"God
damn it, open this friggin' door!" Phil Jespers yelled, "Do it right
now, Maggie, or you're done for. You know what I mean."
Outside the bedroom, leaning up
against the wall next to the door, Margaret 'Maggie' Jespers could feel the
vibration of her husband's pounding in her back. She could feel his anger, too.
Or rage would be a better word. She knew his hatred for her by now had spilled
over into uncontrollable fury, but that was too bad. Last night he'd come home
at two in the morning after a night out drinking with his buddies and demanded
to have sex with her. He outweighed her by over one hundred and fifty pounds
and was determined, so she had no choice but to give in, knowing from past
experiences that in a few minutes it'd be all over. Well, she was wrong. It was
over in less than a minute and in that minute she'd made her decision. A
decision she'd been thinking about for years - years of putting up with his
abuse; the verbal put downs of everything from her cooking and how she cleaned
the house, to how she folded his stupid pants, not to mention the ongoing
physical punches, pinches and slaps and, of course, what she could easily refer
to as Rape By Husband. Well, no more. She'd had it with him. Now it was time to
get even.
Maggie turned and put her mouth
close to the door and lightly knocked on it to get his attention. The pounding
immediately stopped, and she said, "Done for, you said? What is it you'll
do to me again, Phil, I couldn't quite hear you?"
"I said, I'll kill you, you
stupid bitch," Phil yelled, and went off on another rant, screaming out an
escalating string of profanities that even for him were obscene beyond belief.
His beating on the door increased, too, with an intensity that was incredible
given how horribly out of shape he was, not to mention severely hung-over. But
he was on a roll, now, his physical fury shaking the entire structure of the single
story rambler that they'd lived in for all of their twenty seven year marriage.
Maggie leaned back against the wall
and listened, enjoying her husband's out-of-control hysteria. She smiled to
herself and said quietly, loud enough to just hear her own voice, a voice she
thought of as the voice of reason and, unlike Phil's guttural swearing, one of
sanity, "That's what I thought you'd say," her smile mirroring the
pleasure she was taking in Phil's complete meltdown taking place only a few
feet away in the bedroom. The room Maggie was now planning would be the place
where Phil would eventually breathe his final breath. And when he did, that
would be that; over and done with, free and clear. She could move on with her
life. A life without Phil in it.
Maggie turned and made her way down
the short hallway to the tiny kitchen. She filled the teapot with water, turned
the gas burner of the stove up to high, and set the pot on to boil. She went to
the cupboard on the wall to the right of the sink and took out her favorite
mug, the one she'd bought at Olafson's when she first started working there,
what? Fifteen years ago? No, seventeen, just after Phil got laid off from his
construction job. "You'll have to get off that boney ass of yours and go
to work," he'd told her back then, literally shoving her out the door, adding,
"Don't come back until you do."
Well, she should have taken the
momentum of that shove and not only walked out the door, but she should have
kept on going. She should have walked down the steps and out to the street, taken
a left and walked the three blocks to the bus stop, got on the 675B and ridden away
from Phil forever. That's what she should have done. But where would she have
gone? She had no family, her parents were both long dead. Her two older
brothers had each moved out when they were finished with high school, and she
had lost touch with them over the years. And she had no friends she could have
turned to. Not a one. So she did the only thing she could have done. After two
days of looking for work; two days with Phil's stinking, dog breath literally
breathing down her neck every moment while he constantly berated her for being,
"A skinny, good for nothing, lazy bitch," as he so vehemently put it,
and despite the fact that she must have walked at least ten miles in those two
days, doing her best to find work, she took a job at the first place that would
hire her. She became a cashier at Olafson's Grocery and Meat Shoppe, an
established, well known family run business in the Long Lake area, only a ten
minute walk from her home. It had worked out pretty well, too, for her. Better,
in fact, than she had ever imagined, and for that, at least, Maggie was
grateful.
The teapot began whistling and
interrupted her thoughts. She went to the stove, turned off the burner, put a
tea bag of Constant Comment (her favorite) in her mug and poured in the boiling
water. She set the mug on the four person, Formica kitchen table, sat down and
started paging through a magazine published in England that focused on
gardening in the British Isles. She liked looking at the pictures of the
beautiful flower gardens, imaging that one day, she too, would plant a garden filled
to overflowing with colorful daisy's, dahlia's and daffodils. Flowers like
purple cone flower, white phlox and yellow black-eyed Susan. Flowers that would
not only be pretty to look at, but would also attack birds and butterflies and
honey bees. She smiled to herself, letting her imagination run wild for a few
moments, enjoying the pleasant fantasy of a life without Phil in it.
Suddenly, a loud crash from back in
the bedroom shook her out of her revelry. She stood up and peered down the hallway
but saw nothing out of the ordinary. It was probably just Phil falling over the
nightstand in the bedroom, she thought to herself. Hopefully he hurt himself.
But whatever the case, it was no big deal. She went back to the table and sat
down with her magazine. In addition to the pretty pictures, there were interesting
articles to read, and she read each and every one of them in order as she
causally sipped her tea, ignoring Phil's escalating ranting and raving and pounding
a mere twenty feet away. It was all just background noise, now, and didn't mean
a thing. Not anymore. Not with her decision having been made.
Maggie had always been shy. Her two older
brothers were not interested in including her in their rough housing around the
house, or playing every kind of outdoor game or sport imaginable, not to
mention the occasional foray into daredevil bike riding no handed down the steep
hills near their home. For that she was grateful. Growing up, her natural
inclination was to spend her time by herself, quietly reading her books (Nancy
Drew Mysteries being one favorite out of many) or playing with her dolls,
making up games and whiling away her time pretending her make-believe family of
princes and princesses was just like her real family, a child's foolish daydream
which it wasn't even close to reality.
Her father was a strict
disciplinarian who taught English at the local junior college and demonstrated little
affection to either his wife or his children, preferring to spend his free time
in his study, writing, he put it, "My first novel." Her mother was a
retiring woman who, after the children were born, began to come across to all
who knew her, her children included, as increasingly tired and worn out. Bedraggled
would be an accurate description. She also developed a strong taste for wine of
the pink variety, and by the time Maggie was in middle school, her mother had
become severely alcoholic, a disease that eventually killed her when Maggie was
seventeen. Her father, as it turned out, must in his own way have secretly cared
for his wife, because after her death he became increasingly morose and
depressed. No one could help alleviate his emotional tailspin, although Maggie
certainly tried, fixing his favorite meals, and making sure the house was clean
and tidy, just like he liked it. She even got her father to help her plant an
oak tree near the back door in his wife's honor. However, all of her efforts
were for naught. Within a year of his wife's death, he hung himself from a
rafter in the basement of the junior college where he taught, a sad and forlorn
man, never having even coming close to finishing that first novel he'd spent
his entire life slaving over.
