Chapter 7 -- Dancing With The Devil
Monday September 19
Cassidy had gotten Paul to show her the video of my fight. She wasn't happy when I announced that I didn't want to go to the dojo, but grudgingly accepted my reasoning. She and Brook went instead. I made Paul drive me home and told him I planned to stay in the rest of the night so that he could take the night off.
What I did instead was get the Demon out and drive until I found myself at the Pearson farm. Zoe took one look at me and put me to work mucking out stalls and putting down new straw as she did other chores. I wondered why I always seemed to get this job or washing horses. Not that I minded, but she brushed, babied, and fed them, while I did the dirty work.
It was exactly what I needed. When we were done, Zoe saddled two of the horses, and we took a ride. She got me talking about how I felt horrible for hurting Mr. Rios. We ended up on my farm, and I took her to the river and found my favorite walnut tree. She listened as I shared everything and when I finally stopped, she nodded.
"Let's pray about it," she suggested.
I bowed my head and prayed for Mr. Rios. I asked for forgiveness for my role in hurting him. I felt better after the work, talking to Zoe, and praying. Somehow, she always made me feel better, more grounded after we did this. Sometimes you needed to get back to basics, talk to a friend, and put it in God's hands.
"Thank you, I needed that," I admitted.
"I'm just happy you felt comfortable enough to share with me."
"I would hope we could still be friends even if you are seeing Johan and I'm dating Brook."
I think it surprised her that I knew about her date with Johan.
"I don't know if 'seeing' is the right word. I just went out on one date with him," Zoe said, pushing back.
"Come on. You've known him your whole life. Johan is one of the nicest guys I know. I can see the two of you together."
"That's part of the problem. We know just about everything about each other."
"I understand; someone new can seem exciting. There's all that mystery of who they are and the fun of discovering new things about each other. That doesn't mean they're better. Yes, you think you know everything about Johan, but I would bet he can surprise you. The key is, you know that deep down he's a good guy.
"I wanted my best friend Tami to be my girlfriend. She kept pushing it off to a mythical 'someday.' Now I don't know that we'll ever be together. A part of me hopes so, but now she's dating my best friend, and I'm in love with Brook. Only you know if Johan might be the one you're meant to be with. I would recommend that if you suspect he might be, don't overthink it."
She bit her bottom lip.
"You love Brook?" she asked.
"Yes."
She just nodded and stared off into space, thinking.
"What does she have that I don't?" Zoe asked.
What do you say to that? I suddenly felt like I was dancing with the devil. No matter what I said, it would be wrong, but Zoe didn't deserve for me to just brush it off.
"Comparison is a joy stealer. It's a bottomless pit of self-doubt and self-deprecation. You need to know that there's nothing wrong with you. You're not less sexy, less lovable, or less anything else. I think it's telling that I'm here when I need to talk about something I consider serious. You're my anchor."
"Then why did you choose her? If I'm the one you feel you can share serious stuff with, why aren't we together?" Zoe asked.
"That same argument could be made for Pam, Halle, Beth, or even Tracy," I said, and saw her frown. "You represent a lot of what I find important. I want to eventually have a large family; I have strong religious beliefs; and I can see someday living on a farm. There are times when I wish that was the life I was destined to have."
"You could have all that with me."
I could see the start of tears. I pulled her to me and gave her a hug.
"Zoe, I care for you more than you may even realize. When I decided to have a girlfriend, I knew what I was giving up. I could've just kept the status quo, but that wouldn't have been fair to you or any of the others, especially Brook. Believe me, I didn't have reasons why anyone was better than someone else. It simply came down to my heart.
"I know that isn't what you want to hear. If I told you it was some arbitrary reason, you would fixate on trying to making yourself better in that area. I can't emphasize this enough: you are perfect just as you are," I tried.
She gave me a weak smile.
"I was prepared to be mad at you," she admitted. "Dang it, David. You should have picked me."
I was smart enough not to say anything.
We mounted the horses and rode back the farm. My grandmother saw me and made me promise to stop by before I went home.
---
"You don't visit," Grandma Dawson complained.
"What is it with women today? They all want a piece of me."
"Better than the alternative."
