Authors: Jettie Woodruff
couldn’t help but think about Drew eating something that
messy. He would have had his little servant there picking
the meat off the bone for him.
I had a good time with Dawson, and we talked and
laughed about nothing at all. That too made me think about
Drew. I had never in the six years that I was married to
him, laughed with him. Yes, I am sure that I faked many
laughs, but this was different. Dawson was just a charming
funny guy, and so much fun to be around.
Dawson had no sooner dropped me off when
Lauren walked uninvited through my front door.
“Why didn’t you tell me you were going out with
Dawson?” she spouted.
“I didn’t know that I was,” I replied.
“Levi called me. He said you blew him off to go
for Dawson.”
“Levi wanted to take me on a date. Dawson and I
are just friends.”
“Do you really believe that, Ry?”
“What?” I asked surprised, “that we are just
friends?”
“Yes.”
“Of course I believe it. There was nothing
romantic about it.”
“Yeah okay, whatever.”
“There wasn’t, and I am not dating Dawson, Levi
or anyone else. Now stop it.”
“Let’s go to the bar,” she said letting it go.
“Um, no. I am staying home.”
“Come on, Ry. Don’t make me go by myself.”
“I just saw Joel on your porch. You’re not going
alone. You little conniver.”
“But I don’t want you to sit here alone.”
“I like being alone. I am going to change and veg
out on the couch. I’m tired. I worked harder than I am used
to this week.”
“Fine, party pooper, I will talk to you later.”
I did veg out on the couch and dozed off by ten. It
was the first night in almost a week that I dreamed, and
again I was taken back in time to being a little girl. My
mom had just gotten home from her shift at the truck stop. I
was twelve, and Justin was just a tiny baby, maybe two or
three months old. He was sick and burning up with a fever.
I was trying to give him a bottle and rock him and do
everything that a twelve year old child would know to get
him to stop.
My mom took him from me and was mad because I
let him get sick. I was crying and trying to explain that I
had told my dad to stop and tell her that he was sick on his
way to the bar, but she wouldn’t listen and slapped me
across the face for back talking her.
That was the first time that I was ever alone. She
took him to the hospital, and they kept him for three days. I
knew he was in the hospital because my dad had come
home long enough to shower and leave again for his
weekend bar routine. He never came home that night, and
my mom never came home. It was the dead of winter, and
again I couldn’t keep the only heat source burning. It was
freezing in the trailer, and there was no food in the
cabinets or freezer. I ate a bag of microwave popcorn the
first night and dry cereal for the next two days. I was
afraid that nobody was ever coming back, and by the third
day I was hungry, scared and freezing.
My parents came home together with Justin, and
again I was in trouble because the fire was out. It was so
cold in the old trailer that there was ice on the inside of
the windows. My dad bent me over his legs on the sofa,
no, he didn’t bend me over, he threw me over his legs. My
mom stood there and watched him hit me over and over
until she finally told him that was enough.
I woke up to Justin crying in my room a few hours
later. I waited for my mom to come and get him, but she
didn’t come. I left him crying in my room while I heated a
bottle. I hated my parents and neither one of them deserved
me or Justin. I could hear the bed creaking and both my
parents moaning and going at it in the next room. I put
Justin in bed with me after changing his diaper and
covered us both up.
I didn’t wake panic or scared with this dream. I
felt pain and neglect and my heart ached for Justin, hoping
that he was doing well. I wanted to go there and find him,
just to make sure for myself, but I didn’t dare. I knew that
Drew had somebody staked out there, waiting to see me. I
wiped the single tear from my eye and got up. I didn’t have
to open the shop for another two hours, but I dressed and
went anyway. I would rather have been working then
alone with my thoughts.
Before I knew it, I had been in my new dwellings
for a month. I did hang out with Dawson quite often, and
he hung around the shop drinking more coffee than normal.
The store looked sensational, and the office was actually a
well productive working space now. I filed everything in
the empty filing cabinets that were buried with boxes and
boxes of stuff that I was sure Starlight didn’t even know
she had. I used some of the petty cash and Dawson built
shelves in the storeroom for me. I had everything
organized and on shelves. I had found some really funky
things in the storeroom and continued to make the dining
room more, customer friendly. There was a box that I was
sure Starlight had gotten for that purpose that had yellow
and white checkered tablecloths. I brought out three booths
that were also buried in the back, and Dawson screwed
them to the floor for me in front of the glass windows. I
brought out three more tables and covered them all with
the tablecloths.
I also found a whole stack of beautiful Indian
paintings that needed to be on display. They were
beautiful. The first day that I had hung them on the hooks
that Dawson also hung for me, I sold three of them. I hung
some uniquely made dream catchers which were also
selling like crazy. I found the company that had made them
and ordered another box in all shapes and sizes.
Lauren and Dawson helped two Sundays in a row,
scrubbing and re-staining the wood floors. I couldn’t wait
for Starlight to get back to see her new store. I also hoped
that she wasn’t going to be mad at all of the changes that I
took upon myself to do.