The house was left to Maggie (her
brothers wanted to have nothing to do with it), and she lived there
non-eventfully for five years. She was twenty-three and working at Hart's Cafe
in Wayzata, five miles east of Long Lake, when she first met Phil. Back then
there was something about him that she was drawn to, namely that he made it a
point to talk with her, took an interest in her and what she liked to do (read
and cook and garden) and seemed to enjoy being with her. He took her to movies
and out to dinner at nice restaurants. Once he even took her to a play by
August Wilson at the highly regarded Guthrie Theater in downtown Minneapolis. Most
importantly, though, he took away some of her shyness, bringing out parts of
her hidden away from the public eye her entire life. He encouraged her to take
an evening class at the local high school on Asian Cooking. He suggested she
sign up for on-line classes having to do with literature. He ever purchased a
membership for the two of them for the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum so they
could visit and walk the lovely gardens paths together anytime they wanted. In
short, he encouraged Maggie to come into bloom just like the flowers she so
passionately loved. Six months after they met he asked her to marry him and she
said, Yes, thinking that he was the best thing that had ever happened to her.
And he was, until the day after their
marriage ceremony. Then things changed, changed horribly, and the nightmare that
became her life began. When Phil moved in to her home he brought with him the
other side of his personality. The side he hadn't shown her in those hours spent
going on dates, or sitting quiet cafes together, sipping tea and talking, or
going for drives in the country just to be together. No, that side of his was
gone and gone forever. There was another side to Phil and he had kept it hidden
from Maggie and hidden well. It turned that he was a violent man - very violent,
and even more troubling, he seemed to enjoy that violence; especially the act hitting
his new wife and berating her and bruising her and battering her.
So instead of the life time of the
happiness Maggie had been expecting, Phil turned their marriage into a
unrelenting reign of terror as he meted out physical and emotional abuse on a
daily basis. Eventually he destroyed the nice, young woman she had become, one
learning to grow into herself and even trust and love the man who would soon be
her husband. Instead, he transformed her into a woman who, the longer she was
brutalized and traumatized, became more withdrawn, shell of her former self, beaten
down and worn out not only by life, but by her husband. A sad story, true, made
even sadder by how often it happens to so many women these day.
But it wasn't the end of Maggie
Jespers, not by a long shot. Because through it all, no matter how it bruised
she looked on the outside, there was something more to her than met the eye.
She had something going for her inside, deep down where Phil couldn't touch her
no matter how hard he tried. Inside she had her spirit; her will to live. She
had her dreams. And she wouldn't give in, and she wouldn't give up. She
wouldn't let Phil's abuse of her rule her life. She found ways to cope. She
became a survivor.
Maggie took a refreshing sip of her
tea, letting the liquid swirl in her mouth a moment before swallowing it down,
enjoying the soothing warmth and slightly spicy flavor. Then she set the mug
down, put the magazine aside and picked up the book she was reading; one by a favorite
female author. She settled back in her chair and began to read, losing herself
in the author's story, one of a woman in her forties who is dissatisfied with
her marriage and leaves her husband in search of a new life - a life free of
the encumbrances imposed on her by the overbearing jerk she was unfortunately married
to. It was a story somewhat close to home in its relevance to what Maggie had
been experiencing for her long and arduous twenty seven year marriage. (Although
the woman in the story wasn't regularly beaten and traumatized, not like
Maggie.)
Reading all manner of fiction had become
a refuge for her as her marriage with Phil took it's turn down the dark road
that lead her to contemplate killing him. In the beginning, when she brought up
buying books, he refused, telling her, "They're nothing but a waste of
friggin' money, if you ask me. I won't allow it." Yet he easily justified
spending grocery money on his whiskey and cigarettes, telling her, "It's
my money and I can do whatever I want with it." Nor would he let her go
back to work at the cafe, telling her she needed stay at home and take care of
him; cooking his meals, cleaning up after him, giving him sex. Thank god there
was a library in town.
After being laid off for a few
months, Phil got lucky. He had a friend who worked for a sanitation company and
the friend had been able to pull some strings, finally getting him a job
driving for Lender's Environmental Services, a company that served the western
metropolitan area. "Phil's a garbage man," is what Maggie told her
friend at work, Lettie Sanderson, when he got the job, "He hauls junk for
a living." Maggie had been working at Olafson's for just a few months by
the time Phil was hired.
"Well, someone's got to do
it," Lettie told her, lighting up a cigarette when they were out back on a
break, "From what you've told me about him, he'd be good at it. You
know...it doesn't required a lot of brain power." She grinned at her joke,
a grin that Maggie returned.
The two of them had hit it off early on when
they'd first been introduced by Mrs. Olafson; one of those relationships that started
good and got better as time went on. Maggie began to confide to Lettie that her
home life wasn't the best, something the slightly older woman was aware of, having
seen the bruises on her new co-worker on a regular basis starting from the
first day they'd met.
"I know..." Maggie said in
response to Lettie's garbage man comment, letting her mind wander, picturing
Phil getting himself stuck in the bin in the back of the truck and getting slowly
drawn into it and crushed along with all the other garbage. Now that was one
pleasant thought. Lettie put her hand on Maggie's shoulder and gave it a
companionable squeeze. It was a gentle, loving touch, something Maggie was not
used to receiving. No, Phil's physical contact with his wife was anything but
loving, and nine times out of ten it was accompanied by some sort of violence.
Lettie's touch was unexpectedly soothing, and Maggie unconsciously leaned
toward the nice woman standing next to her, breathing in her soft scent of
sandalwood and vanilla, appreciating their growing friendship more and more
with each passing day.
When Phil started his new job he
said, "Bitch, you keep working. We and use the extra money." Maggie
was glad he did, because she loved her job, especially her friendship with
Lettie. Over the years, they became as close as two people could get, sharing a
common bond of not only bad marriages, but an interest in gardening, books, and
cooking. The longer they worked together, the more Lettie drew Maggie out,
accepting her new friend's shyness but also probing underneath to find the deeper
person who was hidden there.
They talked all the time. They
shared recipes and came up with a favorite homemade pizza all of their own. A
creation made with sauce from fresh tomatoes and basil, and topped with
gorgonzola cheese, fried onions and mushrooms. Lettie would cook their
creations at her home and bring the food in to work for them to share during
lunch. "It's the best," was the comment given to them when the
Olafsons and other employees sampled their food. Maggie and Lettie had to
agree, it was.
Their favorite book: "Too many
to pick only one," Lettie said.
"I agree," Maggie told
her, liking that she had found a friend like her, someone she could talk with
and confide in without fear of being berated, beaten or worse, "But, I
have to say that I am partial to women authors."
Upon hearing her comment, Lettie
smiled and gave Maggie the first high-five she'd ever received in her life, "You
got that right!"
