"Well. Okay. I knew I shouldn't have left." Mike Turner was more resigned to his situation than angry.
He had taken an unknown side road out of Leavenworth to try to skirt the Kansas Highway Patrol's closing of K-7 due to near blizzard conditions. He just wanted to get home though hotel he was in had been just fine.
Now, visibility less than a quarter mile, wind chill in the minus 20 range and night rapidly approaching, he sat in his car, in a ditch, God only knew where. To add insult to injury, he was in a dead spot - his cell phone couldn't get a signal.
He was weighing his options when there was a knock on his window.
"Jesus!" He was startled.
Before he turned to the window he glanced in the rear view mirror and there was no car behind him. He rolled down the window and a woman's face, nose and mouth covered with a snow-covered muffler, poked inside.
"Looks like you're in a bit of a predicament. Need some help?"
"Uh, yeah, thanks. Can you get me out?"
"I could get my four-by down here and probably winch you out but, uh," the woman looked down the road, "I'm gonna guess you wouldn't make it more than a mile before you're in the ditch again. And no wrecker is going to come out in this."
"Yeah...I suppose you're right. I'm not anywhere near 7 am I?"
The woman laughed, "It depends on your definition of 'near,' you know. Right now, in this weather, you are a million miles from nowhere."
"Yeah, I sorta figured you were going to say something like that."
"Well, come on. Better come inside with me. That's my farmhouse. Maybe by morning things will have improved. Or, you could stay out here and freeze to death."
"I'll come in. You sure you don't mind?"
"Mister, I made the offer. I wouldn't have if I had minded though," the woman added dryly, "I would have felt real bad with you freezing to death out here."
He nodded his thanks, gathered his overnight bag, his laptop and his parka and got out of the car. The woman was already headed up the driveway.
It was only a short walk but with the bitterly cold wind and the stinging snow and his bags it felt like it was miles.
The woman left the back door ajar. He pushed it opened and stepped inside to the kitchen. He stomped the snow off his shoes, set his bags down and unzipped the parka. He was breathing hard and sweating profusely.
The woman was at the stove, putting a teakettle on. She turned to check him out and was alarmed.
"Mister, you need to take a seat. You look like hell. You gonna be all right?"
"Yeah," he huffed, "just let me sit down and take a pill."
He lurched toward a kitchen chair and fumbled with a tiny pill bottle.
She recognized it as nitro. "Oh God, you're not having a heart attack are you?!"
He sort of laughed, "No...just the cold...I've got stable angina. All I need to do is..."
"Is take one of those nitros. Here," she took the small bottle from his shaking hands and got a tiny pill, "open wide, tongue up." He complied and she placed the nitroglycerin tab under his tongue.
She put her hand and his shoulder, felt him shaking, and watched his face. Soon his color improved, his breathing slowed and his shaking stopped. "Thanks."
"You're welcome. What's your name?"
"Turner, Mike Turner. I live down in Overland Park. I was up in Leavenworth on some business. Thought I could beat the weather. I was trying to skirt the Highway Patrol roadblock."
"Yeah. I figured it would be something like that. They announced they were closing 7 just a while ago on the news. I hope you're a better business man than a judge of the weather." She chided gently.
"Listen, in my younger days, I drove a Metro Geo loaded with medical lab specimens up I-44 from Joplin to St. Louis in conditions worse than this." He smiled back.
"The key words in that statement Mike were 'younger days'."
He laughed, "Yeah...point taken.
"You know, you look awfully familiar. I just can't place you. We didn't like, go to high school together or something like that?"
The teakettle began to whistle, she smiled at him, "Darjeeling or Earle Gray?"
"Excuse me?"
"Tea, Mike, Darjeeling or Earle Gray?"
"Uh, Earle Gray, please."
She turned to pour the hot water into the cups. "No, I don't think we went to high school. And I doubt whether we've met before. But, you've probably seen me."
She brought the tea to the table and sat down. She took down her hair from the ponytail it was in and fluffed her hair.
"Oh. Oh, my god..."
She did a Groucho Marx with her eyebrows as she saw the recognition in his eyes.
"I thought you'd in Hollywood or somewhere else. I mean, given your official bio, I wouldn't think you'd be spending much time at home."
"Um," she waved her hand, laughed without humor, "it's like hiding in plain sight. This is my private get away. Belongs to a friend."
She looked at the clock. "Hey, are you hungry? Dinner time, you know, at least for me."
"Sure."
"Why don't you go take a seat in the living room and I'll heat something up? It won't be much. A friend brought a broccoli casserole by yesterday. I was just going to heat it up; fix a salad. Ranch, French or Italian?" She went to the refrigerator, opened the door and started rummaging around.
"Uh, Ranch."
"Excellent choice...because that's all I've got."
~~~~~~~~~~
They ate together quietly in the kitchen. He felt awkward, unused to the comfort of a celebrity stranger and she was curious about her guest but she didn't want to pry.
She picked up the dishes. "Can I offer you an after dinner drink, coffee? Something stronger?"
"Coffee and something stronger would be nice."
"Okay, coming right up."
She poured a cup of coffee for both of them then went to the cupboard. "Let's see," she looked back at her guest, "you strike me as a Jim Beam man." He smiled and nodded. "Straight up, please."
She produced two lowball glasses and a three quarter's full bottle of Beam. She poured a dollop in each glass and held up her glass, "Here's to blizzards and new friends."
"Hear, hear," He clinked his glass with hers and took a sip.
She watched to see his reaction as the bourbon hit his tongue. He held the sip for a moment then swallowed - no grimacing, choking or coughing.
Okay, she thought to herself, he does know how to drink. But there was something about her guest she couldn't quite put her finger on; he was almost too polite.
"Uh, I've been holding off since you came in and looked like death warmed over but...it's my house, okay? I gotta have a smoke. Hope you don't mind."
He smiled, reached inside his sweater and pulled a pack of non-filtered Camels from his pocket. "Can I interest you in a real cigarette or do you really smoke the Reds you sing about?"
"Ah, you know my music? Yeah, I smoke Marlboros but I'd be glad to have a Camel."