I hope you enjoy this story posted today on the Literary Yard.
https://literaryyard.com/2019/12/12/freddie/
I've also posted it below:
Early in June that
summer I took two weeks off work and my friend Bobby and I hitched-hiked to
Denver to a concert at Mile High Stadium. We saw Jimi Hendrix and had an
unforgettable time. It was there I met Freddie, a willowy blond from a small
town in southeastern Wyoming. Something clicked between us and we spent every
moment together. She was the only person I ever loved. She was also the only
person I ever knew who committed suicide.
I'd been back in Minneapolis for about two months and
just gotten home from my ten hour shift at Jorgenson's Sheet Metal. I was
sitting on the front step of the duplex Bobby and I rented smoking a joint. Freddie
and I wrote back and forth often, and I was reading a letter I'd just received posted
marked nearly a week earlier.
'Ben, I miss you so much,' she'd written, 'I was
wondering if I could come out and visit. This town is really boring. Plus
there's something I need to tell you. In person. It's good news, I think.
There's also something else. I got accepted at Montana State. I'm going to
major in art. Remember I told you how much I liked to draw? I've enclosed a
little picture I drew of you...'
It was a long letter and I had just finished reading it
and was looking at the picture she'd drawn of me when Bobby drove up, slammed
on the brakes, jumped out of the car and ran over to me.
"Ben! I've been looking everywhere for you."
I took a hit of the weed, "What's up?
"You'll never guess who called. Freddie's mom."
"What'd she want?"
Bobby sat down next to me and put his arm around my
shoulder, "Sorry to have to tell you this, man, but Freddie's dead. She
committed suicide. She hung herself in her closet at home."
What? I'd just seen her a couple of months ago! I was
holding a letter she'd just written in my hand!! I felt my heart shattering, breaking
in two. I couldn't help myself, I broke down, fell into Bobby's arms and started
crying, bawling like a baby. I've never forgotten that moment, just like I've
never forgotten her.
Freddie's letter was so loving and affectionate. I had
been mentally composing a reply to tell her that of course she was welcome. She
could come anytime she wanted and stay forever as far as I was concerned. I was
imagining us living together in the duplex with Bobby until she and I could
find a place of our own. She could go to art school in Minneapolis. We'd share
our life together, create a future. Now this. Not only was she dead, but she'd
died by her own hand. What could have caused her to do that? If I'd have known what
she was upset about, could I have done something to prevent her death? Being
young and naive, I certainly hoped so.
After I got myself somewhat composed, I realized I wanted
to do something, anything, to show how much I cared for her. Suddenly I had an
idea.
"Bobby, I'm going to the funeral."
"Are you nuts? You hardly knew her."
I loved her, but he didn't know that. "I don't care.
I'm going."
And I did.
Later that summer, after I'd returned, Bobby hitch-hiked
to a three day concert in Woodstock, New York. I stayed home and worked and
saved my money. I'd told Freddie's mom at the funeral that I'd help pay for her
tombstone. It was the least I could do for the young woman I hadn't known meant
so much to me until she was gone. Her mother told me something else, too. That "Something"
Freddie wanted to tell me? It was huge news. She was pregnant. We were going to
have a baby. That news, along with Freddie's death set the course of my life.
What would have happened if she had lived? I never have
stopped thinking about that possibility. She would have come out to visit and we
would have had a long talk and she would have told me that she was pregnant. We
were young. We were in love. I always wanted to have a family, so I'd like to
think we would have stayed together and raised our child. We probably would
have gotten married because that's what you did back then. We might even have had
other children. We would have built a life together, of that much I was
certain.
But we never got the
chance. Never. And I think that's what's bothered me the most for all these
years. Even though we were just beginning to get to know each other, there was
something between us I'd never felt with anyone else, either before or since. I
felt it then and I think she did, too. In fact, it still bothers me to this
day. Sure we were young, but...
But what? Nothing else has mattered. I loved her then and
I still love her now.
Have I wasted my life mourning the loss of Freddie and my
son? Lots of people think so. In the months following her death, I was in
pretty bad shape. I started doing more drugs, messing up pretty bad. Finally,
some friends intervened and I cut way back on the weed and other stuff,
eventually quitting drugs altogether. My parents lent me money to go to a psychologist
for most of that first year, but it didn't help. I was told I could only change
if I wanted to, and, truth be told, I didn't want to. I was happy imaging Freddie
with me all the time.
I kept my job at Jorgenson's Sheet Metal, though. In
fact, I'm still there now, all these years later, in the fabrication
department. They sent me to school to learn computer aided design, and I work
making those fancy light fixtures that cities use nowadays in their remodeling
projects. I've been there over forty years, and I have to say, time has kind of
flown by.
I live by myself in an efficiency apartment in northeast
Minneapolis. I can ride my bicycle to work. I still see Bobby and his wife on a
fairly regular basis and occasionally even their kids and grandkids. I have a
cat and I'm thinking about getting another one. I'm by myself, but I'm not
lonely. I've learned to accept my life for what it is, one of remembering Freddie
and the love we had and the life that we might have had together. All in all,
it's not been a bad way to go.
In looking back, I wouldn't have changed a thing. Well,
of course, I'd have changed one thing. I'd have changed the beginning. In the
beginning, Freddie wouldn't have hung herself in her bedroom closet. She'd have
come out to live with me and we'd have had a life together with our child. And
it wouldn't have been one of my imagination, either. She'd have been alive,
living right here beside me. For all of these years.
For real.
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