Their favorite flower: "I love
roses," Lettie said, to which Maggie replied, "Well, I have to
disagree, there. I'm partial to sunflowers, they're so cheerful. They always
make me happy." Lettie laughed good naturedly and gave her friend a hug
around the shoulders. "So we agree to disagree. That works for me. I won't
even hold it against you."
Maggie laughed, too, enjoying everything
about Lettie, someone who was helping her to see that there was more to her
life than just being Phi's slave, servant and wiping girl.
When they first met, Lettie confided
that she was going to get a divorce. "I'm done with him, Maggie," she
said only a few weeks after they started working together, "He's a lazy
slob who spends all his time drinking when he isn't on my case to pick up after
him and take care of him. We've been married for fourteen years. He's changed
from how he used to be, and, believe me, it's not been for the better."
So similar to my marriage, it's kind
of creepy, Maggie had thought at the time, finding herself increasingly being
drawn to the straight talking, outspoken woman.
Back then Maggie guessed that Lettie
might be around her age, if not a few years older and she was right, Lettie was
thirty-seven and Maggie was thirty-four when they started working together. Lettie
was tall and thin with nervous energy to burn, short cropped dark hair, and a
propensity for wearing tight jeans and snap button cowboy shirts. Maggie was
thin, too, with shoulder length brown hair. Why, other than the fact I'm six
inches shorter that she is, and dress differently and wear my hair differently,
we could almost be twins, is what Maggie had thought at the time, stretching
their common likenesses somewhat. But she felt an immediate connection between them,
something she'd never felt with anyone before in her life, certainly not
another woman, and she wanted to hold on to that connection and make the most
of it. In retrospect, it was certainly Lettie's assertive nature that, over the
years, fueled not only her eventual divorce, but also became the mirror image
Maggie began to develop of herself: Someone who could take charge, get out of
her marriage, change the direction of her life and make a new start. Trouble
was, Phil wasn't about to grant her a divorce.
"Not on your life, Bitch,"
he told her the first time she broached the subject, a couple of years after
she'd met Lettie. "I like things the way things are just fine," he leaned
his big fat body back in his big fat easy chair and guzzled his big fat half can
of beer before letting out a big fat disgusting belch. Then he reached for the
remote and turned the volume up to 100 on some mind numbing football game.
Maggie got the point: End of discussion.
The problem was that she wanted to
keep the house (Phil made her put it in both their names when they got married),
and she would have to buy him out, something she couldn't afford to do. On the
sly she was able to save about five hundred dollars a year from her job. After
seventeen years she had eighty-five hundred dollars, about ten percent of what she
estimated she needed get make him an offer, a sum not even close to something
he'd consider accepting (or what it was worth.) So she was stuck between a rock
and a hard place, and even though she fantasized innumerable scenarios for ridding
herself of Phil, she never considered acting on them. Not on your life. They
were all too gruesome, even though deep down she knew he deserved whatever she
could conjure up: Arsenic poisoning, a shotgun blast to the head, strangling
him with her bare hands when he was passed out drunk. Even running him over
with his car (he didn't allow her one of her own.) They were all interesting
and pleasurable to think about but way too risky. So for years she didn't anything
but do the best she could, which was to try and live with the fact that she was
stuck in her life with Phil, and it was never going to be anything but one big
fat constant horror after another.
But then there was that incident
last night: His heavy, stinking, sweating body, writhing away on top of her,
crushing her and making her nearly physically ill. It had finally become all
too much. She'd had enough. When he finally passed out and she crawled out from
underneath him, she knew that now was the right time to make her move.
Maggie looked at her empty mug, her
tea long gone. She put aside her book and rose from the table and went to the
sink. As she rinsed her mug she looked out the window to the little strip
garden Phil had allowed her to plant in the front yard. Some bright yellow
spring daffodils were flowering and their soft, buttery color brought her a fleeting
moment of cheer - a moment of joy. Then it was gone as she began to focus on
the matter at hand, putting an end to Phil's abuse for now and for all time. She
glanced at the calendar hanging to the left of the window. Wednesday. She
looked at the clock on the wall. 10:47 in the morning. She wasn't excepted at
work until noon. She looked out the window and up and down the quiet street she
lived on. All the people in the neighborhood worked, kids were in school, and
the weekdays were always quiet, houses lying empty until around late afternoon
when folks started returning home to prepare dinner and spend time with their
families or whatever. For someone planning what she was planning you couldn't
ask for better conditions.
She was thoughtfully setting her mug
into the rack to dry when a loud noise startled her. It sounded like the
bedroom door had smashed against the wall. What was going on? She stepped away
from the sink and looked through the kitchen and down the hall. The door to the
bedroom was hanging off its hinge. Sprawled on the carpet was Phil, rolling
around like a fat, slimy, over-stuffed garden slug. He turned his lunking head toward
her as she took a step backward, unconsciously searching for someplace safe to
escape to. But there was none. There never would be. As long as he was alive,
Phil would make her life miserable. It had to stop. Stop now.
Their eyes made contact and his were
burning with rage. "Stay right there, you bitch. Lock me up in my own
house, huh? I'm gonna kill you for that." He tried to get to his feet, but
then lost his balance and fell back against the wall, obviously still drunk. Maggie's
mind raced. What she had originally planned for ending Phil's life wasn't going
to work. Not with him conscious like he was. It took her only an instant to
think of an alternative plan and when she did she smiled to herself. For a plan
B it wasn't all that bad. It might even be better than her original plan A.
Plan A had been this: With Phil
passed out in the bedroom, she was going to open the bottle of Wild Turkey she
had bought and kept hidden for just such an occasion. She was going to pour it
over his body and on the sheets and even on the carpet. Then she was going to
take one of his Marlboro Reds, light it with his plastic, disposable lighter,
and drop it on him. Then she'd step back and watch the burning begin. (Right
now, just imagining the blue and orange flames running over his body was making
her inordinately happy.) Then, before the fire turned into an out-of-control conflagration,
she'd run to the kitchen cupboard closet, grab her shoulder bag already packed with
a change of clothes and her eight thousand five hundred dollars of savings, and
leave the house. She'd walk to the metro bus stop only a few blocks away and
get on the 675B to downtown Minneapolis. Once there, she'd walk to the central bus
station and board the first bus she found leaving the state. She didn't care
where it went. Anywhere would be fine, because the fact of the matter would be
this: She'd finally be free.
Maggie only permitted herself a moment
reveling in that thought because Phil was starting to get to his feet. Time for
a plan B. Maggie reached for the stove and turned all four burners up to high.
She opened a drawer and reached in for a book of matches, then made her way to
the cupboard door and grabbed her shoulder bag. She slung it over her shoulder and
then stepped across the kitchen to the back door. In the time it took to do all
over that, Phil had staggered down the hallway to the entrance to the kitchen.
He was listing against the doorway, out of breath and panting, stoking himself
up to attack Maggie, grab her and beat her up if not actually kill her, like he
had threatened.
