34 Seconds (9 page)

Read 34 Seconds Online

Authors: Stella Samuel

BOOK: 34 Seconds
11.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I know the wedding must have been hard for you, but I don’t understand why you are upset. And quiet. You haven’t been with him in over fifteen years. If this was going to be so hard…”

“I was with him ten years ago. We met less than fifteen years ago. But we were together for over two, then together once again, just before you and I started dating. About ten years ago. And I know ten years is a long time too,” I responded defensively, but quietly. I felt guilty after I spoke. Sure, I was with him ten years ago, but it was a day of fun, laughter, and carefree sex. We were free spirits enjoying our past, letting go, and loving one another again. We had an understanding. I would go back to Colorado, and he would stay in Virginia, unmarried, playing music in bars, and living his life while I continued to search for my dreams of having a family. Chris and I started dating just a few weeks after I returned more confused than I had been when I walked away from Will and my dreams of our future together.

“I thought he was your high school boyfriend,” Chris pulled away from me.

“He was after high school. We were together in college and…you know, we’ve never been apart. We’ve always been friends, but back then we couldn’t find our way back to one another either. So ten years ago we were both single, and we spent a day at a beach playing guitar and singing and then spent the night together. But, Chris, it was so long ago, too. It’s not Will I’m upset about.”

“No? Just that he married another woman, right?” Chris’ voice went up slightly in tone. I could tell my worries and thoughts were more visible than I thought, and he was growing weary of them.

Bella woke up crying and asked if we were home yet. Short car naps are not the best sleep for our little ones. Chris put the car in park, opened the door, waking Emily too, and left for the beach. I watched him walk away from me while both of our children cried to go home. As Emily became more awake, she noticed we were at the beach and wanted to go look for shells. I got out of the car, unbuckled Emily, and told her she could go look for seashells while Daddy and I sat on the beach and talked. Once I got Bella out of the car and set her up with Emily on the beach, I found Chris sitting on an old log nearby.

The beach was public but no one was around. Chris and I could sit quietly and talk while watching the girls collect oyster shells, which they seemed to think came from the depths of the exotic ocean. “Make sure you stay out of the water, girls, please don’t get those dresses wet and dirty!” I yelled down the beach. My two little girls went running, flinging up sand as they went.

 

I sat down next to Chris just a few yards away and asked him to talk with me.

Silence. Again.

After a minute of turning my head back and forth, fighting the breeze pushing my hair into my face, I finally looked at my husband and said, “I don’t think you get it because you never left home. You grew up in Colorado, and you still live there. Your family is there, and you get to see them often enough, you don’t notice the change taking place over the years. I know we’ve seen change and growth there, but it’s just not the same as coming back here to see odd growth, yet almost no change. In many ways, the change is good where it’s allowed, like Starbucks,” I said lifting my cup and handing him the cup he’d left in the car. “But in many ways, the change is depressing. It’s a sober reminder for me. I am not a child anymore. I didn’t lose a childhood boyfriend, Chris. I feel like I lost my childhood. And it took many years, but this whole trip home, it has hit me like a ton of bricks. Did you see my dad’s house? There is mold or mildew, or whatever it is, growing on his siding.” My voice raised an octave as I was finally getting excited over something and beginning to feel less numb. “That doesn’t just happen one summer. It’s taken twenty or so years to build up, and suddenly to me it looks like a worn slipper that needs to be tossed. But he can’t toss the slipper because it’s his home, and you know, it used to be my home too. But it doesn’t feel like home. It just feels like a lost dream, something I forgot coming to the surface just now.” I started talking faster and going in circles and coming back to points I had left behind just moments before. I knew I wasn’t making any sense to Chris, but I was getting it all out and trying my best to communicate with him. I always seemed to think because he was my husband, he would know to expect me to just spew information that would make no sense to him and would only offer cleansing for me.

“Nik, Nik….Nikki! Stop! What are you talking about, slippers and mold…I’m not following you, Nikki. I just thought you were upset about Will getting married. I know you love him; I know you care for him. Remember I was in my thirties when I married you. I loved before you. But I was never invited to their weddings once we broke up. Not only was I never invited, I wouldn’t have gone to any of them even if I were. But that’s the difference between you and me. Once I break up with someone, it’s over. You, on the other hand have remained friends with everyone you’ve ever known.” Chris took my hand, kissed the tips of my fingers and said, “But that’s what I love about you. You have so much love; you love everyone you’ve ever known. At times, I wonder if there is enough for me.”

