Ye Olde Spice Shoppe
"Morning, Sandy!"
"Oh, hi, V. You're in early," her friend and co-worker said when she saw her on the 'rack' doing Pilates.
"I think the sound of the rain put me to sleep last night. I laid down around ten and didn't wake up until my alarm went off at 7am."
"I love the sound of rain!"
"Me, too. It's like heaven on earth! Anyway, I felt so good I wanted to get in the gym and get started."
"Wow. You sure it was just the rain?" her best friend asked with a devious smile.
"Meaning?"
"Oh, I don't know. Maybe you...met someone? Someone really cute who um...helped you...relax?"
"Ha, ha. Very funny!"
"Vanessa? You really need to find someone," her friend told her, a sound of desperation in her voice.
"Why? I like my life."
"Honey? I'm your best friend, and I know you better than you know your own self. You put on a brave face, but you are not happy. Well, not the way you want to be."
Vanessa was trying to come up with a carefully worded reply that would convince her BFF that she was just fine. But a part of her knew that Sandy was right. She was 41 years old and there were times when the loneliness was so bad it felt like an oppressive weight crushing here in some very real, physical way.
"Yeah. You do know me too well," Vanessa quietly replied.
"V. I'm sorry. I didn't mean to be like that. I was only tryin to be...."
"Hold on," Vanessa said, the ringer on her phone interrupting their conversation.
"Hello?" she said after fishing her phone out of the little bag she carried around with her during workouts as Sandy waited to finish her apology.
"Yes, hello. Is this...Vanessa Moore?" a male voice asked.
"Yes. May I ask who's calling?" Vanessa replied as she moved to a weight bench that was right behind her and sat down.
Sandy sat on one across from Vanessa but couldn't hear the other end of the call . Even so, she could tell by Vanessa's facial expression that it was serious.
"Ma'am, my name is Detective Neiss from the Portland Police Department."
Her heart stopped when she heard 'Portland', the city where she'd grown up then gotten into so much trouble and finally left to start a new life in Seattle nearly 20 years ago.
"Yes," she said, barely breathing.
"Vanessa? What is it? What's going on?" Sandy asked.
Vanessa held up her hand as the detective continued.
"Do you have a brother named Gabriel Alan Moore?"
"Yes," she said even more quietly.
"Ma'am, I'm terribly sorry to have to tell you this, but your brother was killed in a traffic accident around 6:30 this morning."
Unable to speak, Vanessa sat there holding the phone while her mind raced as Sandy pleaded for her friend to tell her what was happening.
Gabe was the straightest arrow Vanessa had ever known. He was the one who got her off the drugs and provided her with enough money to start over. They only spoke by phone once or twice a month by phone, and every other year one of them would visit the other for Christmas, but she loved him more than anyone else on earth.
Ironically, both of their parents had been killed in a car accident was she was 16 and Gabe was 20. He'd done his best to care for her, but after the accident Vanessa's world fell apart and within six months she'd lost her way. For the next three years she hung out with the wrong crowd and, after turning 18, lived with a guy who was nothing but trouble.
He was ten years older and completely wrong for her, but he was so hot and so dangerous she'd been drawn to him like a moth to a flame. Looking back she was pretty sure she saw him as some kind of surrogate father figure in her life, a life she came very close to losing after overdosing late one night.
It had been the Portland PD that called Gabe when they found his sister unconscious and barely breathing. They took her from a place she had no business being to a hospital where, with Gabe's permission, a doctor put her in a medically-induced coma to help her get through the withdrawal process without going through the excruciating ordeal while conscious.
Knowing that addiction was mental as well as physical, Gabe insisted she move in with him so he could help her avoid returning to her former ways which she knew might not end as well were there a next time.
To her credit, Vanessa stayed straight, got a job, and turned things around completely. Two years later, when she was 21, she left Portland for Seattle and had never gone near drugs or even alcohol since. In fact, she'd gone to the other extreme and worked her way up to exercising six days a week and rarely ate junk food of any kind. As a result, she looked a lot younger than her 41 years, and was often mistaken for someone closer to 30 than 40.
The detective assumed she might be in shock and said, "I understand he owns a business called...."
The detective checked his notes then read, "A place called...Ye Olde Spice Shoppe."
That was true. Gabe took over the store from their parents after they died, and it was almost certain that he was on his way to work. Gabe had never married, lived alone, and routinely got to the shop two hours before it opened.
"Did he...was Gabe...did he suffer?" she finally was able to ask, her hands trembling as a wave of nausea hit her.
Sandy gasped and covered her mouth with her hands once she understood what had happened. She knew Gabe and also knew how much Vanessa loved him, and that he was the only family she had left.
"Yes. It was a head-on collision with a semi, and...yes. He died instantly," the detective said in an apologetic tone of voice.
For the briefest of moments, Vanessa thought about the detective who was on the phone.
"I'm sorry you had to be the one to call me," she told him.
"Thank you, but this is a part of my job, ma'am. I just feel terrible having to call you out of the blue and give you the worst news of your life," he told her, his voice changing from official to something more friendly.
She didn't tell him that it wasn't as horrible as hearing from another police officer that both of her parents had both died together some 25 years ago. She only thanked him for the call.
"I uh, I guess I'll be heading to Portland sometime later today or first thing tomorrow morning then. Can you tell me where his body is?"
Detective Neiss, whose name sounded like 'niece', gave her the name of the morgue and apologized again.
With that, she hung up the phone and sat there and stared into space as her mind raced through a lifetime of memories with Gabe and their parents and their lives growing up in Portland during the 80s and 90s.
"Vanessa. Honey. I am SO sorry!" Sandy said as she got up in order to hug her best friend who was just sitting there not moving or even blinking nor did she even return the hug.
Thirty minutes later, she was back home and unable to think.
Somehow she managed not to cry, but the sense of loss she felt was crushing her, and at some point the weight was so heavy she felt like she couldn't breathe. When that happened, Vanessa got up, and because it was cold and rainy outside, went to the room where she had a NordicTrack treadmill, and pounded away at it for nearly an hour until exhaustion replaced the gloominess of grief. The relief was temporary, but for a few hours, she was able to think and function clearly again, and that let her make the decision to pack then and leave the following morning.
Sandy let their boss at work know what was going on before Vanessa left town to take one small detail off of her plate.
The following morning, Vanessa showered in a daze. Once she was dressed and ready to go, she tossed her makeup and some other personal items in a small suitcase and sat it next to the larger one she'd packed the night before.