”

“Oh. I’m so sorry,” she said softly. “How very sad.”

He inhaled slowly. “That was the first time Helen has ever shown confusion about the fact that they are dead. It really worries me the more I think about it. Some hard decisions are on the horizon I fear.”

Allison didn’t know what else to say, so she just stood there awkwardly. She felt bad for him.

The man extended his hand. “My name is Nate.”

She reached out and squeezed his hand gently. “Allison.”

He smiled and nodded towards her son. “And who is this little fellow?”

Sean suddenly decided to be bashful, and he hopped behind Allison to hide.

“This is my son Sean. Looks like he wants to play shy right now.” She shook her head.

“That’s okay.” Nate squatted down to Sean’s level. “Hey there Sean, do you happen to like musical instruments?”

Sean stepped out from behind Allison about halfway and smiled warily.

Allison filled in. “Actually, He loves them. I hope to be able to get him into music lessons soon.”

Nate chuckled. “Ha, I knew it, I could tell by the look on his face yesterday.” He slipped his hand into his pocket and pulled out a business card and handed it to Allison. “Well if you are in the market, I just so happen to teach lessons at my studio most evenings. Kids are the primary focus and guitar is my specialty.”

“Oh.” Allison looked down at the information on the card. She felt a lump forming in her throat. “That’s cool, really great. I, uh…” She immediately felt self-conscious and ashamed of her hard scrabble situation. She would melt into the concrete if she could.

“Sorry, no pressure. Didn’t mean to make you uncomfortable again or anything,” Nate said.

She swallowed hard and slipped the card into her coat pocket. “It’s fine, don’t worry about it.”

He looked at her, then at the ground, then back at her. “I just need to ask. Are you and your son okay, ma’am? Do you need anything…anything at all?”

Allison’s lip twitched. Could this character see right through her?

“Yes, yes, we’re good. Just new in town and I’m looking for a job, but other than that…all is well.” She smiled, hoping her cheery expression would hide the unease she felt.

Nate nodded. “Okay, good. I just wanted to make sure.” 

“Well, I don’t mean to hold you up here, but I need to get going too,” Allison said as she picked up her suitcase again.

Nate waved at her. “Of course, likewise. Have a good day, Allison. Bye-bye Sean.” 

Allison laced her fingers together with Sean’s. “And thanks for the information, I hope to be in touch soon!”

“You’re welcome.”

She turned and started walking away. But then she heard Nate’s voice again.

“Hey, wait! Allison?”

She reversed direction. “Yes?”

“I’d like to offer your son a guitar lesson or two, just to see how it would go and all. For free. We could do it right here if you’d like. What do you say?”

“Wait, for free?” She didn’t trust her ears. “Are you sure?”

“Promise. Consider it, hmm…” He mused aloud as he rubbed his chin. “Consider it a  gift from Santa.”

Allison was nervous about what the stranger was proposing, but something inside told her to accept the offer- so she did.

***

December 23, 1998

On the day before Christmas Eve, Allison brought Sean back to the bus terminal for his first free trial music lesson with Nate. She sat on a bench next to them and observed quietly. The two seemed to bond almost instantly. Sean had a huge grin on his face as Nate showed him how to hold the guitar. Nate acted as if he’d known Sean since birth.

It warmed Allison to her core to see their interaction. Sean had never known a good father figure. His biological dad-Allison’s high school boyfriend- had vanished as soon as the pregnancy was revealed. Then Ray came along. He was no better, as he never wanted much to do with Sean since he wasn’t his child by blood. His coldness towards Sean was a huge warning sign that Allison deeply regretted ignoring before deciding to get married.

As she continued to sit there, she felt a breeze and heard shuffling footsteps behind her. With one glance over her shoulder, she jumped in surprise.

It was Helen again.

They locked eyes.

Allison gave her a timid wave. “Hi there.”

Helen studied her, but the blank expression remained on her face. Her attention drifted over to Sean and Nate.

That was when her face changed. She turned back to Alison with her mouth hanging open. “Ruthie! You came back!”

Allison’s lips quivered. Okay, here she goes again.

“Little Jack, you’ve brought Jack too!” She pointed to Sean on the other bench.

Nate stopped the strumming on his guitar and stood up as soon as he realized what was commencing.

“Mom! What are you doing out here now? I thought Edith was taking you to the hairdresser this afternoon. What happened?”

She wagged her head. “Edith? I don’t know where Edith is…but look Nathen, look! Ruth and Jack are right here! They came back, I always knew they would.”

Nate looked exasperated and embarrassed. He turned to Allison. “I’m so sorry again ma’am, I don’t believe this.”

He started towards Helen, looking determined to intervene with more force than was necessary.

So this time around, Allison took it upon herself to act differently. She put out her hand to stop him. “Wait a minute, hold it please. It’s okay.”

Nate looked surprised at her admonishment, but he backed off without another peep.

It just seemed like the right thing to do, so Allison continued. She took a breath, turned towards Helen and smiled. “It’s so good to see you too.”

With tears on her cheeks, Helen took hold of Allison’s hand. Allison gently squeezed the weathered palm in retort. For a moment, the whole world seemed to grow quiet. It had been ages since she felt something so pure.

“Ruth, I’m so happy you’re home.” A soft gasp escaped her. “Just in time for Christmas.”

 A bittersweet feeling filled Allison for multiple reasons. “Aww..me too.”

“We’ve got a lot of work to do to get ready!”

Alison glanced quickly at Nate. He just stood there looking heartbroken.

“Excuse me please,” he mumbled, barely making eye contact as he walked past them. He vaporized into the sea of people milling around the station.

Allison bit her lip. Maybe playing along with Helen’s fantasies wasn’t the right thing to do after all. The man was clearly shaken, probably thanks to her ripping open painful wounds. Not a great way to make friends.

“Jack, what a big boy you are now!” Helen turned her focus to Sean. He looked bewildered.

“But my name’s not Jack…it’s Se-”

Helen just burst out laughing at him.

“Oh, you’re a silly goose…just how Grandma likes it.”

Sean got up off the bench and wrapped himself around Allison. He looked overwhelmed. Poor kid.  

She patted his back. “It’s okay kiddo.”

“Is the teacher coming back?”

Allison looked over her shoulder. “Probably, I think he just needed a potty break or something.”

He grinned. “Ok.”

Nate did come back a few minutes later. His eyes looked a touch red, but he appeared less agitated.

“Sorry about that,” he said. He paused and opened his mouth again, looking like he was about to say more. But before he could, he was interrupted by a petite woman with short, curly silver hair.

“Oh good heavens…Edith? Well hello.” He smacked his palm on his forehead. “I know who you’re here for. This is a mess.”

“Yes, I came looking for you Helen,” she replied with her hands on her hips, looking straight at Helen with a less than thrilled expression on her face. “We were going to get our hair done, remember? We are going to be late if we don’t hurry now.”

“Oh fiddlesticks, silly old me!” She shook her head. “I’m sorry Edith. But look here…look who I found!”

Helen launched into the same narrative as before. Poor Edith looked flummoxed, her eyes kept darting back and forth between Allison, Sean, Nate and Helen.

Finally, Nate stepped in again. He stepped over to Helen and draped his arm around her shoulder.  “Okay Mom, listen for a moment. Please go with Edith to your hair appointment like you planned. You need it, it will make you feel so much better. Ruth and Jack will still be around when you get back, okay?”

Nate exhaled in relief as Helen conceded to leave the bus station with Edith.

He turned back to Allison once again. “Hey, can I take you and Sean out for a late lunch? I think we need to talk, and here is not the best place. Don’t worry, the cost is on me.”

She nodded through her simmering anxiety. “Okay, let’s do it.”

“Let me lock up my gear in the car, and then we can go. There is a café just a block away that I think you’d like. We can walk if you’re up to it.”

***

The café was not very busy when the three of them got there and closing time was in an hour. They were seated and promptly put their orders into the kitchen. The waitress brought Sean a tin can full of crayons so he could color on his paper placemat while awaiting the food. He quickly became engrossed in his art project.

Allison sat and fidgeted. She wasn’t quite sure what to make of this “date.”  

Nate turned his attention to her. His composure remained solemn. “God knows I’ll never get over losing Ruth and Jack.”

He pulled a small photograph out of his wallet and passed it to Allison. It was of Nate, a young woman, and a child. The boy in the picture looked to be about three or four, but Allison was struck by a shocking sameness that he in fact did share with Sean. It made sense that Helen probably saw that too, which aided the confusing episodes.

The ticking of the large clock on the wall grew eerily deafening in the silence of the dead restaurant. She felt a knot in her chest tighten and she had to moisten her parched lips with her tongue before replying.

 She tenderly handed the photo back to him. “I don’t think most people can or are even supposed to get over something as tragic as that. And Nate, I’m so sorry if the way I interacted with Helen hurt you.”

He shook his head. “No, it’s not anything you did that hurt me, please don’t think that.” He twisted a paper napkin in his hands. “I thought it was really sweet of you, actually.”

She looked down into her lap. “Oh. Okay, well that’s good.”

Nate took a sip of water as soon as the waitress brought out drinks. “So what’s your story, Allison? What brings you to this city anyway?”

She cleared her throat and took a deep breath. It was time for honesty. “As cliché as it may sound, I came out here to start over. And would you believe that my car also broke down when I got in? Just like the movies.”

“Oh no, gee whiz!”

She picked up one of the crayons and started doodling on her placemat.  “I’ve made nothing but bad relationship choices in my past and because of that, I had to get out in a hurry and go far away. Not only was I in danger, but so was Sean…and he’s done nothing to deserve that.”

“I think I know what you’re talking about. I had a hunch. That’s rough.”

She put the crayon down. “My ex-husband is above the law in the little farm town we come from. You know, it’s the sort of thing where he’s good friends with the whole police department, so he can do no wrong in their eyes. I feared I didn’t stand a chance going about it any other way.”

 Embarrassment nibbled at her. “We’re living in a nearby motel for the moment. Hopefully I can change that quickly.”

Nate just shook his head. She could see his eyes turning glossy. “So you really do wish you had a home to go to for Christmas, huh?”

She shrugged. That was complicated too. “In some ways.”

His brow creased, then relaxed. “Unless you don’t celebrate that is, which I also understand. To tell you the truth, I haven’t wanted to have much to do with Christmas since the year of the fire. It just became another day to muddle through.”

“The fire?”

“The house fire that killed them.”

Allison cringed. “Oh.”

He settled back in his chair. “So, here’s little about me. Ruth and I played in a band called Old Cheese during college, that was how we met and started dating. We got married a few years down the road, and Jack was born. At that point we’d managed to become quite successful with the band. We were doing a lot of touring in a nasty old van, with a toddler in tow of course.”

Allison had to chuckle a bit as images came to her mind. “Wow, sounds like an interesting life.”

“Oh yeah, we had fun, but once the Jack came along, we got tired of it quickly. Never being home and a rock and roll kind of lifestyle isn’t exactly the best environment for raising a kid. Long story short, we ended up dropping out of the group. We then bought a house that needed a lot of renovation. But that was one of Ruth’s dreams…to fix up a house like that.”

He took another sip of water. “Now I wasn’t about to quit music totally, and I still needed to make money too, so that’s when I changed my focus to teaching rather than performing as much.”

“Ah, makes sense.”

“Life was quite wonderful for a while there.” Nate paused and his composure fell. “Until the day some faulty wiring sparked the terrible blaze, and it all went to hell. The only reason I’m probably still here is because I wasn’t home when it happened. I wish I had been most days.”

She shook her head. “I can’t imagine.”

“And poor Helen…It’s as if all the heartache has aged her twenty years in the past five.” He sighed. “I’m glad I ended up just moving in with her…especially now.”  

The waitress brought the food out to the table, and they began to eat. It was a good thing too because Sean was growing quite antsy. Allison cut his food into smaller bites for him and covered it in ketchup. She’d discovered copious amounts of his favorite condiment would get him to eat most things he’d otherwise not touch.

She handed him a fork. “What do you say to Nate for being so kind to get you such a yummy lunch?”

Sean looked up and grinned. “Thank you!”

Nate chuckled. “You’re welcome.”

Allison was still curious about something Nate had said. She finished chewing her mouthful and put the sandwich down.

“I hope you don’t take this wrong, but I must ask. If you still can’t bear to celebrate Christmas, why the Christmas carols?”

Nate squinted at her as if he didn’t get what she was alluding to.

She explained further. “The night I got to town and you were playing music in the bus station. They were Christmas songs.”

“Oh, that.” He finally caught on. “Well, it’s just part of my job at this time of the year. Parents want their kids to learn how to play the Christmas classics, so I teach them. And people listening as they pass by want to hear the songs that put them in the holiday spirit. I just do it for others, it doesn’t mean much personally.”

“Hmm, I see.” She took another small bite of food. “I’ve honestly forgotten what it’s like to feel that holiday spirit. Although I think your music did do a little something for me back there. I, uh-”

A flashback choked her. The one of Ray throwing the hot baking sheet of cookies that she made back at her, because he caught her trying to ‘rebel’ and ‘partake’ in ungodly festivities. All because she dared to bake cookies in the month of December.

Nate cocked his head. “I’m listening.”

She squeezed her fists together under the table, then released them and took a deep breath. “My ex was a sort of religious nut. He has always been part of this church that likes to forbid anything that might bring people joy- like celebrating Christmas.”

Nate looked baffled. “Wait, why would they do that? At its heart, isn’t Christmas a Christian holiday about the birth of Jesus? Or have I totally lost my marbles?”

“They think it’s bad because our modern way of observing it has a dark, pagan underbelly…or something like that. I never agreed with most of what they taught about a lot of things. I just kept my mouth shut and pretended to go along with it. Because If I didn’t, things with Ray would get…”

“Ugly?” Nate finished the sentence for her.  

“Exactly.”

He winced. “That’s a new one by me, crazy idiots. You poor thing.”

She shrugged. “It is what it is. I’m just happy to be focused on moving forward now.”

They ate in an uneasy silence for a few minutes.

But Allison’s mind rewound again, but this time just back to Helen earlier that day. That look of unbridled happiness on the woman’s face when she gushed about her family being home for Christmas. She couldn’t forget it.

“You sure you’re, okay?” Nate looked at her, his brow furrowing.

She hesitated. “It’s about your mother-in-law. I think I know what she needs right now. Heck, I think we all might need it.”

“Okay, Go on.” Nate propped his elbows up on the table and folded his hands together. “I’m all ears.”

Allison pushed down the last of her apprehension. “She needs some Christmas back in her life this year. I know it probably feels crazy or maybe even impossible, but I think you should follow her lead.”

Nate looked like he might resist, but then relaxed. “You might be right. It just feels overwhelming though…she used to go all out making the holidays amazing for everyone. I fear I can’t sustain what used to be.”

“You don’t have to, just keep it simple. Focus on the stuff that really matters.”

He sighed but cracked a smile. “I believe you are wise beyond your years, ma’am. I’m more of a stubborn old stone.”

She chuckled. “I don’t know about that.”

“I know we really just met, and you have plenty of reason to be wary of strangers… but I’m going to go out on a limb here.” He pushed his plate away and looked her dead in the eyes. “Allison, would you be willing to somehow help Helen and I rediscover Christmas in our home this year?”

She felt a lump forming in her throat and hesitated.  “Yes, I think I can manage that. We can all be a little rusty together, and that’s alright.”

“Good, and in return, I need to see what can be done about getting you and Sean some better accommodations. You deserve somewhere much safer. The cheap motels in this city are not okay, trust me.”

She blushed but said nothing.

Nate scribbled something down on a napkin. “This is my home phone number, not the music studio one on my business card. Please call me tomorrow morning, okay?

She took the folded napkin, slipped it into her pocket, and smiled. “I will.”

***

Christmas Eve, 1998

“Hello, is this Nate?” Allison held the phone receiver tightly against her ear that next morning.