"What do to you think you're
doing, Bitch? Trying to escape? Not on your life! Stay right where you are,"
he commanded. Then he lurched toward her, but after only two or three steps he
lost his balance and stumbled into the Formica table. He crashed and fell to
the floor, letting out a string of swear words.
Maggie watched as he lay drunkenly
squirming on the linoleum. She glanced at the stove, imagining the gas filling
the room. Good, she thought to herself, the more the better. In a minute Phil
was able to turn himself around and take hold of the table to steady himself.
He used both hands as he struggled to get to his feet. Maggie quickly moved from
the doorway toward him. "Here, Phil, let me help you," she said, with
more than a hint of malevolence in her voice.
Phil looked at her as she stepped
toward him and their eyes meet, his bloodshot red, hers full of conviction. He
spoke first, "You Bitch! I'll..."
Maggie never heard what he was going
to say, although something on the order of 'I'll kill you,' would have been par
for the course. He'd certainly said it enough times, nearly every day of their
marriage. She stepped up, grabbed the edge of the table and flipped it over,
causing Phil to fall to the floor, sputtering more obscenities.
Maggie turned away and stepped back
to the door. It lead from the kitchen to the side walk leading to the detached garage
in the back yard. The oak tree Maggie planted with her father grew between the
house and the garage. It was huge now, the trunk over three feet in diameter.
If she was lucky, the tree would help protect her from the blast. If she wasn't
lucky...Well, best not to think about that.
She turned around and looked into
the kitchen. Phil lay either exhausted or injured or both on the floor, legs
kicking weakly. She clutched her shoulder bag to her side with her elbow and
opened the book of matches. She looked at the stove. It had been on long
enough. She could even smell the gas. She stood in the doorway with the matches
in poised in her hand. Now was the time. Decision time. Should she stay and
deal with Phil for the rest of her life? Just like she had been for the last
twenty-seven years of her marriage? Or should she light the match and try to
make it to safety before the blast from the explosion caught her, likely
killing her? If she made it out alive, she could start a new life. One that had
to be better than the one she was in now. She looked at the matches and she
looked at Phil. She made her decision. She held the backdoor open and got
herself ready. Then she took a deep breath, preparing herself to run. An image
flashed in her mind of her living in a world different than the one she was in
with Phil. A better world. A less painful world. A prettier world. Let's do
this, she thought to herself.
She let her breath out, and put her
foot outside the door, holding it open with her foot, ready now to make a sprint
for the safety of the oak tree. "One, two, three," she counted out
loud, poised and ready. Phil's horrible head appeared above the table, and
that's all she needed to see. She took a step out the door and struck the match.
Carl
Whittaker, the Chief of Police for Long Lake, Anders 'Hank' Hankinson, the
Captain of the Long Lake Fire Department and Gordy Little, lead investigator,
sat in Carl's office early the next morning.
"Well, this is the shits as far
as I'm concerned," The Chief said, snapping a rubber band on his wrist,
worrying it to death, "What the hell do you think happened, Hank?"
"You mean beyond the fact that
the entire house blew up?"
Carl grimaced, "Don't even
bother trying to get smart with me."
"Yeah, I get it," Hank
said, coughing and opening his file, getting down to business. He spread it
open on the Chief's desk. It wasn't funny, what happened, that was for sure - a
house completely leveled, and at least one person dead. The only saving grace
was that the damage was confined to the little rambler on Lilac Way and none of
the other houses nearby. "The guy was a smoker; we found the remains of
packs of cigarettes and lighters all over the place. My guess is there was a
gas leak, maybe at the stove. He didn't notice it, lit up, and..." Hank
expanded his hands out away from his body, signify an explosion. He didn't
bother adding, 'Boom,' which Gordy did in his mind, wincing as he did so,
trying not to imagine Phil Jespers' final moments and not doing a very good job
of it. Hank Hankinson continued, "Let me summarize what we've got
here."
Gordy listened with half an ear
because, one, he'd helped Hank with the report and knew everything that was in
it, and, two, no matter what Hank thought, Gordy figured he had a pretty good
idea what had gone down at the house Phil and Margaret Jespers had once lived
in. The now non-existent house was a place he'd been called to at least a dozen
times in the twenty years he'd been on the force. The one thing he knew for
certain was that Phil Jespers was dead. Without a doubt. They'd found his body
late yesterday afternoon after the fire had been extinguished and the scene was
under investigation. The fact that Phil Jespers poor wife, Margaret, was
missing and unaccounted for...well, that was something else again. Gordy and
Hank and the rest of the search team had found no evidence of her anywhere,
even though they'd diligently searched the house both inside and out, the yard,
the garage, and all around the neighborhood. No body. She was either completely
incinerated by the blast, which was the theory Hank was leaning to, or she'd
escaped and maybe run off. Gordy hoped it was the later. Over the years he'd
seen with his own eyes some of the things Phil Jespers had done to his poor
wife. The guy was a brute who rated down with the lowest of the low on his list
of repeat offenders, and Gordy wasn't bothered in the least by the charred
remains that dental records had already confirmed what everyone surmised: They
were from Phil Jespers.
But Margaret, his poor wife...What
happened to her? That was the question, and that's what the Chief wanted an
answer to."You're my best man, Gordy. I'm putting you in charge of the
investigation. Find out what happened to the wife."
"I sure will, Chief,"
Gordy said, formally, fighting back an urge to salute, just to show his boss he
got the message. But he kept his hands in his lap, and, instead, sat back while
the Chief and the Captain talked some more, eventually turning to other
department matters. Gordy tuned them out. In his mind this one thought kept
circling around and around, a thought that soon turned into a hope: I hope she got away. That's what he was
thinking. I hope she survived the blast and is now long gone and on her way to
living a better life. She deserves a break.
And to that end he could already see
where the investigation might lead - if he had anything to do about it, which,
being lead investigator, he did.
He spent the rest of the day
interviewing people. By five that afternoon he'd talked everyone close to Mrs.
Jespers, or Maggie, as everyone called her. The neighbors were no help, the
prevailing comment being that she kept to herself. "So did the husband of
hers," Lucy Franklin, who lived next door, had told him. But she at least
had the wherewithal to lean close and whisper, "He's was a mean one, that
man. Really mean." Then after pausing for a few moments she shook her head
sadly before adding, "Poor Maggie..." When Gordy asked her to
elaborate, she declined, saying instead, "It's probably better for her
that he's gone."
Her employers, Sigurd and Ella Olafson, offered nothing more
than, Mr. Olafson saying, "She was quiet, you know, but a real good,
reliable employee," and Mrs. Olafson, adding, "She was very courteous
with the customers. A real nice person."
They both seemed saddened by Maggie's
having gone missing (and presumably dead) and wanted to help, but couldn't
offer much to move his investigation along. So that was that.
