I found this mostly finished story on my computer. No sex. No drama. Just one guy's simple story.
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"We need to buy Kyra a car for school." my wife said.
"What? I thought you were driving her to school."
"Driving her to school's not the problem. I can drop her off on my way to work. After school is the problem. She needs to get from school to her job at the animal shelter. I can't just leave work and drive her there. By the time I get back I've missed an hour of work at the end of the day."
Right! The job. My 16-year-old daughter started working down at the local rescue shelter. She wanted to be a veterinarian when she grew up and she got this idea to start working there. She mostly cleaned up cat shit and washed the dogs, but she loved every minute of it. Over the summer it hadn't been a problem, because it was less than a mile from our house; she rode her bicycle. But her high school was more like 5 miles away.
"Can she ride her bike? That seemed to work."
"Tom?!? Are you crazy? You want your high junior to ride her bike an hour to school every day!?!"
"It won't take that long to ride there. It's maybe half an hour."
"Yeah, Einstein. Each way. That's an hour every day." That went downhill fast. My wife seemed to lose her patience with me quickly.
In her defense, I can be tough to live with. I am what you would call a cheap bastard. I clip coupons. I shop sales. I buy stuff second hand. My parents were both raised on an Ohio farm in the aftermath of the depression. Neither one of them came from money, so they got used to saving. I was raised the same way. I didn't buy things I didn't need. Even if I did need something I waited long and hard before I spent the money. The car I drove was fifteen years old. My wife had the nice car, and it was a five-year-old minivan.
My wife knew I was cheap when she married me. I made it through college without going into debt. I went to a community college for two years getting all the general education requirements out of the way. When I transferred to the University of Michigan, I found a job working at the hospital cafeteria where I was allowed to eat before work. As a result, I would eat oatmeal for breakfast, peanut butter sandwiches for lunch and gorge myself at the all-you-can-eat buffet line. I was a Chemistry major in college, but I had no interest in becoming doctor. The last thing I wanted was getting in debt going to medical school.
I met my future wife, Kate, at the hospital. She was a nurse, fresh out of college, and she ate at the cafeteria now and then. I enjoyed chatting her up, but while I was in college, I didn't actively pursue her. I wasn't interested in spending money trying to woo her. She was pleasant company and cute as a button. A few times I invited her out. Once we went to the downtown art festival and looked at all the vendors. Another time we went to the free blues concert in the park. I bought her lunch from the food trucks, but nothing fancy. If there was a fun free activity, I was happy to check it out with her. I held her hand and gave her a goodbye kiss, but it wasn't serious.
After I graduated, I got a job as a Safety Compliance officer at the ConAgra food packing plant. I mostly spent my time testing food samples for bacteria and making sure the incubators were keeping the cheese at the correct temperature. There was more to it than that, but I was happy doing my job. Once I had a few paychecks under my belt, I got more serious about Kate. She appreciated my level-headedness. Before we married, I had already bought a house and was making extra mortgage payments to pay it off.
Kate worked as a nurse for a few years before we decided to start a family. Kyra was our oldest and Kevin was born three years later. Kate and I had similar attitudes about world overpopulation and didn't feel like we had to contribute to more consumption than the world could handle. Children only come in two varieties, and we had the complete set. She knew the best doctor for performing vasectomies and we never had to spend money on birth control again.
When Kevin was four, he started attending pre-school and Kate went back to work nursing. Competent nurses are in high demand, and she was good at her job. She placed her children first, but she loved her job and helping people that way. She worked as a surgical nurse for three years, then three years as an emergency room nurse. Nowadays she works in the birthing center and has been training to be a midwife.