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This is a standalone story, submitted for the
Valentine's Day Story Contest 2024
.
Pal-entine's for Single Parents is a hallmarky slow burn novella with a feel good vibe, so settle in! Sexual content includes: heavy flirting, kissing, oral and MF sex.
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September
After-school pick-up was, somehow, only moderately better after moving out of the city.
To be fair, I'd grown up in the same town that my daughter and I had moved to and I had always rode the school bus, so it was strange in general to me that things had changed so dramatically over time. Still, there was something almost cinematic about being parked in the roundabout on the younger kids' side of the elementary school and seeing a wave of the little munchkins come running out of the doors as a couple of teachers tried to keep some semblance of order.
The volunteer parents, dressed up in reflective vests with their clipboards, weren't faring much better than the professionals.
June came skipping out of school with another little girl who must have been in her class, and they were yammering away until she saw me and she waved to her friend and then sprinted in my direction with a big grin on her face. I went down to one knee and held out my arms and she rushed into them, and I hugged her and her backpack tight as I picked her up and spun her around. "Hello, little bug," I said, giving her a smooch on the cheek and holding her up.
"Hi, Daddy," she said with a goofy grin. She'd lost one of her last baby teeth, an incisor, the previous weekend and it was almost as cute as when she'd lost her front teeth.
"How was school?" I asked.
"Good!"
"Did you learn anything new today?"
June shook her head, still grinning.
"Well what possible use is school, then?" I asked playfully. "Maybe you should never go back."
"No!" she laughed. "I met my best friend today."
"You did?" I asked, raising my eyebrows. Her old best friend, back in San Jose, had been our neighbour's cute little daughter Rosita, and their friendship had been the only thing that had made me hesitate about moving us. At the end of the day, I knew my seven-year-old daughter would get over the cross-country move and make new friends, but it was still a little heartbreaking at the time.
"Uh-huh," she nodded, pointing at an SUV a couple of cars back. "That's her! Her name is May, we're Month Buddies!"
I chuckled, giving her another little smooch on the cheek that made her giggle. I hadn't been a major fan of the name Juniper when my ex-wife suggested it, but had figured I could warm up to the shorter 'June.' My ex had, of course, hated that I did that, but then she'd been volatile about a lot of shit. Hence why she was my ex and not in June's life.
"Well, let's go say hello," I said, shifting my daughter to holding her on one hip as she hugged my shoulder.
We technically weren't supposed to 'dilly-dally,' as the volunteer parking managers liked to say, but I really didn't give a crap. I swerved around a minivan that seemed to be picking up half a soccer team worth of little boys, each of them capped with ginger hair so I assumed they were brothers, and headed for the blue SUV my daughter had pointed out. The back passenger door was open, as was the trunk, and as I got closer I saw that May was already strapped into a booster seat in the back while her mother was rummaging for something in the trunk.
"Hey there," I said as I came alongside the back window. "I-"
"Jesus, Francine, I get it, OK?" the woman said, not looking out of the trunk.
"I'm, ah, not Francine," I said.
Now the woman pulled herself out of the trunk. She had a tan complexion, was fairly short and maybe topped her height at five-foot-two, and her dark brown hair was softly wavy if a little frazzled in that way that parents of young children who actually parented their kids tended to develop after an hour or two. I could tell she was of mixed ethnicity, but couldn't immediately pinpoint what, and she was clearly having one of
those
sorts of days that I knew all too well.
She gave me a quick once over. "Look," she said flatly. "I'm not looking to try and get hit on in the school pickup line, buddy. I'm just here to get my kid."
"Wow," I chuckled. "Jesus, you sound like you've got a couple of stories to tell. I actually just wanted to introduce ourselves - my daughter June says that May is her best friend."
"And Month Buddy!" June happily added.
The woman's face dropped a little of her frustration, and I could see the switch from 'beleaguered woman reaching her limit' to 'mom who is managing to maintain a semblance of feeling like a normal adult.' "Is that right?" she asked. "May, honey, did you make a new best friend today?"
"The bestest!" May said with enthusiasm from her booster seat, grinning and waving out the open door. She was a cute kid with dark, wavy hair and a complexion close to her mother's. "June is really good at basketball and
I'm
really good at basketball too. We played in gym and we were the best!"
"You guys played basketball today?" I asked, putting on a bit of excitement for the two girls.
"We did, Daddy," June said. "And I scored six shots and May scored seven."
"No, I scored six, too!" May said. "We were the same. And we were better than
all
the boys."
"Wow," I said, offering June a high five that she returned, and then May who gave me it back enthusiastically.
May's mother was smiling now and shot me an apologetic look. "I'm Olivia," she said. "Sorry about that."
"Adrian," I said, shaking the hand she offered me lightly. "And it's no worries. I get it. I just have one question - who is Francine, and why should I be avoiding her?"
Olivia smirked a little and nodded down the roundabout area towards one of the volunteers with the clipboards who currently seemed to be haranguing a couple of other women. "That's her," she said. "Three kids, all of them snotty little shits, and she's trying to get an official PTA installed instead of letting the school manage volunteers and events. Very pushy, very judgy."
"Noted," I said, turning back to her. "We just moved back to town. I grew up here, but June doesn't have any buddies around yet, let alone a