Lost in Sunlit Shadows Drifting
Disclaimer:
This story contains no sex, no cheating, no eroticism, and especially, no cuckolding.
Only a love that is selfless and enduring.
If this is not what you seek in a story, then read no further...
I was standing outside, by the gate next to the driveway. I was at my parents' house in New Avalon, Vermont, staring up at the hillside above, with its grove of tall birch trees. The trees seemed to soar higher, more majestic than I remember. It was a bright glorious morning, and the sun was shining. A perfect morning. I stared wistfully up at the hillside. Great day for a walk before lunch. How many times had I walked up there as a kid, taking in the view? I started to think of those times, racking my head... has it really been so long? How long HAS it been? I don't remember anymore. I get so confused sometimes, I forget...
Time seems to drift. More and more, I lose track of my thoughts. They tumble around, sometimes I can almost grasp them; sometimes I cannot. I stare up at the hillside, longing to go for a walk. I almost feel I have the energy for it. It is a lovely day out. We used to run up there as kids, chase deer, build forts, pretend we were army men fighting the Nazis. My oldest brother had actually gone over there, fighting them for real. I realize I haven't seen Tom, though, in a really long time. For some reason I get sad when I think of Tom, but why should I be sad? He was my brother... but then I remember; he didn't ever come back from fighting the Germans over there. We all lost our taste for playing soldier soon after that.
Maybe I'll call Tom up some time and catch up.
Then I hear a voice behind me. "Darrell, it's almost supper. Darrell...."
Who is Darrell? Right. I'm Darrell. Darrell Cafetta, and this is my place. I glance at the hillside one last time. But to my dismay, I realize it is too late for a walk. It has gotten dark suddenly. Have I really been standing here, all that time, all those hours while the morning drifted into the afternoon and the afternoon into dusk? One can lose track of time here so easily. Time doesn't pass here, it just is. But yet I am alarmed, and confused, how could I have wasted a whole day just standing and staring, not thinking? Maybe there was something wrong with me. I can almost remember there was, a nagging pang of remorse or regret, but I can't quite pin on it.
"Okay, Mom," I reply.
But when I turn around, it is not my mother standing there. And this is not my parents' house. The hillside I am staring up at is not the familiar hills of Vermont. The trees on the hill are strange. Australian looking, not native. I don't remember what they are called. I used to know the name but I forgot it. Just like I used to live at my mother's, but now I live somewhere else. Somewhere out West. When I try to remember how I ended up out here, out in California, I cannot, and that makes me sad. So much is fading now. Just like the light of the rapidly setting sun, as I give the hillside above me one last wistful glance. It is starting to get dark out.
I turn towards the stranger behind me. A young woman. Friendly, but smiling, welcoming with the warmth of home. Who is she? She looks so familiar but... I obviously know her. I shuffle after her, following her inside.
I follow her down a long hallway. Wait, where IS this place? Am I SUPPOSED to be here? I feel lost, out of place. I'm hungry too. Maybe I ought to be going home for dinner. I turn around. But I feel an arm, grabbing me, pulling me back. "Darrell....Come this way." The woman says.
I jerk away angrily, but I see a patient smile on her face and realize, maybe this is important. Maybe I should go with her. She seems nice enough, but still, I'm apprehensive, scared. What if she is trying to poison me? Where is she leading me? She sees my scared expression but comforts me. "We're gonna get you fed! You've been standing out there a while. Nice evening isn't it. Anyway, I hope you're hungry! It's dinner time! We got mashed potatoes and stew, yum!"
Actually, that does sound good right now. Funny, I can't quite remember what mashed potatoes are now- that's the cold, sweet stuff that comes in the crunchy thing you can also eat, isn't it? Or wait, is that something else? Whirling thoughts continue to spin. But no matter what, I feel like I could eat just about anything they put in front of me.
"Okay..." I reply submissively. She leads me into a small dining room. It looks familiar yet somehow not. Like my parent's house, or my old Alpha Tau house, but it is neither. My head feels all foggy and I can't quite place where it is. Geez, I must be really baked, thinking of my Alpha Tau brothers and all those smoke sessions we had, long ago. I mean, REALLY baked. I can't even seem to think straight, my thoughts trail off, spiraling out... how much did I smoke and how long ago was it? And are these the Alpha Tau brothers? Where's Mustache Jim? Petey Bee? Instead, I see a bunch of strangers are seated here. I don't even recognize any of them, and they're all really old. One of the guys knows me though. I almost think I've seen him before. He calls to me, "Hey Darrell. Mash Bake Rolls. We're Smelting Airborne seventy three." That doesn't make any sense to me, but whatever. I hear a lot of things that don't make sense; idle chatter that sounds like English but the words echo incoherently in my head. Something smells good anyway. Oh yeah, that's what mashed potatoes and stew are, now I remember. There are plates of it sitting there at the round table here in the dining room.