Lettie Sanderson however, the
employee closest to Maggie, and, it was easy to see, a close friend, painted a
much fuller picture. She was the final person he interviewed. It was middle of
the afternoon and they'd gone out back behind the grocery store to talk, the
rail thin lady chain-smoking Lucky Strikes and telling it like it was when it
came to Maggie Jespers.
"That beast of a husband of hers
deserved to die a long, painful death," was how she started out when Gordy
asked her to tell him a little bit about her friend. "If there's a Hell, I
hope he's roasting in it right now...long and slow...being par-broiled for eternity.
It's what he deserves after how he treated that poor woman." The picture
Lettie painted of Maggie's marriage and home life didn't get any better after
that. "He beat her, he treated her like dirt, he made her life a living nightmare.
He controlled every moment of her time. She couldn't even call me on the phone!
I wouldn't be surprised if she just snapped and blew them both up."
Mrs. Jespers blew them both up? Interesting,
Gordy thought to himself. Here he was hoping she'd escaped and was maybe alive
somewhere, starting life all over again, and now this. Was Lettie telling the
truth or perhaps, instead, covering up for her friend, trying to throw him off
the trail and point the investigation in a different direction? It wouldn't
have been the first time a friend had tried to cover for another friend. Maggie
blowing herself and her husband up on purpose? He pondered some more. That was
certainly a possibility, especially given how horrible her life had been. A
life with no future. Maybe committing suicide and taking her no good husband
with her was the only solution she thought she had.
On other hand...Gordy pursed his
lips and toyed with his pencil, maybe what Maggie really did was kill her
husband and make it look like she perished (although they still hadn't found
any evidence to support that supposition.) Then she took off, left town, and
started life all over again. Maybe right now she was alive and well and living
out the American Dream somewhere. Maybe she orchestrated a new start for
herself. But if that was the case then how could she have done it? The house exploded
in an instant. The blast was heard five miles away. There was no way anyone
could have escaped alive. That's what the fire department guys were saying.
"It just couldn't happen," Hank had told Gordy yesterday while they
were sifting through the rubble. "No way anyone could have lived through
this."
But Gordy was trying to keep an open
mind. Maybe there was more to Mrs. Jespers than met the eye. Maybe she was
capable of taking action, drastic as it was, and doing the unthinkable - taking
a chance on losing her own life to get out of the life she was in with her
abusive husband. Is that what she did? Did she blow up the house on purpose?
Could she have escaped? Could she still be alive? And if she was still alive,
shouldn't she be held accountable for her crime, the murder of her husband?
They talked a few minutes longer,
Lettie suddenly turning vague and non-committal, leaving Gordy to wonder if she
really was covering up for her friend. But if she was, there was really no way
of finding out. The more the two of them talked, the more he realized that Lettie
had said all she had to say. Finally he accepted he had all the information he
was ever going to get from her.
"Ok, Ms. Sanderson, thanks for
meeting with me. If you come up with anything else that you think might be of
importance in the investigation, please get in touch." He gave her is card
and said good-bye, knowing deep down the chances were excellent he'd never hear
from her again.
As he walked to his car, though, Gordy
couldn't get the conversation out of his mind. There were many questions, but
he wasn't sure he'd ever be able to find answers to them all. To try to sort
through his thoughts, he drove the squad car in the opposite direction of the
police station and went, instead, down to Lakeview Park, the community park over
looking Long Lake. In spite of the warm spring weather, the park was nearly deserted,
only a couple of kids casting lines off the public dock. He found a picnic table under a massive cottonwood tree
that was just starting to leaf out and sat down. He lay his notebook on the
table and looked out over the placid water, dimly aware of a sea gull squawking
from somewhere. He thought about all the times he'd been called to the Jespers'
house, being alerted by the neighbors on either side as well as from across the
street. Everyone in the neighborhood was aware of the brutality of Phil Jespers
toward his wife. Early on in his career Gordy had come to believe what they
said and the truth about what was going. In fact he talked many times privately
with Margaret Jespers at the grocery store when she was on break, but he
couldn't convince her to file charges against her husband. Every time he failed
to convince her, he felt like a failure, feeling like he should have been able
to do more.
A red squirrel hopped up on the far
end of the table and started chattering away, scolding him incessantly. Gordy
waved his hand and the squirrel jumped to the ground, scampered off about ten
feet and took up its chattering again. Gordy shook his head and laughed a
little while watching it. Then he turned back to his notebook and looked at the
notes he'd accumulated during the day. Then he stopped and looked out over the
lake. Maybe he deserved to be scolded for not doing more to help Maggie Jespers,
Gordy thought to himself, if not by a noisy squirrel, as least by himself.
He breathed in the fresh spring air.
He loved seeing the trees leafing out and songbirds returning from the south to
nest in the forests and woodlands nearby. It was a time of year for change and
rebirth. Out above the lake an eagle soared on an upward thermal while nearby
it's mate flew toward it. They met in mid air and grabbed talons, twirling
together in a show of their union before unlocking and flying next to each
other to the east, to the far end of the lake where their nest was located. It
warmed his heart to see them together, bonded with each other in a common need
to procreate and raise their young - a life of purpose and meaning. He was
quickly coming to the conclusion that Margaret Jespers deserved better than
what she'd had. If she were still alive, why didn't she deserve a chance at a
better life? A chance to make something of herself? A chance to live without
the threat of abuse from the man she married? Especially after all she'd been
through. It seemed reasonable to him.
Gordy looked at his watch and saw
that it was nearly six in the evening. His partner, Alan, would be home from
work by now and probably preparing dinner. He taught math at the local high
school and they had talked earlier that afternoon, Gordy filling him in on the investigation.
Alan told him to take his time getting home - he was going to fix a nice meal
of pasta, toasted French bread and a mixed greens salad with balsamic vinegar
dressing; something that would keep until Gordy returned to their small, tidy
bungalow, only a mile from where the blast took place. Gordy's mouth started watering
just thinking about sitting down to a good meal. Especially after today.
He sighed and got to his feet, but
before he went to his car he reached into his jacket pocket for the bag of
sunflower seeds he always carried to munch on. He poured a handful and tossed
them back toward the squirrel, who scampered off, stopped, sniffed, and then
ran back to where the seeds lay and started stuffing them into its mouth. He watched
for a moment enjoying the peaceful scene. Then he headed for his car. He had to
go back to the station and write up his report. Sitting in the park had helped
him clarify his thinking. He'd lay out the facts as he saw them, and point out
the unanswered questions as to Mrs. Jespers whereabouts. His final
recommendation would be that they leave the case open. Then he'd file it away
and move on to the string of robberies that had been plaguing the area since
last Christmas. The Chief seemed motivated to solve the break-ins, thinking
they might be gang or drug related. Gordy would suggest they focus on them, and
put the case of Margaret 'Maggie' Jespers on the back-burner. He smiled to
himself. He was pretty sure he could convince the chief to go along with it.
