"I have news," said Debbie.
I'd just come through the front door to find her standing in the foyer of our small apartment. She was 29 with dark hair, girl-next-door beauty and a smile that was usually ready.
On that summer evening, her smile was not ready.
Had it been another day I would have given her the bouquet of long-stemmed roses at the door, but she was too distracted for that. Instead, I kissed her lightly on the lips and said, "You can fill me in after I put this stuff away." I squeezed past her to drop the groceries, wine, and flowers on the kitchen counter. I put the roses in a vase, added some water, and put them on the table.
She absentmindedly sat at the table, silently admiring the roses while I put the groceries away.
"Would you like a glass of wine?" I asked. She didn't answer, so I poured her one anyway.
Debbie took a sip of wine and said, "They called about Jeff today. They want me to go to a hospital in Germany to be with him."
I took a healthy swallow of wine as I studied her face. Her usual upbeat perkiness had been replaced by thoughtful concern. That morning's news reported that her former lover, Jeff Belanger, had been found, badly beaten but alive, outside a forward operating base in Kandahar province. Until that moment we'd all thought he'd been killed in action.
I asked, "What does that mean?"
She turned her wine glass in her hand as she thought, then, without looking up, she said, "It means I'm still engaged to Jeff." They'd dated for only a few months before he'd deployed, and then he'd disappeared not long after that. I'd never met him, but he was a good guy by all accounts.
I exhaled deeply, then said, "I'm still not sure what that means to me."
We sat there, answerless, staring at one another for several minutes before she said, "The flowers are beautiful. Thank you."
I nodded, then we drifted back into silence.
We were still sitting in silence when the doorbell rang. Debbie's best friend, Michelle, opened the door and shouted, "Hello, is anyone home?"
"Come on in Michelle," I shouted back.
Michelle and her husband Stan joined us at the table. Michelle was a large, boisterous woman who commanded attention wherever she went. She was partial to loud colors and oversized plate-gold jewelry that hung from ears, neck, and wrists. Stan was short, thin and bald. He wore round glasses over a thick mustache. They were oddly perfect for one another. One of them would nod and smile long before the other finished their story, but they never talked over one another.
Michelle announced, "We brought Chinese," as Stan pushed the flowers to the side and put bags of food on the table. She passed out chopsticks, paper plates, and napkins while he opened up the packages.
Michelle kissed Debbie on the cheek, sat down and said, "Tell us everything."
Debbie slowly shook her head, "I don't know much. I guess Jeff's alive and he asked for me. They want me to go to Germany, maybe as early as tomorrow, but I don't know when for sure."
Michelle turned her attention to me. She took my hand and asked, "What do you think about all of this?"
I shrugged. "I don't know what to think."
Stan prodded some of the rice from a box to his plate then topped it with General Tso's chicken and a mixture of beef and broccoli.
Michelle said, "Stanley! We brought the food for them."
"What?" Stan waved his chopsticks over the brown paper bags filled with food and said, "There's enough food here for an army. Besides, they're too depressed to eat."
"Well, maybe you could show a little compassion. Deb and Doug's lives have been turned upside down."
Stan rested the tips of his chopsticks on his paper plate as he regarded his wife. "Maybe. Maybe their lives have been turned upside down. Maybe this is a bad thing, but maybe it's a good thing. Maybe everything will work out. We just don't know, so there's no reason to panic."
Michelle rolled her eyes. "You read one philosophy book and all of a sudden you're Mister Philosophy."
I happened to like Stan's thinking. That Debbie's fiancΓ© was still alive and asking about her didn't mean that we were finished. Maybe he'd had a spiritual awakening, and he wanted to tell her that he was joining a monastic order in Tibet. There was no point in jumping to conclusions before we knew the situation.
I put some rice on a plate, surrounded it with a little bit of everything and passed it to Debbie. She thanked me with a shallow smile then stirred the food around with her chopsticks.
Michelle asked, "Are you going to go to Germany?"
Debbie answered, "Do I have a choice? He's a war hero that was given up for dead. What would people think if his fiancΓ© didn't go to his side?"
Stan responded, "They'd think that she'd done what most people would do and moved on with her life."
Debbie shook her head and said, "I was just beginning to move on."
Michelle threw me a smile, then turned back to Debbie and said, "You can still be happy," while squeezing her hand.
I offered Michelle and Stan some wine, then Stan followed me into the kitchen to help me get it.
