Foreknowledge:
This all happened before the time of the virus.
Prologue:
I remember how much I loved my wife. She was the apple of my eye; everything I ever wanted. She was a French teacher at the high school. Her name was Emily McNair, nee Loudermilk. She stood a svelte 5'4", weighed maybe 110 lbs., and had brown hair and brown eyes.
We'd been married four years. No kids, not yet, still in an apartment but we'd been looking. We attended the same high school in Waynesboro. She was two years year older, belonged to the F.F.A., 4H, and the National Honor Society. She was a talented dancer, sang in the school choir, was a varsity cheerleader, and loved to hunt. She graduated and went to Penn State, majored in foreign languages, education, and Global-International Studies. She was very smart!
No, she's not dead.
Me, Daniel McNair; I got through high school, joined the U.S.A.R. while getting a job driving a truck for a local garage. I'd worked my way through high school loading and driving trucks on several local farms. That's where I got into truck driving. Driving the big hay trucks, just like eighteen wheelers I guess, meant knowing how to back trailers into tight spaces, something I was very good at.
After I graduated, I drove tow trucks for the guy at the garage for a while; then I used my U.S.A.R. bonus money, some money from mom and dad, and my savings to buy a dump truck of my own. I used that to haul furniture and trash, then I borrowed some more money and bought a second truck.
Right now, I've got a small unattached office behind an old garage. My younger sister handles all my calls and keeps my accounts.
Like I said, I loved my wife, but I was afraid I was going to lose her, and I didn't think there was much I could do about it.
Why did I feel that way? I guess to understand that we have to go to the backstory.
So, here's the backstory. You can listen to it or not, that's your call.
In high school Emily was what I'd call every guy's idea of the perfect wet dream. When God put her together, he used all the best parts; she was beautiful, talented, personable, and considerate. The teachers loved her, her class-mates loved her, parents loved her, and I loved her.
My problem was the age difference; she was two years older. When I first laid eyes on her I was in the ninth grade and she was a junior. About that time my teachers realized I'd need help if I was to succeed; this was basically in the area of Language Arts. I loved math, but couldn't read for shit. Emily didn't need any additional service-learning credits, but she was the type who didn't care; if she saw someone in need she stepped up, and I definitely needed someone to step up.
Emily was good. She showed up with two "book things"; one was called "The Faerie Queen" by some guy named Spencer and another one called "The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner", by someone named Coleridge. I'd never heard of either of them. Emily said the best way to get good at Language Arts was to study something hard. She said I should choose, one or the other. I looked at the two books and decided I didn't want to read about some fairy, so I picked the one about the sailor.
Emily had the patience of Job. The problem was me and her soft velvety blouses, those swishy tits and mini-skirts, her long luscious thighs, her big brown eyes with those incredibly long lashes, and her sweet "come make love to me" voice. After three sessions she gave up and got another person to fill in.
Emily was sweet about it, and I understood. So out went Taylor Swift and in came this skinny little flat chested stick with frizzy red hair. I thought whoa, did life throw me a curve ball! It didn't matter after that; I worked on my reading and writing if only to get "Little Orphan Annie" off my tail and out of my parent's house. Meanwhile Emily went back to being, by then, not just everything, but the only thing I ever wanted.
We saw each other from time to time. Of course, she was always on some guy's arm. Now, I was no slouch. By my sophomore year I'd made varsity soccer, and she was a varsity cheerleader. Too bad, the cheerleaders worked the football games, not soccer.
I tried. I always said hi when I saw her in the hall, and she always smiled, but it was really no use. Of course, I dated other girls, and a couple really pulled on my heartstrings, but it was like every time I started to feel like getting serious Emily got back in my line of vision.
She graduated and went off to Penn State, leaving me to languish through two more years of school. I got to my senior year, checked out Penn State's entrance requirements, took the S.A.T.s. which I bombed, thought about the military until someone mentioned Iraq, and then, at last, decided I'd find something else. My dad said I should join the U.S.A.R. He said I'd be serving my country, but I'd be in the branch that was hardly ever used, plus there was a small bonus for joining. Plus more, my mom and dad said, since I wasn't going to college they'd set aside some money if I ever actually found anything I liked.
I thought about it, and decided to work for a guy who needed someone to drive his tow truck. Trucks had always come easy for me; when I worked on the various farms over the summer, I found I was just about the only kid who could handle the large hay trucks. For some reason I found backing up those big boys with their long trailers was a piece of cake.
So, I went to work for a garage guy. Pretty soon I got bored working my ass off day and night for almost no money. I figured if I had my own truck, I could set my own hours and rates. I bought my own tow truck. It worked for a while, but again, there wasn't any money in it so I decided to buy something bigger, and that's what I did. I got my parents to kick in and I bought a fairly decent "used" seventeen-footer. I worked out a deal with the guy who owned the garage; he had a small dilapidated building behind his business. I put my tow truck at his disposal, got to use his old building, and he'd keep everything running.
It seemed like things were looking up. I had myself, a couple other young guys, and my little sister, Priscilla, doing my accounts and keeping up with scheduling. It might not have worked, but the whole area was growing rapidly, new houses were cropping up everywhere.
I suppose that brings us to the "almost" here and now. Yeah, there's more.