All in Fiction

I think it’s sweet the way he’s dancing tonight. I’ve been standing at the ‘bar’, which is just a guy sitting on a cooler, ‘getting us a beer’ for the last 10 minutes watching him. Part of the appeal is doing the same thing over and over again for hours, very slowly. He and I are going to breakup, I know that, but that’s neither here nor there I don’t think.

As usual, he closed the kitchen door behind him in the morning light. But he didn’t slip into his rumpled sedan to go to work. Rather, he hurried round the block, his signature cap almost leaping from his head. He never runs, she thought, ever, and this titillated her. For a moment she forgot her annoyance and shared his excitement.

Her family, those she loves, expect no less of her, she thinks, now. They knew- no, expected, she would be there, day in and day out. Like the sun, she had always risen to the occasion, shining brightly on those around her, while those she shone upon lounged beside the pool of life, slugging down margaritas and splashing joyfully, soaking it all in.

He used to bring me flowers whose petals had not opened; we spend long afternoons together, the flowers have time to open and show their centre. Our love-making scene could be like this: He the bee and me the flower. I open my petals and he comes to gather his pollen. Happy. But then he has to take the pollen elsewhere. He cannot stay. Sad.