This story is about a mature couple who are over 18. It builds slowly to a climax so if you want a quick thrill you won't find it here. Thank you for reading.
*****
Dee Webb was surprised at herself. She wasn't even divorced a month and she was thinking about a new relationship. All of her friends, and all of the magazine articles, and all of the self-help books, said the same thing: don't jump into a new relationship right away after a divorce, give yourself some time to heal, take time to get to know yourself. It was ironic that the same sources complained at the lack of good marriageable men out there. Her friends who had divorced constantly were bemoaning the assholes that they dated.
"All the good guys are already married," they would say over drinks. "They're all assholes!" they claimed. "Where are all the good guys!"
Dee would have to roll her eyes because any time these same women - her good friends, had a choice they would choose the asshole over a nice guy every time! It was almost laughable if it didn't take such emotional toll on them and in fact everyone in her whole circle who were naturally expected to rally around the broken hearted.
She knew better than to be thinking the thoughts that were in her mind. "It's too soon," she told herself, "I'm not ready." But in spite of herself the thoughts were there and she couldn't ignore them.
She took her kids to a new church, that's all. Making a new start, meeting new people, getting out of her humdrum, loveless, tedious life. She didn't expect to meet Alan Drake.
What was it about Alan that struck her so? He wasn't tall like her ex-husband, Gene. He was good looking but so was Gene. He wasn't rich, he was a teacher. He did have a sweet smile, though he could use some orthodontia. He was funny, but again so was Gene.
It was something in his eyes. He looked at her and she could feel the heat. He had a confidence, not like some men with women, as a matter of fact he was a little shy, but he had a confidence in life, like he knew what he wanted, he knew where he was going and he knew how to get there.
She had to admit though, that the clincher was when they were introduced and shook hands, the moment their hands touched there was a spark. It was not an electrical spark like a shock but more of a pulse, like heartbeats that instantly synchronized in that fraction of a second. She felt it immediately, and she was certain that he felt it, too. There was a widening of his eyes at just that moment, and softening of his smile.
Yes, he felt it, too, and he understood what it meant besides. She had blushed. She felt exposed, like she was naked but not in a sexual way, more of an intellectual or even spiritual way. She was nonplussed and stammered and fumbled over her own children's names as she introduced them to him. "I must have sounded like an idiot," she repined.
"He's too short!" She said out loud.
"Who's too short, Mom?" said her son, Tanis. Tanis was the spitting image of his Dad. He was all boy; Muddy feet, dirty hands, rocks, toads, airplanes and fire - he liked fire which scared her to death. He was a good boy but he was a handful.
"Oh, no one. Did you have fun today in church?" She asked trying to change the subject. She glanced in the rearview mirror at her son playing with a toy airplane. Her daughter, Ester, who was not quite two was in her car seat already sound asleep.
"Alan?" Asked Tanis? He was like a dog with a bone!
"Yes," she answered.
"Too short for what?"
"Never mind."
"Yes, I guess,"
" 'Yes, I guess,' what?"
"You asked 'Did I have fun?' I said, 'yes, I guess.' "
They both fell silent, "How did Tanis know I was talking about Alan," she asked herself? The boy was either very perceptive or she was very transparent, and if she was that transparent it meant that Alan picked up on her feelings, too. What a disaster! Two weeks on her own and she practically picked up a man, at church, no less! She even gave him her phone number! He will think she was easy!
He didn't seem to be that sort, however. She saw in his eyes a maturity and a strong sense of purpose. She also saw there a longing and a loneliness. But, maybe she was just seeing what she wanted to see. He had told her he was a single Dad with three kids, all of them seven to ten years older than her two. The older two daughters now lived with their mom, but his son lived with him. He seemed troubled by the fact that his daughters didn't live with him anymore, a good sign he was a good and loyal Dad. He seemed to have been single for quite a while, she would have to learn more about the story behind that and more specifically how a woman can leave her kids behind even if they had a great Dad. Dee was not cut from such cloth!
She pulled into the parking lot of her apartment building. The apartment she could afford was nice enough, clean and relatively modern, but the reason the rent was so low, she surmised, was that the building was about 50 feet from the railroad tracks and maybe 100 feet from a crossing, so the trains blasted their horns approaching from both ways. Her TV would break into random squiggles as the train went by, always at a critical moment of a program! But there was a bedroom for each of her two children and she slept on the sleeper sofa she brought from her former home. It would do for now.
When she entered the apartment her phone was ringing. She quickly got the kids inside and closed the door then answered the phone
"Hello?" She asked into the receiver.
"Hello, this is Alan Drake," He laughed, "I just wanted to make sure I had written the phone number down correctly. I hope you enjoyed our services this morning."
"Oh, yes, very much," she purred, then grimaced, "It hadn't been a date!" she told herself, "tone it down."
"Great, may I call you sometime?" Nice, very considerate, she noted
"Sure, I go to bed early so don't call after 8:00 pm."
"I understand, well anyway I enjoyed meeting you today so I'll let you go."
"Already?" She cringed as soon as she said it, she was sure she sounded desperate.
"Well, I figured you needed to get lunch for your kids."
"Yeah, we just walked in the door."
"Say, why don't you let me treat you and your kids to lunch?"
"Well, I don't know..."
"Just pizza down a Pappy's Pizza, they have video games for the kids so the adults can talk."
"I... well, I guess so...how about in 30 minutes?" She could use some adult time, she thought, "I'll meet you there."