“Allison! Is that you?” Nate’s voice on the other end of the line sounded the most excited she’d heard him yet.

“Indeed…you told me to call, so yeah.” Her teeth chattered as she pulled on the hood of her jacket to keep it from blowing off her head in the cold wind. She had Sean snuggled against her.

“Good. Are you sure you’re still up for this? Please tell me the truth.”

“I haven’t changed my mind.”

“Wonderful, I’m glad. When do you want to come over and surprise Helen?”

Allison changed positions so that the wind blew against her back rather than her face. She informed Nate that she found out her car was finally able to be fixed, and it was at the mechanic’s shop ready to be picked up. She had to get it before noon, because the shop would be closing then for the holiday.

She certainly wanted to drive her own vehicle for her own safety, as well as convenience. So, she told Nate she would hop on the bus that would take her to the stop nearest to the mechanic, and then drive to his place from there. Nate gave her directions, which she struggled to write down with the winter weather going on. Then they prepared to hang up.

“Oh and Allison…one last thing.”

“Yes?”

“Check out of the crap motel before you leave.”

She frowned. “Check out?”

“Yes, I figured something out.”

“Um- okay?” She still wasn’t one hundred percent sure about all of this.

“Please.”

“Okay. See you later. Buh-bye!”

***

Allison breathed a sigh of relief that she had a car again. The fix sure put a dent into her scanty bank account, but she decided it was a sacrifice she ought to make. She signaled her intent to turn and merged out into the road. Nate’s house was the next stop.

“Mommy, where are we going?”

She glanced at Sean in the rear-view mirror and smiled. “You’ll see, it’s a surprise.”

“Ooh, yay!”

Nate’s directions led her to a quiet looking suburban neighborhood on the outskirts of the city. The houses were modestly sized but looked well to do. She pulled into the driveway of a light blue home with the correct number on the mailbox. She killed the ignition, but just sat there motionless in the driver’s seat for a few seconds, staring at rear of Nate’s car directly ahead of her, and questioning her decision to come.

A door on the side of the garage popped open, and Nate appeared. He peaked around the corner and waved.

Allsion waved back, took a breath, and opened the car door.

“Hello again,” Nate said as he ushered Allison and Sean into the garage. “Glad you made it. Let’s get in out of this cold.”

He led them across the dark, cluttered garage. “Watch your step there.”

He opened another door, and soon they were all standing in a homey looking kitchen. They shed their boots and winter coats near the door. Sean wanted to be stubborn and keep his stocking cap on. After all, it was a brand new one that the soup kitchen was handing out the other day, so he was excited about it and didn’t want to lose it. Allison sighed, but just decided to just let him wear it rather than risk starting any sort of tantrum. Nate then brought them down a short hallway to the living room.

“Please, make yourselves at home,” he said, gesturing to a couch and a couple armchairs. “I have a pot of coffee ready; can I get you some?”

“Sure, thanks,” Allison replied.

He turned to Sean. “Would you like some milk or apple juice?”

He bounced up and down. “Milk please!”

“Good boy, got to make those bones nice and strong, right?” He flexed his bicep, and Sean did the same in response. “Coming right up.”

Nate left the room. Allison sat down on the couch and looked around the room. There was a piping hot woodstove in one corner, a piano and a few guitars in another corner…along with a TV and a computer desk to complete the setup. The chill began to melt from her bones. It looked like a home should- there were no holes punched in the drywall or picture frames with shattered glass.

Man I wish we had a place like this…someday.

Allison startled a bit as she noticed she and Sean were not alone in the room. Helen was right there too, quiet as a mouse! She occupied the seat in front of the computer with her back turned towards the couch. It looked like she was engrossed in a game of Solitaire on the screen.

Allison bit her lip and then called out in good cheer. “Hey Helen!

The chair squawked as Helen swiveled around to look behind her. A puzzled expression blanketed her face once again.

Allison softened her voice. “Do you remember me? From the bus station?”

Helen didn’t react at first. Then she just shook her head and turned back to the computer.

Though she would never admit it, Allison felt disappointed by her response. She just wanted to see her happy again, like the previous day. But Maybe it wasn’t meant to be and it just wasn’t her place. Maybe she couldn’t make a difference there after all.

Nate returned with the beverages and set them on the coffee table. He glanced over at Helen.

“Mom, why don’t we give the computer a break for a while…It sounds like it’s working too hard. We don’t want it to crash or worse… you to strain your eyes again.” Nate gently tried to coax her away from the computer and over to the armchair. She cooperated.

Allsion looked nervously at the dangerously tall glass of milk meant for her son.

Woah, not child friendly.

She eyed Sean sternly. “Sean, take a seat on the floor please and keep the milk cup on the table so you don’t spill all over the nice rugs and furniture.”

The boy hopped to the floor, but before he went for the milk, he decided it was time to ditch the stocking cap. He tossed it aside, revealing a sweaty head of hair that already looked all funky and matted.

Helen happened to have been settling into the armchair just as Sean peeled the hat off his noggin.

She took note of it. She noticed him again.

Once again, her expression began to transform.

“Wait a moment…yes, I know who they are now!” Her eyes glistened. “It’s Ruth and Jack! You made it home for Christmas. Oh, God has been good to me!”

Allison felt her spirits lift, and she tried to discreetly wipe her eyes.

Nate smiled. “Yes, yes…in some mystical way, they are here.”

Helen got up out of her chair in a hurry. She began looking around the room frantically. “What day is it really?

“It’s the twenty forth of December…it’s Christmas Eve, Mom.”

 She grabbed at the hair on the sides of her head with both hands. “Christmas Eve already? For heaven’s sake! Nothing is ready…we’ve got so much work to do to get the house ready!”

“Easy, Helen. Don’t worry, we’re all here to help,” Allison said with a laugh, as she pressed her palms into the couch cushions. “We’ve got plenty of time to make it work. If Santa can make it around the whole wide world in one night…our job here is a piece of cake.”

She plopped back down in the armchair and released a long exhale. “Well, when you put it that way…I guess you’re right. Bless you my dear.”

“Allison and Sean, can I have your help out in the garage for a few minutes?” Nate got up from the seat he had assumed on the floor near the stove.

“Yeah!” Sean sprang up with a holler, bumping the coffee table and sloshing the darn milk.

Allison just shook her head, sopped up the milk as best she could, and followed the guys.

Out in the garage, Nate turned the lights on and moved a few boxes around. Then she saw it- propped against the back wall, with the end of the trunk in a bucket, was a Christmas tree!

“Sweet, you got a tree.” She grinned at Nate.

He heaved the tree out of the bucket and laid it to the ground. “The pickins’ were a little slim at the tree lot this morning, but I managed.”

Allison took hold of part of the trunk, as did Sean, and prepared to start hauling. “It’ll be perfect.”

They maneuvered the tree into the kitchen and around the corner into the living room. Helen’s jaw dropped open when she saw it.

“We have a Christmas tree again!”

“Yes, we do,” Nate said. “Now, I’m going to go to the basement to first get the stand, and then dig out the boxes of lights and ornaments. Hopefully the lights will work, and once we get those up, you can start choosing ornaments to hang on the tree. Sound like a plan?”

 Helen nodded as she continued to gaze at the evergreen. “Oh yes. This is wonderful.”

After the tree was positioned in the stand, Allison quickly found herself in charge of digging through the bins of light strings and the tedious task of untangling them. As each strand was plugged into a nearby electrical outlet to test, they quickly found out that many of them did not work. Still, enough working lights were found to illuminate the tree with multicolor pizazz.

As the ornaments were unboxed, Helen, Sean, and Allison began hanging them on the branches. A little while later, it dawned on Allison that Nate had disappeared, soon after the lights were figured out. She hung one last glittery ball, and then wiped her hands on her pants.

“Excuse me for a moment.”

She tiptoed out into the kitchen, where she found Sean with his back to her, standing at the kitchen sink. The water was running, but it didn’t look like he was doing any dishes, he just stood still.

Her mouth trembled as she stepped closer. “Hey Nate, is everything okay?”

The faucet immediately stopped running and he whirled around, clearly startled. “Yeah, I’m just…cleaning up out here.”

She nodded. “Cool, just checking.”

Nate threw down a dish towel on the counter and shook his head. “I’m sorry, I couldn’t do it.”

“Nate, it’s okay.” Allison’s stomach knotted as she leaned against a chair.

“Too many memories in those ornament boxes, I thought I could handle it, but no. It’s still feels- it’s just hard.”

Allison stared at the floorboards for a few seconds, then looked up. “What do you want me to do?”

“Go keep having fun with Helen and your boy,” he said, as he waved her back towards the living room. “I’ll come around; I think I just needed a break. I have a chicken I need to start roasting for supper anyway, I’ll get that done now.”

She turned to go. “Let us know if you need anything.”

Part of her didn’t feel right about any of it either. Like she didn’t deserve to experience joy because her life was defective. Still, she knew it wasn’t fair to Sean to live like that, so she determined to figure it out.

***

Later that afternoon when Nate returned to the living room, the tree was all decorated. He smiled at it. He looked a lot happier than before.

“Good work everyone, it looks wonderful.”

He had a rectangular box with him. “Sean, do you want to help me set up a new Christmas tradition?”

Sean’s eyes widened. “What is it?”

Nate got down on his hands and knees next to him. “It’s a model train on tracks that we’re going to set up under the tree! Someone just gave this to me the other day, so I thought now would be the perfect time to try it out.”

Soon the train was set up, giving Sean plenty of entertainment to last until supper was ready. After they ate, Helen and Allison made everyone hot cocoa. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was on TV, so they all settled back into the living room to watch.

The movie ended and Helen rose from her seat. “It’s past my bedtime. Good night, everyone,” she said bluntly. “You young’uns can party the night away I guess.”

Nate chuckled. “Okay Mom we will. Have a good night.”

Soon after Helen had gone up the stairs, Nate went into the other room and came back with a large envelope. A large red bow adorned it.

Allison’s heart skipped as he brought it to her. “Here, this is for you and Sean.”

“Oh wow, what is it?” she asked.

“You checked out of that motel, right?”

She bit her lip. “Yes.” She’d honestly forgotten about her lodging situation in the hustle and bustle of everything.  

Nate took a breath. “The parents of one of my students happen to own a bunch of cottages that they rent out to vacationers mostly. But they also have a few cottages that they keep on reserve just for women in your exact situation. It’s a cause that’s always been very important to them.”

 “I called them up last night on a whim, and they told me that the one of the occupants just so happened to have moved out the other day to go to her new permanent residence, and there was no wait list or anything.” He smiled at her. “It’s all yours until you can get on your feet again. It’s a beautiful, safe little place.”

Allison felt like crying up as she fingered the envelope. Was this all too good to be true?

He pointed at the packet again. “Keys are in there, as well as a bunch of other information and pamphlets about other services that are out there to help you.”

“I really don’t know what to say. I wasn’t expecting this. Thank you!”

“Merry Christmas,” Nate said. “See you in the morning?”

She got up from the couch and took Sean’s hand. “Sure thing.”

***

Christmas Day, 1998

Allison was still in awe that next morning as she woke up to not be staring at moldy water stains on the ceiling of a dirty motel. Nate wasn’t lying, the cottage was beautiful, warm, and clean. She thanked God again for the man and his generous friends, and then rolled out of bed.

“Sean, get up! It’s Christmas Day.” She jostled him gently as he still slept on the cot in the corner of the room. He sat up and rubbed his eyes.

A big yawn escaped his mouth. “Yay, Christmas!”

“Let’s get dressed, we’re going back over to Nate and Helen’s house for breakfast. Isn’t that exciting?”

He beamed. “Yeah! So happy Christmas is not bad now.”

A wave of regret came over her. She knew what he was talking about life in their old house with Ray. But that was history…hopefully.

“Me too kiddo, me too.”

***

When they arrived later that morning, Helen went through her same routine of believing Ruth and Jack had just come home for the first time in years. She didn’t seem to have much recollection of their interactions and tree decorating from the day before. It was bittersweet, but what mattered most was that she had pleasure in the moment at hand. That part was inspiring.

When breakfast was over, they gathered back in the living room to open a few small gifts. Allison felt bad she didn’t have anything for Nate. He repeatedly assured her that it was okay, her helping make the magic happen was more than enough for him.

After the gifts, Helen disappeared for a while and came back with a cardboard box.

Nate looked up from the newspaper he had been engrossed in. He gave her a puzzled look. “What’s that, Mom?”

he plopped the box down on the coffee table. “We forgot the most important part! It’s my nativity scene.”

He folded up the paper and tossed it aside. “Oh, you’re right! I’m surprised you knew where that was…I’d forgotten myself.” Nate gestured to her. “Go right ahead, get it out for us.”  

Helen did, and she began setting it up on the coffee table. It didn’t look like the classic, typical nativity scene housed in a wooden stable. This “stable” was made to look more like a cave in the side of a hill…it was made of a gray plaster like material. Inside of the opening to the cave, Helen placed all the usual characters of the Christmas story.

Sean was soon enthralled by playing the figurines as well. Allison explained each character to him.

“The light doesn’t work,” Helen said as she repeatedly flipped a switch on the chord that was attached to the cave.

Nate got up with a grunt. “Let me check the junk drawer in the kitchen for a little lightbulb, I’m sure that’s what it is.”

He came back a few moments later and squatted down next to the coffee table. Reaching into the opening, he took out the old light bulb. He shook it next to his ear to test it.

“Yep, busted.”  He put the dead one down on the table and replaced it with the new bulb. He glanced at Helen. “Try it now.”

She pressed the button one last time and light exploded inside the nativity scene.

“Yay! Let there be light,” said Allison. “That’s pretty neat.”

After that they all lounged around in the living room for a while. Sean played with the new toys he’d received, Nate went back to his newspaper, and Helen started crocheting.

Allison kept gazing at the nativity scene. Something about it struck her now that it was lit up. There were many cracks in the plaster material that only became apparent as the light oozed through.

She realized that the light was like the true hope and joy of Christmas. Life had left her wounded, inflicting her soul with many painful cracks and holes. But wasn’t that true for everyone? Wasn’t that why Jesus came to earth?

Letting the light spill through those fissures was exactly what she needed to do. She was glad to have taken those first steps that year. Healing wouldn’t be instant, but it was part of a process. It was good to embrace the wonder along the way.

Nate abruptly put the newspaper down again and got up. His face looked thoughtful. He walked across the room and picked up one of his guitars.

He returned to his seat and strummed a few chords. Then he began picking a melody. In a few seconds of listening, Allison found herself swept back to that first night at the bus terminal. The same tune.

“I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day,” Allison said.

Nate halted playing. “You know it?”

“Yeah, I remember it from when we would go to church at Christmas as a little girl.”

He nodded. “Me too actually. I’ve always loved the melody, but I just learned something new about it.”

She cocked her head to the side. “Oh?”

He handed her the folded-up newspaper. “I was reading an article, fourth page in, about Longfellow and the history of him writing that poem. I guess I’d never really paid much attention to the words until now.”

He rubbed his hand over the frets of his guitar. “It was written during the Civil War, after his son got hurt in battle. Not only that, but his wife had already passed away in a tragic accident a few years earlier1. I guess it goes without saying, but he was feeling awfully low, and it’s painfully obvious in the poetry.”

Allison opened the paper up and skimmed over the article, as well as the complete poem printed below. “Yeah, that’s heavy for sure.”

“Yet somehow, in spite of all that, he still manages to end on a note of finding faith and hope.”

Allison looked at the nativity scene again. “Sounds familiar, huh?”

“Well, thanks to the three of you, I think I’ve finally realized that I can embrace the real meaning of Christmas, even when it’s really hard.” He paused and inhaled deeply. “No, it won’t take all the pain away while we’re alive, but I remember God is here to walk along with us through it all.”

After a few minutes of contemplative silence, he began to strum the tune again and sing. Allison and even Helen joined in on the words too.

Sean climbed up on the couch next to her and snuggled against her side. She stroked his hair and smiled.

