"Someone has an appetite!"
"The best thing about the end of wrestling season is being able to eat again," her son said.
"You look too skinny when you're wrestling," his mom said.
That wasn't actually true, because even at 174 pounds, her son was anything but skinny. He was in perfect shape, and his body was both ripped and shredded. Staying at or below 174 was a constant battle, but one in which he'd been victorious the last three years.
When wrestling ended, he'd go back up to his normal 185 pounds for baseball where he pitched for the University of Washington Huskies. For someone who was 5'11", he still looked extremely good and carried the additional weight quite well. In fact, he actually looked better and more healthy with a few extra pounds.
This year, however, he wasn't playing baseball. The coach had told him before the end of wrestling season, "Listen, Kellner. You're a damn good wrestler, but you're just an 'okay' pitcher. If you even make the team again, and unless you've improved significantly, you won't, but even if you do, you won't get more than a few innings of relief work the entire year."
With finals coming up, and graduation just three months away, he decided to throw in the towel. He'd had a good run, but professional sports had never been in his future, so he thanked the coach for his honesty and called it a 'career' where college sports were concerned.
He didn't see it as quitting but rather as opening a new and potentially exciting new chapter is life. Life was about adapting to change, and he was always interested in whatever might be around the next bend.
The sound of his mother's voice interrupted his mental reminiscence.
"Would you like some more?" she asked after the first helping was nearly gone.
"Yes, please," he said with a smile.
"I don't know where you put it," she said, feeling so happy her son was home during Spring Break.
"I'm a bottomless pit, remember," he teased as he raised up so she could keep it coming.
"How are your classes going, and are you getting excited yet about graduating?"
"So far so good for the classes. I think I've been too busy to think about graduation, though. Between classes and sports, I guess it just hasn't hit me that it's almost over."
"I understand," his mom said. "I can't believe it's been four years myself. I know your father would be very proud of you."
"Yeah. I think he would, Mom. I try not to think about him too much, but I still really miss him."
"Me, too, honey. But we either move on or life passes us by, right?" she said.
She and his late father were the people from whom he'd learned the important life lesson about living in the moment. Reflecting on the past was fine, but living there wasn't. Planning for the future was important, but one still had to let the future come rather than try and live there.
"You're right, Mom. As usual," he told her as he kept eating.
There was something she almost didn't want to ask, but knew she couldn't help herself.
"Are you still seeing Elizabeth?" his mom asked very casually.
"Um, no. That didn't work out," he said rather quietly. "I guess sleeping with one of her professors in exchange for an 'A' meant more to her than staying faithful to me."
"Are you being serious?" she asked.
"I am. She denied it at first, but eventually she admitted it. It was almost surreal listening to her. She actually told me it was, and I quote, 'Nothing more than an exchange of two commodities'. Her body for a better grade."
"I...I don't even know how to respond to something like that. Does she even have a conscience?"
"Good question. I honestly don't know. But I will say she doesn't seem to have a moral compass. But hey, she's an economics major, so what do I know?"
"Well, I'm sorry that happened."
She smiled her best smile and told her son, "I hope you won't give up trying to find someone."
"I won't. But I'm in no hurry. At 22, it's not like all the pretty girls are going to be gone by graduation. Or even...next summer," her son said with a smile as he continued packing it away.
He knew what she was hinting at and couldn't help teasing her a little bit. Nick smiled back at her and said, "So there is still the possibility of grandchildren in your future. Just not the immediate future."
His mom laughed because she knew he was aware she'd eventually like to have a grandchild. Not necessarily right away, of course, because Nick really was still very young. However, raising him had been the best part of her life, and she'd love nothing to more than to have another child to love.
She was also aware that since her husband's unexpected passing during Nick's freshman year of college, she'd found herself much lonelier than she could ever have imagined. So while she wasn't about to push the issue, Karen Kellner couldn't help but think about how wonderful it would be to have the sweet voice of a child in her home again. Only this time she'd be able to give him or her back to her son or daughter-in-law whenever she wanted to.
She also knew he'd have no problem finding someone. Yes, she was prejudiced, but she thought her son, Nick Kellner, was a very handsome young man. And the fact that he'd always had pretty girls flocking around him for as long as she could remember, she was quite sure she was correct.
So finding girls was never been the problem. The problem had been finding one who was a one-man kind of girl.
This Elizabeth was the third girl she personally knew of who'd slept around while dating her son, and as a woman who'd never strayed, it made her ashamed of her gender. She knew most women didn't cheat even though many did. That her only son had managed to find three who did somehow seemed outside the bounds of chance. It was three out of a couple of dozen or so, but it was still three too many for her liking.
And yet he was still such a good, decent, caring boy who treated all of them very well and one who'd never let the actions of any particular girl change him. Knowing that made the infidelity all that much harder to understand. But as he'd just said, there was still plenty of time, and as her late husband, Gene, had often said, "There are plenty of fish in the sea."
"How about you, Mom? Are you seeing anyone?" Nick asked even though he was sure what the answer would be.
"Me? Be serious! I'm beyond all that. And now that I have my new hobby, I'm not even looking," she told him.
"Ah, yes. Quilting, right?" he asked even though he knew that answer, too. She'd been at it for over a year now, and was still going full speed ahead with it.
"Yes. It's the most enjoyable thing I've ever tried," she said.
She saw him look at her, and knew where he was going. Before he could say it, she pointed her finger at him playfully and said, "Don't you dare say anything about sex!"
His mother was no prude. She'd tried dating after Gene had been gone for two years, but soon realized she'd never be able to love another man. And that was around the time she stopped into a new fabric & quilting shop that had just opened up and started browsing around. Before she left, she'd signed up for a beginner's class in quilting, and now she was hooked in a big way.
It not only filled her days, his mom absolutely loved it. Nick had asked about it a time or two, but couldn't see the draw.
As it turned out, quilting wasn't really quilting. It was about deciding which quilt pattern to make followed by fabric selection. Once that was done, the next step was cutting the fabric into precise strips and sewing them together, something that was called 'piecing'.
The quilting part was done only after the entire quilt was, well...pieced...together. Then it could either be hand-quilted, the thing most people associated quilting withโthe grandmother sitting in a chair pushing a needle through the quilt for daysโor quilted by a huge, computerized beast called a longarm quilting machine.