As I entered the coffee shop and saw the long line, I squeezed my eyes shut and let out a sigh of frustration. I didn't need this. All I wanted to do was get in, get my coffee, and get out. I had a ton of work to catch up on thanks to losing time before Steff went home to Spain to see her family. She insisted we spend the entire week together before she took off, leaving me behind in my work and stressed while she was on holiday. I got in line behind at least a dozen people and pulled out my copy of Water for Elephants from my handbag and tried to read.
After reading the same paragraph over and over three or four times, I looked up to see the line had barely moved. Damn it, Kara, chill out a bit, everything will be okay. I was supposed to write a few brochures that week. I knew once I got started, everything would flow, I'd be in the zone and writing like crazy. I always got like this before a busy project, especially for a new client. I figured whatever I wrote would look like utter crapola to them and then the gig's up. Exposed for the fraud that I am.
I hated when I got like this, thinking too negatively about myself and my work. I looked around the tables to see if I saw anyone I recognized. Maybe instead of taking my coffee home, I could sit for a while and read a bit and settle my thoughts. Or maybe I could sit and have a chat with someone. Stressed writing is never good for me. I saw a few faces I recognized, but I only knew them to look at and occasionally smile at. I looked at the people ahead of me in line and didn't see anyone I knew.
A couple of people ahead of me in line was a tall redhead with a nice figure. She looked young from what I could tell, maybe early twenties. Even without seeing her face, I knew hadn't seen her before. I'd remember. Everyone who knows me knows I have a weakness for redheads. It can get embarrassing at times. Some carrot head walks into a room and no one looks at her, they just look at me. It's not every redhead! It's not like they just have to dye their hair and I'll fall for them. It's just that if they happen to be attractive and they also have red hair, I get a bit ... well, not like a fan girl or anything, but off my game a tiny amount. My voice changes a little and I say more than I should.
Sometimes I see a perfect thick wavy mop that looks like it belongs on a hair dye box at the pharmacy and that, I admit, is something I might swoon for - internally anyway. A girl could have a pretty plain face and a so-so body, but a long lush thick set of locks will sometimes overrule that, and I had to admit, this girl had that, but I still hadn't seen her face. I waited in hope that she'd turn around with no success so far. Not that it mattered as my single days are over, but I'd never stop looking or making up stories in my head about what was going to happen next. I'm a writer, after all. It's my job to imagine.
No, stop, I told myself! The line was moving, and I needed to focus. Just get my coffee, get back home, and get started on the brochures. I was now third in line. I craned my neck a little. The tall, young redhead was getting her coffee now and leaning over the counter counting her coins, giving me a view of her tiny ass, the kind you start to lose at my age. Oh, she was wearing a red thong! I could see the waistband at the top of her low-rider denim jeans. She started to fish in her pockets as the lady returned with her coffee. I had no idea how deep her pockets were, but she kept digging back in like she was missing some treasure. Even though she had a nice butt, I was getting a bit irked, to be honest. Have your damn money ready, how hard can it be? The coffee lady asked her did she have plastic and the redhead shook her head, which was kinda cute because her hair had that wavy, curly shimmy effect, but come on, pay the woman and move on. She dug into her pockets again and I was at the end of my rope.
I walked around the person between us and asked a little abruptly, "How short are you?" She turned to look at me with big blue eyes and looked lost, like she was wondering was I asking her height. "Money," I said, again sharply - I had to get to work. "How much do you need?" She just smiled, and the coffee lady said she needed another quarter. I pulled a dollar bill out of my purse and handed it to the coffee lady. "Keep the change."
"Thank you," said the redhead.
I forced a smile and went back to my spot in the line. She slinked off to a table at the back of the coffee shop and sat down with her coffee, looking around at everyone as if to see who was staring at her. Nobody really was. Nobody cares these days; they're wrapped up in their own lives. I felt bad. Everyone is always in a rush. She slowed me up by a minute at the most and so I snapped at her like a clichΓ©d cranky old lady, which I'm not. Neither old nor cranky.
Anyway, it was my turn and I ordered my coffee, and the lady asked did I want it to go and I said yes. I gave her a few dollars tip to make myself feel better and headed to the door. I slowed a bit to glance at the redhead one more time and she smiled at me. She'd taken off her jacket now and she really was quite something. She was all the way down at the back, but I could make out that she was wearing a little white top that left her belly uncovered. Even without the red hair, she'd get looks. There was something in the way she smiled that you couldn't just look away from. She shook her hair like before and I sighed. I felt even worse about how I'd spoken to her. She looked like a complete angel, someone who wouldn't hurt a fly.
I walked down to her table. I'd apologize and feel better the rest of the day. She maintained the smile and I noticed her big blue eyes growing bigger. She wore no makeup but wow, if she applied some eye liner she'd be dangerously beautiful. Her eyes were the kind of blue that made you stare at them in an attempt to name the particular shade. She stood up as I approached, and I almost stopped to gawk at her long torso. The white top she wore clung to her breasts like it was hand-tailored for them and revealed her long flat tummy. Five little white buttons held it together. She wasn't large-breasted by any means, maybe a B+. But they were just the right size for her slim body type and sat there flawlessly perky. Stop staring and say something, I told myself!
"I'm so sorry," she said, and her lips settled into a mini pout. "I changed my jeans just before I left my house and my wallet is in the other jeans."
I instinctively looked at her low-rider jeans, which, like her top, were designed by someone specifically to show off her insanely flat tummy. Look her in the eyes, I told myself, and I managed to say, "No, don't be sorry. I was in a bit of a rush and I was rude, quite frankly."
"You were real, and you seem stressed. The last thing you need is some twerp holding you up," she said, and her smile was irresistible. "But let me pay you back."
I stared at her for a few seconds. "You don't have any money."
"I know, but sit down. Tell me your name. I'm Jamie."
I took a deep breath. Why not? I could spare a few minutes. I plonked my bag and coffee on the table and sat in the chair across from her. "I'm Kara," I said as I took my jacket off and settled down.
"You are stressed, right, Kara?"
"A little," I said.
"I know your type. You do everything to make things nice for others even when it makes your own life hectic."
"Well, no, I just have high standβ"
"Kara, close your eyes."
I didn't close them, but narrowed them to near slits as I examined her expression. She looked very serious now. "How old are you?" I asked.
"I'm twenty," she said, "Now, close your eyes."
Oh boy! I was a few months away from thirty and dreading my birthday and this just made me feel old. "Why aren't you at school or something?"
She just maintained the smile. "Study day. Close your eyes."
I closed them and waited.
"Now, just breathe."
So, I breathed.
"Take in the sounds," she told me. "Take in the aromas."
I felt like I was watching the start of a movie where the screen was black, forcing you to figure what was happening just from the sounds. Every few seconds, she'd prompt me to listen to the cars or to listen to the clinking of spoons or the voices around me. It was surprisingly relaxing. When she finally told me to open my eyes, I looked into hers. She seemed to wear an expression like she knew something about me and was amused by it. It was disconcerting but cute at the same time.
"How do you feel?"
"Oh!" I said. I really felt like my stress was gone. "You're amazing! Can you teach me how to do that on my own?"
She brought her hand to her mouth and laughed, and it made me laugh. "I just did. You can do that anywhere and you'll instantly feel like you have more time in your life. Not feeling in such a rush now, are you?"