I turned to watch the girls. I didn’t want Chris to see me cry again. Emily was piling shells into a part of her dress she had turned into quite the basket. Bella was sitting on her knees with her dress gathered around her waist digging a hole in the sand. I thought, at least they listen. Those dresses might be dirty, but they didn’t get in the water.

“You know I love you, Chris,” I said. “Don’t you?” Chris put his arms around me in response. “You know what an emotional wreck I am, right? I can’t keep things straight. I worry about you. I worry about us. I worry about what the moms I see at the playground each day think of me. I didn’t lose Will. I gave Will up years ago. I decided what I wanted. He wanted something else. I have a wonderful life with you; I’m just having a hard time realizing life is cycling so quickly, I guess. Members of my family are dead or dying; my dad’s house looks as if it’s dying. My sister is divorcing a man I met when I was ten years old. I always thought of him as a brother to me, and now, I don’t know if I will see him anymore. I guess I need therapy. Can we go shopping?” I forced a smile as I tried to lighten the mood with a joke.

Chris chuckled, put my face in his hands, and kissed me. “You and your sister go shopping. That’s girls’ therapy. Me, I like to sit right here in nature and watch the bugs crawl all over your dress. Now, that’s therapy.”

I jumped up. “What!?” Chris was laughing. Frustrated and pretending to be furious with him, I walked down the beach and told the girls to gather three of their favorite shells and get in the car. Pop-Pop and his aging mother and greening house were waiting for us, after all. So was the silly life Chris and I had together. Chris could almost never have a serious conversation. I’d walked away from tear jerking moments wondering if he heard me at all or if he was trying to think of his way out of the conversation the entire time I was pouring out my heart.

Chris stopped at Natalie’s house. Clearly, Natalie was waiting for us to arrive. She had a look on her face that said she was hiding something.

“Nikki! Chris! Emily and Bella! How was it? Was it beautiful?” She asked these questions not really expecting an answer because she kept talking. “Nikki, I’ve got the girls’ things gathered already, you can pick them up tomorrow afternoon when you return.”

“When I return? From where?” I asked looking at both my sister and my husband.

Chris is the one who spoke up. “Thanks, Nat, I haven’t told her yet. I’ll just need the directions, and we’ll be on our way.”

 

 

Chapter Five

It’s never easy to leave my children; especially when I’m not aware I am leaving them. But a few bribes to bring them something special, and the promise of a fun living room camping trip with their cousins at Natalie’s house made heading to the bed and breakfast much easier for us all.

“When did you plan all of this?” I asked Chris once he put our overnight bag in the car. We were on our way down the dirt road leading away from my sister’s house where we left all the kids with Popsicle smiles and faint laughter. I glanced at the road leading to Will’s house as we passed it.

“It was actually Natalie’s idea. She offered to take the kids, so we could have a night alone. We figured today would be the best day, so I could work on showing you how much I love you and remind you what we have together.”

I couldn’t help it, but this comment made me mad. “Chris, are you looking for an argument? Are you telling me you planned a night for the two of us on the day Will got married because you thought maybe I’d be so sad and upset and wallowing in my past, you’d need to pull me back into our life?” I could feel my face getting hot. No way was I going to enjoy our evening out if Chris planned it all around the fact an ex-boyfriend got married. I kept thinking how insecure he must be feeling, and for some reason, I was angry and feeling guilty. I just couldn’t get the past off my mind, and now I knew it was affecting my family and obviously, my marriage.

