The One That Matters
Page 1
Minnesota
Copyright © 2018 by ELLE LINDER
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, without prior written permission.
Ocean Dreams Publishing
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Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.
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Cover Design by James Smith (http://www.goonwrite.com)
The One That Matters/ Elle Linder. -- 1st ed.
ISBN 978-1-7324944-0-4 (softcover); ISBN 978-1-7324944-1-1 (ebook)
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For the women who loved, and tried, but couldn't make it work. I carry you in my heart, there is light.
“BE FEARLESS, BE BRAVE, BE BOLD,
LOVE YOURSELF.”
―HARUKI MURAKAMI
The One That Matters
Okay, Abuelita
Girls Night
Familial Feelings
Just A Dance
A New Mom
The Call
Summer Begins
The Barbecue
Like A Dream
The Double Date
Letting Go
Yes
Making Love
Taking Time To Process
Trying
Growing Stronger
Finding Peace
I Love You
Social Media Outlets
Reassurances
Life-Changing
Holiday Traditions
He’s My Son
Twists & Turns
She Is Strong
Love You Forever
A Full Life
Acknowledgments
About The Author
Chapter 1
Okay, Abuelita
Craig’s aggravating voice droned on and on, with excuse after excuse. She had heard it all before, dozens of times. And yet his nonchalant attitude as he canceled his weekend with their son always felt like a punch in her gut. Try as she might, she couldn’t remember a time when Craig had put her or the kids first. It wasn’t that he didn’t know how to be devoted to anything. He did. In fact, Craig’s loyalties were to his parents and his family’s construction business—and himself.
“Marie! Are you listening to me?!” His bombastic voice shook her from her reverie. The man had to have been a drill sergeant in a previous life, the way his voice boomed at the slightest frustration.
“Yes, I’m listening. You’re going to Vegas with Sasha.”
“Just tell Jackson ‘another time’. I have to go. Our flight leaves in a couple of hours.”
“You make it sound like being a parent is an option. He picks up on that, you know.”
“You wanted full custody; now you’re going to complain?”
“Huh-uh, don’t twist this around. I’d love never to see you again, but you’re still Jackson’s father.” Marie braced herself against the kitchen counter, gripped by the weight of her emotions threatening to pull her to the ground.
“Dammit! Don’t do this!”
“What, hold you accountable to your children?”
“Shit. I’m doing you a favor canceling, so you won’t be alone.” Alone. The singular word had the power of a thousand to tear her down, and he knew it. She winced through the stretching and twisting of her innards. “I’ll just email from now on.”
“Perfect.”
The hot water poured over the breakfast dishes while Marie stared out the window, transfixed on a tattered fence, trying to calm herself. Numb with nostalgia, she recalled her old view of a sparkling pool with strategically placed palm trees. The tranquil setting had been a lovely substitution for her ocean and made washing dishes bearable. If she tried hard enough, she could hear the roar and swoosh of the breaking waves and smell the seaweed. She could even feel the slithery vines snake around her ankles while she jumped into the frigid water.
A day at the beach with her abuelita was one of her fondest times. Once Marie had children, she took them to her favorite spot along the shore and created new memories with them while they splashed around in the Pacific. Giggle after silly giggle transported Marie back to her youth and to her dear grandma. Those short-lived days were a thing of the past. Now the old, weathered wooden fence in her view mirrored her lowly state.
You’re pathetic, she thought as she turned off the hot water. This was what her life had become post-divorce: one ordinary, trivial task after another, with no one to hold her at night.
Her abuelita’s words invaded her thoughts as they often did during times of distress. “Marie, no estar solo. Do not be alone,” she had told Marie on the day she had joined Marie’s abuelo, Pancho, in heaven. All her life, Marie had believed her dear sweet grandmother had spiritual powers, and that day when she took her last breath and said “no estar solo.” Marie had rolled her eyes. But now, Marie was alone.
Well, this weekend she wouldn’t be alone. There was a silver lining in all of this. Jackson wouldn’t be disappointed Craig canceled their weekend. He would be relieved. And Marie wouldn’t be left in a puddle of tears after she coaxed Jackson out the door to go with a man he was invisible to. Perhaps if Jackson felt loved…wanted…and made a priority, he might want to go to Craig’s of his own free will.
But Craig didn’t see it that way and believed relationships didn’t need nurturing. Nor did they have to be a priority unless you were a swimsuit model. Her mother had told her as much when she started dating him. She saw things Marie didn’t see in her star football player.
“He’s not like us,” her mother would say in broken English.
To that Marie would reply, “I thought love conquers all, Mamá.”
“No siempre, mi amor,” (not always, my love) her mother would tell her.
“But Abuelita used to say, ‘All you need is love.’”
Her mother laughed. “A Beatles song? No, no, Abuelita is a romantic. Tu corazón…your heart is delicate. Choose wisely, mija,” she had advised.
