Story Sentence: She played a wicked game and had to right a wrong.
Once again, a big thank you to Randi for including me in one of her "Legends" events. This one being
"
Wicked Games
."
It's always an honor to be asked. As well as a challenge to complete.
Main Characters: (
When story begins)
Wife:
Holly Breckenridge, age 41 married to Parker for 15 years, mother of 3 children (Craig 15, Dillon 12, Erie 10) Vice President of Quality Services for HCA Healthcare. MBA in Healthcare Management.
Husband:
Parker Breckenridge, Age 38, a 17-year employee of, and currently the Maintenance Supervisor for Coors Beer in Golden Colorado. No college degree. Army veteran, and father of 3 children.
Wife's Friend:
Aurora Firestone, age 33, divorced coworker of Holly's and a mother of two pre-teens.
Story:
Thirty-eight-year-old Parker Breckenridge sat quietly at his kitchen table in his well-kept but rural family home off Highway Six outside of Golden, Colorado. From his chair, he had an excellent expansive view of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains as they sloped severely down onto the western edge of the Great Plains. The view was usually breathtaking, but today, Parker wasn't the least interested in the panorama that had sold him and his wife Holly on this house.
To the uninformed, it would appear he was simply enjoying a quiet early Tuesday summer evening in a solitary moment with one of the free beers supplied regularly by his employer. His half-empty bottle of Banquet sat in front of him, one hand clenching it tightly as he drummed his fingers of the other hand against the dark amber glass. This was the hand he had finally quit burnishing his temple with. The furious and repetitive motion, each having been more intense than the last, was beginning to draw blood. It was as if he was trying to exorcise the demons wreaking havoc inside his brain. He had been like this for over an hour. His forehead was scarred with bright red burns from his repeated assault.
He needed a reference point, a life experience if you will, to help him deal with what he was facing. Parker had always heard his fellow veterans talking about how their military experiences helped them through difficult situations in the civilian world. He wasn't sure how being a diesel mechanic at Ft. Lewis was supposed to help him cope with
this
nightmare?
His world was on fire. There was no question his fifteen-year marriage to his wife Holly was over. She burned it down. Maybe she never really loved him. Perhaps it was all a lie from the beginning. They used to joke about their 'accidental' marriage. Their son, Craig, who recently turned fifteen,
was
the scene of the accident.
Parker had met Holly in college, but they were only casual acquaintances who frequently turned up at the same school parties. Then one night, both had too much to drink, and well the mishap occurred.
They decided to do what they thought was the right thing. They were so different though. Parker was the calm and quiet type. He wasn't very ambitious. Parker loved machines, their intricacies, and as he called them, their personalities. He simply wanted enough money to be happy, safe, and contented. Holly on the other hand, had more than enough ambition for both. Her grades were excellent, and her career path was well laid out since her freshman year. Generally, whatever she went after, she got.
Now at forty-one, she was already the Vice President of HCA Healthcare Quality Services. As such, she traveled frequently across Colorado to HCA's numerous medical facilities. It was mostly day travel, but in the last year or so, more overnights began to creep in. They were only overnighters and normally early in the work week. Parker didn't mind. Holly loved her work, and the homecomings were spectacular! At least up until today, he thought she was satisfied.
It was a rough beginning for the couple, but the moment little Craig appeared, they were locked together as a family. Twelve-year-old Dillon and Ten-year-old Erie were the icing on the cake.
Their marriage was definitely a partnership, but Parker never deluded himself into believing he was the managing partner. Holly ran the show, period.
As he sat and waited impatiently, Parker was hurt, angry, and saddened. But he didn't feel any great sense of shock though. Throughout their marriage Parker sometimes had a niggling thought, that they weren't 'right' together. Maybe it was an inferiority complex on his part. For her part, Holly never displayed any overt actions or even attitudes that caused him to feel that way. He could never define why he felt that unease. It was just something.
In any case, now, their three young children would be collateral damage from her betrayal. Parker loved being a father. He took great pride and joy in it. He never really had a father in his life. His parents divorced when he was very young, no one ever told him why, and he never asked. He would do almost anything to not leave his kids, but this?
How did Parker discover his wife's deception? It was stupid really. A simple, innocuous, and random set of circumstances one could experience every day. You know, the what if you had turned left instead of right, kind of thing?
In Parker's case, it was, what if the parts driver hadn't called off sick? What if he wasn't so desperate to get the damn bearings replaced so quickly? What if he left five minutes earlier, or later? If he had, he never would have been parked at the parts suppliers' building twenty miles from the brewery across the street from the Red Roof Inn. And, God Damn it, if they had the part ready to go as they promised him, he wouldn't have wandered back out into their parking lot to make an unnecessary phone call while killing time for them to get their shit together!
Hell, he could have even done everything the same. Except, if he'd just turned his back to the street while making his call, he never would have seen Holly Kissing some stranger passionately. They were laughing and stumbling as they struggled to open the door to a first-floor room at the Inn. At that exact moment, a passing car backfired, causing the lovers to pause and look in Parker's general direction.
Parker thought he noticed Holly hesitate for a fleeting moment, but he couldn't be sure. In a daze, he turned his back to the Inn to go back inside and yell at the parts desk idiot again. He got the fucking ninety-five dollar bearing that ended his marriage, but instead of returning to work, he drove home. I guess that part wasn't so important after all. That is how he came to be where he was, doing what he was, waiting to have it out with his wife. Not just once during his wait, he debated if he would have been better off if he hadn't gone to get that damned part. After all ignorance is bliss, isn't it? It didn't matter now. Because he did go to get it.
The kids were already at Holly's parents' house. His in-laws generally picked them up after school anyway. At least Parker wouldn't need to worry about that piece of it right now. Parker's heartbeat quickened as he heard Holly's Seven Series Beemer pull into the garage.
Who in the hell drives a Beemer when they live six thousand feet up in the Rocky Mountains for Christ's sake?
After what seemed like an interminable time period, Holly casually strolled into the kitchen. It was probably only a few minutes, but Parker was becoming increasingly anxious and angry, so the passage of time was becoming hard to discern.
"Hi, Parker. You're home early?" She spoke like she didn't have a care in the world. "The kids at Mom and Dad's?"
Parker's throat was extremely dry. In response, he could only slowly nod his head in assent.
"You okay, sweetie?" She appeared genuinely concerned. She appeared to fixate intently at his forehead.
"We need to talk, Holly." Parker was finally able to choke out the words. He looked up at her with glassy and moist eyes.