I'm dedicating this story to one of my two friends who help with technical details. Please, get well soon my friend. My family and I have been touched by both your and your wife's willingness to give over the years. You are our second family and live in my daughter's and my thoughts and hearts. Thank you for ALL the help you have both given over the years.
To my Beta reader, dustybin63 for his support and ability to always point and laugh. To my editor, thank you so much, for everything. You all take time out of your lives to help me, which I really appreciate. To those of you about to read this, please enjoy. We did our best.
Please note, this IS a story.
It came from my head and not from any history books.
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The House on Broad Street...
I had grown accustomed to open spaces but the park was a clinching feature as far as I was concerned when I came to view the house. The house was a little too expensive for my taste, however. A sleeping bag and the sky above have been known to be good rooms with a view in my opinion -- the opinion of a guy, I may add. I was already set to buy the house when I passed the park and it only added another half a mile until reaching the "for sale" sign at the curbside. As my car came to a stop, I took one look at the place and even though I still sat in the car, I was even more impressed.
Fiona Becton was waiting in her car when I pulled up behind her. The brochure under her arm was of the house. I knew it would be because I emailed her to bring it along with the confirmation of my appointment. The internet only tells you what gets typed into it. I had seen enough via the realtors' web page to bring me over four thousand miles to this very spot. My boss, of course, went nuts when he found out I intended to buy this house. It took some fast-talking on my part, but it was my assignment, so I was given a little leeway.
"Mister Harrison?"
I extended my hand, Fiona clasped it and her smile brightened her face. We shook and she handed me the more up-to-date house details. We stood by the curbside for a while as I looked over the brochure and asked a few questions. Her brows slowly rose as this time, she looked a little harder at me for my English accent surely must have been new to her.
The house was in foreclosure. We went from room to room and it was plain to see a family had once lived here, the various colored pen marks on one of the doorframes marking a child's growth through the years. The marks stopped at eight years of age, the age of growing an attitude and leaning towards, but not quite, teen angst.
Fiona kept me informed as we passed through room after room until finally we stood in the very American open-plan day room. I allowed my eyes to roam, marks on the walls of what would have been long hanging pictures and photos clear to see. The house was stuck in time but according to the brochure the heating, plumbing and electrics came with a pass mark but they were dated.
I knew it would be uninhabitable for weeks if not months to come, once I signed on the dotted line and I was going to. My gaze moved across the room one more time before I plucked up the courage to ask my question.
"Fiona, what happened to the last occupants?"
She was silent, so silent that I turned from the big sliding window that looked out over the garden to look at her fidgeting in the middle of the room. "I would prefer not to say Mister Harrison. I understand that statement may cost me a sale but I stand by it."
Pointing to the kitchen isle and the four stools pressed against it, Fiona nodded and walked towards it, I followed.
Looking through the cabinets with the slim hope of finding what I needed, however, luck was with me when I managed to find a glass, ran the cold tap for a few moments and then half-filled it and placed it on the island between us.
"Fiona, you already have the sale. I sent a confirmation of my interest to my lawyers while we were touring the garden and they are talking to your office as we speak. Confirmation of payment and new ownership should either come to you here or on the way back to your office."
Pulling my best poker face on I said, "Please, Fiona, failing you telling me, I will simply employ a private detective and get what I asked you for that way. I sense you knew the late owners. At least if you tell me, I will get the truth faster."
Her hand reached for the glass, sipped from it and then placed it back on the counter. It still took a few minutes of staring at the outlines of what would have been past pictures on the far wall before she said anything.
"Jodie was my best friend all through early school and right up to the day she left for college, we kept in touch but it became sporadic as she went through college. She married her college sweetheart a year after graduation, she brought him back here and they bought this house. Jodie was a very successful accountant, Frank did something in the city, but he didn't talk much about it. They had a daughter and named her Alison."
That was the name on the girl's bedroom door right next to the marks of her yearly height measurements.
I listened intently as Fiona talked about the love within the family. Frank's job lent to him being away, sometimes for months on end.
"It was my day off so we were out back sunbathing all afternoon. When we came back in here the doorbell rang. Jodie asked me to answer it because she was doing stuff in the kitchen. When I answered the door, a Police Officer stood there, a man in a suit stood next to him. Both thought I was Jodie since I had opened the door, though they didn't even ask me. The suit apologized and said he should have come sooner."
Fiona then looked up from her hands that were grasped tight to the glass of water.
"The officer took off his hat and the suit told me that my husband was dead and he was sorry for my loss."
Tears were now running freely down her face. "I'm gay Mister Harrison, my partner teaches at the same school Jodie and I were at when we were both young. With that one sentence from the suit, I looked back at Jodie who was now almost alongside me, she pulled me to her and slammed the door in both their faces."
I had read the report of what happened that day and even now, listening in silence as she spoke of that day, I just couldn't believe it.
"They had no right to do that Fiona. They should have asked to come in first."
By now, Fiona had composed herself.
"It was my impression they couldn't wait to say what they had come to say and leave Mister Harrison. They sure weren't there when Jodie had calmed me down and had opened the door five minutes later."
Again, I looked around the room, my mind wondering what picture and photo held what status among the marks on the walls. My own thoughts of that afternoon barely held in check. I had seethed when I read the file, hell I even asked my boss if this was all true.