He asked, "What are you going to do?"
"I think I'll take your advice and not panic."
"Are you going to ask her not to go to Germany?"
I poured wine into a couple of glasses, put the bottle down and said, "I don't think that's the right move. One of the things I love about Debbie is that she keeps her promises. She made a promise to that guy, and now we have to see how it plays out."
"Did she make a promise to you?"
I shook my head, "No, I never got around to asking."
Stan picked up a glass and sipped at the wine. "Jeff's a good guy. Michelle liked him. I liked him. Shit, he received the Bronze fucking Star, the whole damned Army likes him. Despite all of that, Debbie is happier with you." He touched my sternum with his fingertip. "And I think you are happy with her. I know it isn't going to be easy, but you've got to figure out a way to keep her."
I chuckled softly, "...but don't panic, right?"
Stan raised his glass. "Never panic. Panicking is never the right thing to do."
I nodded uncertainly. "I'll just keep my cool and see what happens."
Stan continued, "You've got your work cut out for you, but I think you're up to the task. If you pull this off, you and Debbie will be in an amazing place."
We walked back into the dining room. When I put Michelle's wine in front of her, she said, "I've got an idea. Why don't you go to Germany with Debbie."
Debbie looked to me as she shook her head.
I smiled at Michelle and said, "I think Debbie knows that I love her, but she needs to figure this on her own. I just hope that whatever's coming down the pike isn't too painful."
Stan pointed his finger into the air and said, "Pain is unavoidable. Suffering is optional."
"Good Lord, Stanley, please give it a rest!" said his wife.
***
After Michelle and Stan had left, I cleaned up the dining room, filled a couple of glasses of ice water and took them into the living room where Debbie was sitting on the couch looking at a blank TV screen. I handed her a glass and asked, "Do you want me to leave you alone?"
"No, of course not." She patted the couch for me to sit down next to her. Once we were side-by-side, she said, "You know that I have to go to Germany, right?"
"I know."
"You know that I may not come back to you, right?"
"I know that too."
She touched my cheek with her finger and lightly kissed my lips. "I want you to treat me like tonight will be the last night we will ever have together."
I didn't like the sound of that, but I knew what I had to do. I stroked an errant lock of hair from her face, kissed her lightly on the lips and then paused with my lips a fraction of an inch above hers. She waited patiently while my face hovered over hers.
I soaked her in with all of my senses so that I might remember her in a lonely future. Her fading perfume smelled of basil, lime, and mandarin oranges. It was her favorite scent and a Christmas gift from me. Her lips were red, deep in the shade that was my favorite. Her brown eyes held a hint of green mixed with the sadness that had been there all evening. A light sprinkle of freckles crossed her cheeks and nose.
She looked into my eyes and said, "Do you remember what you said to me the night we met?"
We'd shared the story a thousand times, but I wanted to hear her retell it. I said, "What was it again?"
"We were in Michelle and Stan's kitchen at their old place. I'd poured a rum and coke and was waiting for you to pry a few cubes from a refrozen bag of ice. You looked up at me, took a double take and asked, 'Are you always that beautiful?' I was wearing a t-shirt and a pair of Levis, so, I said, 'Yes.'"
I laughed and said the same thing I always said, "No self-esteem issues there!"
Debbie touched her hand to my chest the let it slide around to my back. She pulled me in close, kissed my lips and said, "Now I need you to have the self-esteem. I need you to know your worth despite everything that goes on around you."
I shifted so that I was above her with my right leg between hers. My hand massaged her breast through her blouse. I said, "Let's not get ahead of ourselves. Right now let's worry about right now."
Her smile brightened ever so slightly. "You are so right." She tipped her head back exposing her neck and pushing out her chest, which forced her tit into my grasp.
I leaned in to bite her neck while my hand drifted to the buttons of her blouse. It was the blouse I'd given her for her birthday. It was tighter than she liked, and it exposed more cleavage than she was comfortable with, so it usually went unworn. It was too sexy for her to have worn to work, so I assumed that she'd changed into it before I'd gotten home.
I fumbled with the buttons for a moment while I pondered the future of the blouse without me. I said, "This blouse is mine." I grabbed the collar with my hands and ripped it apart, popping the buttons off in rapid fire.
She smiled up at me while thrusting her hips, "Oh yes. That's it."
I pulled off the top, then took off her bra, exposing her buoyant, double-margarita size breasts. "These spectacular breasts are mine."