Monday, September 15, 2014

Golden Earrings

I'd waited nearly a seven months to see her again. When I entered the Crafts Building, I spotted her at her booth where she'd be selling her many specialties—scarfs, headbands, stocking caps, sweaters, shawls, blankets.
All meticulously and colorfully crafted, the work of a genius, I thought.
She saw me right away—Allison McGregor, the woman I loved. But after all this time, I still wondered if she loved me.
While twenty or thirty other craft people set out their wares for our city's annual Flea Market and Craft Show, she rose from a chair behind her booth.
She met me just inside the main entrance, where I stood aside so others could amble by. Smiling, her face flushed, she offered me her hand—small, delicate, warm.
"I knew you'd be here," she said, smiling. "At least, I was hoping."
I grabbed her hand, shook it, perhaps held it a bit too long, and said, "Why wouldn't I be? It's where we met a year ago. And I'm a crafty person myself, as you know." The flush in her cheeks deepened. What a raven-haired beauty she was, hair flowing loosely in curls beyond her shoulders. Slender and willowy in jeans and a white V-neck sweater she'd not doubt made for herself.
"We need to talk," she said, her blue eyes latching on to mine.
"Yes, we do," I said, nodding. "I haven't contacted you because you asked me not to. But now it's time to talk."
"After the sale," she said, and scurried away.
I'm a wood carver by night, a city engineer by day. Allison heads up the County Clerk's Office. Besides that, she sews, stitches, crochets, knits—you name it. We met last year at this craft show when we happened to set up our booths next to each other. It was my first experience at selling my carved, miniature creatures: owls, mallards, pheasants, loons, deer, elk, wolves, foxes.
My figurines intrigued her but not nearly as much as she intrigued me. We chatted during the sale. We were both the same age, thirty-five. She was divorced just three months ago, no kids. I'd never been married. She showed me how to engage with prospective customers to insure a sale. I asked her to dinner that night after the show. She hesitated but said yes, and thus began my courtship of Allison McGregor.
Our dates ranged from lazy weekends working on or crafts together to casual movie dates and sometimes dress-up symphony encounters. From the beginning, I knew she was the one for me. She was talented, fun, thoughtful, and loving. On our three-month anniversary, we dined at an upscale restaurant. After dinner, while we each sipped a glass of wine, I drew from my suit pocket a tiny, black-felt, jewelry box and presented it to her with a big smile, thinking she'd be pleased. But she looked fearfully at the box, as if she were afraid to accept it, so I took her hand and gently dropped it into her palm.
Her fingers trembling, she opened the box, and then—I swear—a look of relief swept across her face before she gushed, "Earrings! They're beautiful!"
"I thought you'd like them," I said, my smile even bigger.
The very next day, when I called, she dumped me. At first she said, "Things are moving too fast." Then, "I'm not ready for a serious relationship yet." Finally, "I don't think we should see each other for a while. Please don't call."
Today, when the craft show was over, the browsers leaving, the vendors packing up, she scurried across the floor and stood in front of me again. Biting her bottom lip, looking me in the eye, she said, "I owe you an apology."
"No, no, no—no you don't," I said, waving a hand. "Took me awhile but I figured it out. You thought that little black-felt box held an engagement ring, right? You weren't ready for anything like that."
Her eyes lowering, she studied her hands clutched in front of her, then looked back up at me. "My marriage was a total disaster—I still don't talk about it. I—" She faltered.
I untangled her hands and held them. "You don't have to talk about it," I said. "Ever. Unless you want to someday."
"I simply wasn't ready to make a commitment again. I needed time."
"And now?"
My heart thumped as I waited for an answer.
Wiggling her hands free of mine, she tucked her long, curling black hair behind her ears. In the lobe of each one gleamed an earring—a gold, heat-shaped diamond stud. That was good enough for me. A huge smile leaped onto my face as I said, "Dinner tonight after we pack up?"
Her smile matching mine, she said, "I'd love that."

