No Day Like Today
Page 1
No Day Like Today
Amy Teegan
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No Day Like Today is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright 2018 by Amy Teegan
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
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Contents
Free stories
5:10am Marshall
8:26am Leah
8:32am Kristy
8:47am Sophie
9:00am Leah
10:09am Dylan
10:36am Ian
10:49am Amber
11:12am Kristy
11:40am Marshall
11:42am Leah
11:52am Ian
12:00pm Amber
12:22pm Sophie
12:54pm Kristy
1:12pm Dylan
1:24pm Ian
1:44pm Amber
2:02pm Leah
3:14pm Sophie
3:21pm Kristy
3:34pm Ian
3:49pm Sophie
4:00pm Dylan
4:09pm Leah
4:37pm Kristy
4:49pm Amber
4:52pm Ian
5:09pm Sophie
5:29pm Marshall
5:43pm Leah
5:50pm Dylan
5:53pm Ian
5:55pm Amber
6:11pm Kristy
6:28pm Ian
7:00pm Amber
7:22pm Leah
7:30pm Kristy
7:32pm Marshall
7:35pm Sophie
7:40pm Ian
8:04pm Amber
8:15pm Dylan
8:28pm Leah
8:45pm Kristy
8:53pm Amber
9:42pm Sophie
9:51pm Ian
10:02pm Kristy
10:09pm Dylan
10:29pm Sophie
10:35pm Amber
10:39pm Ian
10:48pm Kristy
10:57pm Dylan
10:59pm Marshall
Afterword
About the Author
5:10am Marshall
Marshall Page lies on his side, blankets bunched up around his shoulders and tucked under his chin. As he slowly wakes up, he remembers that for once he actually has plans today.
I gotta get up. I gotta get moving, he thinks, rubbing the sleep from his eyes. I gotta get ready. Today is going to be a great day. Today will be the best part of his week. His month.
As he steels himself, coaxing his old muscles to move, the first thing his eyes fall on is his half-full bottle of pills on the bedside table. It’s a reminder of how difficult of a time he had falling asleep the night before and the night before that. And before that.
Marshall rolls over and blinks at the ceiling. The room is still dark, pre-dawn, not even a tiny hint of sunlight coming through the blinds. The red glow of his alarm clock (5:10) barely illuminates the popcorn above. He closes his eyes again; the warm pressure of blankets is such a tempting nest, pulling him down, drawing him in, farther away from the cold, empty bathroom. His chest feels heavy. His eyes feel heavy. He has gotten a full night’s sleep but his face feels too weighted and tired to move.
It doesn’t matter how late he goes to bed, Marshall can’t help but wake early. It doesn’t matter what he does. His room could be a cave, dark as midnight twenty-four hours a day. Silent as a black hole. It wouldn’t matter. It’s what happens when you’re eighty-six years old. It’s a cruel joke. Now that he is spending more time awake, he’s more alone than at any other point in his life.
He lets his eyes fall shut again. There is so little waiting for him once he gets up. He has hours still before his granddaughter will be there. He wishes, as he does every morning, that he could just sleep a bit later. An hour, even. Anything to fill the time. Remember back when he had to set his alarm for work and actually used the snooze button? Ha!
Sometimes he lets himself stay in bed longer, lolling late into the morning even though he’s not sleeping. He keeps a book on his nightstand for those mornings, but right now he’s having a hard time focusing on text.
It doesn’t matter when he finally decides to get out of bed. No one is holding breakfast for him. No one is excited to start the day. No one to spend the next ten hours with.
Sure, his kids and his grandkids, who now bring his great-grandkids, all visit when they can, taking him shopping when he gets holes in his slacks or bringing him a frozen lasagna when they buy too much. They always send Christmas cards or coordinate with each other to make sure he has a ride to every holiday gathering. But once he’s irrevocably gone they will barely notice. They are a team of babysitters just passing him from one caretaker to another.
Like this afternoon. But regardless of how he gets there, Marshall looks forward to this afternoon.
He opens his eyes again, staring into the dark. He sits up in bed, blankets pooling around his waist, his worn white t-shirt hanging off his gaunt angular frame. It’s already fairly warm for June, but Marshall is cold all the time. In the summer, he sleeps with four light quilts that he tells himself are just-in-case layers, but each night he ends up using all of them. His thin, knotted hands sort through the blankets, looking for the edges to pull back. Once free, Marshall carefully places his feet on the floor, gearing up his mental strength to bear the weight and joint pain once he stands up.