Somebody owed the poor woman something for all the pain and suffering she'd
gone through in her horrific marriage, and that somebody might as well be him.
He started the car and took the most direct route back to the station that he
could. He was eager to get the report written, give it to the chief, get home
to Alan, and to put the case behind him.
The next day Lettie was taking her
smoke break out back of the store. The springtime sun was warm on her face, the
day was pleasant and the air was filled with the aroma of lilacs in full bloom.
Next week was the beginning of May, and she should have felt happy about the
unseasonably warm weather but she wasn't. She was mulling over her conversation
the day before with that investigator from the police department, Gordy
whatever his name was. He had called her at work earlier that afternoon and
asked to meet.
"I just have a few questions
for you," he'd said, "About Mrs. Jespers. I heard you and she were
pretty close."
So he'd come over to the grocery and
talked to Mr. and Mrs. Olafson, and when he was done with them he met up with
Lettie. "Can we go out back and talk?" she'd asked when were
introduced, "I might need a cigarette or two." Gordy readily agreed and
they'd gone out back and she'd lit up the first of many Lucky Strikes. Before
the cop could even start asking questions, Lettie had taken off on a non-stop
rant, spewing forth a litany of observations about Maggie and Phil, and
Maggie's marriage with Phil, and how badly Phil treated Maggie, and on and on
and on. She was positive she'd had the investigator reeling in a matter of
moments.
She told the cop in no uncertain
terms what she'd hoped had happened to the husband who had caused her friend
such relentless misery, and then started in some more about Phil and what a
jerk he was. But as she talked something clicked in the back of her mind. She
realized she might have been sending out the wrong message, because she certainly
didn't want the cop thinking that maybe Maggie'd had something to do with
causing the explosion - just to get rid of Phil for good.
So she stopped mid-sentence, took a
breath to calm herself down and went on a different track, "Sorry,"
she apologized, "But I'm a little upset by the whole thing, I guess. I've
never known anyone who'd been killed before, let alone in a house that blew
up."
The investigator had put up his hand
to stop her, "Whoa there, Ms. Sanderson, no one said anything about your
friend being killed. We're just starting the investigation and we're looking at
every angle."
"Well, be that as it may, I've
got to be honest with you. Even though I've known her for seventeen years, I've
never really known her, if you know what I mean."
Gordy nodded and took a minute
making small talk to let Lettie calm down, before getting back to the matter at
hand. But after about five or ten minutes of vague comments and even vaguer
answers like, "I don't really know," and "I'm sorry, but we
really weren't that close. She was a hard person to get to know," the cop had
nodded, closed his notebook, given her his business card and left, seemingly
satisfied with the fact that Lettie didn't really have anything more to say
about Maggie, or add to what little he already knew. Or at least that's what
she hoped, anyway.
And that was just fine because Lettie, of
course, really had been close to Maggie. As close as they get under the
circumstances, especially hampered by the fact that Phil kept her on a short
leash and basically under his thumb every possible moment. But, even given
Phil's tight control of her friend, as far as Lettie was concerned there was a
fifty-fifty chance that Maggie had blown up the house on purpose. She had
confided to Lettie more than once that she might eventually snap and if she
did, there'd be hell to pay. Maybe this was one of those times. And, who knew?
If she had snapped, if she had blown up the house, maybe there was a chance she
could have escaped and could now still be alive.
Lettie took a contemplative drag and
blew the smoke out. She already missed her friend, but the big question was
this: Could Maggie have survived the explosion? No one had found any evidence
one way or the other to lead them to think she had or hadn't. The cop seemed like
a decent enough person. Maybe he'd find some clue or something that would lead
to an answer. One could only hope. She snuffed out her cigarette and went back
to work. One thing was certain, Lettie was going to keep all her options open,
and the first and main one was this: Maggie was alive and well and living
somewhere. That was what she hoped with all her heart, anyway. And it was a
hope she carried deep inside, because, other than the memories of the good
times they'd had together, it was all she had to hold on to.
But the days turned to weeks and
then to months. Spring turned to summer, and people eventually forgot about the
big explosion on Lilac Way. Well, they didn't actually forget about it, they
just talked about it less and less and got on with their lives. By the time
fall rolled around, and the kids were in school, and the leaves were starting
to change color, the Long Lake Police Station had moved on to other business,
too, and the case of the explosion at the house on Lilac Way was indeed filed
away as an open cold case that no one bothered looking at - just the outcome
Inspector Gordy Little had hoped for. The Olafson's hired a new woman to take
over Maggie's job and life went on. For nearly everyone in and around the Long
Lake area the memory of Maggie Jespers grew dimmer and dimmer with each passing
day.
For everyone that was but Lettie. She
is out back in the late October sun, on break, having a cigarette, and thinking
about her friend. She misses the quiet, shy woman who she has grown to care for
and love. She misses talking about recipes they wanted to try, flowers that
were in bloom and books they were reading. In fact, right now she is enjoying a
mystery series by a well respected woman author set in a rural village in
central England. She would love to talk with Maggie about how much she is likes
the main character, a quirky female private eye. She thinks Maggie would enjoy
the character, too, (as well as the books themselves).
In short, she misses the
companionship and friendship. Life isn't the same without her friend. In the early
months after the explosion Lettie held out a strong hope that Maggie had
actually escaped the blast - had, in fact, somehow survived and, by surviving, had
gone on to build a new life for herself. A better life. And with that new and
better life she would one day get in touch, and they would renew their
friendship and move on with their lives together - these two old friends who
were both now finally rid of the specters of their former husbands.
But Maggie has never gotten in touch.
And as the days have turned to weeks and the weeks to months, Lettie has finally
begun to accept the awful truth: Maggie had, indeed, died in the blast. She is
dead and gone. Gone forever. She is never coming back. With that hard
realization a void has been left in Lettie's heart that is deep, numbing, and
painful. And all the more painful because of the sad reality that now she,
Lettie Sanderson, is truly without hope of her friend returning.
She sighs and crushes out her
cigarette and makes her way back inside to work. She glances at her watch. Four
more hours. Then home. Then a bite to eat. Then relaxing in her rocking chair
with her book. Then bed. A life empty without her friend. Everyday more lonely
than the previous one.
October in Gloucestershire
in England is gorgeous. Even the locals marvel at the way the muted oranges,
reds and yellows of the beech, oak and sweet chestnut trees, colorfully wash
the Cotswold hills along the River Coln that flows through the village of
Fairford. People who are born here may leave for a while but most always
return, drawn by the beauty of the area and the slow pace of life. Others, once
they discover the tapestry of rolling meadows, woodlands and fields, many
bordered by low, limestone walls hundreds of years old...Well, once they set
down their roots, they never leave.
