The footpath was
sometimes so narrow though the woods that my husband Joel and I had to hike
single file. We each pulled along a wheeled suitcase stuffed with enough
clothes so that we could spend three nights and two days in the wilderness.
My heart beat a little
faster.
We broke into a
clearing.
"There it
is!" Joel said.
Smiling, I gazed at a
little log cabin nestled beneath towering pines, their scent floating in the
air. A picnic table, gas grill, and lawn chairs sat in front of the cabin, all
provided by Foxwood Lodges. Fifty yards down a grassy hill, Eagle Lake sparkled
in the late-afternoon sunlight, the sky above it a deep blue.
Joel took a breath,
inhaling the fresh air. "What a great idea you had."
"I told you, we
had to do something to get the chemistry back. Married twelve years. Remember
when we first met? Violins and fireworks!"
He draped an arm around my shoulder. "Even after we were married, you created butterflies in my stomach. Big ones. I couldn't wait to get home from work."
He draped an arm around my shoulder. "Even after we were married, you created butterflies in my stomach. Big ones. I couldn't wait to get home from work."
I felt myself blush a
little. "We had some awesome times, didn't we?"
"Beyond
awesome," he said, and grinned. Then, "Look, here's the keys to the
place. You open up, and I'll go back for the groceries."
"You sure you can
manage alone?"
"It's why we
brought the kids' wagon, right? The brochure said the place was secluded."
I watched my husband—tall,
broad-shouldered, and handsome—scurry along the path into the woods. After we
were married, four or five times a year, we'd take time out from our jobs, jump
into the car, and spend a fun day together. Sometimes something as simple as a
barefoot picnic in the park, later tossing a Frisbee back and forth. But after
three kids arrived—Sandy, Becky, and Tom—those let's-play-hooky days dwindled
to zero.
I pulled both
suitcases up to the cabin's front porch, unlocked the padlocked pine door, and
stepped inside, catching a woodsy scent. The cabin was a single room that
included a kitchen area with a sink, refrigerator, cupboards, and a four-burner
stove. A brass bed with a bright patchwork quilt on it crouched in one corner.
In another corner, what looked like a closet, I discovered, was actually a
bathroom, complete with shower. The place was totally perfect for the get-away
Joel and I wanted.
I checked my watch.
Four-thirty. The kids would be home from school. I needed to call to assure
them their dad and I had arrived safely, we loved them, and missed them
already. I fished my cell phone from my purse, plunked down at the table, and
dialed home. My mom and dad were staying with the kids. I talked to each girl
for about a second. They were in a hurry. Grandpa was taking them to softball
practice in five minutes, but neither one could find her glove. I told them
both to check under their beds. I was still gossiping with Mom when Joel
started lugging the cooler into the cabin and the boxes of groceries.
He frowned at me.
"What are you doing?"
"Checking on the
kids. Talking to my mom. I haven't talked to Tommy yet."
"I thought this
was a time for us."
"Joel, I'm
letting them know we're okay."
He shook his head.
Smiled. "We haven't gone to the moon, Ann. We're only a hundred miles from
home."
"Just a minute,
Mom," I said. "I can't hear."
I eased up from the
table, slipped outside into the late afternoon sunshine, and caught my breath.
The sun, perched above the trees across the lake, had painted the sky with bold
strokes of pink and purple. Down near the dock, ducks paddled and quacked along
the shoreline. Beautiful. I sat down at the picnic table, cell phone clutched
to my ear.
I reminded Tommy that
he could take a bath by himself, he was a big boy now. Brush his teeth. When
Mom came back on the line, she said that Mrs. Olsen, and elderly widow down the
street, had suffered a heart attack. An ambulance whisked her away to the
hospital at about noon. No word about how she was doing.
"That's
terrible," I said. "She's such a lovely lady."
I talked longer on the
phone than I should have, I admit. But when I finished and hurried back into
the cabin, I never expected to see Joel hunched over his laptop computer,
papers strewn across the table.
My mouth dropped.
"What's this? Work from the office?"
He looked sheepish.
"I thought if it rained all the time..."
"It's not
raining, Joel. Rain's not even in the forecast."
"I just wanted to
gab a minute, first chance I got, to organize this data."
"Joel..."
We fell silent.
Without a word,
without being asked or without complaining, he gathered his papers off the
table and shuffled them into a manila folder. He shut down the computer and
tucked everything into the laptop carrying case.
Before he zippered the
case, I said, "Give it to me."
He handed me the case,
and I stuffed my phone in with his computer and folder.
"I'll be right
back."
"Where are you
going?"
"Light the grill—I
think we've both made a major mistake."
Five minutes—tops—is
what it took me to tromp through the woods back to our Suburban and lock these
evil distractions inside the vehicle. Back at the cabin, we grilled
lemon-pepper salmon steaks and onion slices, and baked two potatoes. We drank a
glass of red wine with supper. We watched the sun, a red ball, finally sink
behind the trees.
We built a bonfire in the fire ring in front of the cabin. We sat next to each other in lawn chairs by the blaze. Under the moon and stars, we held hands.
We built a bonfire in the fire ring in front of the cabin. We sat next to each other in lawn chairs by the blaze. Under the moon and stars, we held hands.
"Lovely
night," I said. "Just what I'd hoped for."
He squeezed my hand.
"I wouldn't want to be with anyone else."
"But I almost
blew it today," I said. "I'm so sorry."
"I'm to blame. I
promised myself I was going to leave all that paperwork home."
Joel stoked the fire
with a long stick, and sparks danced off into the night.
I snugged my chair
closer to his.
"Those sparks
remind me of fireworks." he said, looping is arm around my shoulders, kissing
my neck.
And I said, "I
think I hear violins..."
The
End
Enjoy reality! Contemporary YA fiction with an impact. Visit: Yhttp://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Jon+Ripslinger
Enjoy reality! Contemporary YA fiction with an impact. Visit: Yhttp://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Jon+Ripslinger