The woman leads me to an empty chair and gently seats me down. She's cute. Long dark hair, only she's wearing a rather frumpy outfit; like a maid or an orderly. "Wow, Thank you!" I smile up at her. "I'm Darrell." I add. "Would you like to join me?"
She just smiles and giggles.
The food tastes good, and I see the woman helping a couple of people cut chunks of hearty meat into smaller bite sizes. She offers to help me but I wave her away. I'm not a cripple, you know. Eventually I eat my fill. The yellow warm mushy stuff, (whatever it was called, dang, I just forgot) and the food with the orange, light green and brown chunks is hearty and filling.
"Are you finished? Would you like me to take your plate?" The woman asks. That doesn't make sense to me, but whatever. I hear a lot of things that don't make sense.
She leads me down the hall to a room. I am nervous, scared, trying to remember where I am or how I got here. This isn't the dorm at the University. And I feel utterly drained, stiff after a good workout on the rugby field. Geez, I hope I'm not still sore tomorrow. I think we have practice tomorrow but I'm not even sure what day it is. Maybe I'll give Lorene a call.
All my apprehension vanishes as I walk into the room. There's my bed, the painting of the seaside villa, and my old guitar. Sure, it's all here. My place. I lay down in bed, alone with my thoughts. After a bit, I get up and begin to pace the room restlessly, remembering yet at the same time, forgetting. I pick up the guitar and strum it quietly. I try to play a song, but realize I have completely forgotten how to play it. Where do you put your fingers again? Which are the right chords? I strum it but it only comes out as dissonant noise. Frustrated and angry with myself, I slam the guitar down into the corner and begin pacing the room, practically sobbing with frustration.
Outside, it is dusk. I stare out the window. I remember the day, long ago, or was it just a few days ago...
We are out on the lake. It is dark, but the full moon is out and I can still see the sparkle in her eyes. The deepest sparkling black, deep pools of infinite beauty, her dark hair spilling down over her bikini top. "I get to row!" She says, taking the oars from me. She splashes me with the paddle and laughs, teasingly. We paddle to the shore and tie up at a dock. It is someone's private dock, near one of the big houses on the south shore of the lake. But it's dark out, and the big house about 30 yards behind us up the hill is dark as well, probably because the wealthy summer people who own it have not yet arrived, still too busy in the bustle of their corporate New York city lives to sit back and enjoy what they have. But we have the lake to ourselves, and the dock to ourselves, and we have each other, and nobody else bothers us. We stare up at the stars. I am shy, wondering if it would be okay to reach over and take her hand as we sit here in perfect silence. But I need not worry about being shy, because before I can reach over and take her hand, she reaches over and takes mine. She leans over at me. I can see the beauty and light pooling in her dark eyes, smell the sweetness of her tan summer body, and before I know what I am doing, I lean over her and gently kiss her, for the first time...
...and she embraces me and we enjoy each other there on the dock, under the stars, looking out over the lake and she gives herself to me, and the joy we both feel in that moment, the feeling that we share is something that I swear will be with me forever, and I will never, ever let this feeling go...
I look up. Lorene is gone. The dock is gone. The stars are out, but yet are filtered through my reflection in a large, barred window facing a strange moonlit courtyard. Instead of the dock, I am sitting on a bed in a strange room. Well it can't be that strange. That oil painting I always had is here, along with my old acoustic guitar, but where is Lorene? How did I get here? I panic, not knowing where I am, or what is happening. Who brought me here? Was it them, the people from the house overlooking the dock? The police? I cry out, out of fear and panic. My reflection in the window looks old, haggard, grey. I can't even tell if that is my reflection, or if it is a strange ghost, and that gives me shivers of terror.
A man walks into the room. He is smiling and offers me a glass of water. "Take this, it will feel better."
"Where am I? Who are you?"
"You are at Felton Hills. You live here, Mr. Cafetta."
"I brought you something to calm you down. You should take this. It will make you feel better," the man added. He holds out a cup of water and what looks like a pill in his hand.
"I don't want your poison!" I bark. "What is this? Who are you?"
"It's okay Mr. Cafetta. Darrell. It's for your sore muscles. I'm a doctor. We're not trying to poison you!" He laughs. "Don't worry. You are in your room. There's nothing bad out there. This place is for rest, relaxation. You'll be fine. But if you take this, it will help you so you won't hurt or be scared."
"Where's Lorene? Is she here?"
"Not yet. But your wife will be here tomorrow, Mr. Cafetta. In the meantime, you should get some rest."