Category Archives: One Word

Simon Remembers

Sunday Scribbling prompt #177: Adult and One Word Destination

“Simon – run along and play, I’ve work to do,”  Mum brushed a damp strand of hair back from her forehead.  There were good smells coming from the pot on the fire and she was sweeping yesterdays dust out the door.

“Yes mum.” he called as he jumped over her broom laughing and ran out into the sunshine.  He waved at his Da out in the garden as he ran past and headed to the woods.  It was a warm day and the cool shade was beckoning.

He followed the path he had worn through the trees to the creek and tossed stones at turtles sunning on a log as boys will do.  He watched as they left their log and dove into the cool water. He found a great crooked stick and carried it with him, whacking trees and plants as he walked along.  He ventured farther than he usually did, lost in daydreams.

The sound of singing came to his ears and he changed direction to get closer and see where it was coming from.  As he climbed through bushes he saw a place where the sunlight slipped between the leaves and bathed a small clearing in golden light.  A girl sat with a hat of many colors on her head.  He slipped closer, hidden by trees and his eyes widened with wonder.  He started to make the sign to ward off evil but something told him there was no evil here.

What he first thought to be a hat was butterflies of all kinds, covering her hair and back which was turned to him.  Her arms were held out from her sides and sparrows and larks and robins flew in and landed and flew off again, fearless and singing.  Her melody seemed at one with the birds and the light fell all around her like a warm blanket.

He stood very still and silent, just watching.  The girl looked to be about his age, with long brown hair and a flower chain around her neck.  She stopped singing and turned smiling. “Come out boy.” she said.

Simon stepped out from behind his tree and stood staring.  “What is your name?” she asked him.  “I am Simon Brennan.  Who are you?”

“I am called Nuala” she said.  “Come and sit with me, Simon ‘of sorrow’ and the butterflies will cheer you.”

Simon quietly walked over and sat beside her, amazed that the butterflies didn’t leave.  They seemed to sense that she was a safe haven.  “Are those apples, you have in your tunic?” she asked.

Simon had found an apple tree in his ramblings and picked a few and tied them up in his tunic to eat later.  He nodded and took them out.  Polishing one on his britches, he held it out to her.  “Thank you.” she smiled at him again and he felt like her smile was warmer than the sun.  It seemed to light her from the inside and he felt as safe as the butterflies.  They sat and shared apples and told each other many things.

“Are you Sidth?” Simon asked her.  He had heard stories of Faeries but had never really believed in them,.  At least til now.  He would have believed anything of her.  “No,” she laughed. “I’m as human as you, Simon.”

“Then how do you call the creatures to you and they have no fear?”  He asked.  She told him that you have to be as quiet in your heart and let the magic of the world come through.  He didn’t really understand but it didn’t matter.  He would listen as long as she would speak.

Simon and Nuala met most days for the rest of that summer.  It was the last summer they would truly be children as trouble and adulthood would soon come to them in the valley.  For these days, at least, sunshine, apples, and the beginnings of true love carried them through the season.

As Simon woke from the dream, he felt again the fullness of heart that had been his as a young man.  No matter the destination and the sadness that eventually came to pass, he would never regret those days for they had brought him Nuala and the love that had lasted throughout his life, from that forest all the way to the moon and back.

Shiny Dreams

One Word: Chrome

It was bright yellow, with a black convertible top.  Chrome wheels and chrome around the headlights.  She couldn’t wait to drive it off the lot.  She closed the door, put on her seatbelt and breathed in the new car smell.  She pulled out of the parking lot, adjusting the radio as the eighteen wheeler shifted to another gear.

Best Laid Plans

One Word: Coffin

She had made her list and checked it twice.  Everything was in place.  All that was needed was an opportunity, one more nail in the coffin and she would be rid of her forever.  Waiting was excruciating but had given her time to plan down to the last detail.  The sun was sinking and her expectations were rising.

One Word: Pastime

One Word and Fiction in 58

They sat on the dock , shoes off, feet in the water.  He would look away  and kick the water so some would splash.  She would yell, smack him and in a moment, do the same thing.  The sun was shining and they didn’t care.  They were just passing the time.  Everything was fine until the body floated by.