A young girl from the next town over stopped in
one day and had just opened up a cookie and cupcake
store and wanted to know if I would be interested in
placing an order. I had told her that I would order once
and see how they went and if they did okay I would order
more. They did more than okay, and she was bringing
fresh orders daily. The display case that Dawson helped
get from the back room to beside the counter was perfect
and I even had room for Phyllis’s Saturday morning
doughnuts in the case. I was the one to get the cookies,
cupcakes, and pastries from the case. I hated the way it
was before and people could just finger whatever. I felt
much better about taking the food out with my plastic
gloved hand.
Dawson was there, as normal, earlier than he
needed to be on Saturday morning. I was frantically
cleaning and making sure everything was perfect for
Starlight. I was a nervous wreck and hoped that she was
okay with all of the changes.
“Will you get over here and sit down,” Dawson
pleaded. “I know Starlight. She is going to love it.”
I got a cup of coffee and sat at the booth in front of
the window with him, patiently waiting and wishing that
she would get there already.
“You want to go eat some ribs tonight?” Dawson
asked as we waited.
“Hmm, maybe,” I replied.
“Maybe?”
“Well it’s six o’clock in the morning. I can’t think
about supper until I have breakfast and lunch.”
Dawson laughed. “Okay, let me know after lunch.”
I ran to the back room when I heard the door
unlock, knowing that it was Starlight. She came in with
huge eyes, and her hand covered her mouth. Dawson had
followed me back, wanting to see her reaction, as well.
“Oh, my God, Riley, did you do all of this,” she
asked in awe of the neatly organized storeroom that you
could actually see the floor, and it was clean.
“Well, I had some help,” I answered, smiling at
Dawson. “I would have never been able to do it all
myself.”
“You haven’t seen anything yet, Starlight. This girl
is a working machine. Welcome home,” Dawson added.
“I don’t think I am home. This is not the store that I
left.”
She walked down the hall and opened the office
door and gasped. I had hung pictures on the walls, the desk
was clear, except for the computer and a folder in a medal
slot with an order for some psychedelic flip-flops that I
wanted to purchase for the store. It was now pretty warm
out, and with the tourists that I had been getting in the
store, I knew they would sell.
Starlight couldn’t believe what she was seeing.
She opened the drawers and filing cabinet with the wisely
placed tabs with a tangible system. She couldn’t seem to
close her mouth. She continued and walked in both the
men’s and women’s restrooms. They too were transformed
into delicately decorated rooms. Both rooms had an Indian
theme and the décor all came from things that I had found
in the storeroom, except for the paint. We did paint those
two rooms because they desperately needed it. The rust
colored paint with the Indian design looked almost urban.
“Riley, I am speechless,” she exclaimed.
“So you’re not mad?”
“Mad? No way. I am in shock that you did this.”
“Keep walking,” Dawson said. I gasped when I
felt him place his hand on the small of my back. I knew it
was just a friendly gesture, but it made me feel like, like, I
don’t know, like maybe I liked it.
I thought Starlight was going to have a heart attack
when she finally made it to the front. She took note of
every little detail, not missing a thing, and commenting on
every little alteration.
She loved the new look and thought that my design
was magnificent. She thought we had painted there too,
and couldn’t believe it when I told her that we only
scrubbed the walls. I told her that I had wanted to get the
ceilings painted as well, but didn’t want to use all of her
petty cash.
“I will get the ceilings painted for you,” she almost
demanded. She walked around the new counter and slid
the deli case open just in time for Phyllis to bring in the
Saturday morning doughnuts.
“Oh, I better get the coffee going,” I said,
forgetting the time after getting wrapped up in showing
Starlight everything.
“Oh no, you don’t. You’ve done enough. I’ve got
it,” Starlight demanded, taking a bite of an oatmeal cookie.
“I love the cookie idea, and I love you, Riley Murphy,”
she stated. Dawson and I smiled at each other.
Dawson didn’t hangout as long as he normally did,
and Starlight was again amazed at the traffic that came in
and out all day. We didn’t get to close until an hour later
than normal and stayed another hour restocking the sold
merchandise.
“Riley, I don’t know if we can keep up at this
rate,” she said as she replenished the tie-dye shirts on the
rack.
I smiled at her, and she shook her head. “Let me
guess, you already have it covered?”
“I do,” I said. “I sent for a catalogue from this
company out of Oregon. They have the coolest stuff ever,”
I explained, disappearing to the office to retrieve it.
Starlight followed me, and we sat across from
each other at the desk while she turned each page. I had
corner pages folded of the things that I thought would be
nice for the store and she circled a few things, as well.
My cellphone rang, and I answered the call from
Dawson.
“Are we eating ribs or not? I’m starving.”
“I forgot all about it, Dawson. You go ahead. I
think I am going home and making homemade pizza.”
“You made me wait until eight o’clock at night and
didn’t call me. I’m coming over for homemade pizza,” he
demanded, and I laughed.
I wasn’t nervous around him anymore and wasn’t
worried about anything happening between us. We had
been hanging out for a month, and he had never even tried
to kiss me.
“Okay, I have to stop at the store and then I am
headed that way.”
“Sheriff Dawson, uh?” Starlight smiled.