Forward:
This story is more than one chapter. If you're looking for something pornographic you might be disappointed,but of you're looking for a love story this might be it. Regardless, if you get to the end of this chapter I'd like a comment.
Prologue:
Two people are alive and at work in one of America's larger eastern cities; one had been a rising star in the construction industry. He built everything from private homes to office buildings; he had all the things that money could buy, but then life threw him a low curve ball. The other was a lack luster lonely almost thirty something office employee looking for someone, anyone, to fulfill her fantasies of a happy life filled with all the things a younger girl once dreamed of.
As the story develops these two incomplete souls find each other, their lives entwine, affections grow, their ideas of happiness are pretty congruent, but families and life's unexpected pitfalls intervene, happiness and contentment are smashed on the harsh rocks of unexpected discovery. Then again, maybe not.
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Peter Dawson was thirty-two, a businessman, and lucky. He'd had a construction company that had been building all sorts of things since the early 1990's. Back in the day business had been so good he'd been able to buy large tracts of farmland and subdivide it years before he was ready to build. He'd built high rise, eight stories, condominiums and luxury apartments. He owned an ocean front house, a forty foot cabin cruiser, an expensive sports car, a time share in the Bahamas, and an apartment in the Big Apple. But then came the 2008 crash, the big housing bubble burst. He had to say good bye to the time share, all but a tiny handful of the lots, the New York apartment, the ritzy sports car, and the boat. Thankfully he'd held on to two of the apartment buildings and the seashore condo never having leveraged them.
There had been other losses he really regretted. He'd had a good core of hardworking employees; some American, some illegal. But his biggest loss was his fiancΓ©. He thought he'd found the girl, just the right girl he believed he could spend the rest of his life with. Brother had that turned out wrong. She just wasn't the one; she turned out to be just the right girl for what had once been a good friend. His girl, his sweetheart, had been sweet on his friend all along. When the bubble burst, and he nearly went belly up, she went bye bye. His friend, being a lawyer, never blinked an eye when the cards came tumbling down. His girl, the faithless whore, simply followed the money.
He swore, never again would he go so far in debt, and never again would he trust a woman. Nothing with a vagina would ever get so close to him again. If he wanted what a woman had; he'd buy it.
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Then there was Laurie Stanton; Laurie was everybody's helpful little girl Friday. She worked as a software consultant for a medium sized law firm downtown. She was twenty-nine, alone, and lonely. She'd had her share of boyfriends, one anyway, to whom she almost surrendered her cherry several years earlier. Since then her life had been scripted to follow the same monotonous cycle; work, home, sleep, work, home, sleep, and parents and siblings for the holidays. There had been a time when she thought she'd find her piece of the American dream; the nice house on the quiet street with the husband, and the kids. She thought about it still; but she knew she was running out of time.
'On a Wal-Mart Parking Lot'
Laurie was exhausted, another week, another five days plus long hours of overtime for which she was never paid. It was Friday, 8:00 p.m., and she was loaded down with groceries. Groceries, what a joke, two weeks' worth of frozen dinners, microwave bacon, orange juices, granola bars, skim milk, coffee, and one small bag of salt free potato chips. She was so tired she wanted to cry.
It was September, shortly after Labor Day, the evening air was cool, no sun, god what she'd give for a few days in the sun, anything but that horrid computer screen. She pushed her cart up the softly sloping ramp toward her parked car. Great car, a 1998 Toyota Camry, bald tires, bad brakes, and a compact disc player that wouldn't work.
Oh sweet Jesus, let her get home, a hot bath, her novel, and a good night's rest. Tomorrow she had to play happy aunt and babysit for her sickeningly sweet sister-in-law. The one who always had the same line, "Oh Laurie you should find a boy and get married. You'd make such a good mother, blah, blah, blah."
She pivoted the cart to start up the incline that led to her car when her cell phone went off. 'Oh no, she thought, it was probably somebody who wanted her to watch or take care of somebody.' She stopped, leaned the cart against her leg, shuffled around in her purse, found her cell phone and flipped it open, "Hello."
From out of nowhere a really mean looking big guy ran up, grabbed her purse, and took off.