Gone But Not Forgotten

One Word: Cleanse

She dove under again and swam as far as she could before coming up for a gasp of breath.  She had been swimming for hours, hoping the chlorine would cleanse her body.  Maybe exhaustion would cleanse her soul, but she doubted it.  He was gone but  memories he left behind wouldn’t leave town as quickly as he did.

One Word Gallery Into 58

One Word: Gallery squeezed into a Fiction in 58

He glanced right and left at the gallery walls as he worked his way up to the present.  A first visit to the family home of his fiance and he was lost.  Each painting showed a different groom but the brides looked alarmingly like his, same dress, same earrings.  How was he going to get out of this?

Simon Tells A Tale

Totally Optional Prompts offered color for inspiration and it had been sitting in the back of my mind for a couple of days and Sunday Scribblings prompt is New in honor of Laini who is anxiously awaiting the birth of her baby. One Word Prompt: Geese

Simon was slowly regaining his health.  Word had spread in the valley that he had returned and soon folks would “pass by” to get a glimpse.  As he got stronger he would take his staff and wander around his house in the afternoon sun.  He would rest when he was tired and as he sat on a bench in front of his house the children came and sat around him and begged for stories.

“Shh” he said with his finger to his lips and a twinkle in his eyes.  “If you get still I will tell you how our valley came to be so beautiful”.  The children scooted up closer and waited expectantly.

Once a beautiful lady lived in a house at the end of the lane.  She had magic that caused animals to be friendly and she loved this valley more than anything.  One day, he began…

“Tsk Tsk, this will never do.” she said as she stepped out on the porch.  The vista before her was all black and white and gun metal gray.  She picked up her box of supplies and walked into the scene.  On one side of her walked a lion and on the other a lamb.

She reached into the box and drew out her favorite brushes and began to paint.  She took blue and white and mixed the perfect shade of sky and  using wide strokes, applied light and air and wispy swirls of cloud. She took a tiny detail brush and with just a few flicks, birds wheeled and twirled.  “That’s better.” she thought.  Fine lines in the distance and suddenly geese flew in formation. The lion swished his tail and she nodded and smiled, “you’re right, we need to plan for morning and night.” and she added bright orange and deep rose in the west for the sunset to find and midnight blue so the night would have a place to hang the moon and stars. Lavender and pink blended in the east to invite the sun to rise.

The lamb nudged her with it’s nose and she nodded in agreement. She dipped her fan brush in the forest green and painted in towering pines, dabbing with black and gold for shadow and light, little brown pine cones to finish them off.  Now for some oaks and elms.  Bushes and shrubs and grasses to cover the earth and give the smaller animals something to nibble on.  She looked around at her work and was happy.

She took browns and golds and reds and gave the dreary houses clothing that warmed them and made yellow light to spill out of windows with blue curtains waving in the breeze.

“That’s so much better.” she told the lion and  lamb.  One last thing to be done.  She took her pen and drew loving and peaceful words over the first house and an angry argument ended.  Lullaby lyrics written into the next house and a fussy babe slept.  A poem from the street and the an artist sitting at his desk began to write.

She turned and as she wandered back to her home she sang softly and tree branches sighed in the wind, birds sang, and insects spoke of the changing seasons.  Her supply box was lighter and so was her step.  She reached her porch and set the box down and settled into her rocking chair.  Her friends curled on the porch at her feet, sleeping peacefully.  The gray was still there, but love had painted over it with beauty and the world was new with magic.

She grew sleepy and as she dozed, the shadows grew longer and night fell.  The darkness was so jealous of the colors she brought that it locked her in the moon and that’s where she lives to this day.

The children all clapped and didn’t notice the sadness in Simon’s eyes when he finished the tale.  “Go home children, your mothers will be calling you for supper.” he told them and stiffly got to his feet.  The children wandered home calling out goodbyes as they went.  They would look out their windows in wonder that night.  They would dream of a beautiful woman looking down on them smiling over her valley.

One Word: Icy

Running behind on One Word – prompt: icy

Yeah we bought the nice house in the burbs.  Thought it would be a great place to raise the kids, PTA, soccer, mini-van.  the whole enchilada.  Then we found the graveyard back behind the house.  Now my days are spent slopping around in this old ratty robe trying to stay awake, the result of sleepless nights as the icy hands of backyard ghosts reach out to me. I think I will introduce them to our realtor..

