Another Brief Conversation
Story Sentence:
This will be the last conversation we have about this.
Author's note:
This story is really a short vignette. It details a thirty-minute conversation between a husband and wife in the death throes of their marriage. My original thought was to make it a 750-word story, but I just couldn't make it fit as it took on a life of its own. As finished, it is approximately 5,000 words. So, I guessed I missed the 750 mark by a little? There are no descriptive sex scenes, and no one is killed or maimed. If that's your thing, you should take a pass.
Main Characters:
Lewis Anacortes:
Husband to Blaine and father to Rainier & Lacey, age 33. Firefighter with Riverside Fire Authority.
Blaine Anacortes:
Wife to Lewis and mother to Rainier & Lacey, age 35. Branch Manager for Chehalis Bank
Rainier "Rain" Anacortes:
Oldest Daughter, age 12, daddy's girl.
Lacey Anacortes:
Youngest daughter, age 10 and a definite mommy's girl.
Story:
Thirty-three-year-old Lewis Anacortes sat on the freshly finished and scrubbed marine teak wood and iron park bench overlooking Riffe lake. During happier times he and his family had sailed on the lake during countless visits here. He studied the bench's freshly polished brass plaque.
'Donated by the Edmonds family of Mossyrock, in memory of our beloved grandfather Kennewick Edmonds. This bench is for all to enjoy the beauty of the area he loved so dearly.'
As a native of the area, Lewis gave a short, sharp, bitter laugh after reading the inscription. He knew why old man Kennewick loved the area. And specifically, this overlook, where the bench in his honor, was strategically placed. From this spot, Kennewick would frequently rest and peer wistfully at the crystal blue water that had inundated his boyhood home decades ago when Tacoma City Light constructed Mossyrock dam to generate power for the city. Lewis knew the town of Riffe was out there, but it lay nearly two hundred feet below the shimmering surface of the lake that currently reflected the glorious blue sky and broken clouds.
The canopy forest was thick with the various native pines that surrounded the lake. Some of the Western Whites and Ponderosas towered well over one hundred and twenty feet into the sky. As a boy, Lewis always dreamed about climbing to the top of one to see if he could touch the infinite sky.
He had a cherished memory of his late father. One time as a small boy, he and his father were lying on their backs at the lake shore resting. Their ancient H.L. Leonard bamboo fly rods were leaning up against a tree. They were rigged for the landlocked salmon that flourished in these waters. They gazed skyward admiring nature's awesome work while taking a respite. He told his father about his desire to climb to the top of one of the pines. His dad didn't speak or even acknowledge Lewis's statement for several minutes. Just as Lewis thought his father must have missed what he said, he began to sing the line from Jimi Hendrix's Purple Haze. 'Excuse me while I kiss the sky.' His father was a terrible singer. He couldn't carry a tune to save his life, but it never stopped him from singing. As his dad's voice repeatedly warbled the line, the youngster Lewis looked around in embarrassment, praying that no one was witnessing his dad's crooning. As an adult though the incident was pleasantly and indelibly burned into his memory.
Lewis lost both parents to cancer when they were relatively young. That fact, coupled with his understanding of genetics, were among the reasons this meeting was taking place. Life was too short.
The lake itself now encompassed Lewis' attention. At almost twenty-three miles long, it was so deep that light couldn't penetrate the darkness that enveloped the once vibrant close-knit community of Riffe. The darkness concealed all evidence that it ever existed because it would never be seen in the light again. Lewis thought it an apt metaphor for his marriage.
To any passerby who wasn't familiar with the nightmare that Lewis had recently been living, it might appear as if he was very serenely absorbing the solitary beauty of the warm fall weather that occasionally visited the Pacific Northwest. The locals still referred to it, despite its current political incorrectness, as an Indian Summer. When it made its appearance, there was no more beautiful time or place on earth. It almost made the nine long months of dreary rain seem tolerable.
While Lewis may have appeared calm on the outside, his insides were roiling. He had to live this nightmare alone. He was an only child, and he didn't have many friends outside of the firehouse. Lewis couldn't talk about his problems with any of the guys at the station, because, contrary to how they were portrayed on television, firefighters didn't spend all their downtime revealing their fears and emotions while sharing intimate bonding moments with their brethren. No one dared show any signs of weakness to the others for fear the others would lose confidence in them. Their lives depended on each other. And even a moment's hesitation caused by being unsure if they could trust someone to do the right thing under extreme conditions, could prove fatal. No, Lewis was all alone in this.
He had purposefully arrived a little early because truth be told, he was counting on the healing power of his favorite lake and nature's magical natural oil canvas, to help him get through this meeting his soon-to-be ex-wife had requested.
She demanded it really, and his lawyer told him it would be in his best interests to grant it. It would look good in family court, he was admonished. Besides, his lawyer was becoming frustrated by all the roadblocks Blaine kept throwing up to delay the inevitable. For the life of him, Lewis couldn't understand why Blaine kept insisting that their marriage could survive her insanity.
She wanted her attorney to request mandatory counseling. It didn't matter to her, that in Washington state, a family court judge couldn't impose it. Both attorneys tried to talk to Blaine until they were blue in the face, to no avail. Lewis thought Blaine definitely needed some form of therapy, but that was no longer his concern.
Oh well
, he sighed as he thought to himself.
It all ends today anyway.
Blaine may have demanded the meeting, but Lewis insisted on the location. He knew the summer crowds would be a distant memory, so they were quite likely to have the spot to themselves. This meeting wasn't going to go the way Blaine expected it to.
He glanced briefly at his watch. She was scheduled to arrive in a few minutes, but he knew that in reality, he had plenty of time. For one thing, Blaine would have to drive out on Highway 12 for a good distance, which she hated. She was never on time for anything in her life, including their wedding. She was an hour late for that. He gave the same cynical laugh as the quick memory came to him. He thought it would have been better to have left the church after the twenty-minute passed mark as his best man had jokingly suggested over thirteen years ago.
He quickly dismissed that thought. The truth was, that the first twelve and half years of his marriage to Blaine were a perfect dream. Lewis loved his two daughters, Rainier and Lacey, more than life itself. "Rain," as they called her, was daddy's girl through and through. She was already studying and training to be a firefighter like her idolized father. On the other hand, Lacey was a 'mini-me' of his wife.
This was proving to be just one of a myriad of complications for Lewis. Family courts were loath to split up children. This and the fact that in the state of Washington, there is no statutory age set in family law codes that allows a child under the age of eighteen to choose which parent to live with, in a divorce. According to his attorney though, all was not yet lost. Although complex, Washington's divorce and child custody laws, allowed a husband and wife to jointly submit a childcare plan to the court. If the judge felt it was detailed, comprehensive, and financially equitable for the children they would usually sign off on it without modification. The trick, his lawyer told him, was to get his wife to go along with the very complex proposal Lewis wanted his wife to accept.
Lewis was a realist. Before his lawyer even confirmed it for him, he recognized that his job as a firefighter with the Riverside Fire Authority, the RFA as it was known, would almost certainly prohibit him from gaining primary custody of his daughters. The dangerous nature of the work and his variable work schedule were both almost insurmountable roadblocks for custody consideration.
It took time and money, a lot of money, to develop the plan he had put in motion.
He closed his eyes and let his mind drift back to that horrible day several months ago when his nightmarish existence began. He could never decide if his current life was an episode of the
Twilight Zone,