Lloyd's Angel: Reconciliation
November 2010
I'm not sure I actually slept at all; I just knew that I felt like crap when I finally slunk out of bed and started the coffee maker. I sat there in the kitchen and stared at the thin stream of brew spilling into the carafe.
"Happy 75, Lloyd," I told myself morosely.
Some of it was self-pity, but I felt like every decision I'd made since Alexandra died had turned to shit. It was my 75th birthday, and I was sitting alone with no living relatives reflecting on the fact that I was probably accidentally killing myself with medications while trying to recover from raping a man and effectively destroying the life of a woman who didn't deserve it -- and that was just the last twenty-four hours.
My business partner saw me as just a tool to be used, and the only person who'd tried to befriend me had been shattered beyond hope of repair into pieces that either mirrored the darker side of my soul or existed as a fragile facade of what had been.
On top of that, my balls ached with their load of unspent semen. Good things never happened on my birthday.
I watched the morning news while drinking my coffee and a few more aspirin. At least Glory's boyfriend had been locked up as planned. The breathless on-site reporter was thin on details, but he said police claimed to have a confession. With luck, he'd be butthole buddies with some bruiser real soon now, and get put away for a long time.
I needed to have a talk with Danny about Glory, but that couldn't be done over the phone. We'd have to see if we could set up some proper support for her, or she'd disappear into the underside of society. It had seemed the lesser of evils last night, but it was still evil.
Over fifty years of habit prodded me into action and I dragged into the store right on time.
"Happy birthday, Lloyd," Angela told me when we met in the break room. "You look like you did a little too much celebrating last night."
I grunted noncommittally and helped myself to another cup of coffee. It was pretty pathetic when the break room brew was better than what came out of my coffee maker at home; maybe it was time to splurge and get a new one.
"Would you maybe like to go out for a drink or maybe dinner and celebrate again?" she asked.
I looked up, surprised. It was hard to say which of us was tenser.
"I'd like that," I answered and surprised myself with a brief grin.