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Chapter 1
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"Welcome to Adelaide, Australia, where the local time is ten-forty-six AM. The current temperature is twenty-three degrees. We've enjoyed having you fly with us and hope you choose us again for whatever your travel needs." The announcement ended with a pair of high-pitched bells sounding through the cabin.
Aaron Cuthbert sat staring out the window. It had been twenty-three degrees when he had left Minneapolis the day before, yet this was a different twenty-three. Celsius instead of Fahrenheit. Outside the small oval window, he could see the bustling commotion of the airport. A plane sat on the ground opposite his view. Two men dressed in shorts and an orange safety vest were loading the jet with the luggage of other travellers flying to parts unknown. It was a far different view from the one he'd had the day before, where the same windows showed mountains of snow pushed to the side where it would take months to finally melt.
The plane rocked a bit and a moment later another tone chimed through the cabin. The captain made an announcement about getting the doors to the plane ready to open. Aaron was more than ready to start his new life, the adventure that would begin once the passengers started their leisurely escape from the pressurised tube he'd spent the last nineteen hours growing to hate. It was not the plane's fault. At that moment, Aaron was full of hate.
His thumb caressed his finger, where until a month ago there had been a wedding ring. It had taken Aaron nearly a month to get used to that ring after he said, "I do." How long would it take to grow accustomed to that ring being absent now that I do has become "I do no longer?" The divorce wasn't exactly final; his lawyer would have to stand before the judge and finalise the proceedings, but his part had ended. The details had been hammered home, the property divided, and the checks written, to the lawyers, the realtors, and to each other.
Minneapolis had been bleak. A divorce during the coldest, darkest, most dreary month had somehow made the city where he'd grown up, fell in love, felt heartbreak and fell in love again before learning that the romance glorified in Hollywood movies didn't always have a happy ending, feel more than depressing. It had felt cloying, claustrophobic and miserable, like that of a mourner standing in front of a coffin for the very first time. And wasn't divorce just the death of a marriage? His divorce had come slowly, like a long, lingering illness. Maybe if Kasey had cheated on him, he would not have felt so lost.
The thought of staying in Minneapolis, the only place he had ever lived, had lost any appeal. How many times could he listen to his coworkers offer their condolences or call his wife a bitch that didn't deserve him? How many times could he listen to Kasey tell him that it wasn't his fault, that she just didn't love him anymore? What if he ran into her? What if he ran into her friends? Maybe he was running away. Hell, he
was
running away. Flying half-way around the world to put the cold Minnesota winter behind him. To put Kasey behind him.
It was time to start again.
He had felt silly, searching the internet for places as far from Minneapolis as he could find. Perth was the farthest, but it was a little larger than he wanted. He settled on Port Elliot, a small coastal city on the southern coast of Australia, a short drive south from where he had just landed. With the proceeds in his account from selling their homes, he had more than enough money to start over. To begin again in a place where no one knew him or how his heart was aching for the marriage that he knew was ending a year before it died. He would find a place to live while looking for work. Soon enough he would settle into a place where twenty-three degrees meant wearing shorts and t-shirts instead of heavy pants, wool jackets, scarves, hats and gloves. He would watch Christmas movies taking place at the beach instead of freezing cities where the breath of the actors would hang in place like cartoon bubbles. And maybe he would find someone new.
Something new.
The passengers began deplaning, slowly shuffling up the aisle. Soon enough it was time for Aaron to take his place in line. He grabbed his jacket, giving a lopsided grin at the thought of carrying such a heavy coat on such a fine day. He fished his tablet and cell phone from the pocket in front of him, then popped up, joining the procession in the aisle.
An hour later, Aaron Cuthbert was driving a rented SUV, at first flummoxed by driving on the opposite side than he was used to before finding it a distracting challenge. It kept his mind off his divorce and on the road. By the time he had left the city and was cruising south on the A-13, he was feeling quite confident. He would make it to town long before the sun set, find a hotel, and then begin his search for a job when the sun rose on a brand-new day. And isn't that precisely what he was looking for?
The drive south was pleasant enough. He motored through a few small towns, stopping for a bottle of water in the hamlet of Mount Compass. There were rolling hills all around him but nothing that he would call a mountain. Still, it was a pleasant enough drive.
He kept moving south with most of his focus on learning to drive on what he would call "wrong side" every time he got behind the wheel of his rented SUV. The rest of his attention was on the surrounding landscape. Aaron stared beyond the windshield, looking for kangaroos, and finding only disappointment when he spotted horses or cows or flocks of sheep. Where were the kangaroos? Each time a field was swallowed by the surrounding forest he would quietly pout until the forest opened up on another field, only to find that disappointment again.
On the radio, he heard an advertisement for a product he had never heard of being sold in a city that he did not know existed. It was there, with trees on either side of him and the sun shining down from directly overhead that Aaron finally felt like he had left Minnesota behind. He was truly on his own. A stranger in a strange land, as Heinlein once wrote.
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Chapter 2
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After a ninety minute or so drive from the heart of the capital city of South Australia, Adelaide, Aaron entered Port Elliot. The GPS gave him directions to his hotel but as the day was young and the overhead sun quite bright, Aaron opted for some sightseeing, just to pass the time and isn't that all he had now? Time? Time to do what he wanted without having to think about everything he had left behind or the fact that he was a coward running away from everything he had known all because what? His heart was broken?
He drove east down the main street of Port Elliot, North Terrace. Open fields on his left and squat single store homes to his right reminded him of the suburbs where he had grown up. If it wasn't for "wrong side," he could just as easily been driving in Minnesota instead of Port Elliot, Australia.
Further along, while driving down the street, he first saw a pharmacy and a doctor's office on his right sharing a building. Next, Aaron saw the Port Elliot bakery on his left, the name of the business painted on its grey metal roof. He didn't know it at the time, but this was the place that everyone talked about. He would learn very quickly that this place sold the best pies, donuts, cakes, and the like, not just in Port Elliot but the state of South Australia itself. Over to Aaron's right, he saw the local drive-through bottle shop, which Aaron found unusual. It was like a McDonald's drive-through, but instead of serving hamburgers and french fries, a driver could purchase his alcohol without even leaving his car! He smiled at that, wondering if this encouraged drinking and driving, while knowing that it did not.
Next along the road, still on the right, was one of the two pubs in the town. Through the windows, Aaron saw a few patrons at the bar drinking. As Aaron continued to drive along the road, he saw the local supermarket. However, it wasn't your typical supermarket. It was quite small, more a corner store than anything else. Aaron made a mental note of its location, as it was one of the first places he needed to go.
Further along the street, Aaron saw a restaurant, a hairdresser, a chicken store -Chicken Run- which reminded him of the claymation movie that had come out many years before. He kept driving, taking in the sites. He wouldn't commit them all to memory, that would come later, but he made a mental note of all the places he might one day visit. He passed a church, and a few other small retail stores. It seemed to Aaron that the town had all the basics, except a gas station, but nothing more. For gas, Aaron would discover that he would have to travel to Victor Harbour to fuel up, which was a short 10-minute drive.
Aaron made a left-hand turn off the main street to a side street that led to his Hotel. It was a small hotel, only two stories high. There was plenty of parking available outside the hotel, though he wasn't sure if it was because of the time of day or was he visiting out of season. It wasn't something he considered when he made his escape from the States.
Aaron drove into a free spot, got out, and retrieved his luggage from the car's "boot", as the Aussies tend to say, rather than the trunk. How many other strange words would he learn and how long until they became part of his vocabulary? The thought of him formed a genuine smile. The first in far too long. For the first time in a week, he thought that maybe he was doing the right thing after all.