Starting Over, Chapter 1.
This story will take a little time to build up with the background required, but it's been bouncing around in my head for a while. It's a more serious story with some romance in it. Bear with me....
I have all 5 chapters drafted and I'll post each one in as the previous one is posted so I can finish editing.
Main Characters:
LTC (Retired) John Jackson, 5'11", 180, 46 years old.
Marie Jackson, John's widow, 5'8", 140, 44 years old.
Angelica Jackson, John and Marie's daughter, 5'5", 125, 19 years old.
Mary Bradford, bartender, 5'5", 120, 34 years old.
Juliet Margolin, waitress, 5'4", 145, 24 years old.
Samantha (Sam) Walker, 5'6", 130 pounds, 39 years old.
Joyce Walker, Sam's daughter, 5'4", 120 pounds, 19 years old.
Marion Walker, Sam's daughter, 5'4", 115 pounds, 17 years old.
20 September 2012, John's apartment, Seattle, Washington.
Everything was in place in my new apartment and I felt good about it – except for the absence of my wife. I had just finished getting all the furniture I wanted into position and was having a beer. Now I had to either find work, or mope around and feel sorry for myself. The latter was why I tried not to drink too much. When I drank, I ended up wallowing in self-pity about the loss of my wife and I needed to get past that. At 46 years old I felt like I was in great shape and still had many years of life left. I just wish those had been with Marie.
My wife and I had always assumed that she had many years left since her family lived into their 90s. But then the breast cancer appeared. She had always been careful, doing all the self-tests recommended by the medical community, but when she received her first mammogram, they found that she had some cancer. It was not only in the breast tissue, but in her lymph nodes as well. It had progressed quickly and despite all the treatments she was dead within two years after it was found. It was the worst possible scenario for me. I couldn't even properly comfort my daughter. She was in high school when it happened and I knew she missed her mother as much as I did, but I was useless for a while after her death.
So the big question is: how do you start over at 46 years old having lost your partner of 20 years, the mother of your child, and the woman you still loved when you woke up every morning? There were still days when I woke up and thought I could smell her scent on the pillow next to me. Some days, I would go into the bathroom and I could swear that I could smell her shampoo. Sometimes I would be sitting down in front of the TV and find something so funny that I would turn to her favorite easy chair to say something to her, only to find it empty.
My daughter was the one who finally convinced me that I needed to move out of the house we had lived in for the last 10 years and try to start over in a new area. She was right. I had tried to work the same job, drive the same car, and live in the same house. Everything about this situation kept me from moving on. She was starting college and was very independent, just like her mother.
When I started looking around, I decided to go back to Seattle. I had met my wife there in graduate school at the University of Washington. Neither of us was from Washington, but we both ended up there in the computer science graduate school; she by choice, and me because I was in the military and stationed at Fort Lewis when the Army offered me a chance to go back to school on their dime. It had been easier for me to stay in Washington for school.
We met just after the first month and I pursued her doggedly. I had been attracted to her from the time I first saw her at one of the early Computer Science Department parties. Okay, I have to admit that initially it was the attraction to her body. One day she wore a tight skirt and blouse to school that got me interested. I started talking to her in the small lounge and found her to be smart (yeah, she was in graduate school, but that doesn't automatically equate to being smart about life), engaging, feisty, pushy, and a little bit of a smart-ass. I liked her – a lot. She was not a swimsuit model; she was a little more hippy and voluptuous than that. She was also one of a few female graduate students, so she ended up in my line of sight a lot.
Marie, however, had decided that she didn't want any relationships or distractions during graduate school, so she kept putting me off. She had finished her undergraduate degree and had taken a couple of years off before coming to graduate school, wanting to concentrate on her studies. I could remember one of our conversations clearly and the night was representative of our early relationship. This occurred in October 1992, about a month after we met.
1992
"Hello?"
I heard her voice on the phone over the noise of the football party going on behind me. I was with a bunch of buddies watching some of the college games on a Saturday afternoon and we had been drinking ever since they started. Oh, yeah, the East Coast games can sometimes start at 9am on the West Coast so we started early. "Hello, Marie, do you know who this is?"
I heard a chuckle and then this: "Being drunk doesn't change your voice, John."
Was I slurring my words? Damn! She's good! "I was hoping to ask you out for a drink tonight. What do you think? Want to grab a beer down at Jimmy's?" It was one of the local bars on the "Ave", which was a main street just off the UW campus. It had several blocks that consisted of small stores, restaurants, and bars that were almost completely supported by the university students.
"I'm studying for my Algorithms class right now. I don't think so."
"C'mon. You have to take a break at some point. Come out for a couple of beers and relax." I was always hoping for more, of course. I was, after all, a single, drunk, horny male.
"Okay. Maybe one pitcher. I'll meet you there at 8:30."