“Let that Christmas light in.”

1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Heard_the_Bells_on_Christmas_Day

Mechanic’s Shop Coffee (Drabble)

Tyler Rainsworth savored the bitter flavor of mechanic’s shop coffee on his tongue. To him, it tasted like it was brewed in heaven. The taste of newness. Of second chances.

He was still adapting to the feeling of the button-up shirt and khaki pants he had just purchased yesterday. A far cry from his old, destitute wardrobe of rags and former vagrant life, existing merely for his next quick fix.  

But today, Mr. Miller believed in him. Enough to offer him the office job at his garage.

Straightening his shoulders, he inhaled deeply and stood tall.

I can do this.

The Leaf (Drabble)

A woman watched a leaf float gently through the cool autumn air towards the earth. Its shades of crisp orange, fiery red, and soothing yellow all marbled together artfully. Bending down, she picked it up by the stem to study it closer.

Such a simple beauty- when was the last time I even stopped to notice?

Why don’t I anymore?

She turned to her young son, who sat on the bench with her. His hands were welded to the electronic rectangle, his attention glued to her smartphone screen.

She blinked away tears as awareness struck.

A tragedy of lost wonder.

Broken Lawnmowers, Salvaged Dreams

A Contemporary Fiction Story
By KL Storm

[Content Advisory: Alcohol/Substance Use/Abuse, Addiction]


Attmyer Acres Dairy Farm

Malcolm City, Pennsylvania

Dang girl, that’s hot.

Seventeen year old Hazel Attmyer struck a cocky pose in front of the full length mirror on her bedroom door. Her brand new snow white jeans fit like a glove. The elegant belt buckle at her waist shimmered in the light of the sixty watt bulb above her head. She brushed her chaotic dirty blond curls back and out of her face.  For once she actually felt confident, comfortable in her own skin. Where that was all of a sudden coming from, she didn’t really know.

But she did know one thing… She was ready to show her dairy cattle at the county fair. Her favorite show heifer was in tip top shape this year, and she walked perfectly on the halter to boot. This was going to be her year, she could just feel it.

Lane could just take his opinion on her obsessive passion for cows and shove it. Ugh, stupid brothers. All he cares about anymore are frat parties and video games. So what if he or anyone else thought she was weird. Cows were her safety zone; her escape from the cruelty of high school. The place where she could just forget about all the snooty, judgmental girls around her.

Cows were her life. The farming life on handed down land was the only one she wanted for herself. Just like Mom and Grandma before her, she’d be next to carry on the torch.   

Later that afternoon Hazel was still chilling in her room, just lying on the bed, enjoying her Saturday downtime before evening barn chores. Her father’s voice coming from downstairs interrupted her daydreaming. “Hazel, you up there? Can you come down here please?”

Hazel sighed and got up. “K, be right there,” she yelled back. She rolled her eyes as she headed towards the stairs.

“Probably bought another rusted, half broken ‘antique’ lawnmower to add to his museum up the road and wants to show it off to us,” she muttered to herself. 

Upon arriving in the living room, she met not only dad, but mom and Lane too. She made eye contact with mom and then shifted to dad. A strange chill ran down her spine. Not another word had been spoken, but something was wrong. Their eyes. Something in the atmosphere was just off. Hazel felt it in her bones.  Even Lane looked disturbed.

She sunk down into a chair. “What’s going on?”

Her parents exchanged glances before speaking. Dad sighed. “Lane and Hazel, we have something to tell you. This isn’t a decision your mother and I have taken lightly, but unfortunately it’s the way things have to be.”

Hazel’s heart began to pound. The normally lazy, apathetic Lane shot up out of his chair before anyone else could get a word in.

‘You’re getting a divorce, aren’t you!” Hazel could actually see his lips quivering. That only brought her internal freak out to a new level.

“No, no,” said Dad. He and Mom both shook their heads emphatically. “Our marriage is just fine, don’t you be worrying about that too.”

 Lane staggered backward a few feet. “Then what?”

Mom stepped in. “I know you both know how low milk prices have been over the past year. We’re drowning in debt and the hole is only getting deeper. I hate to say it, but there’s no other way out at this point. We’re selling them farm. Well, It’s technically already sold.”

Shockwaves coursed through Hazel’s body. This isn’t real. It can’t be. Numbness set in. Her worst nightmare coming to life. She’d seen the news stories. She knew the odds were stacked against them. Every week it seemed, the word spread of another farm being snuffed out. 

Still, somehow she’d always believed her family’s dairy was different. Call her naïve, but she thought the Attmyers were surely immune. They always found a way. They’d be the ones to triumph and make it another fifty years. They had to be!

Lane glanced at Hazel, looking genuinely upset, but he nodded to their parents. “Okay. Nice update on the inevitable I guess.” He grabbed his dirty baseball cap off the coffee table and headed towards the door. “Excuse me.” His tone went cold. The door slammed shut behind him, leaving the other three inside.

Dad came over to his daughter and gingerly draped an arm around her shoulder. “I’m sorry dear, I know this is hard for you too.”

She just stared off into the fireplace on the opposite side of the room. “What’s gonna happen to the cows?” She heard the words come out of her mouth, but honestly felt like someone else was saying them.

“They’ll go to a buyer in Indiana. The trucks come Monday.” Mom’s voice grew shaky, she paused for a moment. “We’ll milk for the last time that morning.”

Hazel blinked. “Monday! This coming Monday? Seriously? And you’re just telling me this now?”

“We’re sorry honey, yes, we probably should have given you more warning. The time got away from us a bit…”

Hazel’s numbness exploded into a primal rage. She sprang to her feet and grabbed a random church bulletin off the table next to her chair and crumbled and crushed it into a ball with her hand.  “The hell you should have! You couldn’t have at least waited until after the fair to ship the cows? Me and Lane were part of this farm too and this is how it ends?”

“Please, take a breath Hazel, please,” Mom said gently. “Look, you have your whole life ahead of you. I know you can’t see it now, but, there’s so much more to chase after than cows and this old place. Just think of it, college in another year…anything you want out there. I know it hurts, but in all honesty- we’re doing this for you.”

Dad nodded. “We refuse to saddle you and Lane with our debt, our mistakes. It just isn’t fair for us to leave it all to you.”

Hazel snapped. She gave the sweaty paper in her fist one last squeeze and chucked it at Grandma’s large oil painting of the farm from years ago that hung on the wall. She turned and stormed out of the house and onto the porch. She couldn’t comprehend anything they were trying to say to her anymore, it was all too much for her teenage mind to take in.  

Through the tears that started to burn her eyes, she noticed dad’s pickup truck in the drive with yet another old, cast off lawnmower in the bed. The tags from a local auction yard were still attached, indicating that he’d just bought it.

He’s been throwing money away into that dumb museum all along, nothing more than an outdated tourist trap, all while the farm has been dying. Thanks a lot Dad- send all my dreams and hard work down the drain, while you keep rescuing your stupid scrap metal. Doing this for me, huh? Yeah right…

Do any of you people care at all?

***

The next 48 hours were a painful blur to say the least. By 4 p.m. on Monday, the milk cow barn, heifer barn, and calf hutches all stood empty. The horrible silence of no cattle was deafening, the lack of life eerie.

“Hey sis, you want to go for a walk with me?”

Hazel had been leaning against a fencing panel, staring out across the former heifer pasture, watching the traffic fly by on the highway in the distance; when she heard her brother’s voice behind her. She turned and squinted through what were surely bloodshot eyes from all her crying.

Someone must have kidnapped the real Lane Attmyer and replaced him with an impersonator or something. Go on a walk with his little sister? She shrugged, it suddenly didn’t seem like such a bad idea. Not like she had any cows to take care of anymore or anything.

She stepped towards him, still putting on a fake, slightly annoyed attitude. “Sure why not. Let’s go.”

They strode to the end of their gravel drive. Then they followed the main county road for a bit, then walked onto the half completed, technically closed bike trail that had been abandoned by the park’s department some time ago for lack of cash. Not much was said between them, they mostly just listened to the rhythm of each other’s breathing and footsteps. 

The trail led them into the heart of downtown Malcolm City. It used to be a rather nice small city, the home of several factories that employed a healthy amount of people. Attmyer Quality Lawnmower & Small Engine, Inc. used to be among those, the cream of the crop place to work. The company was founded by Hazel’s grandpa and his brother, but they sold it decades earlier to someone outside the family when Grandpa fell ill with cancer. These days it stood disgraced and empty on the skyline along with most of the other industrial buildings. The exposed skeleton of yet another dying Rust Belt town.

The only real evidence left that Malcolm city used to be known as the lawnmower capital of the region? Attmyer’s Lawnmower Utopia on the opposite side of town, just off the interstate. That lawnmower museum. A real thorn in Hazel’s side at the moment.   

Lane led them off the path and through a maze of crumbling city streets. Eventually they came upon a liquor store and he headed towards the doors. He looked back at Hazel trailing behind him. “I think we could use a good stiff drink or six, hmm?”

Hazel had to chuckle a bit. “I can’t disagree.”

Lane purchased a selection of beverages as he was of legal age, and then they continued on their hike.

“Down to Herman’s Lake?”

 Hazel snorted. “And get arrested for trespassing on a deadly Superfund site? I think you’re nuts.”

“I wasn’t planning on climbing over the forbidden fence or anything. Come on, I hang with the guys over there all the time. Don’t tell me you haven’t been to a Herman’s Lake party- cuz I know you have.”

“Oof, busted,” Hazel mumbled.

Herman’s Lake had been a long time problem for Malcolm City, due to years of haphazard industrial waste disposal and intentional dumping. Attmyer Quality Lawnmower & Small Engine, Inc. was surely a major contributor to turning the lake into a toxic cesspool. Even though the current generations of Attmyer’s had nothing to do with what happened, it sure left a nasty stain on the family name for anyone who knew the history of the area.

They proceeded into the brushy secluded area on the east side of the lake, to a popular hangout spot for high school and college kids alike that the cops had pretty much given up on patrolling. They set up camp, right outside of the high chain link fence, in the shadow of the ominous sign:

 DANGER! ABSOLUTELY NO TRESPASSING! TOXIC WASTE AREA.  

The siblings made a toast to their life as they knew it falling apart, and drank the evening away.

***

Later that night, Lane called one of his college buddies over in Warden Falls to give them a ride back to the farm. They had walked quite far from home to get there earlier, no way were they reversing that… in the dark, hardly able to walk straight.

But Hazel didn’t stay home long. In her impaired state, she couldn’t stop thinking about Attmyer’s Lawnmower Utopia, and her parent’s misplaced priorities. She wanted revenge. She’d show them all how she really felt, because so far…no one was hearing her. Hazel went out into the machine shed and grabbed a crowbar- the first implement she laid eyes on capable of doing damage.

She set off down the road to the museum and stood there staring at the stupid old building. She gritted her teeth and marched in a circle around the building, smashing the glass in every window with her crowbar as she went. Once she started, she didn’t stop.  

***

Hazel opened her eyes, a pounding headache and the piercing sunlight coming through the windshield greeted her. She looked around in confusion, she was in the passenger seat of her dad’s truck. He was driving.  She looked down at her hands in horror, they were bloody and full of cuts. Her eyes grew wide and panic gripped her as pixelated recollections of what she did the night before crept into her brain. What did I do? I’m dead. Oh I’m so dead.  

Dad turned to her, raising his eyebrows slightly. “Morning.” He reached into the console between them and pulled out a bottle of antiseptic, gauze, and an assortment of bandages. He tossed it all into her lap. “Better attend to your hands.” He turned his full attention back on the road. Hazel fumbled with the first aid stuff, still stunned like a dear in the headlights.

She was waiting for his wrath to coming flying at her. He knew exactly what she did. There was no way that he didn’t. Obviously he must have found her passed out on the ground outside his precious museum with the crowbar and glass everywhere.  

She opened her mouth but no words would come out. Dad glanced at her, but his face didn’t look angry, just tired and sad. He just pulled out a sports drink from the cup holder and handed it to her as they pulled into their driveway. “Better get this in you too. Then I want you to go up to your room and really think about what happened last night. Is this how you want to live your life? It won’t get you very far, I can tell you that.”  

For reasons that Hazel would be left to wonder about for the rest of her life, the incident at the museum would never formally be talked about again. Dad never brought it back up or wielded punishment. Mom never got involved either, even if only for her sanity’s sake. Beyond the words he spoke in the truck, Dad simply raked up the debris, boarded up the broken windows, and went on with life.

Things were supposed to get better. A new chapter post dairy farming was right there and allegedly full of promise. But would that actually be the reality for any of them?

Chicago, Illinois

12 Years Later…

Hazel stared at the blinking cursor on her computer screen until everything in her line of sight blurred together. 10 p.m. had turned into 1 a.m. instantaneously, or so it seemed. She’d lost count of how many times she’d read, reread, erased and restarted the same dang sentences.

So that was the day I started down my road of destruction- the day my parents sold the cows.

She squeezed her eyes shut and opened them again with a sigh. Getting up in front of all the people at church the next morning to share the story of how she’d managed to screw up her life and then find her way back to God and such…that was not going to be easy.

I couldn’t bear to stay in Malcolm City once we moved off the farm. Just days after my 18th birthday, I left my parents a note and took off with an older guy I hardly knew. We ended up here in Chicago. It was not a healthy relationship. I started drinking more to cope with stress from that, then the inevitable breakup, and then living on my own. I still had no idea where I was going in life, who I was, or what I wanted to do.

Hazel stopped typing again. The emotions this brought up where unpleasant to deal with. Sure, her twenties had been a booze fueled, meaningless blur. There was no way to get that time back. Even so, it wasn’t completely wasted. She did get her drinking under reasonable control for a while and enrolled at a community college, hoping to find a career path that would spark her interest.  Unfortunately that ambition didn’t last long and she embraced her bad habits again with gusto.

About four years after Hazel left town, Dad tragically fell off the roof of his house while taking down Christmas lights, and passed away from his injuries. Hazel showed up for the funeral, but it ended in a huge fight with Lane. She couldn’t remember what she said, but it must have been bad.

I’m thankful to say I’m just over two years sober now. It probably never would have happened if it wasn’t for the grace of God in the form of crashing my friend’s car, the DUI, probation, and court ordered recovery program. That was the kick in the butt I needed.  And I certainly couldn’t have made it this far without the support of my amazing roommate, Veronica.

Hazel stopped typing again and smiled. Yes, she was not going to waste away this fresh decade of her life. She could only move forward. She was moving forward.

The corkboard on the wall behind her computer caught her eye. Or more specifically the long distance bus ticket tacked to it. She untacked it and studied it. The nervous lump began to rise in her throat as she read the print.

To: Malcom City, PA

Tuesday morning she would face one of the most difficult parts of her recovery journey, a big thing she kept pushing off- going home to see her Mom for the first time in eight years. More like twelve years, because she could hardly consider that funeral debacle a visit. She had to attempt to fix the mess she’d made. Was that even possible after everything? Maybe not, but she knew she had to at least go and make contact, admit her wrongs, and seek forgiveness.

***

Monday evening Hazel sat in the bedroom of her apartment, trying to figure out how to make everything fit in her suitcase. That was a minor problem compared to the other complications of the day. Number one, she was having trouble finding a working phone number for her Mom. She didn’t want to show up totally unannounced.

Number two, dear old Lane was sure to have her number, but she’d called him multiple times just to get no answer or call back. He’d also moved away from Malcolm City, for a better job. She’d learned that from creeping on the publicly visible information on his social media accounts.  

C’mon Lane. I know you don’t want to have anything to do with me…but please call back. This is kinda important!

A little while later, Hazel’s phone began to vibrate on the bed behind her. She spun around a lunged for it. “Philadelphia,” She said, looking at the area code on the screen. She swallowed hard, that had to be him. Please God, let it be him. She tapped the screen and put the phone to her ear.

