This one is short, has I think an original discovery method (kindly thought of by my partner, CTC) and a unique ending. It is mainly dialogue so if that's not your thing you have been warned. As usual, it has been expertly edited by my partner in life and crime, CreativityTakesCourage. It was also reviewed by our bunch of crazy blog followers who usually spot anything CTC misses, thanks guys.
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"Hi, Jenny, thanks for coming. I..., I need a friend right now."
"That's fine, Mum, exams aren't for another month yet."
"How is university going? I haven't seen or spoken to you for months now."
"You know how it is, Mum. Final year of uni and working my ass off to get into the top ten percent of my class. It's a dog-eat-dog world out there, especially in law."
"But I thought you were going to work for your dad?"
"I am, in fact I've started already, but I want him to be able to say he hired me because I was one of the best students, not just because I'm his daughter. Me, I'm going to be working for him not because he's my father, but because his law firm is the best around these parts. I know I won't get preferential treatment from him. On the contrary, I expect to be given the shittiest jobs going, the legal equivalent of mucking out the pigs."
Silence descended between the two women before the older one broke it with a sniff.
"Still, would it kill you to ring once a week?"
Jenny considered her mother for a long moment before replying. "Perhaps, but, well, we've never been what I'd call close, Mum, have we? Be honest."
"No," Margaret sighed. "You were always a daddy's girl."
Jenny arced up at her mother's mildly accusatory tone.
"Don't you dare try to put our lack of closeness on me, Mum. If I am a daddy's girl, it's because you were..." Jenny paused searching for the right term. "Emotionally absent from my life for pretty much as long as I can remember."
The older woman looked down as a little of the truth of her daughter's well-chosen words sank in, but it just wasn't in Margaret's nature to accept blame.
"I bloody worked too, you know? I was president of the PTA while you were at school. I ran, and still do run, several charities. I have a career every bit as valid as your father's. Just because I don't earn the big dollars doesn't mean my career isn't important too."
She sat down, knowing her goals wouldn't be served by getting angry and digging up old issues.
Jenny felt no such constraints.
"You didn't have to do any of those things, Mum, as valid as they were, you chose to. And, let's face it, you did them more for your own self-aggrandizement than for what good they would do in the community. You had to run everything, remember, you left the PTA when someone else was elected chairperson. If you were honest with yourself, you'd have to know you only kept the chairmanships of most of the charities you run because dad or his associates donate much of the money they rely on."
Now it was Jenny's turn to realise there was little value in raking over old coals, to say what she really wanted to - that she'd much rather her mother had been there for her instead. What was the point in telling her mother she'd spent most of her childhood feeling like she was just one more annoying detail for her mother to organise? She'd never listened before. Pointing out home truths may have been a pointless exercise but she couldn't stand by and see her father criticised.
"Sorry, Mum, but it's the truth. It was dad who went with me to all the after-school sports. It was dad who was there for me to talk to when I needed a shoulder to lean on. Dad who helped with homework and taught me to ride a bicycle, drive a car. It was dad... everything. You just weren't there, physically or emotionally. You were, how shall I describe it... detached. Unavailable."
"No, that's not fair, Jenny. I'm the warm one. Ask anybody. It's your father who is the cold one, totally emotionless."
"That's a big fat bullshit, Mum. Dad is a lawyer, and just like doctors and shrinks, they can't afford to get emotionally involved in their clients, it would destroy them. He still feels all the feelings a well-adjusted human being feels but he has to control them; hide them. You have to learn early in your training to separate emotion and action. So, sometimes he had trouble turning that off when he came home. To me that just proves he's human. You..., well I'm starting to think you're a sociopath."
The older woman flushed bright red. Sociopath? How dare Jenny! She ran charities, for god's sake! Charities that helped people. She was a humanitarian!
With difficulty Margaret managed to curb her reflex of anger - she needed a friend right now and after her husband's actions of the last week, they were in very short supply. Being an extremely competitive person, Margaret hadn't the personality traits to make many close friends, more arms-length acquaintances.
Her closest confidante had been her sister who'd rung her and told her about the pictures and video Dave had shown her. Images of her dirty dancing in a club, practically having clothed sex on the dance floor, then the camera following her and the guy twenty years her junior to the motel room door. No, it didn't show her having extramarital sex, but it was obvious that was what was about to happen. Her sister had ranted on about her disgusting behaviour until Margaret could stand no more and hung up.
No, getting righteously angry right now would be very counterproductive. Silence prevailed for several long seconds before Jenny broke the uncomfortable hush.
"So, what did you want to talk about, Mum? I have to say, you look like shit."
"Your dad left me, Jen."
"I know, Mum, he told me."
The silence returned for another long, crawling pause.
"He also told me why, Mum."
The older woman's eyes sank to the table and stayed there. Driven as she was by other's perception of her, she'd desperately hoped Dave hadn't told the rest of the family. It was bad enough he'd shown her sister the video. Margaret felt stuck -- how much had Dave revealed to their daughter? Not knowing exactly how much Jennifer knew made volunteering anything problematic.
For her part, Jennifer waited for her mother to be honest and open with her for the first time in her life.
She was disappointed. Again.