* * *
A Chance Encounter:
My sister Erin glanced over as she eased her car from the arrivals curb at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport.
"So how was your flight?"
Actually, it was pretty shitty, now that you ask. She had just driven over a hundred miles to pick me up so I wouldn't be tormented by a three hour wait to take the next Greyhound bus home. I knew she was just being friendly and probably didn't want to hear the details.
"It was fine. No one took the middle seat. That's always a nice surprise these days. Hey, thanks for coming to get me. You know you don't have to as long as there's still a bus leaving when I get in. You want me to drive back?"
"No, I'm good. It's still light for a few more hours. Anyway, we'll have a chance to catch up on the way. Ed and I are delighted you came home for your birthday. It'll help take your mind off things out there. A change of scenery will be good. You know you're always welcome."
Erin is six years younger than I am. I must have been so incorrigible as a child that my mother refused to have another baby until I was safely in the first grade and out of the house for most of the day.
My plans to visit Erin and her husband Ed were made at the last minute. I had been dumped by my long-time girlfriend a few months back and was still asking myself why. Maybe I was in need of some serious self-reflection, which might happen a little more easily if I was away from my familiar surroundings.
I had been looking forward to a destination party for my 50th birthday. Away from Los Angeles, up the coast near Santa Barbara. A perfect storm of excuses caused my entire inner circle of friends to decline the invitation: spousal illness, a business crisis, a family funeral, having other plans, and a cratering marriage. Oh, and the parents who decided to go to their daughter's umpteenth gymnastics meet instead of partying down with me. Since I don't have kids of my own, I guess I shouldn't judge.
"So have you figured out how you want to celebrate your birthday? Ed's out of town on a company retreat, but he'll be back in time. Check if there's any live music you want to see. And decide on a restaurant soon so we can get reservations if we need them.
"I waited to go food shopping until you got here. We finally got a Natural Grocers. They should have most of the things you say you never can get in our backwoods town."
That was good news. I'd definitely grown into a food crank and picky eater as my list of things I should avoid grows longer every year, but I still planned to have birthday cake and ice cream.
* * *
We were pushing the cart around the store when I thought I saw one of Erin's old friends.
"Isn't that Laurie Quinn over there? At the deli counter."
"Oh, god. I don't want to talk to her now."
"Why not?"
"She's ... weird."
"How so?"
"Well, you know."
"No, I don't know. I thought you and Laurie and the others were inseparable when you were in college."
"We were. And still are mostly, except Laurie was the only one who moved out of state after graduation. She lives in Washington, D.C.
"Sometimes the things that bring people together in their childhood or at school change over time. So the friendships change. You don't hang out with everyone that you buddied around with at school, do you?"
"I guess you're right. I probably would still be close to the old gang if I hadn't moved away. So what's she doing back here?"
"She was engaged to this guy, but that went sideways. She'd been with him for years. Laurie's never been able to hold onto a man. We thought she'd finally broken that curse. She's here to settle her late mother's estate. The house has just been sitting there the whole time, even though the funeral was almost a year ago. I thought about calling her, but I was waiting for her to make the first move."
Laurie began heading our way. She had on a washed-out burnt orange sweatshirt from the University of Texas, one that looked like she'd been wearing since she was a freshman. A pair of baggy brown pants and flip-flops completed her slovenly outfit. I always thought Laurie didn't do herself any favors by the way she dressed—unfeminine and unfashionable. Even when she was cleaned up for a party or some grown-up event, she dressed very matronly, in things her mother would wear. I wondered if she walked around like that in D.C. Her reddish-brown hair was pinned up tightly in her trademark schoolmarm bun, severe and nary a hair out of place.
On the other hand, Laurie has a very elegant neck that's optimally displayed by that hairstyle. And her eyes—she has the deepest blue eyes. What color would you call them: cobalt, indigo, lapis? I could stare at them indefinitely—like other women's cleavage.
I always thought she was the most attractive of Erin's friends but didn't present herself well. Laurie always seemed shy and unsure of herself, sometimes awkwardly overcompensating for this.
"My god, she's gotten a boob job!"
"Laurie? You're kidding." She seemed like the most unlikely person I know to do that.
"No, look. Those two lumps in her sweatshirt were never there before."
"Tell you what, I'll go over and ask her: 'Laurie, Erin was saying you must have gotten a boob job.' That should clear things up."
Erin swiftly turned our cart down the next aisle so Laurie wouldn't see us. More out of loneliness than any physical attraction, I decided to go over and say hello.
Erin and Laurie were part of a quartet of close friends as far back as I could remember, along with Terri Unger and Fran Carver. Terri was the plainest of the bunch, but she got all the boobs that Laurie and Fran didn't—and then some. I pretty much ignored all of them, but I'll admit that I had more than a few sexual thoughts about Terri once I started noticing her burgeoning bosom when she was a UT student.
Laurie beamed with surprise when I called her name.
"Oh, hi, Joe. Didn't expect to see you here. Are you here with Erin? I've been meaning to call her since I got back. I'm finally dealing with cleaning out and selling my mother's house."
She didn't mention her failed engagement. Naturally she wondered what brought me there during the hottest part of a Texas summer.
"I decided to celebrate my 50th birthday here. The plans in L.A. didn't jell, so I thought I'd come back home and do it here. Things haven't been going well of late out there ... socially."
"So are you and Erin going to the free river concert tomorrow night?"