She’s Come Undone

Fiction In 58 and One Word prompt: collapse

She built her case, brick by evidentiary brick, documented in triplicate, what was once called iron-clad.  He searched for loopholes and shimmied in and out as he pleased.  She had it wrapped up, tied up in a bow, buttoned down.  He was free and easy, breezing through the front door and out the back when it all collapsed.

It’s Not The Heat, It’s The Humidity

One Word prompt: humid and Fiction in 58.  I don’t have the link to the Fiction in 58 site.

She scrubbed the porch with water and an old broom.  Sweat made her shirt stick to her. He went fishing  with his idiot buddies using grocery money for beer.  “I hope he brings home fish or falls overboard.”  She thought.  He had promised her daddy he would take care of her. This was not what her daddy meant.

One Word Changes :Planet

One word prompt: planet

Okay – I started this and wanted to keep going past the minute time that the website gives you.  Since I’m queen of this little corner of the blogosphere, I decreed that I could have as much time as I wanted.  🙂

She leaned on her cane and slowly followed the signs that said disembark.  The hall wasn’t that long.  Her kids were all grown and had their own families.  Her husband had passed away years ago. There was no one to actually miss her. The one requirement was that she would have to remain here.  The process would revert if she went back to earth.  She said her goodbyes and headed off planet.  She had sold her house and stocks and bought the whole package.  She was sixty five but soon she would be young again.  The white clad attendant at the end of the hall directed her to the Fountain Of Youth salon.  The brochure said there would be no pain and she was more than ready.

She was directed to a changing room where she put on the tissue paper robe.  When she came out the table was ready.  They helped her up and she laid down.  The pillow was fluffed, the lights lowered, and her favorite music was playing softly. Some sort of candle or incense was burning and it smelled of cinnamon. She closed her eyes and felt all the old aches and pains that age and arthritis had given her and thought about all it had taken from her.

That was all about to change. She would wake up healthy, with shiny hair and flawless skin.  Young and better than she had been when she actually was twenty. No more glasses, her eyesight would be clear and she would be able to wear heels and a bathing suit and she would take better care of everything this time around. She would have, well, her whole life in front of her.  A do-over, the kids would call it.

She slowly came to consciousness.  She stretched but nothing felt the same.  Her legs felt bigger.  Her shoulders too.  Her hair was short?  What was going on?  She felt a little panicky.  She started to sit up as she opened her eyes.  A smiling attendant reassured her that she was alright.  There had been a slight glitch in the program though.  She was strong and healthy – nothing to worry about there.  “How did she feel about the name Mark instead of Mary?” He asked.

And The Correct Answer Is?

One Word Respond

You ask me if I love you.  How am I supposed to respond?  You show up after two years, no explanation, no apology, just “hey babe, can I sleep on your couch?” You think that curly brown hair, a bad little boy smile, and those washboard abs, well can get you whatever you want. Next thing I know I’m waking up and your toothbrush is hanging in my bathroom, and your stupid favorite brand of coffee is on my counter.  What about next week?  What about a job?

~~~~

How long should it take them to respond?  He had been lying here for an hour.  There should be pain – when he looked out of the corner of his eye he could see his ankle.  That ain’t supposed to happen.  He had managed to hit nine-one-one on his cell before he blacked out.  Must of dropped the phone cuz when he came to he was cold but numb and no idea where the phone went.  Guess he shouldn’t have laughed at her.

~~~~~

She straightened her jacket and checked her teeth in the mirror. The insurance policy application had been simple to forge.  He thought he had it all going on and he would have used her and then taken off again.  She would have been sitting there in that beige second floor studio apartment, no hope of ever getting out.  He would have moved on to someone else and she would have had to start all over again.  She had given him a chance.  He should have thought of a better way to respond.  He should have taken her seriously.

The Quest

I’m having a twitchy, can’t think of anything, don’t like it if I do week.  This is for a pile of prompts including One Word Shallow, Sunday Scribbling, Where in the world, Carry On Tuesday, and Three Word Wednesday.

Every inch of the back wall in the little room was tiled.  Thousands upon thousands of little bits of multicolored pieces of glass and pottery.  A mountain of rainbow chaos where someone had reached in, swirled their hand about, and caused a fantasy of ethereal beauty.  There was no way this was done by human, it had to be fae and even so over a long period of time.  There was power in it and a history before time was counted.  How I had even managed to get to this room had to be accidental and now that I was here I wanted to back away before they became aware that I had seen it.  It would not be something they would want me to know about.  I wanted to back away, but couldn’t.  The magic in the color held me spellbound and I felt as though I were falling into it.

