Author's note: All players are over 18 in this mostly fictional Nude Day 2021 contest entry set in suburban Southern California before smartphones. Tags: romance, veterans, bicycles, parade. Views expressed may not be the author's. Details may be incorrect or invented. The startup may seem slow. Enjoy!
*****
REUNION
Wounded warrior returns home.
*****
I was beat to shit.
That frenzied all-nighter at my graphics workstation was brutal but I put finishing touches on the demo designs and emailed the files to the main office. Now I could take some time off.
The morning was warm enough for me to just strip, mix a strong drink, and jump in the pool out back, But I knew exercise first would do me good, even in my current feeble state. A bike ride on the 'river' path called me.
And this was a Tuesday so I might find Katya on the path. I had not seen her for some weeks; I was so fucking busy! At least working from home beats commuting.
I stripped anyway and covered myself with flashy biking shorts and a sports bra under a bright red tee. My lemon-blonde hair stayed in its long ponytail. I sucked coffee, noshed a cinnamon roll, and checked my gear. My Trek mountain bike was set for pavement, not gravel, so I just clipped water bottles to the frame and pedaled the few residential blocks to what passed for a parkway.
They called this narrow stream a 'river' but it was really a concrete storm drain, a wash draining the dam and reservoir in the mountains above here. Paved pathways on either side were safe zones for walkers and riders. Lunatic skateboarders illegally dared the wash floor in dry months.
My timing rocked! I plopped on a cement bench to make sure everything was tight, and Katya rolled up on her old Raleigh road cruiser. Bike togs as sunshiney as my hair set off her own black bob and natural light tan. She plopped beside me and gave me a hug.
"You look fucking awful, Lin," she observed. "Like an overworked field slave. No sleep, I bet."
"Sleep is for losers, Kat," I retorted. "I'll lose myself real good after this ride."
"What else you got to lose?" she asked. "Not weight, for sure. You're as lean as you've ever been. Me, I could use a few pounds less on my ass." She patted her strong thigh.
"So don't sample the merchandise. Leave the avocados alone."
"What, you don't want guacamole and chips when I come to swim? We can do enough laps in the pool to work-em off."
"Ha! You never met a tortilla chip you didn't like."
"Like you're any better with your peach ice cream?"
"Sure, drowned in rum. Attitude adjustment, fuck the world!"
"So try to beat guac-n-chips washed down with tequila sunrises.
Mucho
vitamins to keep us fresh."
And on with our usual banter.
We were friends since infancy almost, growing up and staying in this same neighborhood, in the cookie-cutter development houses our folks had left for us, on opposite sides of the block. She could, and did, hop across the alley and jump in my aging backyard pool whenever she wanted.
We were rare survivors of this suburb. Most of our childhood friends were gone. Families moved away. Kids died, married, matriculated, emigrated, found distant jobs, went military, etc. Katya and I had our own rough patches but we stayed here after junior college and toxic relationships. We were embedded.
I worked at home, designing stuff I cannot mention because NDAs. Katya was now produce manager at her family's grocery, groomed to soon take over the whole supermarket. Tuesdays and Wednesdays were her 'weekends' when we rode — if
*I*
was free then.
We saddled up and rolled downhill to the first road bridge, crossed over, and pedaled uphill on the narrower, prettier path. We chattered as we warmed up, then saved our breaths when we pumped hard to tighten our sweet legs and bubbly butts. A girl has got to stay fit, y'know. At least the smog was thin today.
We plopped ourselves on another cement bench after some few miles, sipped from our water bottles, and scanned the occasional passing joggers and bikers. Then onward a few more miles, and another rest break, and more people-watching.
=====
Most of those on wheels rode vanilla road or mountain bikes but something odder approached. I recognized it as a semi-recumbent, like a Harley chopper with a human motor. Low; a big wheel in back and smaller up front with raked handlebars; a laid-back seat, not a groin-eating saddle. It looked comfortable.
The guy riding it looked almost familiar. He stopped by us.
"Morning, ladies. Mind if I share the bench with you?"
"No problem," we chorused. Damn, I knew that voice!
He clumsily pulled his long, lanky body off the 'bent, fetched his own water bottle, and took the end of the bench. His aura felt strong. Who
*was*
he?