“Urrggh,” he grunts as he gets to his feet, still half bent at the waist. Once he is up and moving around it will get better, but getting out of bed is nearly always the hardest part of his day. Scratch that. Getting out of bed, before dawn in a room that is still pitch black when no one cares whether he does or not is the hardest part of his day.
Marshall straightens up slowly, and drags his feet through the dark room to the bathroom.
8:26am Leah
Leah had woken up at dawn, a couple minutes before her alarm as usual. She had eaten her egg whites with broccoli cooked in coconut oil, had taken a quick jog around the neighborhood and had sat for fifteen minutes of focused meditation all while her family slept. As usual. She has been working on her prosperity affirmations for the last month, so spent five minutes journaling about her money blocks. Her business will hit its next income goal in ninety days or fewer.
Now she is showered and dressed in one of the five identical charcoal gray pantsuits she always wears for weddings, well before she needs to leave for the day. Her dark blonde hair is pulled back into a tight, low bun to stay out of her way during the busy day ahead. She has gathered everything she will need, packed up and in place near the door of her office, but she goes over everything just one last time, because you never know. Leah does not have a reputation for attention to detail from only checking things once.
She had given herself a fifteen minute cushion, just in case, and she texts her assistant Cindy to confirm she will be available in case of an emergency. Always. Just in case. The same routine every weekend. It’s near-constant checking, double checking and triple checking, but how else would she coordinate a wedding?
Some of the horror stories she has heard about other weddings make her shudder. A friend of a friend had hired a novice coordinator when she got married and di
dn’t end up having any silverware for her guests. Even worse: they didn’t notice until dinner was being served. Her sister-in-law heard a story about a wedding where the officiant had to cancel last minute and they had no backup plan. Although, in that case the couple hadn’t even hired a coordinator so there was no one to fix it either. Nothing like that has ever — or will ever — happened at one of Leah Holder’s weddings.
She has just finished confirming she has all her vendor phone numbers and back-up contacts when her husband Joe sticks his head into her home office. Their teenage son Dylan is still sleeping in the next room, so he whispers. “Here,” he says, handing her a travel mug full of coffee. “In case you don’t have time to stop on your way there.”
“Thank you.” She smiles at him as she takes it, but of course she has time. It’s on her pre-planned, printed out timeline — leave twelve minutes early for drive-thru Starbucks, including texting the bride to see if she would like one. Very few of Leah’s clients take her up on the offer, but she makes it every wedding day just the same. But still, she thanks him. It is thoughtful.
Leah takes a sip of coffee, turns away from Joe and is quickly immersed in her checklist again. Her desk is completely cleared off, save the computer and her meticulously scheduled planner, open to the following Monday morning. Her white board on the wall near the door is completely full with a list of the names and dates for the weddings she has booked the rest of the year. Color-coded by stage in the decision-making and payments-received processes. Admittedly, it’s a bit complicated — Cindy is still learning the specifics — but it’s thorough.
In her hands, Leah holds a yellow legal pad with each and every action step she is to complete over the course of the day — the first three are already checked off.
“Can we talk real quick? D’you have a minute?” Joe asks her, his voice low.
“Um, yes,” she says, slightly distracted. Leah flips to a later page in her legal pad to review her list of bridesmaid names once more before she leaves for the day. “Just a reminder, dear. Today is Ryan and Lindsay’s backyard wedding in the Valley. Pertinent contact information and when you can expect me home is already on the fridge just in case. Do you have something fun planned for today?”
He closes the door behind him. She is startled and pulled out of her work. There has never been any reason to close her office door before. Never. It is a point of pride for her that she runs a (more than) full-time business and is still available to her family (most of the time). There is no other chair in the room, so Joe stands awkwardly in front of the closed door.
“I, uh … Yeah. I do have plans today.” He scratches his neck and looks around the room, at anything but her. “Not particularly fun, though. Um … Oh, shit.” He holds his head in his hands, fingers laced through his salt-and-pepper hair.
Leah blinks at him, trying to understand. Her stomach drops. What on earth could be the problem? Joe never curses. He is usually so calm and prepared. So stable. “Joe, what is it? Are you okay?”
He takes a deep breath and finally looks her in the eye. “I’m going to move out.”
She barely hears the words. She can only see his tears. Joe is not a crier.
“What?” she whispers. She feels like her chest has collapsed. Her breath leaves her body. She doesn’t realize she is crying until she tastes the saltiness on her lips.
“I’m, uh. I’m going to go move in with my sister. Today. It’s closest to my work and she’s going to let me sleep on the couch until I find my own place. I’ll find one with a room for Dylan too but we can talk about those details later. I’ll be gone before you get home.” It all comes out in a rush. Leah hears a steeliness enter his tone. He rubs his fists into his eyes, but the tears still flow.