Surprised and scared Laurie jumped back out of the way. As she jumped the cart loaded with her food toppled over.
She fell back against a dirty mini-van; purse gone, wallet gone, car keys gone, food strewn all over the ground, and someone she immediately recognized as her boss impatiently yelling at her on the cell phone. It was too much. She cradled the phone in her arms and started to quietly weep.
Peter saw the creep slam into the woman. She meant nothing to him, but he hated that shit. He dropped the bag he was carrying and sped off after the thief. He could tell the thief was slow witted, overweight, and out of shape. He ran straight up the center drive of the parking lot. Peter ran him down, got him in a horse collar, and brought him to the ground. Then he punched the guy right in the nose.
An off duty policeman appeared. He grabbed the thief and threw him around a little more.
Peter took the woman's purse and looked around till he saw her. She was standing where the thief had left her. She was still weeping or something. 'Women,' Peter thought, the smart ones are stupid. He walked down to the woman, purse in hand.
When he reached her he said, "That wasn't too smart, leaving your purse to hang on you wrist while you got your phone."
By then Laurie had started to pick up her purchases and stuff them back in the cart. She took her purse, "Thank you. I don't know what I would have done...if..." She started sniffling.
One of the store assistant managers reached the scene, "Can we help you ma'am?"
"No I'm all right."
Peter looked at the paunchy assistant manager, "Sure you can. Go inside and replace everything she's got with new stuff. Look at her, she can't take this garbage home and try to eat it, not now."
The assistant smiled, "Sure. Ma'am, let me replace all this."
Laurie gave the man a wan smile, "No I'm all right."
Peter interrupted, he was a little softer; "Why don't you let him replace this stuff?"
She whimpered a little, "No, I'm all right, really."
A patrol car pulled over. They had the thief in the back, handcuffed, and ready to be taken to the county jail. A patrolman walked over, "I'd like to get some information if you wouldn't mind."
Peter answered, "Sure I saw it all. That creep tried to steal her purse."
The patrolman took Peter's name and address. Then he took some information from Laurie, "He'll be charged of course, there will be an arraignment. You'll have to be there Miss." He looked at Peter, "All we need from you is a statement. You can e-mail it or send by the regular mail. Here's the case number. He handed Peter a slip of paper. "Of course, if the guy wants a trial you'll have to appear."
Peter answered, "No problem."
The patrolman looked at Laurie, "I see you're Laurie Stanton. You live at 113B Maple Grove Road."
She answered, "Yes sir."
Peter looked up, "Hey that's in one of my apartment complexes. Look I'll follow you home."
Laurie answered, "You don't have to do that."
"Sure," he answered, "It's the least I can do."
"No, I'm all right."
Peter had the woman figured out, just another snooty, phony, 'so called' liberated woman who broke down at the first crisis, "OK, well see you around."
She sniffed, "Thank you. What's your name?"
"Peter, but don't bother. You needed help."
Laurie thought about it for a second. He'd helped her. He didn't have to do it. She ought to do something, "Can I pay you or something?"
Peter grimaced. Just what he figured; they're all the same, "No thanks just the same."
Oh she realized he might have thought she meant money, "No, I mean maybe I could fix you dinner or something, maybe a movie?"
He looked at her again, "Tell you what; give me your phone number, maybe I could take you out."
Laurie knew he was blowing her off. She wasn't pretty, but she could cook, "OK." She took out a scrap of paper and jotted down her home and cell phone numbers, "I'm home all the time. You call and dinner's on the table." She tried to smile, but she knew it didn't work.
Peter took the phone number, smiled and walked to his car. Tomorrow was a Saturday, but he still needed to work. Playing catch up wasn't fun.
Laurie thanked him again, finished loading her car, and drove home. She felt achy and sore, maybe from when the thief pushed her. Oh heck she thought, she had to call her supervisor back. He wanted something.
When Laurie got home she called her boss back. He said he wanted her to come in the next morning to help finish up a problem. She explained why she hadn't been able to talk earlier. He said he understood, but still wanted her to come in. She said she'd try.
Nothing much came of the incident. Peter went home, got to bed, and went off to work that Saturday. Laurie went in too. She was tired and sore, but duty called.