Behind the counter of the Strawberry
Fields Forever flower shop the owner, Kelly Newcastle, has just hung up the
phone. She turns to her new employee, a thin, quiet but friendly woman with dark
shoulder length hair, tinted gray, and says, "Arla, honey, would you mind
watching the shop for a while? I have to go to school and get Raffe. Apparently
he's suddenly come down with the flu or other horrific malady." Kelly
rolls her eyes, suggesting her nine year old son is probably faking illness to
try to get out of a math test or something .
"Sure, Kelly," Arla says
with an understanding smile, "Go right ahead and take your time. Don't
worry about the shop, I've got things covered."
Yes she does. Kelly does a quick
look around. She's had the little shop for nearly ten years now. It is well
stocked with cut flowers and floral arrangements and filled to overflowing with
beautiful bouquets made mostly by Arla, her new employee (well, not so new.
She's worked there for nearly three months, now.) The shop has never looked
better. Kelly ruminates for a moment on how Arla certainly has a way with
flowers, then gets herself ready to leave.
"I know you do, honey,"
Kelly says, grabbing her purse. "I'll be back as soon as I can." The tiny
bell above the door tinkles as some customers come in. She skirts around them
as she goes out.
Arla waves, "Say Hi to Raffe
for me." She grins at the thought of the bright, artistically inclined
little boy she is developing a fondness for, then turns her attention to the twenties
something couple and their two young children who have just entered, "Hi there
folks, beautiful day out today, isn't it?"
Kelly looks over her shoulder toward
her shop as she hurries down the sidewalk. She knows that her new employee has
issues. She knew that right off the bat by how Arla limped when she came in for
her job interview, and, later, after she was hired, by how she favored her
right arm when she was arranging flowers. But don't we all, was how she looked
at it at the time. And still does. From her point of view Arla is friendly, a
hard worker, and exceedingly conscientious. What more could she ask for in an
employee? Maybe one day maybe she will confide in her and tell her story. Until
then, she is happy to let things go their own way.
Kelly turns up the street. She loves
the quaint town she has called home for most of the forty-seven years of her
life (except for a brief sojourn to college for a year and a half in North
Umberland.) She loves the cobblestone street that winds through the little
village; the one her shop is on. She loves the slow pace of life. And, above
all, she loves the people who have chosen to live in Fairford. People who enjoy
the beauty of the soft hills surrounding the town, the stream that meanders
through it, and the quaint shops, of which hers is one. Kelly glances at her
wristwatch. Just after two in the afternoon. She slows to a walk. With Arla in
charge, she can take her time. She doubts Raffe is all that sick, but if he is,
she'll be happy to have him home and take care of him. For the first time in
years she has an employee she can depend on to leave in charge of her shop. It's
a good feeling, being able to count on someone other than herself. A really
good feeling. She slows her walk to a stroll, finding herself hoping Raffe can
come home from school. She'd love to spend the afternoon with him.
Back at Strawberry Fields Forever, Maggie
(aka, Arla) watches over the couple as they browse, giving them time and space,
not wanting to be too pushy. She stays near the counter, leaning on it and resting
her leg, ready to answer any questions. As she watches them and their two young
children she again thanks her lucky stars for what seems like the millionth
time for just how fortunate she has been. She loves her job. She loves the
cheerful tinkling of the bell that greets people when they enter the shop. She
loves working with the flowers and arranging bouquets. She loves working with
Kelly, a fireball of a woman a few years younger than her, whose energy and
enthusiasm is infectious and just what Maggie needs to continue her healing
process.
She watches the customers and
contemplates the six months that have passed since the explosion on Lilac Way. My
goodness how life has changed. Among other things she found her way to the
Cotswold region in south central England where she now rents a room in a two
hundred year old stone cottage from a nice elderly lady by the name of Mrs. Elise
Latham. It's a perfect place for her to learn how to live without the fear and
pain and abuse she received on an almost daily basis back BTE (before the
explosion), as she now refers to it. Every day she gets stronger. Every day she
puts the memory of her past life behind her. Every day she learns how much her
new life has to offer. She doesn't have much of a plan other than to live and
to heal and to enjoy life, and that's what she is trying to do.
But if she did have a list of things
to do, next on the agenda would be to get in touch with Lettie and invite her to
come for a visit. Soon, real soon. Until then she will take her time getting
better, both physically and emotionally. It will take time, but that's Ok. She's
Arla Wickensham now, and she has all the time in the world.
She glances at the clock on the side
wall. Two o'clock, eight in the evening in Long Lake. Lettie will probably just
be settling down in her comfortable rocking chair in her tidy living room with
a book. She always liked to read for at least an hour or two before watching
the news and getting ready for bed. Maggie blinks back a tear. Oh, Lettie...How
you are missed.
Maggie had just moved into her room with
Mrs. Latham and was giving herself a few days to get settled, thinking that she
owed herself at least that much, when she happened to glance at the local
paper. She saw the ad for help at Strawberry Fields Forever and decided to take
a chance, limping the three blocks from the rooming house to St. Mary's Lane,
where the flower shop was located. Kelly, the owner, and Maggie hit if off
right away, and she was hired on the spot, culminating a whirlwind of events in
Maggie's life.
She smiles once more at the young
couple and their children, letting them enjoy looking at the pretty floral
arrangements as she lets her thoughts wander back over the last six months,
time she is learning to look at as LAE, 'Life after the explosion' because the last
six months have certainly turned out unexpectedly...what?...Different?
Productive? Rewarding? Maybe all three.
The explosion.
She still marvels at how events
played out because, obviously, she survived. And Lady Luck certainly played a
role, that was for sure. The wall of the house absorbed the primary energy of
the blast as did that wonderful old oak tree. But, even so, she had been hurled
backward into the yard where she'd lain, hurting and in shock as burning debris
began to rain down on her. Her leg was injured, she knew that for sure, but she
did her best to ignore her pain. She clutched her shoulder bag, forced her
aching body to stand and began the painful process of limping from the backyard
out to the street and down the block. She was nearly two blocks away and moving
slowly (but at least she was moving) when the sirens began and the first
responders started racing to the neighborhood. By then she had made her way down
to the bus stop - just like in her dreams she imagined she would one day.
In looking back, she now knows that
her quiet neighborhood, with everyone at work and no one around, had been her
first lucky break. There had been no one to see her as she made her slow but
steady progress away from the scene of her crime. Her second lucky break was
catching the downtown bus so quickly. By the time the police cars and fire
trucks started rolling through town, Maggie was gingerly working her way up the
steps and onto the 675B bus to Minneapolis. By that first evening, when Gordy
and the fire chief where finishing up sifting through the ruins of her former home,
Maggie had left the bus terminal in Minneapolis and was over half way to
Madison, Wisconsin. By the next day, when Gordy had finished his meeting with
the Chief and Hank and was in the process of interviewing Mr. and Mrs. Olafson
and Lettie, Maggie was holed up in a Days Inn near the University of Wisconsin
campus. She stayed there for a week, resting, tending to her wounds and, as she
started referring to it, 'Getting my life in order.' She found a room to rent half
a mile from the campus. She found a job. And she came up with a plan. A plan
that required that she obtain a passport, because she was going to England; she
was going to start a new life.