“Hello?” Her voice shook way more than she thought it would. “Speaking?”

“Hazel?” It was without a doubt, Lane’s voice. “What do you want?”

He sure didn’t sound happy.

Hazel drummed her foot against the floor and felt herself begin to sweat.

Lane continued before hazel could put any words together. “Listen, if you want money I don’t have any to give. You got yourself into trouble? No way in hell I’m bailing you out…don’t got time for your crap.”

“Lane, wait. Please listen and believe me- I’m not that person anymore. That’s not why I’m calling.”

He laughed disparagingly. “Oh sure, that’s what they all say. Punks like you never change.”

She took a deep breath and just ignored his snide response. “I’m going home to see Mom tomorrow. I was just looking for her phone number and was hoping you had a current one. That’s literally it.” 

Lane’s end of the line was silent.

Hazel shook her head and rolled her eyes. “Lane? You there?” Please tell me you didn’t hang-

“You’re going to see mom?” Something in his tone changed.

“That’s what I said wasn’t it?”

“I’m afraid it’s too late kiddo. You’re too late.” It was Lane’s turn to have a shaky voice.

Hazel’s mouth went dry. “Wait, what are you talking about?”

“Look, you’re clueless because you weren’t there. You weren’t there all those years ago to see what I saw.” She could hear Lane’s breath rising and falling more intensely with each word.

“With Dad- you weren’t there to watch the depression suck the life out of his body after the farm sold. He lost fifty pounds in no time. Hell, the only reason why he even put those stupid Christmas lights on the roof was so he could feel alive again, I’ll go to my grave with that opinion. He wouldn’t listen when I asked him to wait for me to help him take them down that year. Someone should have been there- I should have been there…” his voice trailed off.

Hazel had nothing to say. But the hurt in his voice was piercing.

“And with Mom- you weren’t there to watch her pray her guts out, day after day, begging Jesus that her wayward daughter would just stop mucking around and come home. That was all she wanted.”

He didn’t say any more for quite a while, but she could still hear him trying to catch his breath.

“You’re too late because Mom already got an answer to those dumb prayers, Hazel. All she got was the crap deal of having a freaking stroke six months ago.”    

What? A stroke? Hazel felt as though everything around suddenly shifted into slow motion and she’d been plunged under water. This couldn’t be reality. Surely she had fallen asleep and was caught in another bad dream. This wasn’t how this was supposed to go. Wait, is she dead?

 “She’s still alive,” Lane continued, apparently reading her mind.  “But the stroke affected her brain stem and left her with a rare condition they call locked-in syndrome. She can move her eyes, but that’s about it. She can recognize people and understand speech- just can’t express herself with anything other than her eyes.”  He hesitated. “I suppose since I didn’t tell you about it, no one did. Honestly thought you were too far gone to care. ” He paused, then added his barely audible addendum. “Sorry.”  

She moistened her dry lips with her tongue. She thought she would have been angrier at him for not telling her then she actually was. The shock was still dominant. “Yeah, clearly I didn’t know-” She sighed, the guilt and shame began to rise up.  “No Lane, I’m so, so sorry. I’ve been terrible. I should-”

He huffed, cutting her off. “Yeah well whatever, some good that nonsense is now. Do you want the address for the special nursing home I have her in so you can see her at least? ”

She gulped. “Please.”

“Herman’s Lake Advanced Nursing Care & Rehab.” He rattled off the street address. “It’s actually part of the old side of the hospital. Oh, and by the way, you’ll be surprised when you see the lake these days. It’s weird actually. That Malcolm City Re-imagined campaign is really something for the books.”

Hazel’s mind spun with all sorts of confusion. First the man was practically in tears over their poor mother, then he’s off talking about political campaigns? She slapped her palm to her forehead. “Wait, what?”

“You’ll know when you see it.”  

“Oh-kay.”

“Is that all you wanted?”

“Wait, are you paying her bills?” She had to say something. To let him know that she genuinely cared, even though she feared it would fall on deaf ears.

She heard him sniff forcefully. “Who else would be? Yeah me and insurance. But mostly me.”

“Please, let me help pitch in. That’s not fair to you. I want to help.”

“Nah, I don’t think I’ll be needing your help. I’ve been getting along quite alright without it. I’m getting ready to figure out what to do about her house anyway. Then to get rid of Dad’s blasted museum that she’s still been holding onto for all this time. I doubt there’ll be a line of people fighting over who’s gonna snatch up that disaster,” He scoffed. “Anyway, that’s the scoop and it sucks like usual. Later Hazel.”

The line went dead and Hazel just stared at her phone screen for a while. She hadn’t even dreamed that she’d be encountering a monkey wrench in her plans like this.

“Hazel?”

She turned her head to see Veronica standing in the doorway of her bedroom.

The bottle of shampoo Veronica was holding fell to the floor with a thump. “Hazel, are you okay? Oh my, my- you’re sooo pale!”

Hazel’s lips began to quiver and then the tears came. Veronica dashed over, sat down on the bed and wrapped her arm around her friend’s trembling shoulders. “I-it’s about Mom.” That was all she managed to utter for quite some time.

***

Hazel sipped on her mug of chamomile tea. It was 1 a.m. Veronica had huge dark circles under her eyes and was clearly fighting to stay awake.

 She put down her tea down on the desk next to the bed and leaned back against the wall. “What do I do now, Veronica?”

“Go home as planned and see your mother. Tell her the things you need to. You just got to trust she can hear you and wants to see you again. But either way, you need to get it off your chest so you can keep healing and move forward. Right?”

Hazel simply nodded.

“I don’t know if I’d believe everything Lane says either…sounds like he’s battling a lot of troubles of his own. Who knows, your mom might actually be more responsive then he’s letting on.” Veronica shrugged. “I guess it just comes down to doing the right thing, and I know you know what that is.” 

She sighed. “Yeah, it is the right way. Would be nice to think Lane is fooling, but I don’t know.”

Veronica leaned forward, planted her palms on Hazel’s shoulders, and looked her in the eyes. “Are you sure you don’t want me to go with you? I can tell my boss it’s a family emergency.”

Hazel chewed at her lower lip and sighed. “No, I’ll be okay. I can do this.”

 “Alright. Well, whatever happens, just don’t forget what we’ve talked about. I’ve got your back, sis. You’re never alone. If you feel like you’re going to lose it when you’re out there-what is it that are you’re going to do?”  Veronica waited with and expectant look on her face.

She bobbed her head with confidence. “Call you of course.”

“Bingo.” Veronica lifted her left hand off Hazel’s shoulder and instead extended her pointer finger towards her. “Twenty four seven, don’t even think twice. I’ll drop everything and come get you if you need me. Promise.”

Hazel embraced her friend and smiled sleepily. “You’re the best, I owe you forever.”

***

Hazel arrived in Malcolm City in the dead of night. It was a long, uncomfortable day of traveling on a bus of very questionable condition. Someday she’d get brave enough to start the process of getting her driver’s license back so she wouldn’t have to deal with such things as bus travel. It got the job done though. She checked into her motel room, shot Veronica a text to let her know she’d arrived, and passed out moments after her body made contact with the bed.

Upon waking the next morning, she decided to take a walk downtown in search of some proper breakfast. Although her nervousness about seeing her mom in an hour was building and food wasn’t very appealing, she knew she’d regret it later if she didn’t begin the day with some sustenance.

She was also about to get her first good look at her old hometown in over a decade.

“Wow,” she said as she strode along Main Street. She kept on stopping to look behind her and all around. “Did I get off in the wrong state?”

The downtown thoroughfare no longer looked ghostly and boarded up. Charming little shops and boujee cafés lined either side of the street. At almost every intersection, bike and scooter rental kiosks had popped up. Hazel was familiar with that concept, as it was commonplace in the big cities. She just never dreamed she’d see that kind of thing here. What a transformation. How is this even possible? She felt like she just walked onto a movie set. Where was the camera crew? Something felt…artificial?

 Choosing the next coffee shop she saw, she went in to order breakfast. Service was quick and soon she was sitting down at an outdoor table with a “basic” breakfast sandwich and a beverage “pretending” to be coffee- good, just way too sugary and fancy for her semi-bland tastes.

She finished eating and checked the time. The moment had come to do what she came to do. Mom. She shakily got up, and continued on to her destination.

After arriving in the lobby of the nursing facility and hitting the restroom, she checked in at the front desk. An employee led her on through a maze of hallways and around people shuffling about with walkers, towards her mom’s room.

“I’m Lena,” said the staff woman, smiling over her shoulder at Hazel. “I’ve been one of Fran’s regular nurses since she came here.”

Hazel smiled back, trying to swallow her nervousness. “Nice to meet you.”

“So some good news…she’s been showing new movement in her right hand recently,” Lena explained as they walked. They came to a stop outside of a door to a patient room. “That’s encouraging to see after not seeing any real improvements for such a long time, you know? Her therapists are working hard to strengthen that ability as much as they possibly can.”

“Good,” said Hazel. “And I’m glad to hear therapy can help. I didn’t really know about that before.”

“Yes, absolutely! It can work wonders. She’s generally able to answer yes and no questions with her eyes now. Looking up would mean ‘yes’, while down would be ‘no.’ Make sense?

Hazel nodded.

 The nurse glanced down for a moment and picked some debris off of her shirt. “I’ve known your mom for years… well, she was an acquaintance anyway. Farmer, tough as nails, but also sweet. You likely don’t recall, but I remember you too.”

Hazel frowned, trying to figure out if she knew this stranger from somewhere, anywhere. “Hmm…”

“Didn’t think so, that’s okay. I was a temporary nurse at your elementary school way back, only there for a few months. I don’t know, for some reason you just stuck out to me.

Hazel grunted. “Like a sore thumb, right?”

 Lena clicked her tongue and shook her head in response to Hazel’s self-deprecating remark.  

“Oh, now, now…”

Lena grabbed the handles to a cart full of medical supplies that sat in the hallway and looked like she was about to leave. “I’m glad you came back. Lane stops in almost every weekend. He always looks so tired. I know, this is a lot for anyone, but I still worry for him.” She fingered her wrist watch. “I know it wasn’t easy for you either, and it still isn’t. But thank you. I wish you and your family the best with everything.”

Hazel nodded and smiled slightly at Lena as she turned to go onto her next task. “Thanks.”

 She turned to face the door of her mom’s room again. She shut her eyes, opened them, took one last deep breath, and went inside. She honestly had prepared herself to find her mom looking really rough. But aside from not being able to move or speak, she didn’t look too awful. The same springy curls of hair that Hazel always remembered still framed her face. Obviously she was being well taken care of, and that helped her relax a bit.

She sat down by the bed and opened her mouth to speak what she’d rehearsed.

 “Hey, Mom. It’s me- Hazel. It’s been a while, I know. Wow, a lot has happened. I have some things I need to say…things you should know…

***

Hazel stood out on the sidewalk in front of the nursing home after finishing seeing her mother. Her pulse still throbbed as she just kind of stared, shell shocked. Holy crap, I did it.

What else was there to say? Her fumbling, albeit sincere apologies were accepted based on Mom’s subtle communication ability. She had to believe that. But it was still hard, the whole situation just blew her mind.  

She needed to go somewhere and clear her head, somewhere that didn’t smell like antiseptic and soiled linens- that aroma needed to be expunged from her nose immediately. Upon seeing signs for a public boat launch ramp at Herman’s Lake, she decided to follow them.

Rumor had it that the lake was no longer the cordoned off, shimmering cocktail of industrial poison that she’d grown up in the stench and shadow of. This version of Herman’s Lake, according to the billboards she’d seen around town, was touted as the pride and joy of Malcolm City Reimagined.  

Now that, Hazel had to see for herself.  She arrived at a newly constructed boat launch area and flopped onto a park bench that overlooked the water.

Wow. She blinked and stared out over the rippling liquid mirror in amazement. The decades and decades of intense remediation efforts spent on the lake and surrounding land had finally paid off. Swimming, boating, fishing, and the like were all permitted. Campgrounds and fancy cottages available for summer renting by tourists had sprung up all along the shoreline. Seeing as it was the middle of July and prime vacation time, Herman’s Lake bustled with activity indeed.

Her phone vibrating in her pocket startled her alert just as she was zoning out. She froze as she realized who is was.

Lane? Why is he calling me?

She put the phone to her ear. “Hello?”

“Hey Hazel? It’s me- uh, Lane.”

 “Yeah, what’s up?” She bit at some peeling skin around her fingernails.

“N-nothing. Just wondering if you got to see her.”

“Uh-huh, I did.” Her words just seemed to hang in the air.

“Are you good?”

“Yeah…what do you mean?”

“Nothing, nothing,” he said with haste, then he paused. “I just thought I should call to see if you were okay, alright? Anyway, never mind. I got to get back to work now.”  

“Woah, wait.”

She could hear him sigh. “What now?”

“Thank you.” She swallowed. “For doing that. You didn’t have to… considering, well, everything. But I’m gonna ask again since I got your ear, is there anything I can do to help you out? I took the week off work, I don’t have to back in Chicago until Sunday.”

Lane took his time replying. “Well if that’s the case, you could go over to the museum and start trying to organize stuff. Figure out what is really junk verses what is actually worth money in there?”

She shrugged. “I could do that.”

“The city zoning board came out last week and yellow tagged the door. Also sent me a lovely fine in the mail. They say it’s an ‘eyesore’ and we have sixty days to begin making improvements to the outside appearance or they will officially condemn it, and slap us with more fines.”

Hazel frowned. “Oh dear. Because you just didn’t have enough worries, Lane.”

“Yep. Remember the key to the back door we hid under the statue out front?

“Now I do,” she mumbled.

“Well it’s still there and it still works. So you can get in. Just don’t torch the place or anything crazy like that, okay? Not yet anyway.”

She had to chuckle a bit at that. “It’s a deal. I’ll see what I can do.”

***

Hazel mounted her newly rented bike, and began to head towards the museum. The city also finally completed and officially opened the bike trail that had long stood abandoned. She marveled at it as she peddled along the velvety pavement. Crazy… in Malcolm City, what are the odds?

Lane was right though, about what he had hinted at the other night. A lovely as it all was, something did stick out as odd. She just couldn’t quite put her finger on it.

She came to the end of the bike way. She didn’t want to look to the right, but did anyway- like some outside force pulled her in that direction. She could just make it out in the distance. The tall neon sign for the massive truck stop and travel plaza that swallowed up the land that used to be her dairy farm. She shook her head, pushed the memories back, looked left, and rode on towards the land of rusty lawnmowers.    

What Hazel didn’t expect when she arrived- was the strong wave of nostalgia that washed over her when she turned into the weathered parking lot and laid eyes on the pond scum green colored building. Oh the irony, not too long ago she stood in the same spot and wished hellfire on the place. With all the extreme changes around her, just looking at the ugly old building felt like a warm hug. Her chest grew tight as she began to realize that’s probably how Dad always felt about the place.

 She ditched her bike and went over to the tacky statue, an enshrined lawn tractor upon a pedestal.  She carefully reached her hand up under it though a little opening in the bottom and felt around for a key. After some groping about, her fingers finally found it. Hazel pulled it out and headed towards the backside of the building. 

 Something else struck her as she rounded the corner. The windows in the back were still boarded up tight. Dad had fixed the front and side ones in public view, but the rear was stuck in time. A very dark time. She jammed the key into the rusty door lock and struggled to turn it. Oh what am I even doing back here?

 She pushed the door open. The burst out outside air sent of shower of unknown debris and dust down from the ceiling. Hazel cringed and let the dust settle down before proceeding “Yikes.” She pulled her t-shirt up over her nose to filter the air.  

“No ghosts in here right?” she called out in the darkness of the back workshop. She found a light switch on the wall, flipped it, and the burst of illumination made her sigh in relief. Much better.

She walked out into the main part of the museum, it was much less dark and spooky than that backroom. Turning on more lights, she took a good look around. “Huh, this doesn’t look bad at all.”

