*Authors' note: Some time ago, I wrote a story called Dani, which was based on a conversation I had with the father of my late best friend, a Marine who was killed in Afghanistan back in 2008. It was about how his crippling grief, coupled with an already rocky marriage, nearly led to him having an affair with a woman his late son's age.
In my note on that story, I referenced a conversation I had with my dad the last time I went home, and this story I'm calling Randi, obliquely addresses the main topic of our very frank discussion.
In my dad's case, it was a high school friend he hadn't heard from since graduation. She sent him a Facebook friend request letting him know she'd been recently divorced and had been thinking about him. He showed me some photos of her, and she is still very attractive and also incredibly...friendly. For the record, my dad is a good-looking guy so I'm not surprised she was interested in him.
One thing led to another and the result was a very intense cyber and phone affair that nearly became real. Just as with my friend's dad, mine didn't cave, and it ended almost as quickly as it began.
This kind of thing seems to be a relatively common, or at least not an uncommon theme, in marriages that have lasted for 20-30 years or more. Then again, my marriage only lasted five years so I'm only offering my very subjective, anecdotal opinion. (In other words, I'm talking out of my ass.) :-)
Seriously, things like that happen many times every day somewhere around the world. The great thing about a fictional story is that unlike in real life, no one ever gets hurt.
Lastly, a reader recently emailed me to inform me she loved my stories, but would never read another one because 'I let my political views show'. In the story she referenced, I imbued an older man with conservative views and a love of Fox News, and she assumed that represented mine. I've occasionally provided glimpses into my views on politics (especially regarding the Second Amendment), but they are never the focus of any story, as my own personal views are irrelevant and of no interest to anyone reading romantic stories.
In this one, I openly share my views via the main characters, but even here, this is not an attempt to persuade anyone to adopt them as no one is ever convinced simply because someone else shares what they believe. Those beliefs are presented as a part of the story helping two people (who just happen to largely think like I do), fall in love. Politics isn't everyone's forte, but for some people, it's an extremely important part of their life and can certainly form the basis (or an important part of the basis) for a relationship.
I hope you'll enjoy this one as it isn't about me or politics—at all. It's a love story in which a common interest serves as the basis for a longterm relationship.
******
"Oh, check Facebook, okay? I posted some pics of my new cat."
He didn't say anything, but he'd never been a cat person and probably never would be. But because it was his daughter, he said, "Oh, sure. I'll take a look as soon as we hang up."
He was going to say goodbye, but she just had to ask. "Dad? Are you doing okay?"
For the last year or so, every time she called she asked. It was as though something might have changed in the days or maybe a week since the last time she called when there was no reason to expect things to be any different. Her mother had been gone nearly a year, and although he hadn't cried in several months, his life still felt hollow, and every day was a struggle. He knew she knew that, and he also knew she was only letting him know she cared, but he secretly wished she'd quit asking.
But again, because it was his daughter, he said, "Yeah, sure. Things are fine, honey."
As always, he turned it around on her knowing she was still hurting, too.
"The real question is, 'Are you doing okay'?"
"I guess," she said. "It's just so hard, you know? I still think about her many times every day and honestly, I'm almost dreading Christmas this year."
Professor David Eaton didn't want to think about trying to celebrate what had always been his wife's favorite holiday of the year. Right after Halloween, she'd start getting excited about decorations, the tree, buying presents, and getting everyone home in time for dinner on Christmas Eve. Last year, his wife had been gravely ill, and had passed away two weeks later.
"We'll get through it, Mac," he told his 26-year old daughter who was wrapping up her PhD studies in economics, just like her father had done. "You know your mom wouldn't want us sitting around moping and feeling sorry for ourselves. We've been doing that for the last year, and that's one year too many."
He paused for a second knowing he didn't believe a word of what he'd just said, then, more cheerfully, said, "Hey, maybe we should fly out to Seattle and visit Grandma and Grandpa this year. How does that sound?"
"Dad, you know I'm dating someone, and you know it's getting serious. I don't want to be away from him over Christmas. In fact, I kind of invited him to our house, and I'd really like you to meet him."
Eaton did in fact know that Mac, the nickname he and his late wife, Ruby, had used for their daughter, McKenna, as long as he could remember, was dating someone. When she was first learning to talk, McKenna would say, "Me Mac...Kenna." 'Mac' stuck and it almost seemed strange to use her full name.