A jerk on my arm brought me back to my senses.  I shook my head and turned to see Fin pulling me backwards shading his eyes.. “Come on Nissa, don’t look!”  I pulled my self away with no small effort, back into the darkness outside the doorway.  “What was that?” I asked Fin.

“I don’t know but as soon as you stepped inside I could almost feel a hum in the air.  Made the hair on the back of my neck stand up!  There is strong magic in there.”  He said.

The picture was still in my mind though many details were missing. I could still feel it’s powerful hold, though it weakened when out of view. It was too much to take in all at once.  The flowers were colors not seen in nature and words were swirled through the design “Love is a flower that grows in color” in purple and gold.   When I stepped inside it seemed at though lights bounced from a place far above and reflected the mosaic in a shallow pool in front of the wall. Even now I was drawn to it.

“Nissa, you have to control yourself.”  Fin said.

“Don’t patronize me.  I’m in control and you know it.  I feel the pull but I know it’s the magic.”  I pulled away from him, rubbing my arm where he had gripped it.  He was tall and wiry with dark red hair and he forgot how strong he was sometimes.  I was glad in this instance but I’m damned if I would let him know.  He grinned at me as if he read my mind which he nearly could.  “Lets find a safer place to sit and see if we can figure out where this is on the map.”

Some of the corridors in the caverns were in complete darkness and others were dimly lit from skylights.  There was a main room off to the left that we had traveled through to get here that contained illuminats left by mages.  Illuminats were spelled rocks that held light from the sun for years.  At least I hoped it was years. I had no desire to run into a mage.  We sat down on a rock and Fin pulled the map out of his pack.  “That room doesn’t show up anywhere on the map!” He said.

“Well then where in the world were we?”

“I don’t know” Fin said, “But it must be important to have so much magic.  The Fae have protected it so well that it doesn’t show up on the map.  I bet if anyone has found it before, their bones are in that pool at the base.”

“That’s it!”  The artifact is in that pool!” I was sure that was the answer.  We had been searching for so long.  “Now we just have to figure out how to get to it!”

“Is that all?  Nissa, if we go back in that room we might never leave it!”  Fin said.

“You know  the Fae like riddles and puzzles!  We just have to unravel this.  Simon sent us on this quest for a reason.  Think back to his exact words.  Maybe there was a clue in them somewhere.” I told him.

“He said for us to stick together no matter what.” Fin remembered.  “and to not be afraid of darkness, it is just a mirror of the light, then there was something else.”

“Something about using what we have to get what we need. So lets take stock.  We have rope in your pack.  What if we tie it outside the door to anchor us.  We can tear blindfolds. If we can’t see the mosaic it won’t have as much power.”  I said.

“It’s got to work.  It fits.  You hold me and I will go to the pool.”

“Fin, I’ve already been close to the wall – you haven’t been under it’s spell and besides, you are stronger.  I will need you to pull me out.”  I knew he was going to argue but he also would have to admit that my way made the most sense.

We tore strips of cloth for blindfolds and some more to bind our wrists together in case I tried to let go.  Fin tied one end of the rope to an outcropping of stone outside the door.  He wound some of it around his waist, giving himself slack.  We tied the blindfolds on, leaving them down til we were ready.  Fin tied his wrist to mine and I felt a tingle of fear.  What if I ended up nothing but bones at the bottom of the pool?  Simon wouldn’t have sent us here if it wasn’t important.  Whatever was at the bottom of that pool could help everyone in our valley so we would get it for Simon!

Fin grinned at me, fearless. “Ready?”

I smiled back at him. “Let’s go.”

We pulled the blindfolds down and entered the doorway.  We moved slowly with our eyes covered.  I tried to remember what the floor of this cavern room was like but I had been so mesmerized by the tiled wall that I didn’t pay it any attention.

“Are you okay Nissa?”  Fin called to me.

“I’m fine.  Just easing forward.  There is something on the ground here. I’m going to pick it up.”

I reached down and picked up a piece of glass about the size of my hand.  “ouch!”  I cried. I had cut my hand.  “It’s okay Fin, I just cut myself a little on a piece of glass.”  I moved forward some more.  My toe edged ahead and felt the beginning of the pool.  “I’m going to wade in slowly.” I told Fin.

