It had been another long week. My workdays weren't as long, but they had become a lot more intense. Because I had been conducting second interviews, they not only took longer, they were a lot more in depth. And that created more stress, even though I was down from the fourteen hour days I'd put in the previous week and a half, to a more manageable ten to twelve.
Another reason the week seemed so long was that Ann was supposed to be coming out for a week, and the anticipation of having her back in my arms made the hours and minutes drag on. And that was before I got the crushing news that I'd received when I got back to the hotel late on Thursday night.
I'd walked into the lobby that night in a good mood, knowing I'd have Heather at my disposal for the evening for one of her long, luxurious blowjobs, thanks to the transaction I'd made the day before in the 'sex account' game Ann had invented. But when I walked up to the front desk to check my messages, everything changed in an instant. Heather had a look on her face that told me she not only had news, but that it wasn't good.
"There's a message for you, Neil...from Ann," she said, unable to hide the fact that she was upset.
"Oh my God...is she okay?" I said in a bit of a panic.
"Yeah...she's okay...just has some bad news."
"What is it?"
"She won't be here until Saturday night. She had something come up with the wedding, and she's trying to get it taken care of before she leaves."
"What the hell could THAT be?" I asked.
"She didn't say. She just said that she needed to get it resolved now...because waiting until the week she gets back would be too late."
I sighed, knowing that it was a possibility. Ann had a couple of issues with the arrangements she was working on, with the catering and the cake, and a couple of logistical things, namely lodging for guests coming in from out of town. It got to the point that she'd warned me that she may have to delay her trip by a day or two.
Because Ann was coming out for a week, it was going to cut into the planning time for our big day. I knew she was still going to come out...she had too, to find us a place to live after we got married. Once the wedding was over, I had to move out of the hotel, so we needed a place to go. But Ann could technically drive out any week to do that, while there were things regarding the wedding that needed to be taken care of that couldn't wait.
With the news, I was a little distraught knowing that Ann was now yet another day away, and Heather knew it.
"Give me a few minutes, Neil. I'll get someone to cover me, and I'll meet you upstairs," she said, thinking that I'd want her company now more than ever.
It was a very nice gesture on Heather's part. But as wonderful as the thought was of letting Heather take away the stress of my workday and now my sudden dejection, by giving me some one of her amazing blowjobs, my mood had been forever changed for the evening.
"Thanks, Heather...but I think I'll just save that for some other time," I said as I tried to smile politely.
"Aw...Neil. I'm so sorry this happened. I know how much you've been looking forward to Ann being here."
"Yeah...I know. But I guess that will just make the reunion sex that much sweeter," I said, thinking of what my Dad called it.
"Ha...I've never heard it put like that. But you're right...I might have to clear your floor so the other guests won't complain about all the noise you'll be making."
I just smiled again and gave her a little wave. "Goodnight, Heather. I'll see you tomorrow."
"Goodnight, Neil. Hey, remember that I'll be here until midnight. If you change your mind, just give me a call, okay?"
"Okay...thanks," I said as started to turn the corner and head to the elevators, knowing before I took a step that I'd never make that call.
"OH! I almost forgot, Neil. Ann said to tell you that Rose is okay...and so are the Armstrong's'."
I let out a little sigh of relief, and said, "Thank God...that is such a relief!"
Heather gave me a knowing smile, understanding just how good that news was, compared to the message that Ann's arrival was going to be delayed. In fact, compared to what Heather just said, the news that I was going to be without Ann one more day didn't matter at all. This was MUCH more important.
I took another step, and stopped in my tracks. Turning back to Heather, my face contorted a little. "Wait...the Armstong's?"
"Yeah...I think she said the Armstrong's. Todd and Gracie...right?"
My eyes opened wide, and I smiled. Nodding, I said, "OH...yeah...that's right."
~*~*~*~*~*~
I stripped down to my boxers, grabbed a Heineken out of the little fridge in my room, and flopped onto my bed. Picking up the remote off the table between the beds, I turned on the television, settling back into a big pile of pillows as I tried to get my mind off of Ann. But as soon as I flipped through the channels I was bombarded with the news coverage that had been going on for a couple of days, and Ann came right back to my mind. Well, Ann...and a lot of her friends and family.
Just forty-eight hours before, I'd been in my room, eating a pizza from a local joint down the street from the hotel, my eyes riveted to the screen. I was just settling in to watch game three of the World Series, which was being featured as the Battle of the Bay, with the San Francisco Giants playing the Oakland Athletics.
It was a series that not only I found interesting, Ann was practically beside herself. The two teams that she'd followed during her ten years in Northern California were in the games' biggest showcase, facing off against each other. And as the series moved to Candlestick Park, she had said she was hoping for a Giants win, even though she was more of an A's fan. She just wanted the series to go as long as it could, and Oakland was already up two games to none.
It was a phone call I'll never forget. Ann was already in tears when I answered the phone...and I knew the instant it rang it was her. In fact, my hand was on the phone, ready to pick it up to call and console her...but I was in too much shock.
"Neil, are you watching this?" she said as I answered, trying to fight back her tears.
"Yes, babe...I can't take my eyes off it. This is so...tragic."
The greater San Francisco Bay area had been hit with a 6.9 earthquake just fifteen minutes before the start of the game; the epicenter less than 25 miles from the stadium. At first, I didn't know what had happened, other than the signal had gone out for the game for a little bit. But as the cameras came back on, and the scene started to unfold, it quickly went from being just an unusual beginning to what I'd thought was going to be a relaxing evening of sports entertainment, to a late night filled with feelings of helplessness and worry.
The images Ann and I were watching at the same time, 500 miles apart, were staggering. The television network that was covering the game was going to use a blimp to provide aerial shots of the game. Instead, it began giving immediate coverage of a natural disaster just moments after it happened. We looked on in horror as we saw buildings and homes in rubble, plumes of smoke rising from fires burning in different regions of the city, and people standing in the streets, looking on in shock.
When the blimp showed a shot of the Bay Bridge that spans San Francisco Bay, connecting Oakland and San Francisco, Ann let out a shriek.
"OH MY GOD...NEIL!"
"I see it, baby. I see it," I said, trying to calm her down. But I was having a hard time remaining composed myself. There, on the TV in my room, was a picture of the bridge, a section of the upper deck having collapsed down onto the lower deck. I felt a tear roll down my cheek, along with the shiver that ran though my body as I looked at a car stopped less than a hundred yards from the huge gap in the bridge.