Authors: Jettie Woodruff
new life and making the house my home, but my mind kept
drifting back to Drew. It had been four days now since I
had vanished from his life. I wondered about his reaction
when he realized that I had disappeared. What went
through his mind when he dialed my cellphone? I didn’t
even know where it was. I wondered if anyone would
answer it. I knew he was probably beyond irate, and I was
sure that a few things had gotten broke during his
discovery.
I woke to the sun pouring in through the window.
My homemade bed must have been sufficient. I slept the
whole night without waking once. I didn’t waste time
stretching and lingering around in bed the way that I was
used to. I got straight up, brushed my teeth and pulled my
long dark hair into a ponytail. I still had a hard time
looking in the mirror without double taking. My hair had
been blonde for the past six years, and my natural brown,
seemed so distant and foreign now. My bruised cheekbone
also looked better. You could barely see it once I applied
the foundation.
I pulled on a pair of hand-me-down jeans and a
sweatshirt. That was the part about Las, I mean Indiana
that I was going to find the most difficult. It was May, and
the weather was so diverse. I could handle it, had it been a
bit different, but forty degrees different? Come on. Why
didn’t I get a choice? I surely would have chosen a
warmer climate. How were you supposed to enjoy living
by a beach when you wore a continuous layer of goose
bumps?
I had breakfast at Millie’s Diner. Millie herself
waited on me.
“Good morning. Can I start you off with some
coffee?” she asked.
“Yes. Thank you. That would be great.” I chose to
sit at the bar and thumbed through a newspaper.
“Here you go sweetie. Do you need a few minutes
yet?” The friendlier than I was used to lady asked.
“No. I’m ready. Could I get gravy and biscuits and
two slices of bacon?”
“You sure can, coming right up.”
I read through the local paper, smiling at its size. It
was a full four pages. The Vegas Sun was dictionary
compared to the Misty Bay Daily News. The front page
talked about the events planned for the year’s Summer
Fest. There would be apple bobbing, grease pole
climbing, corn hole tournaments, a wood chopping
competition, and the list went on and on for the weekend
long celebration. Saturday night would be no kid’s night,
and it described the street dancing and wine tasting events
for adults only. I flipped the page and read about the new
breast milk flavored coffee at ‘Reminiscent.’ Are you
kidding me? Where the hell was I going to be working?
Where the hell would you even get breast milk? I kept
reading and learned the benefits of breast milk coffee. I
would not be trying the breast milk coffee. I was sure of
that. Gross.
“Here you go honey,” Millie said, setting my plate
in front of me. It looked mouthwatering. Either that or my
stomach was so hungry, it would have looked
mouthwatering had it been a plate of gravy and worms. It
was delicious, and I am sure I ate it in record time. Millie
probably thought I hadn’t eaten in weeks. She refilled my
coffee cup, and I thanked her. The diner was fairly empty
and had only a few people; of course it was getting kind of
late for breakfast.
It was almost eleven. I hadn’t even started my
long list of shopping yet, let alone the cleaning that needed
to be done. I was, however, feeling a little less uneasy that
morning. I had plenty of time to do it. I may not finish in
the next three days, but I would be working mostly days so
I would just have to work on it in the evenings after work.
I was going to need something to do in order to keep my
mind from thinking too much anyway.
“Is there a furniture store around here?” I asked
Millie when she slid me a small strawberry Danish.
“There’s one over on Long Road. Is there
something particular that you are looking for?”
I took a bite of the cheese Danish. “Hmm, this is
amazing,” I told her as the warm contents of strawberry
and cream cheese teased my taste buds. “I kind of need
everything,” I smiled up at her.
“You bought Clara Bliss’s little cottage, didn’t
you?”
Clara Bliss? How was I supposed to answer that?
No. I live in a house that my grandmother left for me. That
was what I was supposed to say. That’s what Ms. K told
me to say. Who is Clara Bliss?
“Clara lived there up until about ten years or so
ago.” Millie started to explain. I breathed a sigh of relief.
“She moved to Portland to be closer to her grandchildren.
The house has sat empty for a good many years. You can
thank her for the lovely colors,” she winked, and it made
me smile.
Shew, I didn’t have to explain anything.
“Where is Long Road? Do they have pretty much
everything? Do they deliver?”
Millie laughed at my run-on sentence. I didn’t
mean not to give her time to answer. I was just happy we
weren’t talking about my house anymore.
“Yes. You can get furniture for every room in the
house, including curtains.”
I was glad she mentioned curtains. I had neglected
to add them to my long list.
“Thank you,” I said, taking a ten dollar bill from
my purse. I liked Millie, and I hoped we would become
friends. She was probably twenty years or more, older
than me, but nonetheless she was a very nice lady.
“Can I offer you some more advice?” she asked.
“Yes, of course.”
“There is a place about fifteen miles from here
called Potters. It’s a warehouse full of housewares. I am
sure you could buy everything you need there, and they
only sell American made,” she added, proud of that fact.
I took out a piece of paper. “Thank you, Millie. I
will definitely go there. Do you know the address?”