“Just take it easy, I’ve got you.” He said.  “Just go slow!”

I was a little nervous walking in to the water.  What if there was a trap or a deep hole?  I just had to trust that Fin would get me out.  “I don’t feel anything, Fin.  I’ve gone all the way across and there’s nothing!”  Now what?  We had to be right.  Maybe we were doing things wrong.

“I’m going to take off the blindfold, Fin.” I told him.  I was already pulling it down, I knew he would say no but I couldn’t stand coming this far and then leaving and maybe what we needed was right there – I just couldn’t see it.

Fin was yelling at me to leave it on.  “It’s already off Fin – just make sure that you get me out of here!”  I felt his grip on my wrist binding tighten as he braced and I felt my eyes being pulled to the wall.  Instead I looked at the piece of glass in my hand.  It was a piece of mirror and now there was blood all over it from my cut.  Without thinking, I bent to wash it and as I got close to the surface of the water, the mirror picked up the light from the opening somewhere above and was bent and flashing from a million tiny tile surfaces reflecting the light from the mirror.  It lit up the pool and I could see something at the bottom.  It was a stone but not like any I had ever seen.  I picked it up and Fin started yelling.  “I’m all right!”  I said. “I’ve found something and as long as I only look at the wall’s reflection it has no power.  As I picked up the stone, a drop of blood from my cut fell on it and it began to glow and pulse.  I nearly dropped it.  I was warm as though alive.  “Hurry Fin!  Let’s go.  We’ve got to get back to Simon!”

Outside the room we removed rope and blindfolds and wrapped the stone and put it inside Fin’s pack.  We stared at each other for a moment and then headed back the way we came, map in hand.  Simon would be waiting for us.  As we crossed the great room, the room we had just left, lit up as daylight and then the door disappeared as though it had never been.

Drive, One Word At A Time

OneWord :  Drive

“Shut up and drive!”  I said as I got in and slammed the passenger door.  I didn’t want to talk. I didn’t want to think.  I knew if I didn’t get out right then I was going to strangle her with my bare hands.I wanted to hit him, hit something, hit it as hard as I could and then hit it again.  I just sat there as the car flew down the road.  Breathe.  It will pass.

****

You don’t have what it takes they said.  They said it takes drive and stamina.  You have to want it more than you have ever wanted anything, they said.  They said you have to want it more than having your own life, more than your family, more than chocolate cheesecake.  That’s when they lost me.

****

The drive was the best part.  The road wound in and out of trees with peeks at the ocean, then around a curve and there it is spread out before you like some kind of Neptune’s feast all sunlight glitter and windy waves.  Makes you want to point the car straight out, gas it and just keep going, skipping across the top of the water.

****

Give Me Wings

One Word Prompt: Gravity

http://www.flickr.com/photos/frielp/

The only thing that holds me down sometimes is gravity.  I hate it.  I wish I could just float up with the clouds, above all the storms and the dark winds that blow.  No feet in the muck for me – give me wings.

Picture courtesy of http://www.flickr.com/photos/frielp/

The Pause

One Word Prompt: Pause

I wrote, paused, and wrote some more

I kept playing the tape over and over again, hitting pause when it got to the part where he proposed to by best friend.  I would hit pause and stare trying to convince my eyes that they were not seeing what they were seeing but no matter what direction I tried to come at it from the truth remained.

~~~~

There it was, the pause.  Always the pause.  He would start to say I love you and she would hold her breath to listen more carefully for it.  It.  The pause. He couldn’t say the words without hesitating.  That’s how she caught him in the lie.

~~~~

Breathe.  Pause.  This is the good part.  This is the meat of the story.  Wait for it – it will come around just as surely as the music comes around on the guitar just before the singer begins. Just as surely as the leaves burst out on the branches after the frost has ended.

~~~~

She stood very still.  The wolf paused his circling and sank down in front of her.  He smiled with the eyes of , oh it can’t be.   But she knows in her heart that it is.  How can she be friends with someone who changes to this – this – thing?  And she knows in her heart that she loves him no matter what.

~~~~

This heart will beat
blood will move to hands and feet
breath will be drawn in and out
and in between each beat is a pause
the moment when the universe stops
waiting to see if life will continue
for another beat
til the next pause

~~~~

pulsing changing dancing
alive for the moment
unable to think beyond today
singing the eternal song
enabled by  hope

~~~~

Two coins

Sunday Scribbling prompt: plans, Carry On Tuesday #10, and One Word: Coins

Fixed some glaring typos thanks to hubby editing.  Apologies to all.