 It really didn’t. It honestly looked like someone had already done significant cleaning. Lane? Not likely. Mom before her stroke was more probable. Clusters of plastic tubs and cardboard boxes laid spread out all around the showroom and between the permanent exhibits. They were full of pieces and parts of everything related to lawnmowers and small engines. Organized chaos would be the proper term for the state of the place.

 “Looks like the internet will be my best friend in figuring out what all this crap is,” she muttered to herself, continuing to peruse the building. She circled around the whole place, even to the kid’s discovery room with the pedal tractors and pretend mowers. She remembered well when Dad added that on, how much fun they had zooming around on the tractors… it was totally Mom’s idea though.

 Soon she found herself in the back workshop again. That area had always been off limits to the public, where Dad would repair and restore behind the scenes- and where he’d hide the real clutter.

Hazel scanned the mess, and the shelves on the walls that were sagging down about to snap from all the weight on them. She sighed and shook her head. Got our work cut out for us in here, geez.

Then she spotted some pictures. Tacked to a 2×4 on the wall, partially hidden behind a hoard of oil cans. She moved away an ungodly number of oil cans to take a better look at the fading photographs. One was of a high school aged Lane, posed and smiling ear to ear with a five point buck he’d taken down on opening day of deer season. The next one she grabbed was of herself, middle school era, grinning with her Holstein junior champion and prize ribbons at the county fair.

She remembered that year well; in spite of the rather forced smile on her face, she was actually being squeezed to death by her show pants. She’d outgrown them over the winter and failed to try them on until 20 minutes before show time. She snorted and giggled at herself as she put the picture back. Just one of those things to laugh and reminisce about years later. 

The last one though, that made her heart skip. Mom and Dad were kissing on the back of the hay wagon with a fiery sunset behind them. The same wagon that they all sweated though countless summers on- where they all learned how to work until the job got done. Back when things were good. Or at least back when Mom and Dad sacrificed much to protect them from the cold reality of how things actually were.

She shifted her attention to some of the lower shelves on the wall next to the work bench. She picked up a sealed, never opened bottle of Kentucky bourbon. Hazel just glared at it. Nope, you don’t own me anymore. She thought about getting rid of it so it couldn’t temp her later, but she just put it back on the shelf as another item caught her eye. 

A big beat up cardboard box. It stuck out over the edge of the shelf and had cobwebs draped over part of it. It only stood out because of what was written on it in bold black marker:

To Build With the Grandkids Someday

She bit her lip. Guess that wasn’t meant to be. She took the box down off of the shelf and blew the cobwebs away. Upon opening it she found parts to some sort of lawnmower. Surprise, surprise.  An old fashioned push mower that didn’t use gas? Whatever do I do with this now?  An uncomfortable feeling grew inside her as she looked through the stuff, and she didn’t like it. She promptly closed up the box and replaced it on the shelf with a sigh. I don’t know.     

She stepped back from the shelves and her attention steered back to the boarded up broken windows. Can’t let them stay like that. I broke them, I’m going to fix them.

It didn’t matter to her whether the building would just end up as a pile of rubble in the end. She had to resolve this; it was long overdue. For her family, and for herself.  

After taking some measurements and such, Hazel locked up the building and got back on her bike. Her next stop was the nearest home improvement warehouse.  Order supplies to make some windows. Have it delivered tomorrow. It’s a plan. I’ve got a plan.    

***

The next morning Hazel decided to get up and go for a run before going to see Mom again. The bike path had been extended so that it now looped around Herman’s Lake, and she itched to check it out. Hazel hadn’t always been the running type, but it was a newer habit she’d picked up; one she crediting with helping her stay alcohol free. 

Even though it was early morning, the heat was already turned up outside. She could tell that it would really be a scorcher by the afternoon. As she was plodding along on the trail, panting and sweating her face off, a new thought came to her.

I should ask mom what she wants to see happen to the museum.

It only seemed fair. Of anyone who deserved to have a say in what should be done, it would be her. Hazel finished her run, showered back at the motel, and headed over for another visit with Mom.

***

“So that’s what’s happening over at the museum,” Hazel said as she sat by Mom’s bed, explaining about the tickets and fines they’d received. “Those darn zoning boards, you know?”

Mom’s eyes moved upward, indicating engagement with Hazel’s story.

Hazel took a deep breath. “So, question for you. If you had it your way; what would you do with the museum?”

She gave her a few moments to think. “Like, would you want to call it a day, and sell the stuff inside and the land? Or would you keep it in the family, even maybe finding a way to reopen it?”

Hazel paused again and looked away. This was still so unnerving.

“So tell me yes or no- sell the museum?”

 Mom didn’t respond right away, but after a few moments, she signaled ‘no’.

 Hazel wrinkled her brow. “So you want to keep it?”

 Mom relayed ‘yes’

“Ok, cool. Good to know.” Then she thought of something else. “Has Lane asked you about it?”

 She couldn’t decipher a response; Mom looked like she was falling asleep.

 Hazel got up from her chair. “That’s alright. Do you want the TV back on?”

But she was already out. At least she got the information she really needed. Mom wanted to see the museum stay. Whether that would be realistically possible, she was unsure. Whether Lane would agree with that, she also didn’t know. What she did know was that she needed to make mom’s wishes known and vouch for her. It was the least she could do. Mom was still alive in there, and still a real person; just stuck in the most frustrating and unfortunate way.

Back out at the museum a little while later, Hazel arrived to find that her window supplies had been already dropped off. She rubbed her sweaty palms together and surveyed the neatly strapped bundle of stuff. “Well, here goes nothing.”

She dragged the items inside, out of the glaring sun and sultry heat. It was much cooler inside the sealed up building, but she knew that wouldn’t last once she started opening up and airing the place out. The two measly bottles of drinking water she packed sure wouldn’t last long either.

Hazel got down to work, and toiled away as long as she could stand it. With some thick translucent plastic paneling cut to size, strips of lumber for framing, hardware, and manual dexterity… Hazel had four DIY windows fashioned in a reasonable amount of time. They looked almost identical to the original ones Dad made years earlier.

She got two of the four windows tacked in to their proper spots in the building wall in before deciding to call it quits for the day. She was out of water and beginning to feel woozy. As much as she didn’t want anything to do with the place…she had to do it, there was nothing else closer. She got on her bike and rode down to that evil truck stop…to quench her thirst and soak up in some air conditioning.     

Sitting down at a table in the dining area of the travel plaza with an extra-large fountain drink cup of ice water, Hazel sucked the liquid down. She began to look around the room at the decorations suspended from the ceiling and mounted on the walls. The whole place had a rustic vibe, with cute trendy farmhouse type décor mixed with some antique farm equipment. She found the atmosphere gratingly similar to the vibe put off by one of those cheesy pop country radio hits, clearly written by someone who’d never, ever been whipped in the face with a wet cow tail.

Her jaw dropped as she scanned the wall behind her. She stood up abruptly and stared, then rubbed her eyes. Surely she was hallucinating. Oh. My. What?

Grandma’s painting- on the truck stop wall! The one of their farm that once hung proudly on their living room wall. When exactly, but maybe more importantly, why, would her parents sell something as special as that?

Hazel walked up to it to have a closer look. She could see the bumps of the oil paint under the glass frame. Yep, genuine. Something else struck her. There was no caption anywhere. No tag citing the artist. Nothing saying that this restaurant used to be, no so very long ago, Attmyer Acres.

That really made her start to fume. “No one knows,” she muttered. How she wanted to jump up on a table top and scream about it. To these random strangers know, the Attmyers were here first! Here the last remaining dairy farm in the whole county once stood. This was her sacred ground. To yell about the injustice of it all…of dreams and family legacy- buried forever under massive asphalt parking lots. 

It took every ounce of self-control in her to just leave the building and not do anything stupid. She couldn’t afford that. Her previous brush with the criminal justice system was quite enough. Instead, she gritted her teeth and pushed all of her anger into the bike pedals, and sped away. 

We’re being erased. They might have taken the farm, but you know what? That’s all they get- the museum is staying. Somehow, I’ll make sure of it.

Part of her couldn’t even believe how the tides had turned, regarding her feelings toward the museum. Was she really losing her mind?

As she rode on, her passions began to cool, and she could think more clearly again. Tourists like museums. Of course they do. If this town is all about the tourists now; why wouldn’t the “re-imagine” people want to help save such a unique landmark?

That was it. She’s make a visit to city hall and petition the folks in charge of all these grand improvements. Obviously they were just dripping with cash so why not? Genius. She turned and pedaled towards City Hall.  

***

Hazel double checked the nameplate, and knocked her fist gingerly against the office door at City Hall. It was opened just a crack for her to see in.

“Come in,” a man’s voice called from within.

Hazel pushed the door open and stepped inside. She smiled. “Good afternoon, sir. Uh, Mr. Turnburton?”

“Aye.” He furrowed his brow as he looked at her. “Are you with the paddleboat company?”

Hazel pursed her lips and narrowed her eyes. “Paddleboats? Oh, no I’m not…sorry.”

“Pfft, I’ve been waiting on them all day,” said Mr. Turnburton, not looking thrilled. He pulled his chair closer to his desk. With his elbows propped on the desk, he folded his hands together and rested his chin on top of them. “Anyway, I apologize. Who are you then?” 

“Hazel Attmyer, sir.” She brushed a stray hair back from her face. “I’m here to petition your assistance- with repairing a building that is significant to the history of this city.”

He rolled his chair back away from the desk abruptly. “Did you say Attmyer?” He reached into a cubby hole on top of a filing cabinet behind him and grabbed a piece of paper. He took a pen from behind his ear and clicked it several times. He frowned again, more intensely this time. “What’s the building you’re talking about?”

Attmyer ’s Lawnmower Utopia. Out by the interstate. Been there for years, sir.” She continued to explain her current family struggles, and the predicament of the museum. 

He listened to her story, and scribbled down a few notes on his paper. Then he crumpled it up and dramatically chucked it into a wastebasket on the other side of the room. He rolled his chair back up to his desk again.

“Look, Ms. Attmyer . I appreciate the fire in your belly and desire to preserve this relic of family and city history. However… I don’t think you understand, but here in Malcom City these days- we lead with an environmental conscience. The need to protect and preserve this rare planet for the future… is at the forefront of everything we do. And of every project we take on.”

Hazel nodded fervently. “And I totally agree with that, sir. I absolutely support that. You’ve done an amazing job cleaning up this town. Trust me I know, I grew up here.”

“So I see.” He slapped his palms down forcefully on his desk and then stood up. Hazel cringed and stepped back. Something told her she’d already lost here.

“Listen, and I’m just going to be frank with you about this. You Attmyers are no friends of the environment. Never have been. There is nothing noble about your so called legacy that your ancestors left-unless you consider mass pollution from their factory and ecosystem destruction the kind of thing you like to praise and leave behind. A museum honoring all that? I don’t think so. Not in my city.”

Mr. Turnburton moved towards Hazel, not so subtly backing her towards the door.

“Again, sir. I totally get that. But I’m sorry, every story has its bad parts. Do we just let that be the only thing remembered?” She cleared her throat that was rapidly growing scratchy. “Did you know, that my parents contributed money, for years; to the cleanup efforts around the city? They did care; they never ignored the fact that there were problems.”

Mr. Turnburton had her in the doorway. He raised his eyebrows. “Not good enough.”   

She stood her ground. “And while we’re throwing around all these buzzwords, did you also know that my grandfather’s company was founded on the principles of workplace equality- at a time in history when that wasn’t exactly the norm? Do we just now sweep that good under the rug and turn away?”

Mr. Turrent was breathing hard. “Ms. Attmyer, in a moment I will need you to leave. But you are barking up the wrong tree here. Go over to the historical society uptown and bother Mr. Floyd. Maybe he can help; you’d be right in his wheelhouse.” He paused and stroked his chin. “Oh, or how about you go down the street from your place to that big bad wonderland of gasoline and diesel?  See if they’ll give you a bailout. Otherwise, you are on your own with this. The yellow ticket and fine I issued you and your building are still in effect. No extensions, no fine reductions. Do you understand?”

Hazel shrunk back. Her shoulders sagged. “Yes sir, understood.”

“Good luck.” With that he shut the door and turned the lock; leaving her alone in the hallway.

She bit her lip. Well crap.

She turned and powerwalked towards the stairs. The historical society; she remembered that place, and a guy named Mr. Floyd. Dad used to hang there a lot and nerd out over old stuff in his spare time. It was worth a shot anyway. She still had to try. It was late afternoon already, if it wasn’t closed yet it would be soon. She needed to hurry

***

Hazel made in to the historical society building a few minutes before 4:30 p.m. Hope someone is still here. She got off her bike and walked around to the front of the building. This structure was really showing its age too. It looked to be about the same vintage and condition as Dad’s museum- with the peeling paint, and sagging gutters with a whole forest of little trees growing in them.  

She got to the front door and stopped. There it was, that same bright yellow code violation tag; stapled right at eye level. She cringed as she reached for the door handle. Oh no, not good.

The door was unlocked at least, so she went inside. Hazel called out into the dimly lit building. “Hello? Mr. Floyd?” 

A man of short stature slowly poked his head out from a door frame at the back of the room.

“Yes? Can I help you?” He emerged fully from behind the door.

Hazel stepped forward, introduced herself, and presented the same story and appeal that she did to Mr. Turnburton. She finished, and the two just stood in silence. The ticking of the massive grandfather clock in the corner of the room seemed to grow louder and louder.

Mr. Floyd lowered himself onto an old church pew type bench that ran along the wall. He stared down at his hands in his lap. “Yes, I was a good friend of your father. Marty was an admirable fellow.” He looked up at Hazel. “If there was something I could do to help you in your efforts out there, I would.”

Hazel nodded slowly but didn’t say anything. Hope was flickering.

“I’ve tried my hardest to stand up to Mr. Turnburton and company since they came in and took over everything. It’s all nice and shiny on the outside but that’s about it.” He shook his head. “Notice the tag on my front door? They slapped me with the same sentence here too. Call me a conspiracy theorist, but they have an agenda. People like you and me simply don’t fit.”

Hazel frowned. “But why bury history like this? This city wouldn’t even exist otherwise…”

He smiled slightly. “I guess you do give me hope that they did make some of you millennials with sensible brains after all. But yes, it boggles this old guy’s mind too. It ain’t the right way to go.”  

“Yeah.” She shook her head sadly.

“I’m tired, miss. I’ve made my contribution to this place. I can’t afford to fix what they want me to, I’m done. I have to accept my defeat and retire with grace. Let the kids have their day now.” He got up from his bench. “I’m sorry.”

Hazel sighed but tried to give him a smile. “That’s okay, sir. I understand. I’m sorry they came after you too. You do deserve a nice retirement though, don’t cheat yourself out of that.”

***

Hazel fled the historical society building on her bike. That melancholy, fatigued look on Mr. Floyd’s face might as well been branded onto her brain. She couldn’t unsee it.

A thunderstorm was brewing in the west. Fat raindrops began to pelt Hazel’s arms, a small relief. She had planned to just go back to her motel room before the sky released its full fury, but as if someone or something else had grabbed the handlebars of the bike, she found herself automatically heading back towards the museum.

Suddenly she didn’t see Mr. Floyd anymore- his face morphed into a flashback of her defeated father, sitting next to her in the truck, the morning after her infamous vandalism spree.    

In a heartbeat, her thoughts began to spiral downward. Despite all her hard work and commitment to changing her thought patterns, that old familiar funnel of self-loathing over her past sucked her down. She knew better than to wallow around there- the pitfalls loomed around the corner. But something about beating herself up over everything; it felt so good for all the wrong reasons.  

Lane’s right. It’s too late. I’m too late.   

She made it to the museum, just as a bolt of lightning struck something in the nearby woods too close for comfort. Pulling the back door closed behind her, she shut out the angry wind. Hazel flipped on the light in the messy back workshop and sank down onto a greasy wooden stool that sat in the corner. Tears began to well up in her eyes.  

