I walked out onto my deck, set the tray down, and sighed. I looked at my breakfast and didn't feel hungry, but I knew I had to eat. It was my fiftieth birthday, and I had a solid plan of drinking alone all day to celebrate.
I took a drink of my mimosa, because one can't drink all day if they don't start early, and one has to have juice in their drink at seven in the morning or they'd be an alcoholic.
The full English breakfast I made was my favorite. All of the good stuff right there on one plate, what's not to love? Eggs, bacon, sausage, baked beans, tomato, mushrooms, toast, and I even found a shop nearby that sold black pudding. The meal wasn't a calorie bomb as much as it was a nuclear blast of bad-for-you food. Good times.
Before my divorce three years prior, my wife would make me a nice breakfast on my birthday. As our girls grew, they joyfully took over the task, and once they became young adults we went out to breakfast. What teenager wants to get up early and cook, right?
Back in the present, it was a lovely October morning and my twin daughters were away at college. They both attended Northern Illinois in Dekalb and chose to live in the dorms. The campus is only ninety minutes from my house and an hour from their mother, but they don't come home often. I would've been lucky to get a text from them that day. They more than likely forgot it was my birthday having no one to remind them.
As I sopped up the sauce from the beans with the last bit of excessively buttered toast, my phone buzzed with a text.
"Happy Birthday, Cyrus."
I groaned. It was from my ex-wife Zoey. She was the only one that ever used my full name. To everyone else I was Cy. She always said it made her special to have her own name for me, even though I hated it.
As with most of our marriage, all that mattered was what she wanted. And like the good and loving husband I was, she got what she wanted. Including the divorce.
I was going to ignore it, but since she hadn't called or texted in over two years I felt I should respond.
"TY"
That was all she'd get. She wasn't even worth the time for a full 'thank you' or 'thanks.'
I took the tray back into the house and poured another mimosa. Granted, there was much less juice in that one. Fewer calories, you know. A fifty-year-old man had to watch his waistline.
I prided myself on being in shape those days. When I was working for the bank, I had put on a lot of weight. After the divorce, I decided to get into decent shape. One that wasn't like a pear.
I was trim, and with the better diet and regular exercise, I had my blood pressure down and all of my blood test results were in the normal zone. I was proud of that too. It was hard at first but ultimately was worth it. I went from over three hundred pounds down to two ten and my doctor was happy with that.
My phone buzzed again with another text from Zoey.
"Can I buy you lunch?"
I shook my head. I didn't understand why she was bothering me.
"No." Was my well-thought-out reply.
I set the phone down and took a shower. There's nothing like the symbolism of a morning shower. The previous day is washed away and one is revitalized to start a new day.
I looked at myself in the mirror after drying. I was in the best shape of my life, I had all of my hair, and it was mostly black. I wasn't a bad-looking guy, I was just broken inside. Perfectly acceptable for a guy on the back nine of life.
When I walked into the kitchen, I picked up my phone and saw the expected missed text from Zoey.
"You shouldn't be alone on such a milestone birthday."
I laughed. Not at her text, but at the hypocrisy.
I replied, "It's what you wanted."
I knew it would set her off and it didn't take long for the phone to ring. I didn't answer and I turned the phone off. I wouldn't be alone if she hadn't kicked me out.
***
After finishing the bottle of Champagne, I switched to Bloody Mary's. I made a great bloody that had the perfect amount of heat and two pickles. I sat at my desk and pulled up my latest outline.
After the divorce, I decided I would reinvent myself. I wanted to be a writer when I was a kid. I wanted to be Christie or Doyle. I wanted to create a modern detective that new readers would make a classic. That hadn't happened yet. I was still writing erotic romances.
I wasn't making millions, nor was I famous, but I sold enough to pay the bills and build some savings.
The best thing I did after the divorce was to prepay my child support. The twins were seventeen when it ended, and I had to pay until they turned twenty-one. I cashed out my 401k and paid Zoe a lump sum. By doing that, I could quit the job I hated and give writing a chance.
My biggest problem was, I wasn't a very good mystery writer. I still held out hope and I knew eventually I'd figure it out, but in the meantime, I cut my teeth writing romances.
Romances came easier for me and I wasn't bad at them. That was proven when I was able to snag a publisher. I didn't think I was a great writer, but I thought I was improving. As I said, it paid the bills.
I stared at my laptop until the doorbell rang. I sighed, frustrated that my not writing anything would be interrupted. I was surprised when it was a food delivery.
"I didn't order anything," I told the young man.
"I don't know man. It's your address on the slip. Enjoy!"
I thanked the driver and brought it into the kitchen wondering who ordered it and what it was.
The smell told me it was Chinese before I opened the bag. A container of my favorite, Curry Chicken, and a container of Orange Chicken.
"No!" I said to no one, and then the bell rang again. "Fuck!"
Orange Chicken meant it was Zoey. If I didn't want to talk to her, why the hell would she think I wanted to see her.
The bell rang again, and I yelled, "It's open, Zoey."
A moment later, the clicking of her trademark high heels got ever closer. She gasped when we made eye contact.
"Cyrus?"
"Who else would it be?" I grumbled as I loaded a plate with rice and chicken. She looked as amazing as she did when we were kids and it was hard not to look at her.
"Jesus, Cyrus. You look incredible."
I ignored the statement and asked, "What do you really want, Zoey? We haven't spoken since the graduation."
She sighed, never taking her eyes from me.
"Cyrus, I don't want you to spend your birthday alone. I knew you'd be wallowing in self-pity, and..."
"Fuck you!" I spat. "You don't get to come into my home and tell me that. What do you care if I'm wallowing in self-pity, fucking an escort, or sitting in the dark with a gun in my mouth? You gave up the right to care about me when you left me for Greyson."
She hung her head and sat.
"Cyrus, I never stopped caring about you, and I never stopped loving you. I had to leave for my sanity. You were a heart attack waiting to happen and were drinking yourself into an early grave. It broke my heart seeing you like that."
I shook my head, "Yeah, I remember. The drunk fatty made you so miserable, you fucked your boss."
"I never slept with him while we were married."
"That's a fucking lie."
"Okay. I never slept with him before I filed for divorce."
"I still don't believe that."