Perhaps Marie should have taken her mother’s cautions more seriously. But then she wouldn’t have Lexi or Jackson, and they meant everything to her. If nothing else, Marie would teach her children family is everything. It was the Valdez family motto: “Familia es todo.” Aunts and uncles would throw those three words around like a hex if you didn’t put your family first. Children grew up knowing their number one priority was family. As a child, Marie understood what her abuelita and elders had chanted on a daily basis. It showed in their actions. Everyone helped each other, even in the most mundane tasks, like doing the dishes. Someone always had your back, and they believed in the whole “it takes a village” mantra, something Marie would fully embrace now that she was alone. Her family always kept their word and they wouldn’t dream of letting each other down. They loved big—family is everything.
Marie loaded the dishwasher and wiped down the counters. Craig’s unexpected call had thrown her off her normal routine, and now she was running late. Still, her thoughts for the weekend were at the forefront of her mind.
Maybe Lexi will come over for dinner, she thought, now that Jackson would be home.
It had been a few weeks since she last saw Lexi. During that visit, Lexi had said her second year of college was ten times more difficult than she expected, requiring more of her time. Marie was so proud of her. She was doing things Marie didn’t get to do at twenty years old, living life to the fullest, free and independent. Lexi was her own woman; no one controlled her. Marie couldn’t be more grateful.
Looking up at the ceiling, Marie took a deep breath, her jaw set for the ritual of getting Jackson out the door. It was time to face off. “Jackson, we gotta go. I’ll be late for work,” Marie hollered from the base of the stairs. He was his typical uncooperative, angry eleven-year-old self. If their relationship didn’t change in a significant way, Marie feared what the teenage Jackson would be like.
“I’m coming! Geez!” he screamed back.
Marie took a deep breath and shook her head. “Every stinkin’ morning he has to be like this.” She grabbed her keys and handbag off the entry table. She cringed, looking up at the second floor. The creaky ceiling made the cheap, nothing-special dome light shake especially hard beneath his rapid, heavy-footed steps. Her eyes followed the sounds as he moved from his room to the bathroom, then back to his room. Finally, he stomped down the stairs in a huff. It took all she had not to lose it. This same scene had played each day like a broken record since the divorce. She would wake him up, he’d grumble, drag his feet, and then switch gears, stomping around the house before they left. Not once would he have a civilized conversation with her. Two years ago, he never would have raised his voice or rolled his eyes in disrespect. But now he looked at her with disdain, and only spoke to her in anger. It pierced her heart over and over again. He had been the sweetest boy since the day he was born, and she had thought their bond was unbreakable. Her tender, funny, smart-as-a-whip boy had changed so much. Worse yet, their relationship was breakable now.
“All right, buddy, let’s hit the road,” she said playfully to lighten the mood. Her efforts received silence. She didn’t know why she tried so hard when all he ever did was ignore her. But Marie held on to hope with a death grip that one day he would come around and have a relationship with her again. She would die before giving up on her son.
Jackson peered out the window as he always did on the drive to school. There was never a right time to talk to him, so Marie just went for it and braced for the backlash. “Looks like you’ll be able to go to Ricky’s birthday party after all.” Jackson flinched with a slight twist of his head toward her, and she knew he was listening.
“Your dad and Sasha are going to Vegas this weekend. It was last minute. He said to tell you he’d make it up to you another time, and he’s sorry.” She embellished it to soften the blow. The slightest curl in the corner of his mouth reflected in the window. No backlash. Just silence.
When Jackson slammed the car door shut, Marie’s tension dissipated. Now she would have fifteen minutes of peace and tranquility on her drive to work. It was just enough time for her to relax and prepare for a busy day, which she welcomed. Marie loved her job, her co-workers, and the law. As an IP paralegal for Malcolm-Bower and Associates, she had found her specialty with copyrights and trademarks. Work was the only place she felt appreciated, respected, and whole. And she wouldn’t be alone.
Her tension returned at the sound of her phone buzzing. She picked it up to see who was calling, then sighed.
Chapter 2
Girls Night
There was only one reason Tessa called in the morning…on a Friday morning: to convince Marie to go out with the girls. It was a crapshoot. Answer and deal with Tessa, or let it go to voicemail and deal with her best friend, Ann, later. Marie answered the phone. Tessa was the lesser of the two evils.
“Good morning, Tessa.”
“Morning. How are you on this beautiful SoCal Friday?”
“I’m good. Just dropped Jackson off at school and I was enjoying a quiet drive to work.”
“Did I interrupt your meditation?” she teased.
“Look, let’s cut to the chase…I can’t go out tonight.”
“Oh, come on! You didn’t even let me give you the details,” Tessa whined.
“That’s because I don’t need to hear them. I’m not going.”
“Well, I’m going to tell you, anyway. We’re going out dancing. To a Latin club—your specialty, if you recall. And it’s been forever since you went dancing.”
“Tessa, I can’t leave Jackson tonight. We had a rough morning. Maybe another time.”
“Oh stop! Don’t let that little stinker ruin your weekend. It’s been two years, Marie. The time has come for you to stop herm-ing and hang out with your girlfriends,” Tessa insisted.