Leah stares.
She doesn’t have time for this. What is he thinking? What is he doing to her? Why could he not have waited a day until she has time to talk it over with him? They could work this out — whatever it is — together.
Her eyes are drawn to the whiteboard full of her clients’ names and dates looming behind him.
She needs to get herself together. She has a commitment to her job and her bridal couple today. She will have to deal with Joe later. This is not the time. She can fix it tomorrow.
She clears her throat, closes her eyes and takes a couple deep, meditative breaths to calm herself. She gives herself just a moment to roll her shoulders back and sit up a little straighter. “Please. Don’t go. Please wait. I don’t want you to just run away while I’m gone. Please, Joe. Just … stay one day and we can talk about it.”
“No, Leah. I can’t.” He sounds so tired, leaning, slumped with his back against the door. “It is never just talking with you. Leah, you suffocate me. We’ve talked about this and it never changes. You always have to fix it and I am so tired of trying to fix it.”
“Well, of course I try to fix it,” she snaps at him. “You think I should just leave things broken and problems unsolved?” Exasperated, she turns away from him to finish gathering up her notes and organizing them for the rest of the day. What a ridiculous conversation. It’s as if he does not know her at all. She can not deal with this right now. She has other responsibilities to take care of.
“No, I know. You’re a problem solver. I know. And you’re great at your job. It’s just … Forget it. I’ll be gone when you get home and then I’ll call you later in the week. We can talk about it then.”
Leah grasps on that last. He’ll call her. She still has a chance. She can retreat for now and handle the wedding as she has committed to more than a year ago. He would call her later.
“Alright, then.” She nods briskly, all business now that decisions have been made. “We’ll talk later. I look forward to discussing this further. Dylan is working tonight but we will both be home by eleven at the latest. There is really no need for you to move out. I’m sure we can fix whatever problem you think we have.”
Joe attempts a smile; Leah dabs at the corner of her eye with a tissue. For once she wishes she owned water-proof mascara — there has never before been a need.
“Excuse me,” she says as she pushes through the doorway past him. “I need to check my make-up before I leave.”
He backs out of her office quietly, not stopping her rush to the bedroom.
8:32am Kristy
Kristy pushes the omelette around her plate. Using her fork, she picks some of the egg off of the piece of bell pepper. Her stomach can handle the soft, cooked vegetable. But not egg. Not right now.
“You want something else, babe?” Her husband Nick stands in the kitchen by the stove wearing her blue checkered apron, the one with the cartoon pig face on it. He’s got her UCLA coffee mug in one hand, and a cheap plastic spatula in the other while he makes his own breakfast. “Toast? Yogurt?”
She smiles at him and shakes her head before turning her attention to her food again. Maybe a small sip of coffee would help.
The clock on the microwave behind Nick shines a bright 8:32am. Like an alarm. A countdown. A siren, warning her how few minutes she has left to herself. How little time left to relax, to eat, or to stay off her feet before she’s tasked with hunting down someone’s cousin from the bar, or waiting silently for the bride’s uncle to get out of her way. Just a few hours until she is on her feet, on call, for twelve hours straight.
If her stomach doesn’t calm down, Kristy is not going to be able to eat anything before she leaves. Lord, she hopes it’s not another afternoon of forcing down almonds and granola bars. You would think after five years of photographing weddings, she wouldn’t be so anxious.
8:47am Sophie
Sophie wakes up a little bit before nine. Her blankets have been kicked to the foot of the bed and her nightgown is twisted around her. She carefully untangles herself and strains to listen. She needs to know what to expect before getting out of bed. Is anyone out there in the living room? She has to be really quiet. Because sometimes she goes to bed when her mom is on the phone, and then
wakes up with a stranger sleeping on the couch. Once it was two strangers. Sophie has gotten really good at figuring out what’s going on in her house just by listening from her bedroom.
Her mom had definitely been talking a lot last night before Sophie put herself to bed. Chatting on the phone and laughing and watching Grease really loudly. Sophie had counted — it had been an eight-bottle night before she fell asleep. All of Grease and part of Saturday Night Fever. Sophie had fallen asleep to the sound of each new beer bottle clinking against and knocking over empty ones. So noisy. On nights like that, she pulls a pillow and blanket over her head. It gets pretty hot under there, but otherwise she would have never been able to sleep.
And she definitely wanted to sleep last night to make this day come more quickly. Just like Christmas. Today she gets to put on her flower girl dress — the day she has been waiting months for.
Fortunately, this morning, the apartment is silent. No one had stayed the night. Mom must be sleeping still. She would probably sleep for a while longer.