© 2023 Duleigh Lawrence-Townshend. All rights reserved. The author asserts the right to be identified as the author of this story for all portions. All characters are original, any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental. This story or any part thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the expressed written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a review or commentary.
I started writing this as something to do between weekends. Laid off from Comcast, disabled, and watching the world scroll past I looked for something to do. I looked far and wide for a hobby that I enjoyed which didn't cost a fortune and take up too much room, but I never found one that met those three simple requirements. Watching TV movies as the snow built up outside I groaned "I can write better than this." That is when my muse tapped me on the shoulder and whispered in my ear, "Quit bitching and do it."
On the We're a Wonderful Wife timeline this occurs around Chapter 10, and it occurs a full year before Stormwatch - A Blizzard in Buffalo
This is it, the genesis of a lot of things I wrote, but it is the first long story I ever tried, please be kind.
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Andi's Dream
Snowbound
It was a cold, dreary December day, gray, damp, slightly foggy, one of those days where it seems like everyone and everything is dreading an upcoming funeral. Yesterday was cold but sunny, the breeze scattered the dry leaves that danced across the street, the sound of their moving filled the air. Today was damp and foggy, the moisture gluing the leaves in place. A Jeep Gladiator pickup pulled up to Dr. Paul Jarecki's cabin on Trevett Road. It was a green truck, that odd color of olive green that made it look like a military vehicle, unless you've been in the military and know what kind of green they use. It even had decorative stencils to add to the military look, but the stencils miss that one thing that would make the stencils look authentic - "over spray." No, the green was a good green, the stencils were perfect and straight and at the same time the finish was buffed to a gloss. This was not a military vehicle and the driver was not military, not anymore. Josh Gravely stepped out of the truck, walked up to the barn shaped cabin and knocked on the door then entered without waiting for a response from inside. "Hey Doc," he said.
Dr. Jarecki looked up from the document he was reading on his laptop, the scent of smoke from his pipe and bacon from the morning's breakfast filled the air. It was a manly cabin filled with mementos of hunts and fishing expeditions, photographs of Paul Jarecki and friends including Josh holding up fish, or ducks, or deer. At one side of the cabin was a wood stove that warmed the cabin with a snap and crackle, the flames seen through the glass door moved in slow motion from the controlled intake of oxygen. A covered iron pot on top of the stove was slowly coming up to heat, there would be beef stew for dinner tonight. "Heading out?" Paul asked without looking up from the document on the screen. "I thought you had the rest of the week off."
"I did, but Eli called and asked me to come in, he thinks there's a storm coming and we have a new hospital to bring online," said Josh as he reached into Paul's fridge and grabbed a bottle of Genesee beer, pulled up a chair and began to drink. Josh worked at an up-and-coming data storage and networking company and owns the property across the street for recreation, but he lives in Orchard Park, about 25 miles away.
"That's the problem with you former military types, sergeant," said Paul, "they call, you haul. You should learn to relax." The doctor glanced over the top half of his glasses and wrote a note on a legal pad on his desk.
"Said the lieutenant colonel who is reviewing his patients records on his day off," said Josh. "Here's the key to my cabin, if there's a fire you know what to do," and he rose and hung the key ring in Paul's key rack.
"I know, save the rifles and clear your browser history."
Josh placed a fresh beer on Paul's desk for his friend then took a sip from his own beer and said, "Clear the browser history first. I don't have a barn full of hot chicks to keep me company."
"My hot chicks are keeping you in eggs. Besides, don't you have a secretary named McRooster or something like that to drool over?"
Josh sat back down. "It's von Köster and she's the bosses executive assistant. She is keeping this company together."
"I'm just saying," Paul took a sip from the beer that Josh set in front of him, "she's a neighbor. I could put in a good word for you."
"Thank you Doctor J but we are definitely in different leagues. She's pitching for the Yankees and I'm a benchwarmer for a pre-school T-ball league."