“Herm-ing? Stop talking like you’re a high schooler.” Marie laughed. “Seriously though, Jackson’s been a handful…more than usual. I don’t want him to feel abandoned if I go out.”
“What about tomorrow night? Call Lexi to sit with him. They need some brother-sister bonding,” Tessa countered. “Wait! I thought it was Craig’s weekend to have him?”
“Yeah, well Sasha wanted to go to Vegas, so he canceled his weekend with Jackson. Canceled, not even rescheduled.”
“That son-of-a-bitch! He sees his son four fucking days a month and he can’t schedule his sex trip for a weekend he doesn’t have him?”
Marie smirked. She admired how Tessa had no qualms about using profanity. Marie never cursed. Her abuelita would have come unglued, along with her mother. “Nice girls don’t have filthy mouths,” they’d say. She took their words to heart. But something was liberating about profanity, though she could never bring herself to spout off curse words like her friends. However, their melodic use of obscenities strangely energized her.
“I agree with you, Tessa. Craig is awful. And every time he does something like this it hurts Jackson. But if I’m honest, I’m afraid to go out dancing or clubbing or whatever you girls usually do. Why don’t we go to a movie?” A boring suggestion to be sure, but one she was open to entertaining. Except the girls were all single, and looking for love, which she knew they wouldn’t find in a theater.
“A movie? Yeah, that sounds thrilling,” Tessa mocked. “What are you afraid of? You’re a fun, sexy Latina with brains, and nobody can dance like you. Come on… It’ll be fun!”
“I’ll think about it. I’m at work now. You have a good day herm-ing with your homies and hearing about their plans for the weekend.” Marie giggled, herm-ing.
Tessa laughed. “Now there’s the playful Marie I love so much. I’ll talk to you later.”
It was fast approaching noon, and Marie sat focused on the documents spread over her desk. The copyright for a song was the furthest thing from her mind. Tessa’s call occupied her thoughts. She knew her girls would be relentless in getting her to go out with them. Knowing them as she did, they would be pushing harder than ever to break her out of the fortress she had built around herself. The gnawing in the pit of her stomach told her she needed to prepare.
Then a flash of panic hit. “Oh, I’m an idiot! I should know by now how those crazy girls work.” She sighed. “Tessa’s call was on behalf of Ann to test the waters. Crap!” It was true. Tessa was sent in to canvass Marie’s mental state before Ann swooped in with the big guns. And she had fallen for it, giving Tessa the intel Ann sought...and she was afraid. Goosebumps covered Marie’s arms while her palms grew sweaty. There was nothing to be done now but wait for Ann to call.
As four o’clock rolled around, Marie’s dread turned to confusion. It wasn’t like Ann not to have called by this time. Ann was the most punctual person she knew, and she always called by three to set up plans for the evening. The girls’ Friday routine never changed. Dinner at seven, and then they’d hit up a club. So why hadn’t Ann called yet? Marie wouldn’t dwell on it or let her thoughts run away with her. Maybe, just maybe, Tessa had convinced Ann to let her off the hook one more time. It was possible. When Tessa turned on her sweet, charming self, she could get even the hard-as-steel Ann to cave.
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br /> Marie shifted mental gears. She couldn’t worry about the girls anymore. It was time to send Jackson his daily text, to touch base and make sure he arrived home okay.
Marie: Hi buddy, how’s it going?
Jackson: same as always
Marie: Do you want pizza for dinner?
Jackson: whatev
Marie: Ok, see you soon.
Even his responses were apathetic. At this point, Marie would do just about anything to restore their relationship. But what? What could she possibly do to make him happy? There was no way she’d take Craig back, not that he’d want her back with Sasha Hill in his life. How her forty-year-old ex had snagged her, Marie would never know. He was a lousy lover and an even lousier husband and father. Surely, he pulled the wool over Sasha. For a brief moment—a very brief moment—Marie actually felt sorry for the young twenty-nine-year-old swimsuit model.
After work, Marie stopped at Sonny’s Pizza and then headed home. Sasha had remained on her mind. At thirty-eight, there was no way Marie could compete with the slender, blonde-haired, blue-eyed model with legs for miles…or any woman like her for that matter. Marie was softer in some areas, and her breasts weren’t as perky as they once were, not to mention what pregnancy does to a woman’s body—leaving her with wider hips and faded stretch marks. Marie had done her best to take care of herself, eating right and staying fit. The Latina had aged gracefully, like her mother and abuelita before her. Her tan skin, exotic features, and curvaceous body were envied by many, although Marie didn’t have a clue what others saw.
A couple of years after she had married Craig, he began controlling most of what she did, from the way Marie dressed, to the amount of alcohol she drank, to dancing and music…right down to her very thoughts. The years with him had been unkind; she’d lost herself and her fight. Craig took on the role of “head of the household” with a firm grasp. Her gringo star football player outplayed her and her wits. As a child, she was raised to be obedient, but somewhere along the way, she didn’t get the memo that she had a choice as an adult.