Authors: Jettie Woodruff
the two girls and their parents. I presumed that Lauren was
the older of the two by the graduation picture.
I slipped on my flip-flops and walked across the
road to my own house. My own house, I said, smiling to
myself again. Panic struck once more when I noticed my
front door open. I relaxed almost immediately the closer I
got. I could hear the country music playing.
I looked in the smaller bedroom, and it was empty,
but the walls had been washed, curtains hung, and the
wood floor shined. I laughed when I heard Lauren singing
something about having friends in low places. She was
singing in a deep voice, not her own I was sure. I opened
the door with a grin.
“What on earth are you doing?” I asked, seeing her
on the floor with a bottle of Murphy’s oil soap and a rag.
The curtains were hung there too, and I loved them. The
white curtains with the black, willow tree pattern accented
the gray walls perfectly.
“Sorry, I hope you don’t mind. I am used to getting
up at four in the morning for work. I was up by five and
didn’t want to wake you.”
“You should have woken me,” I claimed. “What on
earth do you do that you have to get up at four in the
morning?”
“Lauren and Levi,” she said. Like I knew what that
meant.
“Uh?”
“Oh, sorry I forgot. You’re not from around here,
Lauren and Levi in the morning. I’m a radio host.”
“Really? You talk on the radio?” I asked,
intrigued. “Now I know I have to go buy a radio.”
“Yup, I work from five am to one pm.”
“I bet it’s country too, right?” I smiled.
She didn’t answer and only looked up with a
smile. “I brought coffee over if you want a cup.”
“I do, but I want you to stop this, and come and
drink one with me.”
We sat on the deck overlooking the ocean and
drank our coffee. I was so glad that Lauren was my
neighbor. I loved her already. I wondered why there was
no man, or was there? I should probably wait until I know
her a little better before I ask.
“Are you divorced yet?” Lauren asked, breaking
my thoughts about her love life.
I looked at her with a pensive expression, holding
my cup to my lips.
“Relax, will you already?” she requested. “You
have a tan line around your finger.”
I looked at my finger. Sure enough, she was right. I
wondered if makeup would cover that for a few days or
weeks. How long does it take to get rid of wedding ring
evidence?
“I have never been married,” I said with a warning
look. She laughed.
“Yeah right, okay, Ms. Mystery, but let me inform
you, I will eventually gain your trust and you will confess
all of your deep dark secrets to me. Your skeletons will be
bowing at my feet. ”
I looked at her with a serious expression. “It’s not
that I don’t trust you, Lauren.”
“I’m joking, Riley”
I smiled at her. “How the hell am I supposed to get
down to the beach from here?” I asked, wanting off of the
subject of me.
“There’s a path. I’ll show you, but right now we
have floors to clean.” She stood and patted my knee.
By eleven o'clock, we were finished. I couldn’t sit
still. I was noticeably hyper and wanted my delivery,
now
.
Lauren showed me the path to get to the beach. It
was rather steep and rocky, but nothing that I couldn’t
handle. I should have my house all together by the next
day, and planned to venture down there and explore my
new surroundings.
Lauren never left me. She stayed until five in the
evening until the last picture was hung on the wall. I loved
it, and I loved her. My house was complete, and I only
needed to go shopping for a few odds and ends that I had
forgotten. Food! Yes. I had to do that. If I forgot to get
food one more day, I was going to turn myself into a crazy
house.
I hugged Lauren before she left and thanked her
again.
“I don’t like mushy friends,” she teased with a
warning look. “You are more than welcome. Oh yeah,
what’s your cell number?” she asked, pulling hers from
her back jeans pocket.
“I don’t have one,” I said, and she cocked her
head.
“There
is
a
Radio
Shack
right
beside
‘Reminiscent,’ where you will be working. You should
probably have a phone.”
“I am not sure I want one just yet. I think that I
should wait a while.”
“Afraid of being found?” she asked. I wasn’t about
to answer that one. She left shaking her head as she
skipped across my yard. My yard, I smiled.
I showered and was bouncing off the walls as I
entered my new living room. I couldn’t wait to lie on the
black comfy leather sofa and watch a movie. That was my
plans for that Saturday night. I was going to the grocery
store first, not about to get sidetracked or forget that again.
Then I was going to rent a movie or two and come back,
lie on my couch and eat spaghetti. I loved spaghetti and
Drew had hated it. The only time I would get it was when
he took me to ‘Trattoria da Cesare,’ a famous Italian
restaurant on Las Vegas Boulevard, I mean Carson
Boulevard. I giggled to myself and felt like a giddy little
teenager.
I was home by eight, listening to my new radio and
country music as I chopped the needed ingredients for my
spaghetti. I wondered what Lauren was doing. I should
invite her over for spaghetti. I wished I could call her. I
looked out the front door, and there were no lights on. She
wasn’t home. I went out to the back deck and gazed out at
the moon over the ocean. For the first time in an awful
long time I felt light-hearted and had a new sense of calm.
I would never again worry about what kind of
mood Drew was going to be in when he got home. I would
never again worry about focusing on what I could do to
improve myself so that I didn’t set him off. I would focus
on me for the first time in my life. I clasped my hands
together and pressed them to my lips, almost as if I were
praying and thanking God for my courage to do what I had
done, and be where I was standing. I truly was grateful.