She didn't have a drivers license because Phil
had refused to let her drive, and her old one from before she had met him had
expired years earlier. But she did have an ID Card and that's what she used.
She worked for a few months at one of the many college eateries (just like she'd
been doing when she'd first met Phil), living frugally and saving her money,
adding it to her savings from Olafson's. When she had what she estimated would
be enough to get to England and get herself settled, she applied for her passport
and received it six weeks later. She gave her two week notice and booked a
flight to London, landing at Heathrow Airport at the end of summer. The rest
was easy: A map here, a bus there, and soon she was in the quaint village of Fairford,
nestled into the rolling hills of the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire in south
central England. She was ready to begin to live again.
"Miss, we like both of these
arrangements. Which one do you like the best?" The young man asks,
interrupting Maggie's thoughts.
She shakes her head, smiling and
getting her mind back to the present. "I'm sorry," she says and
laughs self-consciously, "Day dreaming I guess. Here, let's take a closer look
at them."
She limps out from behind the
counter and begins to admire the two bouquets the couple have selected. One's
colors are primarily blue, white and lavender. The other is red, orange and
yellow. They are both beautiful as far as she is concerned. Especially since
she made each of them herself.
"I think they're both
lovely," she says, gently caressing the tops of the flowers, "I think
either of them will work out just fine for you, because, you know, there's
nothing that brightens a day quite like a bouquet of flowers."
The couple smile at her comment and bend
their heads together, talking quietly.
What better way than this to spend
the day, Maggie thinks to herself, than helping people decide what kind of
flowers to buy? She is so happy! She's working at a job she loves and she is
healing and getting better. Every day. Her dream of starting over is coming
true.
The couple make their decision and
Maggie wraps the orange, red and yellow bouquet in soft, green, tissue paper.
They pay and make their way out of the shop, but not before accepting two suckers
from Maggie. "These are from me to the children, if that's Ok with you.
For being so polite," she says. The couple (and their kids) smile their
delight, saying, "Thank you, Miss," before leaving. Maggie waves them
on their way, grinning ear to ear.
Then the shop is empty and her
thoughts return. Her smile fades and she becomes pensive.
She feels guilty she hasn't
contacted Lettie. She's missed her so much. It's been too long. She suddenly
realizes how badly she wants to see her.
She glances under the counter where
her shoulder bag lays. Inside is the letter she'd written a few days earlier.
In it she has opened up her heart to her old friend, telling her she misses her
and hopes that she understands why she did what she had to do. She's also told
Lettie that if she ever wanted to, Maggie would send her the money so she could
fly to England. 'We could have a nice long visit,' was how she put it in the
letter, 'I'd love to show you around my new home and where I live.' Hopefully,
they could pick up where they had left off with their friendship. That would
make everything perfect.
But Maggie has put off sending the letter,
not quite sure if she was ready to share her heart. But she is in a good mood
now, especially after helping the couple select their bouquet. Maybe now is the
right time. She closes her eyes and pictures seeing Lettie getting off the bus
in her quaint, little village. They smile at each other and hug and don't let
go for many minutes. Maggie breathes in Lettie's scent of sandalwood and
vanilla. Lettie hugs her tight in return and it's as if they were never apart.
Then they release their embrace and smile at each other, connected again and firm
in the knowledge that their friendship has withstood them being a part for all
these months. In her mind Maggie suggests they go to her favorite cafe and they
stroll down the cobblestone street to the Lavender Mist where they sit down and
drink tea, eat blueberry scones and lemon curd and talk and talk and catch up.
Later Maggie will show Lettie the sights: the Cotswold hills, the Coln River
and the stone cottage where she lives. She'll introduced her to Elise and to
Kelly. The two dear friends will be together for as long as they want to be.
She opens her eyes and sees it all
so clearly. She doesn't have to think further. She will send the letter. She
wants to see her friend again. That's the main thing. She wants to continue
putting her life back together; especially the good things of her life, and
Lettie will always be one of those good things. Seeing her and being with her
will make her healing process complete.
Maggie leans against the counter and
sighs a happy sigh. Contentment has never been a factor in her life, not until
now. But now she can say that she is truly content. It's a good feeling to
have. Now she looks forward to every day and to what the future holds, come
what may. Because after all is said and done, there is one thing for sure that
is always paramount in Maggie's mind these days and that is this: It's good to
be alive.
She pats her shoulder bag. The
shoulder bag that is the one physical reminder of her life before the
explosion. The life she is turning her back on forever. Forever that is, except
for one thing. She takes out the letter and looks at the name on it. Lettie
Sanderson. Long Lake, Minnesota. She has an inkling of a suspicion that Lettie
will be happy to hear from her. She gently caresses the envelope and then makes
her decision. She will mail it tonight. Tonight on her way home. She grins and
puts the envelope back in her shoulder bag.
The shop bell rings, interrupting
her thoughts, and she looks up. A few more customers are wandering in.
"Hi there, folks, welcome to Strawberry
Fields Forever," she says, smiling her greeting, "Isn't it a lovely
day today? How may I help you?"
One of the ladies smiles back and
says, "We're looking for a bouquet of flowers for a dinner party we're
having tonight. Can you help us?"
Maggie grins, steps out from behind
the counter and limps toward her.
"Yes, I can," she says, pointing to an arrangement she just put
together that morning, "These are especially lovely. What do you think of
them?"
It's a bouquet of yellow daffodils,
bright sunflowers and white daisies. Maggie loves how cheerful they are.
The lady is impressed, "They're
absolutely gorgeous!" she exclaims, making a quick decision, "I take
them."
"That's wonderful," Maggie
says, and lovingly takes the flowers in her hands, "Give me just a minute
and I'll wrap them up for you. Then you can take them home."
A thought comes to Maggie as she is
wrapping the bouquet. I think I'll make up an arrangement like this for Lettie
when she comes (already, in her mind assuming her friend will jump at the
chance to visit and renew their friendship.) I'll just add something to
brighten up it up even more. Flowers like blue lavender, purple verbena and burgundy
foxglove. Lettie would love that.
She smiles, thinking of her friend as
she tapes the wrapping paper in place and hands it to the nice lady.
"Here you go. Nothing like
flowers to brighten a day, is there?"
"No, there certainly,
isn't," the lady says, "Nothing better in the whole world."
Except having a friend to give them
to, Maggie thinks, already planning for when Lettie comes to England. Because
when she does make the journey to the Cotswold's and finally arrives in
Maggie's new little village, and they met for the first time since the
explosion, then Maggie will feel like she is truly healed. Then, the life is
creating for herself will be complete and the life she has dreamed of having
can finally begin.