The End
Welcome to Reality! Contemporary YA fiction with an impact. Visit: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=jon+ripslinger

Monday, September 1, 2014

Lost and Found

On Labor Day our village of Cherry Creek hosts not only a parade, food vendors, and a fireworks display but also a village-wide garage sale.
So...ten o'clock Monday morning, after watching the parade, the day sunny and bright, I stood in front of the billboard in the village park checking out the garage sale posters.
A poster that caught my eye featured a close-up photo of a smiling little girl with curly blonde hair hugging a huge teddy bear.
My heart lurched. I thought for a second one of our school children was missing—I'm the secretary to the elementary school principal. But the text below explained that Deebo, the teddy, bear was missing. Last seen at the Machine Shed Restaurant, Highway 150, just outside of town, ladies restroom, three weeks ago. The poster also listed a cell phone number to call if Deebo were spotted in a garage sale and promised a reward.
"I know it's a long shot," a deep masculine voice said, startling me. I turned and looked up into the face of a perfectly handsome dark-haired man with sparkly blue eyes. "I don't believe we've met," I said.
"Ken Lawson," he said, smiling a warm smile I couldn’t resist. "I'm Jennifer's dad—the five-year-old girl in the picture. We're trying to find her teddy bear."
"I'm Laura White," I said. "Your daughter is such a beautiful girl. How did she lose the bear?"
He shrugged. "Long story."
"I've got time," I said. "I remember as a kid I had a beloved teddy bear. I would've died if I'd have lost it."
We wandered over to a picnic table under an oak tree and sat down. To my surprise, Ken explained that he was Linda Stewart's husband. She was a classmate of mine in high school. She left town after graduation to seek a Hollywood career. She didn't make it, but she married a lawyer—Ken Lawson—the man sitting in front of me—and they settled down in California.
"She died in an automobile accident a year ago," Ken said. "I moved here this summer because this is where Jennifer's grandparents live, her only relatives. Mine are deceased."
"What a wonderful thing you've done."
He went on to tell me about the teddy bear. Two weeks ago after arriving in town, he'd taken Jennifer to an amusement park. On the way back, she couldn't quite wait to get home to use the bathroom, so they stopped at the Machine Shed. She took Deebo into the restroom with her and forgot him. "It was late when we got to the restaurant that night," Ken said. "Both of us dead tired. I think someone working there found him and took him. I checked with the Shed the next day, but no one remembered seeing Deebo."
"And you think somehow Deebo might show up in a garage sale?"
"Crazy, huh? But I've got to do something. I've tacked posters to telephone poles, too. Jennifer's lost a lot lately."
My heart ached for this man who was willing to move across the country for his daughter, and I felt fired up. "You take the south side of Main Street," I said. "I'll take the north. We'll stop at every sale. Meet back here at five."
"It's a deal!" We shook, his hand warm and firm in mine.
Would you believe it! I found Deebo. I actually found him!  I nearly dropped dead.
Five o'clock in the afternoon, Ken, Jennifer, and I sat at the picnic table under the oak tree. Jennifer smiled, giggled, and hugged Deebo. Ken smiled and hugged Jennifer. I sat across from them, smiling. I explained that the lady who sold Deebo to me for three dollars, said her daughter collected stuffed animals, but since the girl went off to college recently, the lady was selling them—with her daughter's permission, of course. Yes, the girl had worked at the Machine Shed for a time. She quit because of school.
Still smiling, still clutching Deebo in a fierce hug, Jennifer said, "Thank you, thank you, thank you, Ms. White."
"You're very welcome."
Ken looked hesitant. His lovely blue eyes landed on mine; my blood rushed.
"It is Ms. White?" he asked.
I nodded. "Divorced long ago."
"Jennifer and I would be honored if you'd, like, hang out with us, eat, and attend the fireworks later."
"Oh, please, Ms. White!" Jennifer said.
"And you have a reward coming," Ken said. "Plus three dollars."
With Ken's eyes still locked on mine, I couldn't ignore the fireworks in my own heart.
"No reward," I said. "And forget the three dollars. But I'd love to hang out with both of you," I added, and wondered I'd found more than a lost teddy bear.
                                                  The End