Sometime when you're looking for love it's right under your nose.
Thank you Brian and Robert for your helpful suggestions.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, merchandise, companies, events and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. All characters are 18 years or older when in sexual situations.
This story borrows one of the main characters, Jonathan David Thornhill, affectionately known as "Skeet," from "The Perfect Season." Skeet is a widower in his 40's, a former University of North Carolina star left tackle, 6'4", trim with salt and pepper hair.
Prologue
Everyone's entitled to fall in love, right? Woe is the person that never experienced the joys of love. So many descriptions. For me? It's a sweet, enveloping feeling, like being wrapped in a thick, fuzzy blanket. You want to push yourself deep into it. To get hopelessly lost in it.
I was once in the warm embrace of love. My wife of 15 years passed away over 10 years ago, leaving me to my work as cold comfort. I did suffer through an infatuation with Mia, a woman much younger than me [ed. note, see "The Perfect Season"], and that episode hurt me deeply, although ultimately I got over it and now enjoy a strong relationship with Mia and her wife Megan (who is still one of my executive assistants).
I hungered for the feeling again. But how do you find true love again when you're in the office practically 24/7?
Chapter One
The Coerced Promise
Do you know any workaholics?
You know, the guy that's always in the office when you go home - after you think it's late.
I'm one of those guys. And you know what's stupid about it? I own the company. I should be paying someone else to work late. I should be enjoying life. Except that I don't know how. So maybe that's one of my many excuses for working all the time. I don't know what else to do with my time.
I was forty-two when I had my epiphany. No, I'm not going to tell you now. That'd spoil the story. But for forty-one years my eyes were on one prize. To make money - lots of it. I started my own company -almost twenty years ago, building it from two to eighty-seven employees.
The material stuff? Yeah, I had all that. The fancy sports cars, the clothes, the big house. Those trinkets didn't really hold my interest. Not really. I'd have some fun, then get bored, looking for the next thing.
And women? Of course I didn't have just one girlfriend, I had several. But none were serious, and none crossed enough hurdles to make the dreaded meeting with my mother. I must confess I've always been awkward around women and having lost Caroline and then getting unexpectedly back into circulation was an adjustment I just never successfully made. Even though I'm great in the board room, I'm not quite as polished in social situations, nor have I been particularly good in managing my mother.
Now my mother would be a long story in and of itself. Suffice it to say that if you searched "piece of work" in Wikipedia it'd show a picture of my mother. My father died young at age 55. My mother had a number of suitors, any one of which would have been a fine match. But my mother turned them all down. Did she do it just to spite me? She would never admit it. I guess I'd be an ingrate to deny credit to my mother. She did encourage me to start my own venture capital firm and even lent me a good portion of my seed capital. I do see her every week for dinner. She cooks, I eat, and she interrogates me.
The year I turned forty-two started the same as the previous one. Business was booming. I was clearing a cool seven figure salary. And experiencing the usual problems. I was having dinner at my mother's house, then almost a weekly occurrence.
"So how goes it these days?" my mom asked as she placed a sizable roast chicken on the table.
I eyed the obscenely large bird. "So when are the other six people showing up?"
That drew a smile from my mother. "It's all for you."
I leaned forward and sliced a big hunk of the breast off, sliding it on my plate. "It's going well. We closed a couple deals last quarter and managed to negotiate a credit line that is 50 basis points lower. But I got this pesky employment tax audit going on. What a pain in the ass. Something about a few independent contractors I hired to work on my latest deal. I had to let my accounting manager go last year and my company's tax compliance hasn't been up to snuff. And I've got a dispute with our landlord over who's responsible for paying for the repairs to our tenth floor data center. Stupid ass maintenance person spilled a cup of coffee into a control panel for the data center."
I decided to change the subject. "What about you? Are you seeing anyone?"
My mom showed surprise on her face. "I thought I was the one asking the questions."
"Well, it doesn't seem like you're being serious about finding someone. You're still an attractive woman and there's still a lot of living for you to do. You're only sixty-two." And I was right about that. My mom still had an attractive figure. She had let her hair go gray, but it was an elegant look for her. She was intelligent and fun. She would hold her tongue for no one. That went double when she spoke to me.
"I'll let you know when I'm serious about someone. Now let's get back to my favorite topic - you. You took the question out of my mouth. Are you seeing anyone?"
I drew a long breath and went through the collection of women that I was seeing on a casual basis. Should I subject any one of them to my mom's probing? Discretion was called for. "No, not now."
My mom's eyes narrowed. "Really? A good looking forty-one year old man? Bullshit. I cooked you a nice dinner. Give me some information, and now."
It's too bad my mom wasn't in the CIA. They could have done away with all of those "enhanced" interrogation techniques. All they needed was my mother, a chicken dinner, and her glare. The most hardened criminal would spill his guts to her.
I made a snap judgment on who to give up first. "Terri. I'm still seeing her."
"Terri? Is that one of the women on your outside legal team? You showed me a picture of her sometime back, isn't that right?"
I wasn't going to get anything past my mom. I think she has an archive of everything I've ever told her. "That's right."
"She's a lovely girl. Why don't you bring her over for dinner?"
"No. I don't think we're ready for that." I meant that. I liked Terri. I didn't want to subject her to my mom's withering questioning.
"Look. I know what you're thinking. I won't scare her away. I'll be on my best behavior. I just want to see who my baby is dating. Can't you give your mother that small measure of satisfaction? Don't forget I gave birth to you."
Jesus. My mother pulled out the "I gave birth to you card." She wasn't going to give up on this one.
"All right. I'll ask Terri over. But you have to promise me that you'll be nice and won't ask her a thousand questions."
My mom's face softened into that "You're a good boy" look. "I promise. I'll limit it to no more than a hundred."