Β© 2006 by Penelope Street
With a sigh of disgust, I got up from my kitchen table and made my way to the ringing phone. "Hello?" I snapped, expecting to hear a creditor on the other end.
"Sandy? It's me, Melissa."
In a moment, my bitterness vanished, replaced by a smile that spread across my face. "Hey! Two weeks from today, right?"
"Yeah, two weeks."
"Good," I said with a giggle. "Because that's when my reservation's for."
"You have a room already then?"
"Of course. You know me, plan ahead."
"What a relief," Melissa said. "I knew you would. Silly me, I didn't think about the wedding being the week of graduation, so the rooms are all booked."
My eyebrows dropped. "You need a room?"
"Not me," Melissa said. "I'm staying with my parents. It's another of my bridesmaids who needs a room."
"Which one?"
"Kayla. She was my roommate after you dropped out. You haven't met her."
"So, she needs a room and you want to know if she can share mine?"
"Would you be a doll?" I could almost hear Melissa smiling across the line. "Kayla says she'll split the cost."
It was my turn to smile. "Of course- except I don't know about the doll part."
"You're always a doll. Thanks."
"Anytime," I said. "How's everything else going?"
"Oh, you know, a million things to take care of today, a million more tomorrow."
We spent another half-hour discussing, planning, and reminiscing before my friend steered the conversation in a way I neither anticipated nor desired.
"What about you," she asked, "how are you doing?"
My eyes returned to my table and the pile of bills atop it. I took a deep breath. "I'm ok."
"Do you still miss Jacob?"
"Yes and no."
"Tell me about it."
"I miss having someone, but I don't miss having him."
"Good for you!" Melissa squealed. "So you haven't found anyone else?"
"I haven't looked."
"It's been a year. You should start."
"Not yet," I said. "I'm not ready."
Three breaths of silence followed. "Well, I guess you know best."
"Not always," I admitted with a giggle. "But in this case, yes, my life's too much of a mess for any manly complications."
"A mess?"
My eyes darted back to my bills. "I'm just busy, work, you know."
"Oh. Ok. I should let you go then, if you're busy?"
"I'm not that busy," I admitted. "But I bet you are."
"Yeah," Melissa said with an audible sigh. "I guess I am."
"See, I should let you go?"
"Maybe so."
"Two weeks then?" I said.
"Yeah."
"See you then."
"Ok," she said. "See you then."
"Bye."
"Bye."
With a massive sigh, I replaced the receiver and looked back to my bills.
Busy with work
, I mused with a sigh.
What a lie that was.
I returned to my chair and began to sort out which bills I would pay and which would have to wait. All the while I wondered when I might see the light at the proverbial end of the tunnel. Little did I know that light was already there, in the form of an approaching train named Kayla- and she would be upon me before I even knew she was coming.
* * * * *
Thirteen days later I tumbled off a Greyhound bus in downtown Baton Rouge. I didn't exactly panic right away when I didn't see Melissa, or anyone else I knew, but I was a little concerned. Though dressed for comfort in blue jeans and a T-shirt, I still felt my skin grow damp with sweat while the minutes ticked by. An hour later, with the time of my dress-fitting approaching, I began to wonder if I ought to make change from one of my dollars and call Melissa.
My mind was on that issue and my eyes on the worn, gum-pocked tiles of the bus station floor when a pair of black leather boots strode into my field of view, stopped, and turned their toes toward me.
For a second, I just stared, but the boots did not move. With a gulp, I slid my eyes upward from the footwear, over a pair of black leather pants stretched skin-tight by long, muscular legs to wide hips where a gloved right hand balanced a motorcycle helmet. Onward my eyes traveled to a similar black leather jacket, tapered toward a narrow waist, yet widening again to accommodate a substantial bosom.
My gaze followed the flowing ebony locks that lay over those breasts until I came upon a round, chocolate-colored face within which a pair of large, wide-set orbs demanded, and received, my full attention. Perfect her eyes were, large and full like her lips, yet sharp enough to peer into my very soul. My mouth fell open just a bit, although I had no intention of speaking.
The woman's brows jumped upward to form a semi-circle above her eyes. "Sandra?"