Chris pulled into the parking lot at the ABC store just outside of the little Windmill Point town. He parked the car, turned to me, put my face in his hand, lifted my chin, and said, “You worry too much. I don’t want to argue. I want you to relax. I want you to recognize no matter how you feel about this man of so long ago, you are with me now. And I feel a need to show you how much I love you. I want to share a bottle or two of wine, lay you down, and make love to you in a little room overlooking the bay. If I could do this every day, I would, but our everyday life doesn’t work in such a way. Today is a good day. Just relax.” He touched his index finger to the tip of my nose, winked, and got out of the car to buy a bottle or two of wine. As soon as the car door closed, I sank further into my seat. I was embarrassed because I immediately got defensive and on a night when Chris had put forth extra effort to make me feel special. There were so many times I’ve sabotaged myself focusing on the wrong things. How could I possibly be thinking of a newly married man who touched me long ago when I could not focus and relax like Chris told me to most days? I should have been focusing on Chris and how wonderful he was to me and to our family. I needed to hold him as close as I could and let go of the past. All of the past. I wasn’t even sure I was holding on to any past, but I definitely didn’t need to be thinking of it at all. Especially on a night when Chris and I could be so close. Without children.

Chris got back into the car with a large brown bag, leaned over, kissed my cheek and said, “It’s time to relax, sweetie, just you and me. Oh, and two bottles of Virginia wine. Did you know ABC stores don’t really sell wine, and the only wines they sell are made here in Virginia?” I smiled. I had forgotten. Nothing compared to our Colorado drive thru liquor stores.

It took about five minutes to find the hidden drive to the bed and breakfast once we were in the area. There were trees everywhere on the winding road, and we couldn’t see more than a few feet in front of the car. Coming from Colorado, we were used to seeing for a hundred miles without trees in our way. I felt claustrophobia sinking in. Chris asked me to stay in the car while he checked us in. I found this odd since it was a bed and breakfast. When he came back with a key, I was surprised again to see him follow the dirt road behind the bed and breakfast house. About a quarter of a mile down the dirt road sat a little summer home located on a sandy beach. Chris parked the car on the dirt road where it ended alongside the house. We got out and saw a quaint little cottage amongst the tall pine trees with a screened in porch overlooking a private beach touching the Chesapeake Bay. Chris moved the eye hook to unlock the screen, opened the door, picked me up in his arms, and carried me up the steps, over the threshold and onto the porch. Before he set me back on my feet, he kissed me hard. I could feel the heat from his chest against my own and his tongue searching my mouth. When my feet touched the floor, I could barely stand. He’d always affected me with his pleasant and sensual surprises. It was nice to be reminded.

Once inside the little cottage, we saw fresh fruit and vegetables on the counters in the little kitchen, a new bag of coffee, and a corkscrew sitting near the two cup coffee maker. “I have a feeling we’ll need more than two cups of coffee in the morning,” Chris said to me, “But if they got everything I asked them for, there should be two steaks in the fridge and some bath oils near the tub.” He grabbed my arm and pulled me to him again, kissing me harder and deeper than before on the porch. I could feel his excitement growing against my body. He whispered in my ear, “I think we may have some time to get reacquainted before we have to do anything else.”

Kissing him back, I laughed and whispered back, “We’re in the middle of the woods next to a beach with water filled with jellyfish, what else could we possibly have to do?”

“Exactly my thoughts,” he said as he unzipped my dress and started kissing my neck, lowering his lips with each kiss until I felt him nibble on my shoulder.

“Relax, Nik, it’s me. There are no children here. We have a whole night all to ourselves. You know I won’t last long, but hey, maybe you can sleep all night after I’m done with you. How long has it been since you slept all night long?”

Yep, my husband, always letting me know he’d have sex with me, but ultimately it was sleep he yearned for. I tried to relax. Chris was trying, but part of me thought he was trying too hard. It felt a bit too unreal for me. He started kissing my neck again. If anything, when he was assertive, I responded. I needed him to be assertive. We walked slowly to the couch located in the little sitting area where he took off the rest of my clothes before taking off his clothes and silently made love to me. It was gentle, it was loving, and it felt so wonderful to be on this path of continuing to connect with my husband. Despite the world aging, overgrowing, and becoming too much for me to handle, I was starting to feel whole again. I did have a wonderful life, a wonderful husband, and two beautiful and hilarious girls – whom I missed a lot.

Other books

Water Witch by Jan Hudson
The Clairvoyant of Calle Ocho by Anjanette Delgado
Ghost Hunters by Sam Witt
Woman in the Dark by Dashiell Hammett
Kingdom of Strangers by Zoë Ferraris
Vengeance Child by Simon Clark