Significant change comes with every new season. Summer brings warmth, and Autumn lets the leaves fall, but Adelaide might be the grandest upheaval yet.
Adelaide Walker was the new mom on the street, and I was just some 20-something-year-old underemployed college graduate still living with his parents. We hardly shared the same life experience despite living across the street from one another. Yet there was more common ground than one might imagine.
While the Walker family had moved in across the street about a month back, nothing was noticeable about the couple and their toddler-aged son. The father seemed to always be in a rush, with his phone often cradled between his shoulder and head as he went to his car or grabbed the morning paper. Their son seemed to be a plain old toddler too. He would walk down the street with a face filled with enchantment, the kind that fades with age. Overall, the Walkers seemed to be just some run-of-the-mill suburban transplants. Or, at least, that was what I thought until I noticed Adelaide's morning jogs.
Adelaide's long chestnut hair was tied in a tight ponytail every dawn. What caught my attention was that this 40-year-old mom had a body many women would never achieve. Her abs were visible, her body was compact, and her figure was slender. It was like waking up to street art every morning when I looked outside to see her running, always on schedule.
Like all good things, her schedule eventually did come to an end. At least for one day, it did, when I peered out my window hoping to catch her routine but was greeted by a knock at the door instead, and Adelaide had come bearing blueberry muffins.
"Well, howdy there, neighbor." Adelaide greeted me with a fresh smile. I was sure she would have some Southern analogy beyond my comprehension to describe the feelings her pleasantries invoked in me.
"Hi, you are the new neighbors, right?" I asked while extending my hand, hoping it was not as sweaty as I was nervous.
"We are fresh off the turnip truck, as we might say down South."
I cracked a smile, and she paused before shaking my hand. At that moment, I glanced straight into her hazel eyes, drowning in their wonder and curiosity. This was the first time I had seen the mother up close. And while her body was fine, her face was equally picturesque. She had thin eyebrows, an oval-shaped face, defined cheekbones, dimples to die for, bow-shaped lips, a lovely broad nose, and golden skin.
"My name is Jason, Jason White." I stumbled with my words as I took in her ravaging appearance.
"It is mighty fine to meet ya Jason, and ya are just the man I hoped to see."
"I am?"
"Yessir, I have been noticing ya peeking out yer window just about every morning. And--"
"Who is at the door!" My mother calls out from the other room.
"Just the neighbor dropping off some homemade muffins."
"Well, invite them in!"
I locked eyes with Adelaide, but she just glared back. "Well, aren't ya gonna invite me in?"
"Yeah, sure."
I motioned for her to step inside. She wipes her feet on the mat by the door as she enters. Then Adelaide struts right past me toward the other room where my mother is, but I dare not follow. I fear she will say something about me ogling her through my bedroom window. Moments later, I hear them laughing in the other room and am increasingly confused. Adelaide walks out of the room toward me with the basket of muffins gone, clearly given to my mother already.
"Take me upstairs so we can chew the fat."
I guide her up the stairs by the front door, knowing this next part will be uncomfortable. When I opened the door to my room, it revealed that clothes were everywhere, old soda cans were littered, my bed was unmade, and I had stacks of books.
"Bless yer heart. It looks like a tornado blew threw here."
"Thanks," I mutter.
Adelaide walks into my room and uses a blanket to cover my bed as she sits down. Only now do I notice her chest because I looked down at her sports bra. I also see how toned her legs are in those yoga pants. This truly is a masterpiece of a person.
She pats a spot on the bed beside her, "Sit."
I do as instructed. "What did you want to chat about?"
"I was coming here to have a heart-to-heart about yer starin', but now ya do not have much else. You live with your folks, your room is unsightly, and since you seem to be gone for 8 hours 5 days a week, I assume the job is not paying you what it oughtta."
I waited to see where this was heading because I was expecting to get told off here, but to my luck, Adelaide was showing some godly restraint in her approach.
"Do not read me wrong. I do not want my son or husband to see you give me that kind of attention daily, but the Christian in me wants to offer some of God's grace to a neighbor."
She stopped to mull over her next words, but the suspense killed me. "Meaning?"
"Well, sugar, my husband's got to work late tomorrow night, and I was thinking about making some of my Mama's famous vegetable soup for dinner. It's hearty and delicious, and I'd sure love for ya to come over and share it with Henri and me. What do ya say? Are ya up for some good eatin' and good company?"
I blink at that offer. Just days ago, my interaction with this gorgeous woman was limited to staring out my window and checking out her Instagram feed. While seeing her jogging was a sight, her social media was all about health and wellness since her job seemed to be as an influencer. Yet, this mirage of a woman might be an oasis.
'How about it?" She snaps me back to attention.
"I would be happy to."
We flash a keen smirk at one another before she gets up to let herself out. Then, thinking about what she said, I ask, "Who is Henri?"
"My son, the little tike ya have probably seen runnin' about." Adelaide looked back at me to inform me of the one fact I could not find while scouring her digital footprint.
"I just hope you know my name is Adelaide by now." She begins to move away again before recalling something else. "Oh, and that tall stretch of water ya see on the phone all day is my hubby, Jed. Just as an FYI." Adelaide winks at me.
"Why is his name Henri if you are from the South?"
"A bit of inspiration from my time studying abroad in Marseille, but we can get to that and a whole lot more tomorrow nite."
With that, Adelaide vanished, not to be seen until dinner the next night.
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