The Day

She had taken the clothes to Goodwill,  the furniture was sold, what little anyone would have.  The flowered upholstery on the old rocker he sat in everyday was worn clean through and the footstool had been nailed back together so many times it was more nails than wood. His side table was covered with cigarette scars and water marks from his beer bottles. She had pulled the old drapes down and threw them in the trash.  They were so full of dry rot that they came down in pieces with her coughing and sneezing. He had gotten so mean the last years, no one would come over to the house and he stopped caring what anything looked like, or smelled like for that matter.  Most of what was left when he passed was hauled off to the dump and the house would be sold for taxes.

She just couldn’t bear for folks to see how he lived so she did her best to clean out.  She wiped down the shelves in the living room and kitchen, scrubbed the bathroom, and was making one last walk through before she gathered up her cleaning stuff and walked home.  She couldn’t afford the bus and as tired as she was, she didn’t want to try to sleep on the floor here with the ghosts and grime of the past.  Mama had been gone for years and he had just grown more bitter with time.

As she walked through the bedroom to the front of the house she spied a box on the closet shelf.  “Wonder how I missed that?” She thought.  She set her bucket and rags down and reached up to pull it down.  It was an old boot box, crumbling and faded.  She could just make out the lettering and the picture of steel toe work boots.  She sat down on the floor with it and pulled off the top.  Inside was a treasure.  Mama’s bible and a few pictures, an old lace trimmed hankie that Mama had embroidered, and a little red plastic coin purse – the kind you squeeze to open.  Inside were two coins.  They were odd looking with markings she couldn’t read.  She put them back in the purse and covered the box and set off towards home, hugging the box to her chest.

She trudged up the stairs, unlocked the door of her apartment and flipped on the light switch.  There wasn’t much to see and it needed painting but it was as clean as she could get it and it was hers as long as she kept the waitress job at the diner. It paid the rent and she got a free meal.  Tips bought a few little necessities.  It kept her off the streets and out of the shelter anyway. She put up her cleaning supplies and opened up the box.

She dug out the nicest dish towel she had and smoothed it out on the little box she used for a table.  She laid the bible gently on it.  She folded the hankie and placed it inside the cover where her Mama had signed her name and the date she had been given the bible.  It had her and daddy’s wedding date and the date she was born.  Another lifetime ago.  She closed the cover.  She took the pictures out of the box.  There were her parents, young and smiling.  Another showed her mother holding her when she was born, smiling and proud.  She slid them inside the back cover of the bible. She put the little coin purse inside her tote bag and set the box on the counter.  Stifling a yawn, she headed to the shower and got ready for bed.  She was tired and slept almost as soon as her head hit the pillow.

Day Two

He walked purposefully down the street glancing neither right nor left.  He knew exactly where he was going.  He carried his leather briefcase close to his side and held himself with the dignity of a British royal, even though he was actually a glorified messenger boy.  He turned at her apartment and climbed the steps, debating on whether he should use his handkerchief to knock on the door, this place was back alley seedy and not to his liking at all.  He sighed and raised his hand and rapped on the peeling wooden door.

She washed her breakfast dishes and as she was putting them away there was a loud knock on the door.  She peeped through the little hole and didn’t recognize the man outside.  He definitely wasn’t from around here.  She cracked open the door, peering from behind the chain and timidly said “Yes?”  The gentleman removed his hat and said “Miss Lydia Rose?”

“Yes, that’s me.  But who are you?” She asked.

He passed a business card through the narrow opening.  “Here is my card.  I represent a firm of solicitors in London.”

“England?” She asked.  “You must have the wrong person, Mr. uh, Mr. Brown!  I haven’t done anything wrong!”

“Yes Miss.  That is correct.  My employers wish for me to speak to you about some coins.  If I may please come inside?  I feel a bit uncomfortable discussing this through the door.”  He replied.

She fumbled with the chain, finally removing it and held the door open for him.  “I’m sorry.  I don’t get many visitors.  Please come in.” She said.

“If I may?” He said pointing to the table and chairs.

“Sure” She said.