Millie laughed a short laugh. “You don’t need an
address sweetie. Turn right at the stop light and drive till
you see the billboard on the left that says Potters. You
can’t miss it.”
“Thank you. I better get going. I have a long day
ahead of me,” I smiled and left the ten dollars on the
counter, leaving her a three a dollar tip.
“Come back this evening. Tonight is meatloaf
Friday,” she invited, and I left with a nod and a smile.
I knew I wouldn’t be back. I had too much to do,
but I would come back and have meatloaf Friday
sometime. I hadn’t had meatloaf since before my Grandma
Joyce passed away.
I drove to the furniture store first. I couldn’t
believe the prices. I had twenty-five thousand dollars in
pre-paid visa cards to buy everything that I needed, and I
wasn’t going to spend near what I thought I would. I was
pleasantly surprised at the quality. The dining room table
that I had picked out would have cost me probably five
times as much back in Las, I mean Indiana. I ended up
buying more than what was even on my list. I hadn’t
planned on buying an area rug, a desk, television or coffee
and end tables. I got everything that I needed for a fraction
of what I had planned on spending.
I was on cloud nine, up until it was time to pay that
is. I was standing at the counter, and the older man asked
for my last name.
Dammit. What is it? I was drawing a blank. I had
the Riley part, but the last name just wasn’t registering. I
could feel my face becoming flush when I didn’t answer
right away. He stood in front of me, awkwardly wondering
why I wasn’t answering.
“Murphy,” I almost yelled, when it finally came to
me. He gave me a funny look and turned back to his
computer screen.
I finished giving him my information, and we had
delivery setup for the following day. I would still have to
sleep on the floor for one more night, but I was okay with
that. I would much rather clean in the empty rooms than try
to clean around furniture. I would at least have curtains
over the windows.
I went to Potter’s next, and spent more time than I
should have in there. I was so thankful that Millie had told
me about it. The prices there too, surprised me, and I
bought everything that I needed, and then some. I found the
cutest set of dishes and couldn’t help thinking about the
exquisite china back in
Indiana.
Drew would have never
eaten off of plates like that. They were white, and although
I hated the bright yellow walls back at the house, the cute
little yellow ducklings circling the plates and saucers
were adorable. I wondered then if I had bought everything
that Drew would hate on purpose.
I was so excited. I could hardly contain myself. I
had stolen, well not actually stolen, we were married. I
had taken a microscopic amount of his money. Drew
probably hadn’t even figured that part out yet. I honestly
didn’t want anything of his. I would have walked away
and slept on the floor for months had Ms. K not convinced
me to take what was rightfully mine. Boy was I ever
grateful that she did. Now that I think about it, she didn’t
really give me a choice in the matter. I was taking the
money.
Buying the house was a little more difficult. It took
me almost six months to embezzle the eighty six thousand
dollars that Drew would never find. I had added between
fifteen and eighteen thousand dollars to different overhead
expenses for six straight months. The first couple of
months I was paranoid, no I was terrified that he was
going to catch it, but he never did. Stupid bastard
shouldn’t have been so credulous. I knew exactly where
the key to his office was. It was rather simple to add bits
and pieces to his overhead, donate to a made-up worthy
cause, and a delightful fat scholarship, sending me to the
University of Misty Bay. I had actually found a couple of
ways to change things a little to save him some money,
without him knowing of course.
I counted. It took me nine trips to unload my
overstuffed Honda Civic. I stacked everything in the
corner of the living room and would move it as needed. It
took up half the room, and once again I forgot to eat. I
wondered if there was a pizza delivery. Why would it
even matter? I didn’t have a phonebook, and the pre-paid
phone that Ms. K had given me only had seven minutes left
on it. I wasn’t planning on using it, and Ms. K had already
told me that we would end all contact once I had left
Indiana.
I was to pitch the phone out the window before I
arrived.
My heart all of a sudden dropped to my feet when
there was a knock on the door. Nobody knows me here.
Who would be looking for me here? What did they want? I
was pulled from my frozen paranoia by the second knock.
Stop it, Morg, I mean Riley. I said quietly but out
loud as I made my way to the door.
“Hi. I’m Lauren. I live in the uglier than your blue
house, across the road,” my new neighbor said,
introducing herself.
I shook her hand. “Nice to meet you. I’m Riley, but
everyone calls me Ry.” I was smiling to myself when I
remembered that aspect of my new life. I had forgotten to
mention that to Millie earlier.
“Wow, it looks like you have your work cut out for
you,” she observed peeking around me.
I suddenly realized that I was being rude. “Come
in,” I offered. “I really don’t have a seat to offer or
anything to drink,” I teased.
Lauren walked through the door. “Wow, the inside
paint is worse than the outside,” she stated, and I laughed.
“I forgot how bright it was in here.”
She must have been in here before.
“That will be altered tonight,” I assured her.
“I have a friend that does construction if you want
his number.”
“Maybe for the outside, the inside has got to be
done tonight. I have furniture coming by noon tomorrow,”
All of a sudden I comprehended how much I had to do and
what little time I had to do it. I was happy to have a
neighbor, and I thought Lauren, and I would become
friends. I just didn’t want to be her friend at that moment. I
had too much to do.