This morning, ten years and three hundred miles stood between me and my home town. It might as well have been a century, a continent. In ten years, I had never returned, never even considered it. Yet somehow, the barrier of time and space that kept Hapville and its many unpleasant memories safely out of reach for so long had proven insufficient. I was going back.
The first thing I noticed was the sign. A twenty mile stretch of county road through overgrown pastures and kudzu-covered ditches once flowed seamlessly from Briar Cove to Hapville and straight on through to Morris with nothing but weathered barns and unmarked intersections as landmarks. At some point in the past ten years, the city council had erected a quaint burgundy sign along the way that read, "Welcome to Hapville!" then in slightly smaller letters below, "Antique capitol of North Alabama!" Two snaking tendrils of kudzu had already found their way up one side of the 5' sign. Without someone to come out and trim it, the whole sign would be covered in less than two weeks. I found myself wondering what portion of the city's budget was allocated to keeping the damn Welcome sign clear of kudzu as I made the unmarked turn onto the two-lane street that lead to the center of town.
My grip on the steering wheel tightened. The kudzu and open fields gave way to houses and gravel driveways. The dwellings on the outskirts of town were largely of the single- and double-wide variety. A brick ranch house every once in a while. Then a cinder-block shanty with two faded Fisher Price push cars parked on the front lawn in a tangle of weeds and empty coffee canisters. As I neared town square, the houses grew larger, more solid, and generally more well-kept. Mid-century Victorians with wrap-around porches, white trim, and gnarled rose bushes in the flower beds. I didn't spot one house that couldn't do with a good pressure-washing, but even the dinginess of these grander homes only seemed to add to their charm, as though they wore their years with pride and were more distinguished for them.
I crossed the tracks and took the first left at the Jayco gas station. I was thinking about my next turn when suddenly, I found myself face-to-face with a ghost. The gazebo at the center of town. My foot pulsed on the brakes as the blood rushed from my face and a wave of memory crashed over me. Prom night, two a.m. Stars, lamplight, empty streets. A chaste, tearful kiss as Rascal Flatts softly flowed through the open windows of his parked Chrysler Lebaron.
My ears were ringing. I realized I had come to a dead stop in the middle of the road, but thankfully there were no cars behind me. With a small shake of my head, I dispelled the intrusive memory back to the quiet space where I had kept it locked for over a decade. I tried desperately to avoid looking at the gazebo as I made a right turn onto Main Street and through a stretch of twenty-or-so run-down store fronts peddling everything from second-hand furniture to handmade lawn ornaments. These were the antique stores of Hapville fame, really nothing more than brick-and-mortar garage sales, and every other front was vacant.
As I made the short drive through town, I found myself swatting away old memories, things I hadn't thought of in years. That store sold ice cream from a deep freezer, but only Meyers pints in two flavors: butter pecan and French vanilla. I worked a summer at that McDonald's. My first car hit a nail in the parking lot behind this grocery store. I lost my virginity in that park.
Oh god. The fucking park. It had completely eluded me that Kelly's new address was adjacent to Bunny Hill Park. She used to live beside the school, but she texted me her new address when I told her I'd be coming into town for the reunion. I hadn't even bothered to map it, remembering that the street intersected Main.
Kelly and I had been best friends since sixth grade, and ironically, she had been the first person I'd told about the park. Fuck. Fifteen years old, I thought with a groan of regret. Fifteen, horny, and stupid. My boyfriend at the time, Cody Rogers, was also fifteen. Sweet then, but the relationship soured in the dramatic, painful way that heated teenage romances often did. I could barely remember what he was like when we first started dating, only how pissy and cruel we were both were to each other when we broke up six weeks later, and then the icy, stabbing indifference that followed every day for the next four years.
I found Kelly's house number, and noted with disgust that the exact spot where I'd had my first fumbling fuck was plainly visible from her driveway. Holy shit. Who had lived here back then? Weren't there trees blocking these houses from view at the time? Oh god, please let there have been trees.
The screen door slammed. I looked up and there was Kelly, only it wasn't her. We hadn't seen each other in nearly three years, when she'd spent a weekend with me in Atlanta. In those three years, she had taken off about twenty pounds, chopped off most of her hair and dyed it brown, and if my eyes didn't deceive me, she'd had some work done to her breasts. Her low-cut top clearly revealed two perfect C's where there had once been modest B's. For all of that, she hadn't aged a day. In fact, she looked amazing.
She waved a greeting with one hand. The other gripped the neck of a bottle of red. "Thought you might be ready for a glass," she shouted as I opened the car door and climbed out, leaving my bags in the back seat. Her smile was the only thing about this town that felt at all like home, and I noticed some of my tension lift as she pulled me into a long hug.
