Part One
Carol leaned back against the leather seat of the limousine. Tired of sitting and staring out the window she fought the urge to stretch. She had been in the back of the car for nine hours on the way to a place she had not been in fifteen years. She could no longer see very much outside the tinted window as the sun was only gracing the top of the green hills and the main road had been left some two hours ago.
She had almost wished she had worn a t-shirt and jeans, but instead she had worn something much more appropriate to her mother's stationβa navy pencil skirt and an ivory blouse. She had kept her long brown hair down, and it reached her waist in silky tresses that would later fuss if they were not eventually put up.
This world of shadowed trees that lined the thin highway was her mother's world. Never once as a child Carol could have imagined that her mother longed to live a life style that to most would seem very unusual to the rest of the world. Once, she had come for three months to see what this world was like simply to satisfy her curiosity.
She had found a world filled with rules and love. The citizens gladly gave up the rest of the outside world to take part in this extended lifestyle.
Carol could not argue with the people she had met. She saw their happiness and the love they had for one another.
Wasn't that what everyone wants in the world anyway?
She had to remind her twenty-year-old self back then.
But she had also known the world was not for her. Children were raised outside of the lush, grand, sprawling estates. Her mother had returned to the everyday world with her as a baby. Not once Carol could remember that her mother seemed unhappy, until just before she returned to this hidden world. By then, Carol was an adult, starting to live her own life.
Her mother's friends had rarely ventured to go visit, but they had visited when Carol was young. To her young eyes then, there was nothing unusual about her mother's friends. To satisfy her own curiosity, Carol had returned with her mother. And she had been welcomed, and treated respectfully, as her mother was welcomed back.
And after three months, Carol realized that this was her mother's world. That it was a decision her mother had made to return, not because she had wanted to but because it called her. Carol could not deny her mother's happiness, but for Carol, she had dreams and those dreams had been cultivated without knowledge of the world her mother had been separated from while raising her.
Carol had kissed her mother's soft cheek with tears and then was driven away. In that time there had been letters, but not one visit. Her mother did not mind that her daughter had not chosen this life and this world. It was not for everyone and she had been satisfied her daughter had no words about where her mother had chosen to go.
Three days ago, as she came home from the grocery store, there was a black limo waiting outside her condo. It was the cloud that tainted the amazing weather in the middle of spring. In the car on the way home, Carol had hoped to take a walk before making dinner. Instead, the door on the far side of the limo had opened, and out stepped an older man with an elegant black cane. He wore a simple Navy suit and a grey tie. His graying hair was short. While the limo might have seemed out of place, he was not. The only trace that he was from her mother's world was the cane. There would have been other signs too, a ring, his belt buckle. But the cane was the first and most prominent symbol. It was a part of his rank in the society.
"May I help you with your bags?" he asked as if he had simply been sitting on the front step all this time.
Instinctively, Carol initially clutched the grocery bags closer to her. But then another memory returned.
"Sir Glen?" she whispered softly. He was still lean and strong, but there were more prominent lines when he smiled and there was much more grey than before.
"I do remember a time Child when I was 'Uncle Glen'." He kissed her cheek and took a bag from her. "You are the very image of your mother when I first laid eyes on her. She was a vision then, and you do her so much justice."
Carol trembled. There wasn't any good reason for Glen to here before her. "Please, won't you come in..."
"Carol!" a shrill voice from the condo above leaned over a rail.
Carol looked up. "Yes Mrs. Reynolds?" she asked knowing full well what that busy body neighbor was going to complain about.
"You can't leave that monstrous vehicle parked like that here! Tell that man whore of yours to take his toy and leave it at home if he's to come calling for you."
Carol looked over apologetically at Glen. Glen did nothing but sweep his hand to encourage her ahead.
"After you Carol." And as she led him to her door, the limo pulled away.
They climbed the concrete stairs up to the second floor, past Mrs. Reynolds, a lonely widow in a faded blue housecoat and a flowered dress.
"I've got my eye on you." She mumbled and slid back into her own condo, leaving the door open a crack.
"Mrs. Reynolds, this is my Uncle Glen. He's come for a visit." Carol leaned over to introduce him.
"Uncle! A likely story." They heard her scoff. "A woman as well kept as you does not have an 'uncle'." And with that, the door slammed shut and the sound of the dead bolt sliding across punctuated the bitter busybody's comment.
Again, Carol looked up to Glen and this time he only smiled. Carol fumbled with her keys and opened the door and they entered.
The apartment was clean. There was nothing that could have been there while she had been gone nearly nine hours.
Glen walked to the island and placed his canvas bag on top and started unpacking it. Carol began to put things away from her bag.
"Can I get you something? Tea? Coffee?" she offered as she put away her groceries.
"Tea would be wonderful." He found a kitchen chair and settled into it, his cane just across his lap.
"Is my mother all right?" Carol asked as she put the kettle on the white stove to boil.
Glen shook his head. "I am afraid she is in frail health Carol. It is not advisable that we move her. She is comfortable. She has said nothing about you, but it would do her a world of good to see you."
Carol's mind reeled. "She's said nothing in her letters."
Glen only shook his head sadly. "I had wanted to bring you back earlier. She is ... stubborn."
"She wouldn't have let you come if there was any hope." Carol selected a glass mug and began to steep the tea. She suppressed a sob.
"Milk?" she asked