How pretentious of her to think she could actually just show back up like this and make a difference in this situation. To think she was somehow now capable of doing anything other than breaking things and hurting the people who loved her the most.

The world moved on a long time ago without her. Hazel was still, and rightly so- a nobody in this place. Her new found nostalgic feelings about a dusty old building meant nothing to anybody else. They certainly didn’t carry enough weight to triumph over the money and power held by those in charge.

After sulking for quite some time, she wiped her eyes with the back of her hand and looked up. The pictures of her family from years ago tacked to the wall caught her attention; her throat constricted all over again. I don’t deserve them. She blinked hard and diverted her line of sight away from the photographs.  

Then Hazel fixated on something else. That bottle of bourbon on the shelf.  

Oh how the craving hit her. She thought she would have been stronger than this by now, but apparently not. To put the bottle to her lips and pacify her situation was all she wanted- like she used to do without giving a second thought.

What difference does it even make anymore? She picked up the bottle and opened it, a familiar sweet scent tickled her nostrils.   

A competing thought grabbed her. Wait, what the hell am I doing?

She knew she couldn’t win this match alone. Not here. While still gripping the bottle in one hand, she groped for her phone with the other. Trembling, she managed to pull up Veronica’s phone number. Hazel just stared at the screen and the image of her friend smiling back at her.  

For some reason she couldn’t bring herself to hit the button to call. She felt frozen in limbo- unable to put the bottle down, and unable to call Veronica.

Then she heard something different. The wail of a siren? She ignored it at first, ready to give in to the temptation of the whiskey. Just once… The alarm sound stopped and then started again. But it didn’t sound like it was from a moving vehicle. It was stationary- from the front parking lot of the museum. Then she heard muffled yelling.

“Okay, what in the world?” Exasperated, Hazel got up. She set the bottle down, shoved her phone back in her pocket, and headed out towards the front entrance of the building to investigate.

She grabbed a piece of metal pipe out of a box of scrap metal, just in case there was a serial killer out there or something; trying to lure her to her death. Gingerly, she unlocked the door and opened it just a crack.

 A fancy SUV sat parked out in front of the building, lights flashing and alarm sounding. A middle aged woman circled the vehicle, holding up what looked like a key fob and pointing it at the SUV as she walked around helter-skelter.

Hazel set her defense weapon down and went outside. The alarm finally quit.

“Uh, hi there?” Hazel called out to the woman as she tiptoed towards her. “Is everything okay?”

The lady turned around, her face clearly flushing with embarrassment. “Oh. Hello. I’m sorry. Yes, yes…everything is fine. I’m just old and dumb and this is a fancy rental car.” She shook her head and laughed. “Tripped the alarm somehow and couldn’t figure out how to turn it off…again! All these bells and whistles- gets me every time. My name is Kate, by the way.”  

Hazel chuckled and smiled at her. “Oh, no worries. I know how it goes.” Hazel watched the passenger side door of the SUV open and a teenage girl slid out. “Hi, Kate. I’m Hazel. Can I help you with something?”

The storm had moved on through, letting the sun poke back out.

 “Well, we weren’t even sure if this museum was open anymore, but we were passing through and saw the billboard, so we had to check,” Kate said, glancing at her wrist watch. “I’m guessing you’re probably trying to close up for the day though, aren’t you?”

The girl started to whisper something in Kate’s ear before Hazel could say anything.

“Okay honey, I’ll ask,” Kate said to the girl. She turned back to Hazel and laid her hand on the girl’s shoulder. “This is my granddaughter, Willow. She’d like to ask you a question, is that okay?”

Hazel shrugged. “Uh, sure. Of course.”

Kate nodded to Willow and waved her on.

Willow beamed as she stepped towards Hazel. She clasped her hands behind her back and exhaled forcefully. “Excuse me, miss? Are you a member of the Attmyer family?”

Hazel was puzzled a bit but grinned back. “Um Yes, actually. I’m Hazel Attmyer; pleasure to meet you.” She and the girl shook hands. “And you’re… Willow? Love your name by the way, so pretty!”    

The girl’s smile grew even bigger. “Oh my gosh! I’m sooo excited!” She squealed and pulled a bandana out of her back pocket and held it out towards Hazel. “Can I please have your autograph? Pleeaase?”

Hazel furrowed her brow, out of confusion more than anything. Okay, weird. Me…scorned one minute, a celebrity the next?

She turned back to Willow and accepted the bandana. As she did, she noticed a logo for a lawnmower repair shop stitched on it. “Sure, if you want. I’ll have to find a marker or something to write with. So I get it, you must be a lawnmower enthusiast like my dad was, huh?”

That was the only thing she could think of as to why anyone would want her autograph.

Willow suddenly shot her grandmother an anxious, confused look. “Enthusi-what?” She stumbled over the pronunciation.

En-thu-si-ast, Willow. She’s asking if lawnmowers are your favorite thing in the world.” Kate produced a permanent marker from inside her purse and handed it to Hazel. “Here, I came prepared. See, it pays to have a messy purse sometimes.”

“Thanks.” Hazel uncapped the marker and prepared to ink the fabric.

“Seriously though, if you’re closed for the night, we can come back tomorrow.” Kate slapped at a mosquito that landed on her arm.  “Don’t want to keep you away from things you need to do.”

Hazel hesitated at first, but then shook her head. “Nah, I didn’t really have anything planned.” She noticed through the open rear door of the SUV what looked like luggage, and maybe some tent poles and tarp like material. “You two going camping out at the lake on the other side of town?”

“No, we’re actually moseying our way back to Scranton. We decided to stop here and check into a motel for the night,” said Kate. “We were camping up at Lake Michigan all last week though. I promised Willow we could swing by to see if your museum was still here.”  

Things were finally starting to make more sense to Hazel. How could she explain the disorganized state of the museum interior without point blank bursting their bubble? She cleared her throat.

“Ah, very cool. You are welcome to come in and check things out. I do have to warn you though, we’re doing some…eh, renovations around here and it’s a little messy inside. You know, new windows, rearranging exhibits- stuff like that and the chaos that goes with it.”

 Willow bounced up and down with excitement. Hazel shuffled towards the front door of the building.

She couldn’t just turn them away. What would letting them have a peek around hurt?

“Oh, don’t worry about it.” Kate sniffed, and took a tissue out of her handbag and dabbed at her nose. She turned back to Willow with a stern expression on her face. “Listen to Hazel’s instructions when we go in, please. Watch yourself.”

Willow’s grin turned solemn and her voice sincere. “Yes Grandma, I will.”

Hazel smiled, held the door open, and motioned them through. “After you.”

 Willow shrieked with excitement again. She’d disappeared inside the building before Hazel even finished shutting the door.

Hazel turned on some more lights and pushed a few boxes of parts that were in the middle of the floor into a corner. “Just watch your step, but yeah- this big room holds the bulk of our collection as you can probably tell.” She gave Willow a thumbs up gesture. “Enjoy.”

It took mere moments for Willow to be engrossed in looking at the dusty old machines. Hazel couldn’t help but stare in amazement. She couldn’t imagine that Willow had many girlfriends her age who also shared her fascination with lawnmowers- but maybe she was wrong.

Kate walked a lap around the displays and then came back to join Hazel where she stood.  

She glanced at Hazel and then looked away. She pressed a tissue to her eyes, then wiped her nose again.

 A lump formed in Hazel’s throat. “Hey… you okay?”

Kate inhaled, shook her head, and then managed a small smile. “Do you have any idea how much of a hero you are to us right now?”

Feeling dazed, Hazel blinked. “A hero? Wait, what? No-”

“I’ll need to explain.”

 Hazel squinted. “Uh, please do.”

“I’m witnessing a miracle with my own eyes. Willow’s been through things no kid should ever have to go through.” Tears streaked down Kate’s face; she made no effort to hide it anymore. “Last Thanksgiving… I haven’t seen Willow this happy and full of life since last Thanksgiving.”

She paused to compose herself. “We lost her mother in December. Long story short, she had a lot of struggle in her life- she overdosed two weeks before Christmas.”       

Everything stood still in Hazel’s perception as she came to realize the weight of Kate’s story and where the girl who swooned over the machines was coming from. Her voice caught in her throat. She grew uncomfortably hot. “Oh my, I’m so sorry to hear.” Her words sounded so inadequate and canned as she heard herself say them.

Hazel found stools for the two of them to sit down on, and Kate continued her story.

“I don’t get Willow’s obsession with lawnmowers. I never have and probably never will, but it’s her thing. It’s given her something that she can really shine in, as she’s always struggled getting along in school,” Kate explained. “Give her something hands on and mechanical like that and she’s an absolute genius.”  

“Miranda…her mom; she was doing so well there for a long time. She did her time, worked hard to get her life back, and cleaned up…all that. Then she earned custody of Willow again.”

Kate paused and pressed her fingertips together. “So where did the lawnmowers come in? Tinkering with engines was something Willow really bonded with her mom over. It was odd to me, a bit dangerous… but amazing. For the first time in pretty much her whole life, Willow actually had a mom- until the bottom dropped out again and she didn’t.”

“Wow.” It was all Hazel could say as she studied the vulnerable girl who’d walked into her self-absorbed world. The guilt she felt for getting as close as she did to turning back to her own vices earlier that evening had her silently praying for forgiveness.

Kate continued talking. “After Miranda passed, we lost access to the garage where she and Willow would work on their projects. She lost all interest in it anyway for a while in all the grief; I struggled to get through to her at all. That’s why I’m so happy this worked out, it gives me hope Thank you for letting us in. It means a lot.”

Hazel squeezed her eyes shut before looking at Kate again. “Oh. Well honestly, I have to thank you too. I was needing some hope tonight as well; you two brought it.”

She went on to quietly tell the truth about the plight of the museum, and a little about her own family.

Kate’s expression held warmth and understanding. She patted Hazel’s knee gently. “Honey, I honestly figured it out right away that this place hasn’t been in business for a long time. Depending on what you and your family ends up deciding about the future, we might be able to help.”

“See, my son in-law is a contractor. He does roofing and siding and the like. Knowing him, I’m sure he’d be willing to come out some weekend and help you get the building back up to code.” She and Hazel locked eyes. “Just felt like I should throw that out there.”       

“I appreciate that, thank you,” Hazel replied. “By the way, you should encourage Willow to keep studying engine mechanics as a career path maybe- she’s a natural.”

“I want to, she starts high school in the fall. I’m hoping that will open up some options. She’s been in special education programs all along, but I haven’t been thrilled about how they’ve dealt with her over the years. Sometimes that makes things harder. But I will fight for her and see about changing schools if needed.”

“Definitely,” said Hazel.

Kate and Willow finished looking around and retired to their motel a little while later. They planned to come back in the morning. The pair wanted to help sort through the boxes of mower parts as a thank you for keeping Hazel out late that night. Willow certainly knew her stuff too, and was super excited to come back.

Hazel stood alone in the museum once again. She was still trying to grasp everything that just transpired in the whirlwind of the evening’s events. As she pictured Willow with all her young enthusiasm and passion, she couldn’t help but remember and feel the similar emotions from her teenage years.

She worried for Willow. With all the tragedy, disappointment, and confusion in her life, she feared she was at risk of walking down the same path that Hazel did- or the one that took her mother’s life. Hazel knew what it was like to lose her sense of purpose, and to watch her aspirations die out.  

 There was a reason why she crossed paths with the girl during one of her darkest hours. Just when she was about to be tricked into thinking that it made no real difference to anyone if she fought to stay sober or not. The timing honestly had her freaked out, yet thankful.

She walked through the showroom and looked over all of her father’s metal implements yet again. If I can take these broken old machines and help save Willow’s dreams and future… I will. It’s worth it.  

***

The next morning, Hazel went out to the museum early, before Willow and Kate were due to show up. She picked up coffee and donuts and other drinks and snacks to keep them fueled during their great organization adventure. She found herself shivering in the chilly morning air; chilly in contrast to yesterday’s heat anyway.

She went back into the messy workshop to search for a broom. Hazel stopped abruptly as the open liquor bottle greeted her, right where she had left it in the middle of the floor. She cringed at the memory.

She picked the container up and glared at it. “Time for you to go.”  

Hazel opened up the back door and went outside. She walked back to an old concrete patio area, facing out towards a large empty field. Tall weeds and grass grew up through every crack in the neglected pavement, almost obscuring it completely. Inhaling deeply, she held the bottle up high and chucked it against the ground with all her might. The liquid splashed everywhere and the glass shattered into dozens of satisfying pieces. She smiled and turned to go back inside.

Take that, you still don’t own me.  

The darned broom was still MIA, but as she searched around the backroom, she again took notice of the big box her dad had left.

To Build With the Grandkids Someday

 Those words scrawled on the side still stabbed at her. But then she had an idea.

I could try to build whatever is inside with Willow and let her take it home.

She opened up the box and looked over the pieces inside again. It felt right, better than letting it waste away on a shelf forever. She began to get choked up at the thought. Walking back out into the other room, she glanced up towards the ceiling.

“I hope you’d be okay with this…but Dad, this is for you.”

***

Later that morning, after the three of them had sorted through quite a few boxes of stuff, Hazel pulled Kate aside and asked if it was be okay with her if she and Willow worked on assembling what was in her Dad’s “sort of a mystery”  box. Kate agreed and Hazel brought out the parts.

Hazel knelt down on the floor to join Willow. “What do you think Willow, would you like to build this with me?”

Willow’s eyes grew wide as she zeroed in on what Hazel revealed. “Woah! Is this a world famous Attmyer Original Series rotary mower?”

Hazel felt her cheeks growing red with embarrassment- she really wasn’t sure and there wasn’t exactly any instruction manuals in the box. Thanks Dad.  “Well now, you’re the expert. Is that what it looks like to you?”

Willow held up a piece that had a metal plaque on it, inscribed with a serial number and other details. “It is! Wow, it’s brand new- these are like super, duper rare!”

“Sweet, looks like you are one lucky girl today.” Hazel grinned. Then she got serious. “Willow, look. Your grandma told me, I know working on stuff like this was something you and your mom used to do- and I’m really sorry for your loss.”

Her expression grew sad. She stared at the wooden piece she still held. “Oh. Yeah.”

“Please know, I’m not trying to take your mom’s place or anything, no one can do that. But my parents wanted this saved for someone special, and I think you fit the bill. I thought we could build this as like a tribute to your mom, so then you can take it home and have something that will help you remember the good times you had, and the passions she helped you find.” Hazel paused and made eye contact with Willow. “Are you okay with that?”  

Her sad expression melted into a timid smile. Then she unexpectedly lunged forward and gave Hazel a hug, nearly knocking her backward. “Oh, I’d love that! Thank you!”

“Awesome, let’s get to work.” Hazel straightened up and slapped her hands against her thighs. “Show me how to build this thing!”  

By early afternoon, they had the contraption finished, and Willow and Kate were getting ready to leave and continue their trip home. They managed to get the lawnmower loaded into their vehicle somehow, amongst all the camping gear. Then it was time to say their final goodbyes.

“Well Ms. Attmyer, you have my phone number,” said Kate as they stood out at the SUV, about ready to climb in. “Please keep us posted, we’ll gladly make another weekend trip out to help you guys out with things. My son in-law is willing too.”

Hazel reached out and shook hands with Kate. “I sure will- thanks again. Take care.”

***

Hazel gnawed at her lip as she held her phone to her ear and listened to the ring on the other end of the line. Her nerves were getting the best of her again.

“Hello? Hazel?

“Hey Lane, it’s me.”

He half sighed, half groaned in response. “Ok, now what?

She took a deep breath. “Lane, we need to find a way to keep the museum alive and open for business!”

Silence. Then sarcastic laughter. “Hazel Attmyer , shut the front door! You want to what? Ok, now I know you are definitely on crack or something. Good bye.”