She lead me inside, gave me a quick tour. Two bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet with soft green paint on bare living room walls. The house had the distinct feel of being freshly moved-into, void of all the mess and clutter and subtle signs of human presence that came once a home had been lived in for a while. The furniture seemed a little too new, the stove a smidge too clean, and the pantry far too bare. In fact, the only things Kelly kept in her pantry were a half-empty container of Oreo cookies, a box of sandwich bags, and 5 more bottles of red. "One of those 'wine-crate' mail subscriptions," Kelly explained. "Deb had one and gave us the kinds she didn't care for."
Deb was Kelly's mother-in-law. Ex-mother-in-law, I had to remind myself. "Do you still talk?"
Kelly shook her head. She plucked an unopened bottle from the shelf, handed it to me before closing the pantry door. "Nope," she said. "Things are still a little raw."
Seeing that she was not going to offer anything else unprompted, I asked, "So it's all final, then?"
"Almost. Waiting on one last thing to sign, I think."
Not knowing what else to say, I offered, "At least there aren't any kids, right?"
Kelly shrugged, "Yeah, that's what everyone keeps saying. But I don't know." She pulled a couple glasses from a cabinet. There was already a corkscrew out on the counter. I picked it up and began busying myself with the bottle. "I mean, I can't help but wonder sometimes. Maybe if we had a kid, things would be different. Like, maybe we both would have tried a little bit harder to make things work."
I shimmied the cork free with a satisfying pop. "Bullshit," I said. I began pouring. "Then there would be three miserable people instead of two. And then you'd have to see him every goddam weekend to swap the kid around. At least this way, if you want, you can cut him out of your life for good. Start completely over."
Kelly took the glass I offered her as I poured a generous portion for myself. "Christ, you make it all sound so sterile," she mumbled, taking a sip. "You know it's never really that cut and dry, not when feelings are involved."
"No reason why it can't be," I shrugged. "Believe me," I continued. "You're better off that it's ending now, while you're still young and hot and have nothing else tying you down."
"Mmmm, you think I'm hot?" she teased, playfully licking the rim of her wine glass and leaning over the counter so her breasts peaked over the top of her tank top.
"You're such a slut," I teased, tossing the wine cork at her exposed cleavage. "And hey, did you get a boob job?"
She beamed. "Needed a little confidence boost when things went tits-up, so I upgraded my tits." She did a little shimmy so her enhanced bosom jiggled. "Like?"
I took a gulp of wine. "I'm jealous." My breasts had appeared early, but then never grew larger than a B.
"Don't be," she said. "You've always had great tits."
Later that night, we sat on her bed with the last bottle of wine, taking swigs and passing it back and forth.
"So what the fuck are we going to do about tomorrow night?" she groaned for what must have been the sixth or seventh time.
I shook my head, held up a finger. "We're not going to talk to him. Just leave him alone."
She started to protest, "But I can't-"
"No," I said forcefully, taking hold of her shoulders. She grinned. "No, Kelly. We're going to leave him alone, and if he tries to start shit, we're going to tell him to go fuck himself."
Kelly burst into giggles. "Fuck himself," she snorted. "If he - If he didn't fuck himself, he'd never get any!"
We both rolled with laughter. I took the half-empty bottle by the neck and upended it. "Seriously, though," she said, suppressing giggles. "We haven't fucked in like, months. Or, you know, before-" she flung her arm about to indicate all of the drama and shit surrounding the divorce- "before it went bad, like really bad, we went like six months without sex. Is that normal?"
"Fuck no!" I blurted, almost spitting wine onto her blue duvet.
"Right," she said, but her smile faltered.
"Fucking idiot," I said. "You were always way hotter than him. I don't get how anyone could be married to you and, like, not want to be all over you every goddam night. Idiot."
"I mean, it wasn't all his fault," she muttered. "That part at least..."
She took the bottle from my hand, downed the last of it. "Okay, so it's like this," she said, rubbing the back of her hand across her mouth. "And this is going to sound stupid, but I think my body may have been telling me something was wrong with our relationship long before things went sour. I mean, I used to find him really attractive. We'd fuck like every day, whenever we could. That's one of the main reasons we got married so young, so we could move in and fuck whenever the hell we wanted. But the past couple years, I don't know." She shook her head. "I just haven't wanted it as much. Not with him."
"With someone else?" I prompted.
Her eyes met mine. I noticed they were glazed over and slightly unfocused. She was either already trashed, or well on her way, and I wasn't far behind. Then she shrugged. "Yes and no. Not like, one specific person. I wasn't cheating or anything. But I started noticing that different things turned me on, and the things that used to just didn't do it for me anymore."
"Like what? Did you get into some like Fifty-Shades-of-Grey type shit?"
She whacked me with a throw pillow she had been holding against her stomach. "Shut up," she scoffed, laughing. "Not like that. Just, different people. Different types of people."