“Nothing, Jennie.”
“Then why did you say that word you’re not supposed to say?”
Rob didn’t have a ready answer for that. There was no reason for his bad mood. Actually he wasn’t in a bad mood—things just weren’t cooperating today. The noodles boiled over and then he forgot about them and they were a mushy mess about to be topped with a creamy tomato sauce featuring flecks of burnt onion. He’d gone ahead with the recipe even after the initial mishap with the onions, hoping the disagreeable odor would disappear. Just when he thought he was getting somewhere as a cook, the basic tenets would vanish right in front of him. Some culinary mistakes seemed to fix themselves up, while others intensified throughout the whole process.
“Daddy?” Jennie was staring at him, her head on an angle, her eyes wide.
“Nothing’s wrong, sweetheart, just a couple of things from work. And they’re better now, so don’t worry.”
“Can we eat outside?” Jennie started to bounce.
Great, Rob was off the hook. He said, “Sure we can. Why don’t you get some plates out for us…a couple of napk—”
“I wonder what Piper eats for dinner. Can I ask her?”
Rob sighed. “Uh, I don’t think she’s home right now.”
“Can I go check?”
“Well, sweetheart, actually I know she’s not home right now. I saw her leave.”
Jennie had been pestering him about Piper and she now slumped theatrically. She loved having a mission, a reason to run or jump up and down. Suddenly she raised her hands above her head and stood on tiptoe in her ballerina position. Then she darted out of the kitchen and ran up the stairs. A minute later she was back with her big rooster, dancing him around the kitchen.
Good, the mood roller coaster had taken an upturn. “Jennie, can you and Brocky help me carry dinner out. I’ve got our plates and drinks, how about you grab the napkins and cutlery.”
“Daddy, look, Brocky can carry napkins on his head!”
“Yes, he’s gifted. I only had to hear him cluck once and I knew he was the finest fowl in the flock.” Rob emitted his version of rooster talk.
Jennie giggled uncontrollably and had to pick up the napkins more than once on their way to the patio table as Brocky lost control of his additional headpiece.
There was no more talk of Piper that evening. His daughter was in the throes of becoming accustomed to a switch at the day care and was bubbling with stories about the new Mrs. Stevens, who was very nice but Jennie missed Mrs. Small, who had such a nice voice. She moved on to her friend Marissa.
“She has white shoes with ladybugs all over them, and a ladybug T-shirt. Daddy, do we need more ladybugs? They’re the bestest bugs. Marissa said they eat other bugs, the bad bugs.”
“What about bedbugs, honey, we don’t have bedbugs.” Rob tuned back into Jennie’s chatter.
“No, Daddy, bad bugs—they eat the bad bugs.”
Rob tried to make her laugh. “What? The kids at school are eating bad bugs?”
Unsmiling, Jennie stared at her father. She had picked up on his inattention. Rob couldn’t wait for this day to grind to a close. When the conversational standards of a five-year-old were beyond him, that said something about his state of mind.
Jennie was very tired and was asleep even before Rob finished reading the story. He kept reading aloud to the end just because he couldn’t stop himself. Animal stories were his favorites, Jennie’s too, and it seemed wrong to leave a youngster lost in the forest without his mother when a few more minutes would have them reunited and snuggling. He kissed his daughter’s forehead, walked to the door, then looked back at the tiny mound under the covers. At times like this he was overcome with love for her. Because of Jennie, he knew he still had a heart.
Rob stood very still in the far corner of the garden, flashlight in hand, waiting patiently for the next croak of what he was sure had to be a tree frog. The sounds had been loud but infrequent, and so pegging the amphibian’s location was difficult. He’d been in the dark, treed area probably no more than fifteen minutes, but it seemed like hours and he was almost ready to give up when the door from the apartment opened and Piper walked out. She carried something in one hand and walked cautiously to an empty chair on the patio. She placed what he could now see was a cup on the table in front of her and leaned back into the chair.
Rob was about to call out to her, softly so as not to scare her, when he heard a brief guttural sound. He was immediately riveted again by the notion of tree frogs, but the nature of this was far different and the location had changed. There it was again, maybe calling to its mate. And now it seemed to have a rhythm to it. The tree frogs certainly had a wide variance in their calls.
He furrowed his forehead, cocked his head and listened intently. After a moment he let his head drop and laughed out loud. Piper jumped up, alarmed.
Rob jumped too in an attempt to quickly reveal himself. “Piper, it’s just me—Rob.”
“What the…heck are you doing out here?”
“Sorry, listen, I’m sorry, I thought I heard a tree frog at the back of the yard, but they’re hard to spot. Shy little buggers and I’d just about given up when you walked out. I didn’t intend to scare you.” He made his way along the path to the patio.
“What made you laugh?”
“Uh, I’d rather not say.” He searched for a plausible lie.
“Oh, come on, better to say than look like a nut laughing maniacally by yourself in the middle of the night.”
“Well then, to be honest, it was you.”
Piper stood there, a puzzled expression on her face, and then sat back down. “Me? Now that you say it, I can see how just the sight of me could provide infinite amusement, a festival of clowning around, right here in your backyard at the location of—moi.” She was clearly enjoying herself now. “Yes, I am a reliable trigger for knee-slapping hilarity…okay I give up.”
“If you really wan—”
“I do.”
“It was that sound you were making, a sort of cross between—”
“I call it singing, if you really want to know.”
“Oh, I see…I thought it was another tree frog.”
A moment of quiet followed and then they both erupted. The sound of Piper’s husky voice was infectious and they continued laughing far beyond the point Rob knew it made sense to stop. Eventually the gasps wound down and Piper wiped her eyes.
“Thanks for that, Rob. I haven’t had a good belly laugh in a long, long time.” She started to rise from the chair, sank back into it, then finally stood and headed for the door. “Good night. Sweet dreams.”
Rob sat outside alone for another fifteen minutes, relishing the silence in the aftermath and noticing his own contentment, still hearing echoes of Piper’s throaty laugh. He could get used to that. A laugh that washed away constraint, made him feel ready to break out. When he got into bed that night his heart was pounding a little and he closed his eyes, happy to be drifting towards desire.
LOVING PIPER
Thanks for reading Part 1 –
Up and Down
! I love Piper and hope you feel the same about our heroine. She’s up to more, she’s in a little deeper in Part 2,
The Piper Pitfall
. It’ll be available soon. Come back for that!
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