Once again, thanks to Ada Stuart for feedback after a beta read or three. Her suggestion of a briefer introduction made for better overall story.
I hate grocery shopping with my kids. Probably more than they hate grocery shopping with me. At eleven, eight, and six they always manage to turn it into a war of attrition. Usually, one of us stays home with them while the other shops. They're old enough to prefer any number of activities to following a parent around while haphazardly filling the shopping cart. I had to watch their every move so none of them squirreled foodstuffs into the cart they know were strictly forbidden by their mother. Each makes repeated demands to know when we'll be done. It's worse than the endless cries of 'Are we there yet?' when we're going somewhere. Just the thought of grocery shopping with the three of them was enough to fray my nerves nearly to the breaking point.
My wife, their mother, was away for a few weeks. My mother-in-law was recovering from foot surgery and was on strict doctors' orders to stay off her foot until the cast came off. She would get a boot to wear in two weeks that would allow her to gradually begin walking again. My wife was helping because her father was on tour. It was fortuitous that her mother's surgery coincided with an annual plant shutdown that allowed my wife to take the time off.
I was a little jealous that I couldn't go, too. Carol's parents and siblings are all accomplished musicians. My father-in-law makes his living playing saxophone. He fronts his own band and does session work. Including for some prominent and successful recording artists. You'd never believe the list of people I've been lucky enough to jam with just because we were visiting my wife's parents.
But I just couldn't go. The kids had school. And Spring soccer games on Saturday. I was expected to show up to teach my high school history and government classes. I worked with the consolidated middle school band, too, which kept me at school a couple hours after dismissal two nights a week. So, while Carol got a well-deserved break, of sorts, I had our three bundles of joy. I've never understood how they can be so exasperating for us but so well-behaved when visiting friends or in the care of a sitter. My wife has been known to only half-jokingly inquire about an exorcism.
Don't get me wrong. We love our children. They're good kids. They do well in school and are reportedly well-behaved there. They're good sports on the soccer field. They're often well-behaved at home. But like all siblings, they bicker. Torment the hell out of each other. Play the ask Mom first and then ask Dad if Mom's answer isn't to their liking. One on one, they're a delight. But get them together? My parents can barely keep a straight face when they visit. I swear they come just to be entertained by our children driving us to our wit's end.
At any rate, back to the supermarket and groceries. I had the three of them trapped between me, the shopping cart, and the meat counter. Ethan was bickering with his sister Jodie and the youngest, Lizzie was standing on the side of the cart threatening its stability. A familiar voice, one I hadn't heard in nearly fifteen years intruded on my search for a small pork roast.
'Hi, Gabe. I heard you lived here and wondered when I'd run into you,' she said.
My kids all turned their heads in the direction of the voice and fell silent. Their silence is never a good thing. It inevitably meant trouble. During tonight's phone call, Carol would hear all about the pretty lady none of them knew that Dad talked to at the supermarket. Three times from them and again when she asked me about her.
I turned my head in the direction of the voice and immediately recognized Rebekah Turnbull. She looked exactly like I would have imagined. Her auburn hair still had those amazing copper highlights. She wore it the same way. I nearly drowned the first time I looked into the soothing fluid of her liquid honey-brown eyes. She had a little girl with just a few wisps of strawberry blonde hair, maybe seven or eight months old, facing toward me in one of those slings that held the baby securely to her chest. Rebekah was smiling brightly. The baby was flailing her arms and legs looking around to explore her surroundings.
'Rebekah! It's nice to see you. I didn't know you lived here. How have you been?' I asked. I was genuinely pleased to see her. I wasn't sure Carol would be. She became a little sensitive the few times she'd met one of my old girlfriends. Part of the reason for that is I never had an acrimonious breakup. Exes and I somehow always parted on good terms. Ex-girlfriends were always genuinely glad to see me and almost never hesitated to give me a friendly hug. Carol had nothing to worry about. No reason to think I'd ever take up with another woman. She knew I wouldn't. It was just her nature, I guess. A genetic inclination to get her dander up a bit when someone intruded on her turf. It never turned into more than a passing look of exasperation. But I always knew it bothered her a little.
'I'm doing well. Tom and I moved here about three years ago. We bought a house over in Chatham Riverside after he got transferred here,' Rebekah told me.
I had no idea who Tom was, though I surmised it was likely her husband. There was no engagement ring or wedding band when she adjusted the sling holding her daughter. 'We're practically neighbors,' I told her. 'We're in Deer Shores.' The two developments were two hundred feet apart but on opposite sides of the river running through the center of the city. There was at least a forty-minute drive between them. 'What have you been doing with yourself? Besides the obvious,' I asked, while smiling and nodding at the little one that was now flirting with Lizzie, who was flirting back.
Rebekah laughed softly. 'I have a son that turns six next month. I'm on family leave this year. I teach music and band in the elementary schools. I see you've been busy the last few years,' Rebekah said, looking over at my three who were still paying way too much attention to my conversation with Rebekah. Their nondisruptive behavior and focused attention worried me. I almost wished they'd start bickering again.
Rebekah and I talked for ten minutes or so. The kids listened closely while still fidgeting impatiently. Rebekah was markedly different from the quiet, reserved girl I first met in high school. I was surprised to learn she'd never married despite having children with Tom. We talked briefly about music. I mentioned I played my trumpet and sax with a group of guys that did weddings and an occasional club gig. Rebekah also kept up with her music but hadn't performed since moving. When we said goodbye and got on with our groceries, I decided to see if she was on Facebook. If she wasn't, we worked in the same school system. I could probably reach her through the school system email. It would be nice to have someone to talk trumpet with. Maybe she could fill in for me on occasion when there was a gig I couldn't make.
Rebekah made an indelible impression the moment I first saw her. It was Monday of the second full week of senior year. I was already seated with the rest of the trumpet players in the band room. There were six of us. I noticed there was an extra chair though didn't think much of it. Chairs got shuffled around when the custodial staff cleaned the room. Most of the rest of the band was there, too. Mr. Hadden arrived to the usual cacophony of band members warming up before practice began. There was a small red-headed girl right behind him. I'd never seen her before. The school was big, but not so big I wouldn't have noticed her. Especially, pretty as she was.
Mr. Hadden said something to her and pointed her in our direction. She made her way over to us and sat in the empty chair. She put her music book on the stand and took out her trumpet. I was jealous the moment I saw it. She had a vintage silver-plated professional Vincent Bach. She muttered something to herself about taking the wrong case. My first thought was she was a rich kid whose parents went overboard when they bought her instrument. It wasn't an opinion I clung to for long. At the next practice, she had another older Vincent Bach trumpet, just like mine. One meant for a student.