My new sense of being was shattered once again
when I heard the loud knock on the door. Would I ever get
used to this? Would I ever be able to breathe and not think
that it was someone there to get me?
I looked out and saw Lauren. She pushed herself in
carrying a bag and busily started talking as she removed
its contents.
“So, I figured I might as well get this myself. It
was pretty obvious that you were not going to,” she said
handing me the new cellphone. “You have to have a
phone, Riley,” she assured me.
“Lauren, I can’t accept this.” I tried to hand it
back.
“Hmm, this looks good,” she said, sticking her
finger in my homemade sauce, ignoring me.
“Lauren!”
“Look, Riley. I don’t know what your story is, and
I am not going to pry. If you ever need to talk I am here,
and you never have to worry about me saying anything to
anyone. Even if you never tell me your story, you still need
a phone. It’s pretty clear that you are afraid of having a
phone in your name, so I put it on my plan. I am not giving
you anything. The phone was free to add a line, and you
can pay me the monthly thirty five dollar payment. Okay?”
How could I argue with that? Why was she, so hell
bent on being nice to me? Not that I was complaining, it
just felt sort of superficial. No. Stop it, Morg, I mean, Ry,
not everyone has a motive.
“Thank you, Lauren. Would you like to stay for
supper?”
“No, but I want leftovers tomorrow. I kind of have
a visitor that I need to get back to. I put my number in your
phone already, in case you need anything. I’m leaving
before you hug me again.”
I laughed and watched her walk back to her house.
There was a guy building a fire off to the side of her
house. I watched as he wrapped her in his arms and kissed
her. I wondered who he was and if he was her boyfriend.
I finally sat down to enjoy my spaghetti and the
movie ‘Wanderlust with Jennifer Aniston.’ I couldn’t
contain my nosiness and peeked through the crack in the
curtains across the yard every now and then. I watched
Lauren lead her friend into her house by the hand around
eleven. She probably wouldn’t tell me about him unless I
asked. I wouldn’t, I mean, it wasn’t like I was sharing any
part of my life with her.
I slept like a baby in my new bed but woke a little
too early, thanks to Lauren. I reached for my new
cellphone on the nightstand and read the new text.
“You up?”
“I am now,” I answered.
“Make coffee, I’m on my way over.”
Okay. I said out loud, forcing myself out of bed. I
didn’t even have time to completely finish peeing before
she was knocking on my door.
“Good morning,” she said, way too happy. I
glanced at the clock, and it was only eight. I wasn’t sure I
liked her much anymore. She walked past me and started
the coffee herself.
“I’m going to brush my teeth,” I said and left her
alone. When I returned she was in my refrigerator,
retrieving the leftover spaghetti.
“Want some?”
“No. Help yourself.” I sarcastically replied.
I sat on my new sofa, and she talked. Not about
anything particular, she was just rattling on about this and
that. I sleepily listened and wished I had slept another
hour while she warmed up my leftovers.
“What are you doing today?” she asked, pushing
my feet off the couch so that she could sit.
There is a chair right there.
“I want to walk down to the beach. Other than that,
I guess I don’t have any. Why?”
“I bowl on Sunday afternoon. Wanna come?” she
asked, sucking spaghetti through her lips.
“No. I don’t think so, but thanks.”
“Come on, Riley, it’s fun. I will introduce you to
some of my friends.”
“I will, Lauren, just not today.”
“Okay.” she replied, and I was glad that she didn’t
insist. I certainly wasn’t up for meeting new people yet.
I dressed in a pair of dark blue wind pants with
two small white stripes, and a white cotton shirt,
unbuttoned overtop of a red t-shirt. I was definitely going
shopping for new clothes. Yes. I did once wear worse
than what I had now, but I had gotten used to the designer
clothing that was a vital part of my life for the past six
years. Somewhere in-between this and that would be
good, I decided as I tied the also used sneakers. I felt
ashamed of myself. I shook my head in disbelief of
wearing someone else’s shoes. There was a time in my
life that my toes cramped, curled in the only shoes that I
had to wear, probably two sizes too small.
I started down the path, holding onto the boulders
as I made my way to the beach. This was surely not what I
had pictured when I thought about living by the beach.
From what I had seen so far, there was no beach. I
climbed and maneuvered my way through the sarsens.
Some of the spaces between the rocks were barely wide
enough to squeeze through. It was probably a good thing
that I was required to keep in shape. Finally, I was in the
clearing. I moaned a disgusted breath when I saw that the
large peak that I had been looking at from my deck, didn’t
allow room for walking. The only way I would be able to
walk north was sprint while the tide gave maybe a foot of
wet sand. I would do it, just not that day. I chose instead to
walk south. The beach was nice, and I decided that I had
found my new favorite place when in a distance I
witnessed a pirate ship. I knew that it wasn’t a real pirate
ship, but with the many sails, it could have passed as one.
The windjammer was moving away from the lighthouse on
a peak in the distance.
I sat on a hard rock and pulled my knees to my
chest. The air was crisp, but the sun warmed my face, and
felt invigorating as I contemplated living there. I closed
my eyes and breathed the sea air and the suns heat into my
lungs. I was here. I did it, and I was never looking back.