Paul took another drink then said, "Don't put yourself down like that. You'll start as center fielder for the local Ace Hardware T-ball team soon... with practice."
Josh rose and zipped up his jacket and moved toward the door, "See you Saturday?"
"Roger that, the Bills are playing the Broncos, it's going to be a good game." Paul then noticed that Josh was still holding the beer bottle as he opened the door and called out, "that's a nickel!" Josh groaned and finished the beer then set the empty bottle on the table so Paul could collect the deposit. "Do you think it's going to snow?"
Josh looked out of the door at the lead gray sky and shrugged. "Nah, probably not," he lied.
"Same here," Paul lied. "Bring some beers on Saturday, I'll put on some venison stew."
Josh backed out of Paul's driveway, then stopped to check his mailbox and double checked the gate on his property then headed to work. It was annoying to come in on a day off but he wanted this project to succeed so he headed in. The trip to his office in Orchard Park was about twenty minutes and by the time he got to the office the snow was starting to fly. It looked like this storm grew some teeth without warning anyone.
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Dr. Adrianna Roberts had flown from her home in Denver Colorado to Buffalo New York for a medical conference to be held at the South Boston Hospital, a new hospital in a growing rural community about 20 miles south of Buffalo. Andi, as she's most commonly called, didn't expect much from this conference, one of the speakers' name rang a bell, but her best friend in the world who now lives in the Buffalo area, Dr. Lucy Kosis, encouraged her to go. Other than the opportunity to come and visit Lucy, there was really no need to go. Looking at the speakers and the list of classes to be held in the seminar, it was all 'stuff' that she wrote many papers on in her past, some even before she got her fellowship. At least University hospital paid for the trip, Andi guessed they figured "What trouble could she get into in Buffalo?"
She brought the twins with her too; they were the joys of her life. Since Lucy left Denver and moved to Buffalo, the twins were the only joy left in Andi's life. They would be starting kindergarten next year so this was the last time she could bring them with her on a business trip, it was the first business trip she had been on since they were born. The last trip she took was a conference in Minneapolis not long before the twins were born.
They landed in Buffalo several days early to unwind at a highly praised B&B, then she had the week-long conference while the twins played with Aunt Lucy, then two weeks of
actual vacation!
They planned on one week spent skiing and tubing in the "snow belt" south of Buffalo, then Christmas week in Niagara Falls and Toronto. Her very best friend and former colleague Lucy would be there to guide them around the area, provide day care during the conference, and being a world class athlete Lucy would be her instructor for the important Nordic skills of tobogganing, inner tubing, and consuming wine by the fire.
Getting out of the airport and into a rental car was easy enough, in fact Buffalo International was one of the easiest airports to get out of that Andi had ever flown into. Soon they were in their rental car heading south, singing along with Christmas carols on Andi's iPhone which she paired with the radio on the rental car. And to the twins' delight it started to snow. She was extremely confident in her winter driving skills having been born and raised in Denver and she visited Grandma and Grandpa Olson in Bismarck, North Dakota almost annually - how hard could winter driving be in Buffalo?
Had they been listening to a local radio station they would have discovered that sports talk switched to weather talk and they were heading into the teeth of a Lake Effect blizzard, the kind of storm that Buffalo is famous for. The snow started in small, wet, widely spaced flakes as they passed New Era Stadium, the home of the Buffalo Bills in Orchard Park, but the further south they drove the heavier the snow fell. As they got closer to their target destination, Springville, not only was the snow flying in earnest there was thunder and lightning. "Thundersnow?" Andi asked no one in particular, "who has thundersnow?"
"Thundersnow! Thundersnow! Thundersnow!" the twins sang along with 'Let It Snow.'
Her windshield wipers could barely keep up with the onslaught, and to make matters worse, when she exited the 219 expressway, she ended up heading west into the countryside rather than east into town and the cozy Bed and Breakfast room waiting for them. She wanted to turn around but there was oncoming traffic which prevented a U turn, and there was no intersections visible.