“Oh stop it just hold on,” Hazel shot back. “I know it’s hard to believe, but I’m being serious. I don’t want to see it gone anymore. Neither does Mom– neither do my new friends Willow and Kate.”  

He sighed again, sounding very exasperated. “I’m so confused right now, like, are you sure you’re okay? Who in the world are Willow and Kate and what do they have to do with anything?”

“Oh, and I didn’t even mention what I learned about Mr. Turnburton yet and his re-imagine plot thing,” Hazel continued saying. “He wants to just cut out the parts of town history that he doesn’t like and anything that reminds him of it; meaning our museum! Who even does that?”

Lane grunted. “Well where in the world have you been? That sort of stuff seems to be the trend these days.”  

“But Lane, I hope you’ll come out to see mom before I have to go back to Chicago.” Her voice started to shake. “There’s some other things I need to talk to you about first, but only if you’re willing to see and at least listen to me after all these years. I promise to listen to you, too.”

He didn’t say anything for a while, but Hazel could hear his heavy breathing. “I was actually just packing my bag to leave.” The volume of his voice dropped. “I’ll let you know when I get in, okay? I guess we do need to talk.”

***

Upon finishing the phone call with her brother; she biked off to check in with Mom again.

Mom wasn’t in her room when Hazel got there. Her physical therapist had been working with her and getting her used to using a special wheelchair. Hazel found her out in the peaceful garden area that the facility had set up for residents to enjoy. She pulled up a chair and joined Mom out on the patio amongst the flowers. Hazel knew she might be in for another uphill battle once Lane arrived, but she knew she had to do her best and press forward.    

“Don’t worry Mom, I’m working to make sure that the legacy that you and Dad built will not be forgotten. You worked too hard for too many years for it all to disappear. The best I can do is to just keep building on to what you started.”

She paused and glanced down, nervously picking at a hangnail. She looked at her mother again, still as brave and as lovely as ever. ”Call me crazy, Mom. But I see Dad’s museum as a hopeful place now. We breathed a little bit of life back into a child’s faded dreams today. And thanks to her, maybe I’ve discovered some new ones of my own.”        

As Hazel sat there in that surreal, but beautiful moment, something crazy happened. Even if it was just for a second… she swore she saw Mom smile.  


This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

©2022 Kim Buddington

Sunday Blues

Feeling paralyzed,

An internet induced mind funk?

Everything overanalyzed,

You’re just another boat to be sunk.

Doors are left wide open,

Nothing left to do but run.

Shame you’re too soft spoken,

Dwarfed by anyone with a louder drum.

Better kill those illusions,

They’re giving you the Sunday blues.

A poisonous infusion,

Go and chase it off with something true.

Spinning Color Behind Lenderson’s Deli

By KL Storm

A Fictional Short Story

Thursday night, 6:52 PM…another day of slicing meat and cheese was about to draw to a close. That routine seldom changed for Tristan at Lenderson’s Deli. If he was being completely honest, the old small town family business felt more like a big black hole, threatening to suck him down and under these days. Especially in the last eight months since his dad died suddenly. The show was all his to run now. Everything felt strange and lonely.

With a broom in hand, Tristan swept robotically under the sandwich prep counter and slicing equipment. The bell on the front door of the building jangled, signaling that he had a customer.

“Great,” he muttered under his breath. He propped the broom up against the wall and quickly washed his hands. He turned and then just stopped and squinted at the figure who had just walked in the door. A young woman, probably about his age, stopped in front of the counter.

A blindingly bright neon green scarf adorned her neck and shoulders. She wore a bright yellow hooded sweatshirt, contrasted against an old grungy pair of jeans, quite literally held together with silver duct tape in several spots.

As hard as he could, Tristan couldn’t stop his eyes from drifting back to that neon green scarf.

“Uh hi, can I help you?” He said after what felt like an awkwardly long time.

She loosed the scarf around her neck more and smiled. “Yeah, sorry I know you close in a few minutes. I just wanted to inquire about the room for rent on the sign outside. Is it still available?”

Tristan threw the paper towel that he’d been rolling between his fingers mindlessly in the trash can behind him. “Oh, yes it is actually.” Tristan lived alone in the large apartment above the deli, as he had his whole life. With his father gone, he decided to try to rent out his old room. It was not something he really wanted to deal with that evening though. He sighed inwardly but made eye contact with the woman. “I can give ya a quick tour if you want.”

“If it isn’t too much trouble that would be great.” She brushed her wavy brown hair back out her face. “I haven’t had much luck, there’s like no vacancy in this town. I swear I don’t require much!”

Tristan came out from behind the counter to join the woman and extended his hand towards her. “My name is Tristan Lenderson.”

She shook his hand firmly and smiled slightly. “Nice to meet you. I’m Gina.”

He took her to the front of the building to a door next to the door of the deli which lead to a staircase to the second floor. “You’d have a private bed and bathroom, kitchen and living area would be shared with me. There is a microwave and dorm style fridge already in the bedroom though.” He explained as he showed her to the room and opened the door for her to go in.

She had a quick look around and came back out. “Looks nice and clean. Say, how firm are you on what you’re asking for rent?”  

Tristan rubbed his chin and raised his eyebrows. “Depends I guess.”

Her glanced dropped to the floor. “I don’t have a lot of cash at the moment.” She looked up again. “I left my abusive partner about a year ago, been around, living out of my car for the most part, trying to get back up on my feet. But it’s been really rough lately.”

She held up her hands, palms facing him. “Now hear me, I’m no freeloader. I can pass a drug test. I can give you references. I’ve already put in several job applications here.  I’m also handy with tools, I learn quick. If you need a job done or anything, I’ll do it. Try me.”  

Tristan pinched at his chin again and thought about what to say. Normally he wasn’t one to take kindly to sob stories. But there was something about this Gina character that he just couldn’t quite put a finger on. Part of him said to tell her no, in this day and age, he was probably about to get scammed or something. Still, he felt his heart strangely soften towards her.

“Hmm…have you ever worked in a deli before, Gina?”

She shrugged. “No, but I’ve done time in fast food.”

He nodded. “Here’s my thought. I could really use some help around the deli, it’s just me here since my dad passed but I can’t afford to pay a ton. Especially since that new yuppie deli came in uptown with all their stupid vegan cheeses and whatever…my business has really suffered. If you help me out a few hours here and there, pay me what you can for rent. How does that sound? You can think about if you want, I’ll be here.”

“That’s very kind of you, thank you!” She smiled. “I’m happy to help out in your shop, whatever you need.”

He shut the door to the bedroom and stepped back towards his main kitchen area. “Alright, I’ll type up an agreement for us so we’re all clear on the details. I’ll have it ready by morning. See you then?”

“Sounds like a plan, thank you again,” said Gina. They shook hands again and she left.

Once alone he shook his head and sighed. Tristan wasn’t sure that this was his wisest idea ever. “Well, let’s see how this goes.”

###

Gina did show up as planned the next day, they signed paperwork, settled up, and she had her meager belongings all moved in before Tristan finished up in the Deli that evening. He didn’t see that much of her over the weekend, but they exchanged a few friendly words whenever their paths crossed. So far so good… she seemed quiet and trouble free.

On Sunday night, Tristan walked into his kitchen and on his kitchen table was that neon green scarf with a note card attached to it.

Dear Tristan,

Thank you again for letting me move in to your home. I appreciate it more than words can say. I also noticed that you just couldn’t take your eyes off my green scarf when we first met! I though you must like it! I just had to give it to you as a gift. I hope you enjoy it, I hand made it myself.

Regards, Gina

Tristan felt excess warmth flushing his cheeks. Oh no, was my staring really that obvious? He picked up the scarf and shook his head. Okay, he also had to laugh just a bit.

He hated the color actually. It was so bright, so loud, and so uncalled for. It honestly hurt his head just to look at the thing. But, he tucked it away in his front hall closet, scribbled out a note thanking Gina for the beautiful scarf, and tacked it to her bedroom door.

Luckily, the weather had shifted majorly from the unseasonable cold for April that it was the other day, to unseasonably warm. There would be no reason to wear scarves of any type until the next winter hopefully, and certainly not obnoxious ones!

Monday morning rolled in and Gina met Tristan in the deli at 9am as planned to learn the ropes of the establishment. Immense relief came over Tristan when the pants she chose that day were not patched with duct tape. Another bullet dodged in his personal opinion.

“So that’s basically what I do every morning here,” Tristan said as he finished going through his opening procedures with her. He wiped his hands on his apron. “Any questions?”

She wrinkled her nose and shook her head. “Not really, it’s pretty straight forward.” She turned away from him and appeared to be looking around at the walls and ceiling, especially over in the seating area where people would eat their sandwiches. “It sure is plain Jane in here though. No frills, fuss or bother, huh?”

He shrugged. “Always been like that and I like it. Yeah, it hasn’t changed much in over twenty years but it still meets code. As long as the health inspector is happy,” he paused and pointed at himself, “then this guy is happy. And that’s all I really care about now.”

“Fair enough.” Gina crossed her arms in front of her. “Its just…so much white and beige and brown and gray in here. Sorry to be a critic, but it just feels grumpy to me. Unless using decorations and other colors are against your religion or something?

He squinted at her. “No, I’m not very religious these days. Don’t have time for that nonsense.” He quickly realized that might not have been the right thing to say. “I-I mean no offense if you are or anything.”

She waved her hand at him as if to dismiss his concern. “None taken, I understand.” She paused for a moment and they made eye contact again. “I used to think like that.” 

He didn’t say anything else. She took a rag and spray bottle and began to wipe down a smudged window over in the corner of the room. Tristan went behind the counter and had his back turned to Gina who continued to work out in the seating area.

“Hey, looks like you were gonna paint at some point.” Gina’s voice broke the silence, startling Tristan a little.

Huh, what are you talking about?

He turned around to face her again. She held up a paint sample card to show him. He then notice that there were several more cards of different hues in a line, tucked behind the wood molding strip that created the border between the wood panels on the lower part of the wall and the painted part on the upper section.

His mouth hung open a little as he realized. Those paint cards had literally been there for years, he totally forgot they were even there. Talk about embarrassing. Gina picked up blue card. “Now this one I really like.”

“Oh those,” Tristan said, taking off his ball cap to scratch an itch on his head. “Yeah, my mom wanted to repaint in here- at one time…”

The skin on the back of his neck began to prickle and feel hot. He swallowed hard, this was not a topic he had wanted to get brought up.

She nodded slowly and replaced all the fading samples. “What happened?”

Tristan squirmed. He was not prepared to go there. He didn’t want to talk about this now or ever. “Uh, we just didn’t get around to it. That’s all.” He wasn’t exactly sure if his tone sounded rude or upset, but he felt bad about how he answered.

“Okay, I’m sorry,” Gina replied, her gaze dropped to the floor. “Just curious.”

They both went back to work and didn’t say much to each other for the rest of the day. A cloud of awkwardness hung in the air for Tristan. He imagined it probably wasn’t much better for her either, but he had no idea how to fix it in that moment.

Gina was a good help to Tristan as the week went on. But she still wasn’t much for talking. He tried to give her space. Didn’t she say she was in an abusive relationship before?

Maybe I’m making her uncomfortable. Maybe she thinks I’m mad at her for asking about paint. I’m not, but maybe I’m acting like it. Tristan didn’t know how to deal with these sorts of things. He’d never had much luck with girls anyway.

While he was grateful for the extra hands, business at the deli continued to drop to discouraging levels that week. At the end of the day on Friday, Tristan and Gina closed up shop as usual. Gina disappeared up to her room. Tristan grabbed a beer and a pack of cigarettes and headed towards the back door of the deli to try to de-stress for a while. Something he’d done time and time again with his father. Except now it was only him.

It was still wonderfully warm out, almost tee-shirt weather. About the only positive thing Tristan could think of at the moment.   

The back door of the deli lead to an alleyway. Tristan sat on a set of crumbling brick steps and popped the top off his beer bottle. He had a stellar view of the garbage dumpster, some old rusted restaurant equipment that had been there since the deli’s first and only remodel in 1995, and an abandoned dentist’s chair…exact origins unknown.

Some time passed and Tristan grew drowsy. The sound of the door closing behind him jarred him awake. He looked over his shoulder. It was Gina, carrying something that looked like an old fashioned wooden picnic basket.

She looked startled to see him too. “Oh! I’m sorry, I didn’t know you were out here. Uh, I can go if you-“

“No, no, you don’t have to. Don’t mind me, I’m just trying to relax a bit.” He nodded to her. “Please, sit.”

She shrugged but sunk down onto the step as well. “Oh, alright.” She set her basket down on the asphalt ground beside her.

What in the world does she have in there? His curiosity was stoked.  

“Can I get you anything? A beer?”

She shook her head. “Nah, I’m good. Thanks though.”

He set his bottle down on the ground. “Sorry I never got into weed. If that’s what you’re after.”

She chuckled. “No problem, also not my jam.”

“Cool.” He replied. He nudged a piece of broken glass with his toe.

After a few moments of silence, Gina sighed and looked at him again. “Look Tristan, I’m sorry about what I said about your business and décor and all that other day. I had no place to say that. It was rude and you seemed upset. I’m really sorry.”

Tristan ran his tongue over his lips. “It’s okay. I’m not upset with you. Really.”

She cocked her head and looked at him sternly. “You sure?”

A lump rose in his throat, but he knew he had to tell her the truth. He stared ahead at the logo on the trash dumpster until his vision blurred. “We never repainted the walls because my mom left us.”

She nodded slowly, there was empathy in her pretty green eyes. “I’m sorry. I kind of had a feeling there was more.”

He sighed. “It was a long time ago. I was 14. She had an affair with a rich Italian guy and abandoned us to go marry him. It really wrecked my dad, he never got over it. It just about put him in an early grave.” Tristan shrugged. “But he buried himself in his work and pressed on anyway. He did the best he could.”

“That sucks pretty bad.” Gina said softly. “Looks like he wasn’t the only one wrecked.”

He squinted at her. “Meaning?”

“Oh you know the old saying, like father, like son.”

Her words stung a bit. He felt himself getting more emotional than he’d expected. But she wasn’t wrong. There he was, staring at the glowing end of a cigarette just like his dad would do.

He crushed it out against the ground. Again, he found himself with no good reply. When he looked back over at Gina again, she was opening her basket.

She pulled out a long wooden dowel that had a wood disk on it about three quarters of the way down the stick. There was a small metal hook at one end of the dowel. Atop the disk, sat a fluffy cone of brightly colored string of some sort that was wound around the stick.

Tristan was stumped. There he was, staring at this poor girl again and her strange gadget.

“Is that some kind of dreidel?” Tristan asked.

  She smiled. “No, this is a drop spindle.”

“A what?”

“Back in ancient times, before they invented spinning wheels, this was how people made yarn,” Gina said. “Watch.”

She took a fluffy bunch of brightly dyed multi colored fiber. It looked like a rainbow cloud. She unwound a length of yarn from the spindle and pulled out a tuft of the fluffy fiber and folded it around the end of the yarn and rolled it between her fingers a bit.

She stood up, gave the contraption a twist and let it fall in front of her. It continued to spin as she began pull and stretch the wool at the top, little by little as the rotation of the spindle turned the fibers into a thin tight chord. She gave it another twist and drafted out more wool. She repeated the process until the entire clump of wool disappeared into the yarn. She stopped and added the new yarn to her already existing cone.

“Wow, that’s neat. You’re good at that.” He honestly was fascinated.

“Thanks.” She said, grabbing more wool from her basket. “I have a regular spinning wheel too, but this has been my favorite for the last few years. I really love fiber arts. I’ve been from Boston to Seattle, going to fairs and festivals to teach drop spinning and to sell my yarns.”

“Wow, and now you’re here in nowhere Ohio, hanging out with the most boring guy to ever walk the earth. I’m so sorry.”

She snorted and laughed. “Oh stop it, I don’t think you’re boring.”

He just shook his head and blushed a little. “I don’t know about that.”

