I'd been home for a couple days, helping my little sister get packed to head off to college. The small town's fall festival was going on and - since I enjoy gardening but I'm not very good at it - I stopped by the Recreation Center to look over some of what my former neighbors were growing.
I've dabbled in a little of everything, but I've discovered that melons don't grow well for me. I can throw those seeds in the yard at random and volunteer plants will flourish - but, if I try to contain them within the space I've set aside for my formal garden, the rebellious vines refuse to bend their iron will to my steel hoe.
Normal salad-bowl items do well enough - but most of those grow like weeds anyway - so I know it's not like I have a green thumb or anything. My radishes are too hot, my carrots are too scrawny, and my peppers are always underwhelming.
When I spied a paper plate that could barely contain the three sweet peppers that were offered as one of the submissions in the contest, I HAD to go see whose they were.
"Kimberly Pratt" I read. We graduated together, six years ago. At the class reunion, the year before, she'd been Kimberly Thompson - married to the guy who'd been quarterback of the football team. Kimberly had been the head cheerleader. The two of them had been an item for half of our years in high school.
"Hi, Terry," I heard a voice say.
I turned to see Kimberly holding the hand of a four or five year old who looked like my former classmate's mini-me. The little girl was absolutely adorable. She had mom's blonde curls and a beautiful smile.
"Did you grow these?" I asked the child, as I squatted down to talk to her. "They're almost as big as you!"
She giggled and said, "No ... mommy grew them but I helped pull weeds."
"Well, it looks like you two make a fabulous team," I told her. "I've never seen such amazing looking peppers. How do they taste?"
"They're good!" she exclaimed, "but mommy wouldn't let me eat those."
"How are you not married?" Kimberly asked me.
I looked up at her, shrugged, stood up, glanced at the plate, and said, "Haven't found the one, I guess. You can tell me it's none of my business but I noticed the name ..."
"Brad hooked up with Katie Johnson at the reunion last year. The two of them left town together. I got papers served to me a week later. I got the house - but it was like a cancerous sore. I sold it and moved back in with mom and dad. Not my best decision, but I needed some closure."
"Can I tell you something?" the little girl asked, tugging on the leg of my shorts.
I squatted down to her level again and said, "Certainly!"
Her "whisper" was loud enough for anyone nearby to hear, "Tomorrow is mommy's birthday."
"Is it now?" I asked.
She nodded her head up and down enthusiastically.
"Have we made any big plans yet?" I looked from the child, up to her mother.
Kimberly was smiling but shaking her head. "Mom and Dad will probably take me out to dinner," she said.
I looked at the little blonde and asked, "What do you think mommy should do for her birthday?"
"I think she should go see the Mermaid movie, have a big bucket of popcorn, and then stop for ice cream."
"I think that's a grand idea," I told her, realizing that the little girl was listing off what SHE wanted to do - and not necessarily what her mom might want. "Would it be okay if I came along?"
"Yes! We can share the popcorn."
"Maybe you and I can share and we'll get mom her own - since it's her birthday," I suggested.
"Could I have my own and you share with mommy?" she asked.
"I'll tell you what," I said. "We'll go eat dinner first - and if you eat all of your food - you can have your own popcorn. Does that work?"
She nodded her head up and down again. As I stood to face her mother, wondering if I was in trouble, little fingers wrapped around mine. Kimberly looked at me, her daughter's hand, and then back to my face.
"What do you think you're doing?" she asked, smiling wryly.
"I just HAVE to find out what you did to grow those peppers," I told her. "I'm going to ingratiate myself with you and your little angel and weedle all of your secrets out of you. I'll be the greatest gardener on the planet. I'll be unstoppable!"
She laughed and said, "That's why you're still single. You're crazy."
"Am I though? Are we going out for your birthday or not?"
The girl said, "Mommy! Say 'yes', say 'yes'!"
Kim choked out a laugh, looking at the bouncing little girl, and said, "I guess..."
"Well," I said, mischievously, "if you've got a better offer ..."
I had meant it to be funny but I could tell - when her tears came - that I'd messed up.
"Look," I said, quickly. "I'm sorry! I didn't think that through ..."
She sniffled as she held up a hand to stop the rest of my apology.
"It's not your fault," she said.
"This is why I'm still single," I told her.
"Stop!" she ordered. "You've always been a great guy - a little quirky - but I married the guy everybody thought was the perfect catch and you can see how that turned out. Can I ask you what you have planned beyond this birthday thing?"
"I hadn't planned any of this," I said. "Two beautiful women - with fabulous peppers - showed up out of the blue and I think I'd like to spend a little time with them."
"It's all about the peppers, is it?" she asked, smirking as she dabbed away the last of the tears.
"Right now it is ..." I replied, smiling.
"You're serious about dinner and the movie?"
"... and two buckets of popcorn, and sharing, and ice cream - you're damned straight!" I replied. "Darned. Darned straight."
Kimberly laughed and said, "She hears worse than that from my dad but I appreciate that. Are you sure?"
"I guess you'll just have to find out," I told her. "What's the address and what time should I pick you two ladies up? I'll order the movie tickets and the concessions. Other than popcorn, what do you want?"
"Can I have a blue Slushie?" the little girl asked.
When I looked down, she seemed to be addressing the question to me.
I looked at Kimberly and asked, "Do I need to approve my intense desire to spoil this child silly with you first or can I go crazy?"
She looked at her daughter and said, "Popcorn, a small blue Slushie, and ice cream. Nothing else - and you have to eat good first."
The small blonde cherub nodded, beaming at her mother and then at me.
Kim gave me the address. I checked the show-time, got her to name our dinner location, and set the time for me to pick them up.
I gave her my number and she texted me, "Her name is Belle. I don't know what you're up to, but you've absolutely made her day - and mine. Thank you."
I replied with, "I really just want you to have a good birthday."
She sent, "It's already the best I've had in forever - assuming you don't ghost on me."
"I'll be there. I promise. I can't stand the thought of doing something that might make a beautiful girl cry."
"Belle or me?" she sent back.
"Yes," I replied.
~~~
The following afternoon, I vid-called Kim's number. She didn't answer right away and my heart rate skyrocketed, worried that I'd misread things. Finally, she answered.
"Yes?" she asked, smiling.
"Is Miss Belle available?" I asked. "I need her professional opinion."
Kim turned the phone so that I could see the small blonde.
"Hello," she chirped.
"Hi," I said. "I need your help with a surprise. Can mommy see the screen right now?"
The phone wiggled a little and Belle looked past it and then said, "She's shaking her head."