Gray-tinted oval wire glasses framed hazel eyes under a thatch of dark hair. He wore a bright Rising Sun tee and candy-striped, calf-length surfer shorts. I saw scars on his legs.
I stared at him. I knew those hands and that strong face, more worn than when I last saw him... years ago.
Katya was staring, too.
"Stef?" she almost whispered. "Stefan Culver? Is that you?"
He capped his water bottle and stared back at us.
"Yeah, but... Katya? Katya Rincon? And... Lindy Edmonds? Really? Holy fuck! You're both still here? Am I dreaming?"
He stood creakily. We flowed up beside him, and hugged him, and kissed him, and panted.
"Stef, what the fuck?" I croaked. "It's been so long! Where...?"
We hugged tighter, then loosened a bit and held hands while closely watching faces.
"I bet we all have stories," he said. "Let's ride while it's cool and talk later. Hey, is the Tastee-Freez still open? Let's stop for malts. Don't mind that I'm pretty stiff. I'll tell you about it."
We hugged and kissed again and then saddled up for a slow cruise uphill. The paved path was too narrow for three bikes to ride abreast so I took the lead, Katya followed, and Stefan rode behind us, undoubtedly getting nice views of our tasty butts.
Joggers thinned out after more miles. Bikers were fewer, too. We were the only customers at the ice-cream shop up on a cross-street. We took our refreshments to a shaded table outside and shared our histories.
Our early years needed no replay. We were friends from kindergarten through junior high and into the first year of high school when Stef's parents divorced and he disappeared.
Stefan had lived at the end of the block from my and Katya's houses. We three skinny-dipped in our pool when my folks were not around, and played board games when we were young, and kissing games after puberty. I never sucked or fucked Stef and I doubt Katya did either. But if he had stayed in school with us, he probably would have been our first.
I was getting wet just looking at my friend — a man now.
He griped that his divorced parents restructured their lives and bounced him back-n-forth as they kept moving to nearby towns and their high schools, four in three years. He got too bound to each new school to stay in touch here, and flip-phones were costly then so few kids had one; it was beyond his budget.
"I sure remember the last time I saw you girls. A bunch of the season's high-school grads were enrolling at the junior college and you were in sign-up lines there."
Yes, I remembered friendly waves. His hair was longer then, and his face was smoother.
"Then came the 9-11 attacks. Shit! A bunch of us figured our country needed us. So we headed for the recruiting offices and enlisted, mostly in the Army."
Yes, so many kids we knew vanished then.
"The sandbox was for shit. You remember 'Mayhee', that's Stan Mahowald? He didn't make it. Neither did Ken Willis, a damn fine chess player, and Cyndi Barnes, a great mechanic. Crazy lazy Larry Olsen, my old best friend, got banged up worse than me. I was pretty lucky."
He finished his malted shake and slid the cup aside.
"I don't have war porn tales for you. Fuck that. I'll just say I was working in logistics on a later tour, thought I was safely away from the action, but a junk IED took out our Hummer on a main road, wrecked my legs a bit. The left ain't too bad but the right has a lot of metal and ceramics in it. I manage okay on my 'bent bike and adapted Jeep; walking is hard. I'm still doing physical therapy at a funky VA clinic."
Katya and I both shuddered. We held his hands.
I remembered reading about him in the local news page on the war. Something about him being unable to walk so he crawled to drag wounded soldiers out of range of flying bullets; he took some hits and was awarded a Silver Star. Shit!
He continued talking, his voice steady, almost unemotional.
"Funny, I kept running into local guys there. You know Mickey 'Mouse' Morris, that short kid, lived a couple blocks over? He flew the medevac chopper, got me to the docs real quick. Had a good laugh on me being just as clutzy as I was on the track team. With painkillers, I laughed, too."
I shivered as I listened. I almost cried.
"So they patched me up a little, and flew me to Wiesbaden for fancy surgery, then gave me sergeant's stripes and planted me at a desk near DC to finish my enlistment, minus leaves I didn't take. I've just mustered out and come back home. Our old neighborhood feels good."
He paused. I squeezed his hand. He squeezed back.
"You remember Tina Feines, right? Lived down at the corner."