This is a follow-up to Lovely, Dark and Deep, published in the romance section on 1/25/2022. For a fuller appreciation of what follows, I'd recommend you read that one first.
Rhiana lives in the newer section of this neighborhood. The houses, ranchers and split-levels with lots of glass, were built after the Second World War. But the street pattern conforms to the older section where I grew up, winding and circuitous, the "anti-grid" as someone once called it.
Once inside, we kick off our boots on the two towels left just inside the door. Then Rhiana's mom comes out of the kitchen. "Well look what the wind blew in," she says. "If I'm not mistaken, Rhiana, you left here alone." She looks me up and down, curious but welcoming.
"Mom, this is Aaron Kravitz," Rhiana says. "He once lived around here."
"And we just met on a blind date," I chime in.
Mrs. Schuster grins. "And you obviously hit it off very well." She sticks out her hand. "I'm Roslyn Schuster. Make yourself at home. Here, I'll take your coat."
The woman's got a sense of humor, I think, handing her my ski jacket, while Rhiana gives her a brief rundown on how we met, leaving out the grieving part. "When Aaron began quoting Robert Frost, I just knew I had to bring him home."
"And when she began to quote back, I couldn't resist her invite," I say.
I follow Rhiana into the kitchen, which looks like something out of a nineteen-sixties issue of House Beautiful Magazine. Yellow and turquoise appliances. Brick pattern linoleum floor. Globe lamp attached to a brass rod hanging from the ceiling over a round Formica table. "I'm in the mood for a cup of hot chocolate," Rhiana says. "How about you?"
"Make that two." While she's at the stove, I train my eyes on her cute butt beneath her tight spandex slacks. Boys will be boys, even those still grieving over the death of a fiancΓ©.
Roslyn Schuster comes into the kitchen, makes herself a cup of tea and then joins us at the table. She looks her age, late fifties to sixty, I'd guess, with short, gray-brown hair, a few freckles and a figure that could use some sweat equity to stave off the weight gain endemic to middle-age, female bodies. Per her interest, I tell her what street I grew up on, my current residence and what I do for a living (IT specialist for the state). I then learn that Rhiana teaches sixth grade at a local grade school. "The kids were so sensitive..." Roslyn begins to say, then stops and looks at Rhiana. "Does he know about Sam?" Rhiana nods and she continues. "The kids were so sensitive when Sam was killed. They made her the sweetest condolence card. Even some of their parents sent their condolences and offers to help in any way they could. The kids love her. She was voted teacher of the year. Twice."
"Mom and dad like to brag about me," Rhiana says. "I just love what I do."
I hadn't planned on bringing up my own brush with tragedy, but Roslyn's mention of it gets me to reveal what happened to Kathy. Roslyn places her hand over mine, tells me how sorry she is. "We're kindred spirits in grief," Rhiana says. "Not the happiest thing to have in common, but at least it's not the only thing."
I nod. "That's true. We're both crazy enough to hike in frigid weather."
"And we can quote Robert Frost," Rhiana says.
"Hey, I can do that," Roslyn says. "'Good fences make good neighbors.'"
Rhiana chuckles. "What about the rest?" She looks at me. "Aaron?"
"'Something there is that doesn't love a wall,
That sends the frozen-ground-swell under it,
And spills the upper boulders in the sun...'"
"That's as far as I can get," I admit.
"Still impressive," Roslyn says.
"For some reason, I remember some lines around the middle part," Rhiana says.
"'He is all pine and I am apple orchard