This is a companion piece to Stev2244's 750 Word Project story, "Meeting My Ex". His should be read before this. Both stories are exactly 750 words, which was a lot more difficult than you might imagine. I appreciate his generosity in allowing me to jump onto the coattails of his story.
Part of the reason for my title is that I wanted Harddaysknight to know that he's not the only one who can use Beatle's songs.
Steppin' Stone
"Martin, you doing okay?"
I looked over at Jay, tried to smile and sat down as she and her husband walked away. Jay headed up my corporate security.
This had been a bad idea but it was an itch I had to scratch. If anything, Lisa looked worse than I remembered. Jay tracked her down for me and then called when he realized she would be here for a while.
He sat at the table next to her and she never recognized him. It wasn't too surprising, she had been wrapped up in herself for quite a while. Jay served with my brother and had given his eulogy when I was too much of a wreck to do so. She saw him once or twice a year, but I guess he didn't make much of an impression.
"Yeah, Jay. Just shook up a bit. I guess I thought... Shit, I don't know what I thought, but not this."
"It's nobodies' fault, Martin. Sometimes things happen and, well, things happened."
I smiled at him, a bit sadly. "She wasn't completely wrong you know. I ran. I hid in work and tried to make things better with extravagant gifts and vacations. I couldn't... she didn't allow me to do the small things. I couldn't hold her, I couldn't talk to her about anything that meant anything."
The waitress came by. It seems that Jay had ordered for both of us. Glenfiddich. Good choice.
"She was all, I don't know, polite. Polite and plastic, always controlled. After we lost the baby, we just lost each other. She hid in a bottle and I hid in work. I gained 40 pounds and she had to lose 20. You know what's ironic? I suggested she hire a trainer. She was emaciated, and I was losing her, emotionally and physically. So, yeah. I'm the one that suggested and paid for the man she would turn to. It was hard to make love to a woman who blamed me for our son's death. It became impossible after she called me by the trainer's name when I was in her."
I took a sip and the aromatics redolent of peat tickled my nose as the liquid warmed my throat.
"So, she sobered up and got healthy. For him. I lost the weight and was working on selling the business. For her. But it was too late. Not her fault, I guess. We just slipped apart. Another 90 days and I would have been retired and the company would have been sold."