He placed his briefcase gingerly on the table, flipped it open and took out a stack of papers. He set the papers down and reached into his inside jacket pocket and took out his glasses and put them on.

“Miss Rose, just to clarify, you are the daughter of one recently deceased, Johnny Rose?” He asked her.

“Yes I am, but I don’t understand how that’s any of your business.” She replied.
He raised an eyebrow at that.  Maybe she wasn’t as much of a pushover as they thought.  “There is the matter of Mr. Rose’ estate and we have to verify your identity before we can release it to you” He told her.

“Estate?  My dad?  That’s a laugh.  If this is some kind of a joke Mr. Brown, it isn’t funny.  You need to go back and tell your bosses that they have made some kind of mistake.  The have the wrong Johnny Rose!  My dad didn’t have anything.”  Politeness was wearing thin.  He had a look on his face like he had eaten something sour and she had the feeling that he thought that just because she was poor she must be stupid too.  She had noticed the way he looked around when he walked.  Like he was afraid to touch anything in case he caught poverty like you caught a disease.  She worked and she paid her own way.  She might not have much but she stood on her own two feet and she was proud of it.

“Miss Rose, this is not a joke and I assure you that I wouldn’t come here without a good reason.  If you allow me to explain I think I can prove my story.”  He said.

“Well, then let’s sit down.  Sounds like this will be a long tale.”  She said, pulling out a chair.  He frowned, looking at the other chair and then shrugged and sat down.  “Your mother was Glory Rose, maiden name Jackson?”  He wasn’t really asking her, but she nodded anyway.  “She came to possess two coins.  My employers have been hired by a man who wishes to remain anonymous.  It is his desire to purchase those coins.  If you are able to produce the coins there will be a very generous compensation.  We are assuming that you now have the coins?”

“So estate is not exactly correct. How does this man know my mother had some coins and why are they so important to him?”  Lydia decided she might need to learn a little more before she answered any more questions.

“The coins belonged to his father many years ago.  Your grandmother was working as a housekeeper for his family and she and this man fell in love.  His parents did not approve of course, and sent her away.  He, being young and foolish,  gave her the coins before she left.  He told her to sell them to help her get a start somewhere and he would come for her when he could.” He explained.

“What do you mean ‘his parents did not approve, of course’, Mr. Brown?”  She was getting more than a little tired of this stuffy little man in a too tight suit, who obviously looked down, not only on her, but everyone related to her.

“I don’t mean to be rude, Miss Rose.” He said.

“Well you are, Mr. Brown.  I’m not sure we need to go on with this conversation!”

“Oh. Goodness. I am sorry.  Please let me finish. I think you will be very glad that you did.” He said.  He used his handkerchief to wife a little sweat from his shiny red forehead. It occurred to her that his employers might not be too thrilled if she threw him out and refused to talk to him anymore.  She tucked that knowledge away for future use.  It was always good to know where you stood and what you might be able to use.

“I take it mister young and in love rich boy, never went looking for my grandmother.”  She said.

“On the contrary.  He searched but was never able to find her.  It has taken me years to locate her and by the time I found her, she had passed away.  In her belongings was a letter that she never mailed to him. In it she told him that she kept the coins to remember him  and that she ended up with so much more. She had a child.  That child was your mother, Miss Rose.” He finished triumphantly.

“How did your ‘employers’ end up with a letter that my dead grandmother wrote?” She wanted to know.

“By the time your grandmother passed, your mother was married to Mr. Rose and as I understand it, the two of them didn’t get along.  Your grandmother had been dead and buried for several months before your mother found out.  Notices were sent but she never responded.  We went to her house and there was a box of her things in the garage that the new owners were more than glad for us to take off their hands.  The letter was in that box.  She also wrote that she had given those coins to your mother and told her that they would lead to her father’s family someday.”  He told Lydia.

Lydia stood up and walked around the kitchen, pretending to wipe the counter which was already spotless.  Trying to give herself a little time.  She had known her dad had a mean streak but not that he would have been so cruel to keep her grandmother’s death from her mother.  Even as she thought it she new that it was true.  He was a strange and insecure man.  He didn’t like her mother to go anywhere without him.  It must have been like a prison all those years but she wasn’t the type to get a divorce.  She stuck it out until it killed her.  Did she know about the coins?  She must have known they meant something or they wouldn’t have been in the box with the bible.  It’s a miracle that her dad didn’t find them.

