Unhappy housewife turns to the Internet for love.
Cheryl sat in the living room mindlessly listening to the weatherman's weather report and sipping her morning coffee, while watching the snow make snowcaps out of the cars parked outside. They should have cancelled school, she thought, but this surprise snowstorm had fooled everyone. She could have used another hour's sleep, instead of having had to drive the kids to school earlier. She dreaded picking up her children from school later, especially if they haven't had a chance to plow the roads. Now, she wished she had kept them home today.
"There's a slight chance of snow later today," he said startling her to react.
"Slight chance of snow? Look out the window, dumb ass. It's a freakin' blizzard." She stared with contempt at the television. "With all your advanced degrees, computers, and radar, you still can't give an accurate forecast," she said continuing her tirade at the weatherman's image. "It's time to open the Farmers' Almanac or to count the spots on the back of a beetle or to look to see how high the birds are building their nests. The animals know more about the weather than you do, moron."
She was angry, but not with him. She was angry with her personal situation and frustrated with her life. Instead of her time on the planet getting better, it was stuck in neutral and had been for the past few years. She thought things would be better when they bought this house and moved into this neighborhood and she was happier for a while. Only now, the additional expenses required that her husband work longer hours. She saw him more when they rented the small apartment on the other side of town.
She was happier before they bought the house...the house...the house. Their thoughts, their conversation, their energy, and their money were all pent up in the house. A house had suddenly defined their existence, given new purpose and meaning to their marriage for a while, but now the house had taken control of their lives. Everything was about the house. Emotions misplaced from the emptiness of their relationship suddenly manifested itself into an enclosed and claustrophobically confined structure of high walls, draped windows, and closed doors. With mortgage payments, insurance, repairs, and maintenance, the house was now an all consuming member of their family. The house had become a living and breathing entity of unrelenting burden, pressure, and expense.
She thought buying this dream house would make her happy. Now, she was miserable. She removed her kids from the school they loved and left all their friends behind to move here, a better neighborhood. Only, the people in this neighborhood all had more than she had and with their plastic smiles and cool demeanors were standoffish because of it. It's funny, she thought, how you don't know how happy you were, until you lose all that you had, didn't even know what you had, until it's gone and now it's too late to get it back.
You can never go back. Even if you tried, those who you left behind will never let you back in to experience the way that it was before. There is a price to pay when shedding your old skin and abandoning your old life for a new one. You've changed and the dynamics have changed enough that you no longer belong there. That simple thought calmed her and she considered her present situation, now thinking that this may be her happy time compared to what the future may hold in store for her.
"Enjoy the moment," she said for no one to here. "You should have a problem. Everyone is healthy. Status quo is okay."
The florist van that entered her line of vision, and stopped in front of her house, reminded her that it was Valentine's Day. She put her coffee cup down on the coaster on the side table and jumped up. She looked in the mirror, fixed her hair, adjusted the tie tighter on her bathrobe, and looked out the window again before unlocking and opening her front door.
It had been years since her husband had bought her flowers. She couldn't remember exactly when, but she knew that it was before they bought the house. Then, she remembered, he bought her flowers the day after he stayed out late and came home drunk. It was a cheap bouquet that he picked up at a roadside flower stand, flowers that weren't much better than his excuse for not coming home and flowers that lasted not much longer than his passion did that night in bed and the next day.
This was different. He never bought her flowers from a florist before. Something is up. Maybe, he got a promotion or a raise. Maybe, he's having an affair and this is a bouquet of guilt. Quickly, she ran to the kitchen to grab her purse for a tip and ran back to the front door in time to see the deliveryman emerge from the back of the van holding a big vase with two dozen roses as white and as fresh as the falling snow.
"Oh, they are so beautiful. He remembered that white roses are my favorite," she said smiling widely with her hand perched on the doorknob, while leaning to peer out the door's side window to watch for his arrival and to time her look of surprise. She hadn't had white roses, since her wedding day.
Phil is so sweet, she thought. He shouldn't have, but I'm so glad he did. What a nice surprise? That's why he didn't give me the usual candy and card this morning, before he left for work. He didn't want to spoil this surprise of flowers. He wanted her to think he had forgotten. I'll reward him later with a blowjob tonight.
Her neighbor Gayle will be so jealous, she thought with a pang of one-upmanship. She decided to prominently display the flowers on her coffee table so that everyone who walked by the house could see them from her living room window. Even better, she thought about inviting Gayle over for coffee, so that she could see the beautiful bouquet up close.
"Oh, my flowers, yes, thank you for noticing, Gayle, they are beautiful, aren't they," she imagined the conversation between Gayle and her. "Phil is such a romantic. He's always buying me flowers. I just love how they smell," she imagined herself leaning down to inhale their fragrance. "I imagine he's going to expect a little something naughty in bed later tonight," she said with a wink and a sexy smile.
Her dream sequence burst as quickly as her blood pressure rose, while watching the deliveryman walk across the street to her neighbor's house with her flowers and ring her bell. Suddenly, her wide angled vision that encompassed the entire street of her neighborhood narrowed its focus and microscopically zoomed in on Gayle's house.