Thank you, Erik Thread for your editing skills and suggestions, particularly with the ending of this story.
This is part three of a three part story. The story is finished. Chapters are posted on the site about every day, which means the entire story will have been posted before the first part appears on the list of new stories. People seldom step outside of their personality. They may successfully hide some of their personality from even those who know them well, yet still they remain true to that personality.
*
Troy and I were sitting on one of the low brick partitions that outlined an open area in the center of the large shopping mall. We were waiting for the girls and Stephanie to bring us their most recent purchases so we could make another trip to the car. Although it meant a longer walk, we'd parked in the secure parking lot, knowing we wanted full time guards patrolling the area.
As they walked out of the store, I marveled at how much like her mother Cindy looked. She was blonde, slender and what I'd always thought of as willowy with long slender legs and arms. She was already as tall as her mother was and would probably grow to be a few inches taller than Stephanie. I was thinking about what I had to look forward to in the next two years of watching a daughter finish high school, and the younger one who would begin to date, fall in love, and find the one special man who would be the most important man in her life. According to Cindy she was pretty sure she'd already found that young man, but she was taking it slow, knowing she still had her college years ahead of her.
Troy and Lulu were more like me, with broad shoulders, square faces, and dark brown hair. He would be a sophomore in high school next year and would probably be one of the rising star players on the football team. The year Cindy was a senior Lulu would be a freshman. I'd have three children in high school and I wasn't sure I was prepared to handle all of those changes.
"I've had enough," Stephanie declared. "If we haven't bought it tonight, it can wait a few weeks." She sat down beside me and stuck her feet out, rotating her ankles. She hugged my arm and rested her head on my shoulder for a moment. Her gesture was so familiar. It was something she had done on our first date, when I took her to a movie. In a low voice, she complained, "Remind me to never again wear heels when we go shopping."
There was universal agreement that we'd all exhausted our capacity for the crowds, dressing rooms, and harried clerks. Troy pretty well expressed our feelings when he declared, "I'm out of here," as he began to collect the various bags around my feet, handing several to each of his sisters and taking the larger ones for himself to carry.
Troy, Cindy, and Lulu were half way down the center aisle of the mall before I could move. I think Stephanie realized what she had done about the same time I did. She sat up and stood, then took a couple of steps. I followed, feeling like some kind of line had been crossed, but I wasn't sure what that line was. The ride home was quiet. We stopped for a box of fried chicken to take home rather than going to a restaurant. It was just one of those things we had done so often that we barely discussed it.
As soon as we finished eating, almost as if it was something expected of her, Stephanie started cutting the tags off the clothing and separating them into piles for the washing machine. I protested that I could do those chores and she could use the time to visit with her children. I had several shoeboxes spread around me waiting for me to finish threading shoelaces through the various styles of very expensive shoes. I had also bought myself a new pair of dress shoes.
"Paul, did Troy pick out these shirts?"
"No, those are clothes for work."
She pulled several ties and pairs of dark socks out of a small bag and asked, "When did you start wearing dress shirts and a tie to work?"
"Two months ago, maybe three, I guess. I work in the front on Fridays and Saturdays. Next week is Spike's last week at work. He and Jeannine bought a travel trailer. They're going to Alaska for a month."
"Does that mean ..."
"Actually," I interrupted her. "It means I'm Warehouse Manager and Assistant Store Manager." I turned to tell Troy, "Take these shoes up to your sisters, and make sure everyone's had their shower. It's lights out in thirty minutes."
I spent a few minutes cleaning up the kitchen, telling Stephanie I didn't need any help when she offered. I suggested she send Troy to her car if she needed her suitcase because as soon as the children had gone to bed I wanted to have a short conversation.
Stephanie stood in the middle of the kitchen for a moment then picked up a pile of the clothing, taking it into the laundry room. A few minutes later, I heard the washing machine running. She was back with a basket for another load of clothing when I stopped her.
"I can do that later, Steph."
"Well, I can help you."
"Stephanie," My voice was a little rougher than usual. "I can do that later."
"Well, alright." She picked up her large handbag, left the kitchen, and walked to the guest bedroom, closing the door a little harder than I thought necessary.
A few minutes later, she was back in the kitchen, dressed in a flesh-colored, clinging negligee with two panels that barely covered her breasts and went behind her neck leaving most of her back bare. The covering penoir had no closure in the front and it certainly wasn't intended to hide anything, it was meant to entice.
I wasn't sure what I had expected, probably that she was going to take off her heels and pantyhose and maybe even put on casual clothing. I never expected that she would be this blatant. I didn't sit down at the table, as we had usually done when we had a discussion. I was leaning against the kitchen counter trying to organize my thoughts.
"Have a seat, Steph."
She looked at me with a curious expression on her face, but she did take a seat at the table. I joined her and looked at as much of her as I could, and then asked, "This isn't how you usually dress when you spend the night with the kids, is it?"
Steph smiled and shook her head, "No, I thought you might like it."
"If I have given you the wrong impression, I'm sorry. I invited you to go shopping with the girls because I thought they would appreciate having your help."
"Oh, you don't need to apologize. It was nice being together as a family."
"Steph you and I are no longer part of a family. We are parents, but not partners or spouses. We are divorced."