Chapter 12: Friday, July 22, 2016 (Morning)
It was the sound of lawn equipment that awakened me. I glanced at the clock and couldn't believe the time. It was 7:30. Almost ten hours of sleep.
Dawn's warm body was nestled into mine. I stroked her hair and shoulder just softly enough to not awaken her. I imagined she was as sleep deprived as I must have been. I lifted the sheets to ponder her naked, sleeping body.
"Just awesome," I whispered to myself with a smile.
I carefully eased myself out of bed and went to the guest bathroom, bringing some casual clothes with me. I sat the clothing on the counter, and as quietly as I could, brushed my teeth, washed my face, and refreshed my hair with warm water. I towel dried it to erase the bedhead. Putting moccasins on my feet, I went to the kitchen and brewed a Starbucks Sunrise Blend with the Keurig into my insulated mug along with a dose of half-and-half. I brought my iPad and coffee to the balcony to read the news.
The cold front which had triggered the overnight storms had made for a pleasant summer morning. The air was dry and actually a bit cool for July. The landscaping crews were busy doing their thing. The grass was still wet and made their equipment messy, but I figured they knew what they were doing.
Reading the electronic version of
The Dallas Morning News
kept me grounded and attached to "home." It was how I first learned of the devastating EF4 tornado which ripped through the eastern suburbs the day after Christmas seven months earlier. It struck barely fifteen miles from my apartment, and damaged or destroyed several Extecha employees' homes. Thankfully, none of them or their family members sustained more than minor injuries.
I followed my normal prowl through the paper, reading local, international, national, business, saving the sports section for last. If I had lots of time on my hands, I'd work the puzzles. I could usually do a Monday crossword in less than eight minutes. The Sunday one, if I could manage it at all, might take me about an hour.
I brewed my third cup of coffee before starting the sports section. The Rangers were having a decent season. The 'Stros, on the other hand, were lagging.
"I hate Houston," I heard from behind me and felt a hand massage my shoulder. Devo was standing there in her comfy jammies with a cup of coffee in her hand, looking over my shoulder at the Astros box score on my iPad.
"Good morning," I said, bringing her hand to my mouth so I could kiss it.
"You bet it is."
She sat in the other sling-back chair, propped her feet up on the table, and smiled sweetly at me.
"What time is it?" she asked.
I looked at my watch. "Almost nine."
"You're kidding me. I don't remember the last time I slept this late. You wore me out."
"We wore each other out. I just woke up about an hour ago myself."
"It smells so good out here. I love the smell of freshly cut grass."
"That's
gen-yoo-ine
Kentucky Bluegrass. Almost impossible to grow back home."
Dawn sipped her coffee and watched the landscapers work their magic.
I closed my iPad case and sat it on the table. I sat, thinking about the events of the last two weeks, and picked it up. I texted Marcus Deats.
Do you think Ellena is up for visitors?
It took only a few minutes for him to reply.
She kept texting me about work things, so I decided to visit her myself. I'm here at the hospital now. She says she'd appreciate seeing you again since she won't be back in the office before you move back to Dallas.
Good. My friend
I stopped tapping. I realized I had no clue which words to use to refer to Dawn.
I looked over at her. She caught my gaze.
"What's wrong?" she asked.
"What do I call you?"
"Huh?" she asked, with a puzzled expression.
"What do you want me to call you when I'm speaking about you with our peers? My friend? Girlfriend? My former coworker?"
She laughed. "Your bitch."
"God, no! I'm serious, Dawn."
"That's a good question. I haven't thought about it."
I could see by how she was focusing her gaze in the distance that she was considering options in several moments of silence.
"Until everyone at work gets the news of my departure, like maybe for another week or so, let's just refer to each other by name or as a friend. In a few weeks, like after I'm at my new job, I'm definitely calling you my boyfriend." She winked.
"Gotcha," I said.
I tapped the backspace key a few times and texted
Let her know that she can expect visitors around lunchtime. Tell her I'll bring her choice of takeout if she'd like.
I decided to avoid the whole subject with Marcus.
"What was that all about?" Dawn asked.
"I was telling Marcus Deats, the head of security here, that I want to pay Ellena a visit at the hospital. Since he's technically her supervisor, I figure he'd know, so I asked him if she'd be okay with a visit instead of putting her on the spot by asking her or showing up unannounced. I figure she'd tell him she wasn't interested before she'd say it to me. I told him to tell her I'd bring her lunch."
"You're like the best guy ever," Dawn said and stroked my leg.
"I'd like it if you come with me."
"Yeah. Um … okay, sure," she said after a delay.
"Your words don't match your tone of voice."
"Will, I don't know her. I wouldn't want it to be awkward."
My mind immediately waxed to the insidious. "She knows you better than you think, Dawn."
"How's that?" she asked, sipping from her mug.
"She didn't report to Marcus what went on with you and me in my office last week. Hell. I didn't even know myself that there are security cameras in there. They're in the ceiling lights, by the way, but obviously she did. She promised she would keep your photo session on the downlow."
Devo's tawny complexion blanched.
I continued. "She said that, as long as no one else has reason to review the recordings, they'll be overwritten in two weeks, so, I guess, later next week they should be gone forever."
"Shit, Will! Your office just got demolished! Tons of people have probably reviewed the recordings!"