She was right about that. She took me into the house where Yelena, Yuri's grandmother, was cooking dinner. I sent a text to my dad to let him know I was having dinner here. He sent one back wanting to know if they could come too.
"Dad wants to join us for dinner."
"We have plenty. I just go kill another goat," Yelena said and began to sharpen a knife.
"Is she serious?" I asked my grandma.
"No, she's teasing you. Tell your dad to come."
Having a family dinner at my grandma's was nice. Duke came with and had to check out the farm to make sure everything was the same as it was when he was here last. Coby and Little David were with my parents so that Peggy could have a night off. There were no worries they wouldn't get a lot of attention with two grandmothers spoiling them.
---
Wednesday September 21
Brook and Cassidy were still going to the dojo, so I planned an afternoon with Tim and Wolf. One of Wolf's neighbors needed a hand with a project, and he and Tim had volunteered to help. I came home to find my mom in the kitchen. Peggy had school late on Wednesday, so the boys were in daycare. I'd let Duke out so he could patrol the backyard.
"Slow day?" I asked as I made myself a sandwich.
"No, I have something for you," she said, handing me an envelope.
I looked inside, and there was a check for five hundred dollars made out to my personal company.
"What's that for?" I asked.
"I closed on that house you shot the pictures and video of. It had your name in the credits. Word spread that David A. Dawson, actor-slash-model-slash-photographer, had done it, and I had realtors clamoring to show it. I told the homeowners, and they insisted on paying you."
"Cool," was my naΓ―ve response.
"I just got a new listing, and they want you to do the photos and the video."
I gave her a look that let her know I wasn't excited about it.
"Before you throw a hissy fit, this home is listed for $1.5 million. If it sells for full price, my side of the commission is $45,000. I'll make twice that if I find the buyer."
In our area, the realtor association held a breakfast each year and recognized anyone that made over a million dollars in sales. Mom had told me that the majority of realtors didn't sell that much. She'd brought home a plaque every year she'd been in the business, even the year she'd had cancer and hadn't sold anything for nearly half the year. I knew this was a big deal for her, and the right thing to do was to be supportive.
"Of course I'll help. When do they want the pictures taken?" I asked.
"How about now?" she answered, and wouldn't look me in the eyes.
I chuckled and shook my head as I knew there had to be more.
"What else is going on?" I asked.
"I need you to get them to clean the place and declutter."
Decluttering was basically picking up and packing away anything that didn't need to be left out. Mom always said that if you were moving, you might as well start packing. She also wanted them to pack up any personal items like a wall of family pictures. Her reasoning was that people needed to see themselves living in the home, not to be reminded that it was someone else's. I had no idea if that helped, but she was the expert.
I called Wolf and bailed on them. They gave me some grief, but they understood when I told them my mom needed help with work.
We drove to a neighborhood that had newer, upscale homes. The listing was down the street from where Pam had lived. The owners were a couple with two boys who were under ten. I think my mom set me up because they were
huge
fans. I was a little surprised they'd seen
Star Academy
since it was rated PG-13 for violence.
I walked through the house, pointing out what needed to be picked up based on what Mom had shared with me. Most of it was toys, clothes and the like. Mom told me later that the kitchen and laundry room had been cleaned since she was there earlier this afternoon.
I used the boys as my assistants, and we quickly were ready to shoot the house. I found that big open floor plans were much easier to shoot than a smaller ranch home. I talked their dad into taking them to get some ice cream so I could shoot the video.
Mom's camera on her phone shot a good video. She explained that doing it this way felt more realistic than shooting it with a higher-end video camera. I shot one with my camera, which had a video option. I wanted to compare them in class tomorrow. Mom needed the video to get the listing on her website and put onto the MLS so other realtors would be able to see it. The MLS then would send it out to the world, and it would be on all the real estate websites by morning.
On the way home, I wanted to talk to my mom about doing this in the future.
"You didn't really need me to shoot the pictures, did you?" I asked.
"No, but they wanted the prestige of you doing it. I'll have Megan send them signed publicity shots tomorrow. The boys will love it," she explained.
"Okay, two things. First, I understand why you wanted me today. That is a nice listing. If you could give me a little more lead time, I would appreciate it."