“I like traveling around, but it does get old.” Gina continued to spin while talking. “Of course my car is dying a slow painful death and I can’t afford to do much about it right now, so I figured it would be best to cool my jets for a bit and settle down. Plus these crazy gas prices. Got a few things to figure out before I turn 30 in another year, too.”

“Like what?”

She shrugged. “Oh just stuff.”

“Right, same here I guess.” Tristan knew the feeling. This wasn’t exactly where he envisioned himself to be at age 27. He never really had a concrete plan to go out and cure diseases or anything, but his present reality wasn’t it either.

He changed the subject a little. He was actually enjoying getting to know this stranger more. “Where are you from originally?”

“The Adirondack mountains of New York State,” she replied. “A little town you wouldn’t know. My neighbors while I was growing up ran a mill where they took in raw wool from the sheep and cleaned it up to get it ready for spinning. That’s how I got into the wool thing. Beautiful country, but I had to get away and wander…at least for a while.”

“That’s interesting,” he said.

She continued to make her yarn, making the process look effortless.

She glanced at him. “Do you ever get a day off from the deli?

He blew out a puff of air through his nostrils. “Hardly.”

She shook her head. “Seven days a week in there, yep that would wear anyone out. Shame nobody takes Sundays to actually slow down anymore.”

He sighed. “Yeah, well sometimes that’s just not an option.”

Their conversation dropped off again. Gina gave her spindle another twist. Tristan had to force himself to look away. He was mesmerized by her crafting, but he felt awkward because he couldn’t watch her work without making it appear like he was staring at her chest area. He wasn’t trying to be creepy or anything. But of course, the man he was also couldn’t ignore the natural feminine beauty she was well endowed with either.

“I-I sorry,” he blurted. “I’m not trying to stare at you or you know-“ Oh, now he was only making a bigger fool of himself by opening his mouth. Tristan shut it.

She chuckled slightly. “Oh chill, your fine.”

He leaned back against the step behind him and tried to do as she said. But the questions kept coming. “So is that like, relaxing to do?”

“I find it to be,” she replied. She stopped the spindle and ran the length of yarn she’d just made between her thumb and pointer finger. “I like to think that I’m taking the stress, worry, disappointment and pain of living from my soul and diffusing it out through my fingertips and into the yarn. At the end of the day, I have something lovely and functional. That sure beats hanging onto a bunch of trash that only weighs me down and makes me crazy.”

Tristan nodded. “That’s a very, uh, poetic way of putting it I guess. But good for you.”

Gina shrugged. “Everybody needs something, right?” She stopped stroking the yarn and pointed the spindle at him. “Would you like to have a try at it?”

He laughed. “Heh, yeah you make it look nice and easy. But I don’t know, I think it’s a trap.”

“It’s like anything, practice is key. But everybody has their first time and I promise I won’t laugh.” She gave him a funny look, it came across as a bit flirtatious in Tristan’s interpretation.

He couldn’t resist. “Fine, fine. I’ll give it a whirl…pun intended by the way.”

“Ha- ha, good one.” She secured the end of the yarn she just made to the top end of the spindle and handed it to Tristan. “Grab the end of the yarn with one hand and the spindle with the other. I’ll get you some wool. Got to keep it under tension or else the yarn will just unspin itself and break off.”

With his first twist, the thing spun so fast he didn’t have time to control the thickness of the yarn very well. His section of yarn was about three times thicker than Gina’s. His next try the yarn got way too thin, snapped off, and the spindle clattered to the ground.

He shook his head, growing heated with frustration and embarrassment. “See, yeah I’m failing. It figures.”

“Don’t be so hard on yourself, bud. It happens to everyone I teach. Took me many, many tries to get it myself, trust me.” 

He handed the whole contraption back to her. “Whatever you say, I’m just messing up your work now.”

“I know what, I’ll make you up your own spinning kit so you can practice on your own time,” Gina replied. “Sound good?”

He shrugged. “Sure why not?”

They both retired to their rooms for the night soon after. As Tristan laid down in his bed later, sleep just wouldn’t come. He felt strange.

Gina… he couldn’t stop thinking about her and the encounter they had that evening. Her strange but fascinating hobby. Her approach to life and thought provoking words. Her tasteful figure and kind eyes.

What had gotten into him? He couldn’t let himself fall for a woman. No, no, no Tristan. Romance is bullcrap. Only leads to trouble. You know that well. Think of something else…anything…something important!

He racked his brain for something to distract himself with. That ham shortage they’re predicting! Yes, now that’s a real worry. Focus. How will you keep your loyal customers happy when there is no ham to be found for miles around? What’s your strategy? What would Dad do?    

It was no use. He eventually drifted off to sleep while a movie of a girl making magic with some dyed animal hair behind his boring little shop played on repeat in his head.

###

A few weeks passed by quite swiftly. Gina picked up another job for part of the week and assisted Tristan in the deli on her off days. On one hand he looked forward to the days she helped him. On the other he dreaded it, because her charm had such a big effect on him. He had to work hard to not let it get to him and keep his poker face on.

It was hard to tell what exactly what Gina was all about anyway. Sometimes she’d strike up some small talk with the customers and Tristan. Most of the time she’d just work silently unless spoken to- apparently off in her own world somewhere.

That Saturday night the two of them were cleaning up the deli after a eventful day. Tristan hadn’t been that busy in quite a while so he was pleased, although the low stock of meat remaining for the following day was a bit of a concern.  

“So good news, Tristan,” said Gina randomly, turning her head in his direction as she scrubbed at some dishes in the sink.

He ran a knife through a blade sharpener. “Yeah? What is it?”

“So you know it’s the town spring festival in the park this weekend, right? Well anyway, I’m going to be doing some spinning demonstrations tomorrow evening. I’m pretty stoked, this is my first one in way too long now.”

“Wow, that’s awesome. Congrats Gina.” Tristan smiled at her. “I’m sure the people will love it.” 

“Yeah-“ her voice trailed off into a dreamy whisper. “I was wondering if you’d like to join me, I’d really like that.”

Oh no. Tristan stood stalk still. His hands began to sweat. Does she think he was interested in her? By her body language and tone in that moment, she sure seemed to hint at it.

“What’s wrong?” She smiled again. “Come on, it will be something different for you to do. You know you want to.”

“Well thanks for including me,” he said, nodding to her. “I might have something going on but maybe I can stop by.”

“Sweet.” She just smiled and plunged her hands back into the sink of dishes. “I’ll be there.”  

Well thanks to that invitation, Tristan turned into a nervous wreck for the next 24 hours. Ugh, why am I like this? He knew he should go to be polite. But he just couldn’t bring himself. If I change my mind, I’ll ask her out properly when I’m ready. I’m sure she’ll like that, right?

Sunday nights were usually hectic in the deli for Tristan. He had potato salad and the like to prep for Monday. People were more in the mood now for cold deli salads than they were a few weeks earlier when the weather was nasty. Devoting more time tomorrow to making extra only made sense. Yes, that was sensible…unlike the other “stuff” attempting to intrude his sound mind.

Business is important, Tristan. Get it right.

So that was exactly what he did. Tristan made potato salad alone.

Monday morning Gina texted him and said she wouldn’t be able to come to work that day. No reason given.

A twisty guilty feeling niggled at Tristan’s gut. She didn’t give a reason and he didn’t pry for one, but either way he began to regret last night’s decision. Maybe he didn’t get it right.

On Wednesday, the next day she usually worked, Gina didn’t show up at all. Tristan texted her but got no response. At lunch time he went up to his kitchen and found a note on the table, accompanied by a rather large wad of cash. Pressure rose in his chest as he read her handwriting:

Dear Tristan,

I’m sorry to leave like this but I have to be moving on. Thanks again for everything. Good luck with your business, I’m sure your dad is looking down and is proud of all your hard work.

God bless, Gina

Tristan just stared straight ahead. He dropped the note onto the floor from his shaking hands. Just like she came in, she was gone. That’s how it always goes.

I definitely should have gone to the park with her. For what? Some stupid potato salad. Stupid fool.

He gritted his teeth, dusted himself off and went back to work. Well he tried to go back to work. The truth was he couldn’t. That mysterious women…her aura still lingered in the air. He couldn’t explain it, but going back to the way he was before? Simply out of the question.

It was as if she’d unlocked a part of himself that had been long crusted over by bitterness and who knows what else. She somehow reminded Tristan of how he used to secretly love poetry and the finer artistic things of life. When he was a teen, he would tire quicker than most of the usual boyish activities of his classmates.

He could only take so much of their drinking, tobacco chewing, gun shooting, and pursuits of sexual passion. Sometimes he would sneak off to the poetry section of the library and read. Then he would check out CD’s of full operas, plug in his headphones and listen for hours and lose himself in the dramatic song-soaked stories.

Tristan once had a notebook of his own poems he had penned. Only now did he feel regret over trashing them all. He did that out of shame, when his father caught him writing once and half-jokingly said what he was doing was a waste of time. He could’ve been working instead.

While sitting and thinking that night, Tristan spotted the drop spindle kit that Gina had given him up on the bookshelf. After a little more mental debate, he gave in. Oh okay here goes nothing.

He got the box down and tried to remember what she showed him. He absolutely bombed and had more half spun broken off pieces of yarn on the floor than on his spindle for the first hour or so, but this time he didn’t give up. He finally caught on, found the groove, and spun yarn late into the night. Obnoxious color patterns and all.

This is my life to live. I haven’t done my own thing in far too long and it’s way overdue.  

###

After closing time one night, Tristan looked around at the dreary walls of his deli and sighed. Why did it take him so long to realize? It was as if time stopped at the door and refused to go on. Served him right for business to suffer.

Then he smiled and looked down at the stack of brand new paint sample cards that he held in his hands. So many options. He then picked up a new window poster and tacked it up on the front door with a message for the world to see:

Attention customers. Effective immediately, Lenderson’s Deli will be CLOSED for business on Sundays.

That Saturday night, Tristan got his paint brushes, rollers and primer ready to begin transforming the shop. It became apparent how eerily quiet it was in there. It wasn’t always that way.

When he was a kid, Mom and Dad would always have some sort of music playing. From entire Beethoven symphonies and operas, all the way up to current pop and rock hits, there was a good atmosphere. That was, until the day the silence crept in and the pigment faded from their lives.  

So he dusted off an old CD player and popped in a disk he hadn’t heard in over a decade. It made him feel a bit sad, but refreshed somehow at the same time. Then he painted the night away.

Soon enough, he actually began to enjoy coming to work again. Patrons most certainly noticed and complimented the changes too. Tristan felt more alive than he had in ages. He only wished Gina was there to see it. To see what she’d inspired by just stumbling through his door on an otherwise lackluster Thursday night.

The months began to pass by. Summer came to town, full throttle, followed by the gradual creep of autumn. One November afternoon during a break in the rush of customers, Tristan just so happened to check his phone. A message from a new unknown number. He tapped it to open and stood straight up when he realized. A warm giddy feeling that felt embarrassingly foreign to him flooded in. Is this for real? After all this time? The lengthy text read:

Hi Tristan,

This is Gina, you know that girl who lived with you for a while. Look, I’ve been feeling really bad lately about how I left that day without saying much. I should have just told you a long time ago, but I got scared and ran away. All I can say is sometimes the demons of your past come back to haunt you at the worst possible time. I’m really sorry. I hope you can forgive me. If not, I understand. No need to feel like you have to text me back.

Anyway, if you care, I’m out in Minneapolis now. I got a job teaching fiber arts at an art institute! It’s super parttime at the moment, but still I’m so happy. Who knows where it will lead. I really hope you’re doing well too and things are getting better.

Best, Gina

After he got over his initial disbelief, Tristan knew just what he had to do in response. He couldn’t believe what he was about to do and had no clue where the idea came from but it never felt more right.

Oh this was so not him. Not the guy he’d been for so long anyway. He shoved that thought away. It probably wouldn’t lead to a second chance with the woman, as she was miles away and allegedly happy. Nonetheless, it was to Tristan, in that lovesick part of his being, a teeny tiny sliver of hope that he just might see her again.

He couldn’t mess this up.

Upstairs in his home, he opened the door to the hall closet with trembling, sweaty hands. His heart skipped as his gaze fell on it, still draped over the coat hook on the back wall behind a spare work apron. That darn green scarf. His distaste for the color still remained, however he took it out and squeezed the soft material. It still smelled strongly of the flowery but earthy perfume she wore. He ached to see her.

He went to living room and sat cross-legged on the couch with the scarf draped over the arm and a notebook and pen in his lap. He needed to tell her exactly how he felt about her. About how she’d saved and changed his life. About how she spun color back into his existence. As cliché as it felt, he had to do it. He picked up his pen and began to draft a poem to send to her.

There once was a girl with a neon green scarf…

©2022 KL Storm

The Man in the Steeple

There once was a man in the steeple,

He got stuck there years ago.

They built a new frame down and around;

But he could never get to solid ground.

How he got hung up is hard to say,

There was always something in the way.

Folks supposed to rise and lead,

Stabbed their own right in the back.

Schemes and secrets filled their closet;

Come gang on up like coyotes in a pack.

Now they’re stuck and can’t turn off the faucet!

Watch your step, child,

Don’t get uprooted.

This shouldn’t be surprising,

But the water is polluted.

Oh it’s ever rising!

How he preaches The Word,

They now don’t like.

Kick him to the curb!

Tell him to take a hike!

Oh be careful young one, don’t fall,

Keep guard of your eyes.

You’ll grow up soon, you’ll be asking why.

Going through the files;

Sorting out the lies.

The beast was in there too

She paced amongst the halls…

From the streets straight and narrow,

They so violently careened,

To a path all warped and harrowed.

Got to dress it up in pretty prayers;

Start splitting hairs.

What do they even mean?

They say,

It’s better in here than out there.

Sure it might be so-

But that don’t erase the pain,

Clear confusion ingrained,

Or justify the scare.

To cling to the good times, he tries so hard,

To forget and forgive the bad,

But today the songs all sound the same;

Take him back to that place in his brain.

How he wishes it wasn’t stained and sad!

Is he going insane?

My friend still wedged up in that place,

Can you come down from the steeple?

Sorry it was marred by messed up people!

Sometimes we take it down in haste,

Spur an insurrection,

Lose connection,

Swing it all in the wrong direction.

We’re all supposed to come and love;

Help others heal and find what’s real.

To offer grace, and please,

Stop clipping people in the race.

So in due time sweep up the ashes,

Go get yourself a new pair of glasses.

Look to Jesus-

He alone is sound.

He’s the only one, who,

Won’t twist you all around.

The Edge

She was standing on the edge of a cornfield, empty and brown

That’s how the wise godly man saw her

In the vision he had, holy inspiration all around

A single stalk, upright and alone

One of the few not chopped

By that devil farmer’s blade

A noble thing it would be

If she stood because of faith, like she ought to have

Rather than the fear that held her there back then

Go break it down, churn up the ground

Next she’s found sitting on the edge of a stage

Faith further fading, or not?

The clock and years keep moving

But the chains of her own making

Rust and hold her there like a cage

Doesn’t she know there is no practice round?

She watches babies arrive and then a baby’s father dies

Chances to grow come and go, life starts aching

Sure she can eat her hard feelings

But it only squanders her dime

Never mind enlarging her waistline        

Go break it down, churn up the ground

Now she’s standing on the edge of something new, wild and uncharted

But it’s foggy and hard to see, what is just beyond reach or beneath?

Could be great things ahead, she can’t know until it’s started

Or she could trip and fall

Even to crush the grit of the earth between her teeth

In reality, she’ll probably do it all

Dreams seem clouded over

By disaster, malfunction, and politics awry

Is it worth the trouble? That it is she must believe

Go break it down, churn up the ground

Standing on the edge is outdated, no more time to cry

She won’t fear the mist, she can’t let it win

God please take her hand

She’s ready to go

Jump the edge

It’s time to fly