This is a Valentine's Day contest story. Please vote.
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A Valentine's Day surprise, a man meets a woman online but falls for her sister.
I'm an older man and new to the technological age of the Internet dating scene. After my wife died, my son, Anthony, and daughter, Emily, pressured me to find a girlfriend. My kids didn't push me right away, of course, but it had been five years, since the sudden and untimely death of their mother. They became concerned when they started seeing some negative changes in me and in my mood because I was saddened, alone, and lonely.
"I'm too old for a girlfriend," I protested. "What woman would want me? Look at me," I said looking in the mirror. "I'm old. I have bags under my eyes, jowls, and half the hair I used to have. I'm half the man I used to be."
"Dad," said my daughter Emily. "You haven't been the same, since Mom died. You don't go out and have fun anymore. You just sit at home watching TV and tinkering in your workshop. The house is a mess and every time I come to visit, I feel compelled to clean and do your laundry. Besides, you don't eat right and you're losing weight. You don't have a decent meal, unless you come to my house or Anthony's house and we cook for you."
"I have breakfast every morning?"
"What do you have for breakfast, Dad," said Emily persevering.
"Toast and coffee."
"What about protein, Dad?"
"I make stuff in the microwave," I said defending my poor diet.
"Stuff? What stuff? Soup out of a can and TV dinners don't appear anywhere on the nutritional pyramid, Daddy."
Every time she calls me Daddy, she brings back memories of her as a little girl and how happy she was to see me, when I came home from work.
'Daddy!'
Where did the years go? From working too many long hours, I feel as though I lost twenty important years of my life, those years watching my children grow. And now look at them. They're not kids anymore. Now that my wife is not here to spend the rest of my life with me, what was it all for, when I'm home alone and feeling so lonely? No one should be alone but I was growing accustomed to having my little routine without having someone there to nag me to do stuff that I don't want to do.
Maybe I should get a dog. I like dogs. I haven't had a dog in years. Dogs are good companionship. We can go for walks in the dog park and maybe I'll meet someone there, I thought to myself, knowing that I'd never get a dog to meet anyone at the dog park.
"I was married to your mother for almost 30 years," I said suddenly thinking of Margaret, hearing her voice, and almost seeing her. "She did all the cooking. Now, if Ronald McDonald, the Colonel, Angelo's Pizza, or Mr. Wong doesn't cook my food, whatever I can make in a microwave, the toaster, or eat raw is what I eat. Besides, along with everything else, I don't have much of an appetite for food these days. I'm depressed. No one would want me."
Margaret was never the same after her hip replacement surgery. After she recovered, she said it hurt to walk, so she didn't and then sometime during the night, she had a blood clot that went to her heart. She died peacefully in her sleep, I like to believe. I knew right away, when I woke up to her so cold, so blue, and so stiff that she was gone.
I should have sued the hospital for allowing her to come home too soon. I should have sued the doctor for killing her, but I was too out of my mind with grief to want to go through with any of those legal entanglements and civil aggravation. Besides, they insisted, since she died a month after the surgery, that the blood clot wasn't from the surgery, my ass, but from her medication that she stopped taking because of the headaches it gave her.
"Dad, you should see the guys out there, bald, toothless, and overweight. Compared to them, you're the six million dollar man. Trust me. You look good. If I was your age and not your daughter, I'd date you," she said with a laugh.
"Kinky," said Anthony.
"Shut up," said Emily.
Some things never change, even though Anthony just turned twenty-eight and Emily is twenty-six, they both still bicker in the way they used to do as children. Anthony thought he was funny. He enjoys sitting down at the piano and playing background music to all our conversations, in the way they used to do with the silent movies of old. Sometimes it's really funny, but most times, it's just annoying. Still, sometimes, with us laughing over the songs he picks, he breaks the tension enough with his comedic piano playing to assuage an argument.