This novel is a work of fiction. The chapters have importance to me as a writer, but the parts are just to make this more manageable as an internet novel, along with being a way to publish something while incomplete. At this time, only one detailed sex scene is written or planned. This story is not political, but mentions of politics occur. You will quickly see what side the characters lean toward - if you are on the other side and easily offended, I don't recommend continuing once you figure things out. But again, there are no political statements, just the occasional political discussion fades into and out of their lives. Because my goal is just to capture life, capture the lives of some regular people.
Table of Contents
Part 1:
**Chapter 1: The Lonely Silence of Holidays (6,342 words)
**Chapter 2: Just That But Also Something More (1,638 words)
**Chapter 3: Whence Rivers Come, There They Return (11,301 words)
Part 2:
**Chapter 4: They were Yung and Easily Freudened (~4,202 words)
**Chapter 5: The Love in Your Heart (~9,452 words)
**Chapter 6: Title TBD (~9,573 words)
Part 3:
**Chapter 7: Title TBD (~4,010 words)
**Chapter 8: Title TBD (~6,973 words)
**Chapter 9: Title TBD (in progress)
**Chapter 10: Title TBD (planned as final chapter)
Chapter 1: The Lonely Silence of Holidays
My hindsight tells me that 2009 was a simpler time. When I force myself to remember, I know that there was a terrible recession, and so many people found themselves without a home or job. In fact, for a few months, I found myself without a job, my first time job hunting since finishing college four years prior. But 2009 was also a time when charter schools were rare and uncontroversial, when the iPhone didn't work but was just a toy for status seekers, and many white people like me thought Oscar Grant was a one-time thing. Most of all, for me, the end of the year was the beginning and end of the best time of my life, which would ripple through the rest of my story.
I lost my job selling magazine ads in May as all of my sales dried up. We all did. I was mostly relieved except for the part where I moved back home, back to the small mountain town where my parents coexisted because what was the point of divorcing. I decided that an income was better than a mortgage, so I rented out my townhome and began bringing in a whopping $65 per month. At the end of September, I finally found a job, more than a thousand miles away in San Diego. The only lie I told to get the job was that I had connections in San Diego. Why make them worry that I was currently in a boondock town in a state that bore no significance to them?
I found a room for rent that would take my cat, purposely going short term in case something happened or I wanted to drain my savings and buy another house. I would be cold calling again, but at least I would have a paycheck. I was hired with a group of seven other young people, making me at 25 the second-oldest. Most of them became pretty good friends, but I found I no longer had much in common with recent graduates. Fortunately, I saw that quickly, and when our after work drinks the first weekend of October went stupidly boring, I called my real estate agent from back home and asked if she knew anyone in San Diego. I wasn't going to have a social life, so might as well make an investment while prices were low. And there was no risk of losing my job if they were willing to invest in those kids.
She didn't, but she hadn't sold a house in six months and had just started moonlighting at the Verizon store, which was on the verge of becoming her full time job. She made some calls to California and set me up with someone who would give her a cut. They worked fast and found me a decent house in a lousy neighborhood, just affordable enough to drain all my savings. I moved in what little I had brought to San Diego on November 14.
But success wasn't making me any friends. A few of my cohort couldn't hack it; we were down to just five people by the time I moved into my house. Two quit, one was fired. The firing alienated me more, because they knew I would be the last to go if they started shedding us. But now that I was both a landlord and a homeowner, I didn't have much interest in them. Despite my status, the establishment at the company saw me as part of that group of young people infringing on their jobs. I wasn't able to get to know any of them.
The break in my social life came the Sunday before Thanksgiving. I was raking my front yard, trying to see if I could at least make the exterior of my house presentable until I could afford to update the inside. The raking was nominal, what I'd have to do is remove the chain link fence. Then I saw a young woman walking a dog. I looked again. I might have stared a bit too long, but I felt I had to be sure. Her hair had never been that long and I didn't remember her wearing glasses. But I had remembered that face so many times since the last day of high school. "Polly?" I asked.
"Yes?" she looked at me and slowed her walk, not apparently recognizing me but open to talking.
"We went to high school together!" I blurted out, not knowing what else to say.
She had stopped walking and her look went from one of answering a question to one that said "I don't know what scam you're running but this here is a pit bull and I went to high school 1500 miles from here." But then her look softened, turned to one of inquisitiveness, and she asked, "Spanish class?"
"Yeah."
"Oh my God, Jack! You look... great."
I didn't, I was wearing an undershirt and some beat up khakis, but I knew what she meant. I had traded in my unkempt long hair, baseball cap, and glasses for a clean, professional haircut and contact lenses. Nonetheless, I was surprised she would lead with that comment since I don't recall ever even having a conversation with her. But she was always an extremely, even sickeningly, nice person. Leading with whatever compliment she could think up seemed in-character.
I smiled and said, "So do you, but you always did."
She laughed and turned her head, then said, "I didn't mean- well, what I was saying was..."
"Don't worry. I own who I was in high school."
"No, no, I guess..." she took a deep breath and I watched her struggle. "I always knew you were handsome under your hat. Oh my God, I'm sorry, I don't know why I'm saying this."
I laughed. "It's fine. I know I've cleaned up but still feels good to be called handsome by a girl like you."
"OK, thank you but I'm embarrassed enough. So you live here?"
"Just closed last week."
"Wow that's amazing. Where do you work?"
"I sell some kind of tech product. Don't care about it but I'm pretty good at it. You?"
"I teach gardening at the elementary school up the road. Well, technically science, but I try to emphasize growing fruits and veggies."