“I’d like to see a little more proof that you are who you say you are, Mr. Brown.  She said.

“Certainly” He said “He pulled out a sheaf of papers with the letterhead to a firm of Solicitors in London.  The address matched the one on Mr. Brown’s business card. “Here is a photocopy of the letter your grandmother wrote to your mother.”  He handed her another piece of paper.  He had a lot of paper.  She took the copy and read through the letter.  She felt the pressure of tears but was determined not to cry in front of this stranger.  “How much are these people willing to pay for this little keepsake my mother left me?” She asked him.

Well, well, he thought.  Now we are getting down to it.  He could almost taste the nice commission he was going to get if he could just bring this to a close.  “You will be very well compensated Miss Rose.  We are prepared to pay you a fee of ten thousand dollars up front and then another ninety thousand when we have the coins in our possession.” He looked smug as he said this and she found he was really starting to get on her nerves.

“You have that much money on you now?  In this neighborhood?” She asked.  “I’d like to see that!”

All I have to do now is reel the fish in, he thought.  He reached for his briefcase again and dialed a combination that opened a bottom compartment.  There were stacks of cash, all neatly bundled.

She walked around the kitchen, shocked at what she had seen.  She had never in her life seen that much money.  “So what do you get out of this?” She asked.

“Well I get a small commission, of course.  For my trouble you know.  I’ve had to do a lot of research to track you down Miss Rose!”  He was smiling now, certain that his money was as good as in his hands.

Lydia leaned up against the counter and took a deep breath.  When she turned around, the lid was off the box and there was a gun in her hand.  Yes, the box held a treasure.  A wonderful treasure.  Mr. Brown’s eyes were wide and he was stuttering and spluttering and his fancy handkerchief wasn’t going to help him now.  “What are you doing?” He asked.

“Mr. Brown, I’ve decided to accept the offer from your employers but I have a different plan that does not include you.” She told him. “I guess you thought you were going to be my hero today.  I think I’ll be my own hero thank you!” She squeezed the trigger.

She went to her closet and put on her best dress and got out her coat that she saved for church.  She put the bible and pictures in her tote bag along with the bundles of money.  She took the papers she would need to identify herself to the solicitors.  Everything that had to do with him she put back in his briefcase along with the gun.  She would make a little stop at the incinerator on her way out.  She gave a little wave in his direction.  “Sorry to leave you like this Mr. Brown, but I’m sure you would understand.  We don’t want to keep your employers waiting any longer!”

She carefully locked the door on her way out.  The incinerator door was almost too small for her bundle of garbage, but she managed to shove it through the hole.  No one would look for her.  She paid cash for her rent and no one here asked questions or bothered to get to know their neighbors.  They were all too deep into their own misery to notice and by the time the smell from her apartment attracted attention, she would be long gone.  She did a little turn and dance step as she moved down the sidewalk toward the bus stop.

Lydia was lost in dreams of future comforts.  Clothes that fit, plenty to eat, no more crappy waitress jobs!  She never saw the car that came barreling down the sidewalk behind her.  She was dead on impact and hit so hard that it knocked her shoes one direction and her tote bag the other.  There was paper and money all over the sidewalk.  Deserted just moments ago, now there were people pouring out of doors grabbing up cash and stuffing it in their pockets.  The local cop shop would have a busy night as the liquor flowed and the unaccustomed windfall brought disagreements.  No one noticed the little man in the coat with the bullet hole in it as he walked by and scooped up the little change purse.

His chest would be sore for weeks, but the vest had done it’s job.  He had told them he could get the coins for fifty thousand and forty was already in a special account.  Ten thousand wasn’t too much to pay for the coins and no loose ends.  The car driver had medical bills that would be taken care of by the life insurance policy that he had taken out on Lydia a year ago.  He hated losing his favorite briefcase.  He strolled down the sidewalk whistling.  The Widow’s Mites, once delivered to his employers, would find their way into a very private collection and he would get his next assignment.

One Word : Welcoming

One Word prompt: welcoming

The hose attached to his helmet waved in a welcoming manner as the last of his air leaked out along with his life.  Hope they were able to manage re-entry without him because he and his wrench were floating in freefall. The view would be magnificent if his dead eyes could see like they didn’t see the sharp metal tile that found a home in the line that was his life, his oxygen, his umbilical cord, linking him to home.