Sunday, June 20, 2010

Bathroom Monologue: She’ll Come Around

She fell in the puddle in front of his house, and he fell in love. He got his Pa and they helped her dry off. While her folks came, they played with his anthill.

The next day, she said ‘Hello’ passing by him in the hall. She’d never done it before. He beamed all the way through Algebra.

A week later, she’d forgotten he existed. His brothers elbowed him to do something about it. Go ask her out. Go ask if she’s started that ant collection. Go pretend to bump into her.

He did none of it. “She’ll come around,” he said.

She did great in Math, so he tried hard and made it into Advanced Placement with her. He’d watch her from the other side of the room and struggle to figure out the number of degrees in a pentagon. She never offered to collaborate when they assigned group work.

“She’ll come around,” he said.

She liked puppies, it seemed. She got a summer job at the Hearth Animal Shelter, the one with the uncomfortable location across from a cemetery. He lit right up and got a job as the assistant groundskeeper. She never came over to chat.

“She’ll come around,” he said.

She left town for college. He went to the bar when he knew her sisters were there, to overhear things about her. She switched from Mathematics to Education. She was a teacher. She got her own house. She got tenure. She got cancer. She beat cancer. She still got letters from that first year of kids she’d taught. She was thinking of writing a book.

In time, she passed. Her remains were shipped back to the town where she’d grown up. There was a big service with her sisters and cousins. A lot of crying and nice stories. He stayed out of the way, listening and offering the occasional box of tissues.

After the service, he came up and filled in the grave. When he finished, he patted the dirt with his shovel and said, “I knew you’d come around.”

11 comments:

  1. So sad all the way through, but I couldn't help but laugh at the end. I hope that's OK.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's sad all the time we waste not taking a chance or not speaking up.
    I, to,laughed at the end.

    Maribeth
    Giggles and Guns

    ReplyDelete
  3. Love it. Great story, love the style. Grabbed me from the start. Made me smile sadly at the end.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The tiny decisions we make in our teens that haunt the stories of our lives. Great flash, John. And I liked how your ending wasn't regret, but more spooky.

    ReplyDelete
  5. That's nasty, Mr Wiswell, I love it.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Cool character. I could read something a lot longer about him, weird and twisted as he is.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I laughed at the end too. Of course, if she came to him alive, he may not have known what to do with her.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Killer piece... so sad all the way through and that ending... twisted, John...

    ReplyDelete
  9. Major thanks to whoever Stumbled this story yesterday. You may have doubled my traffic for the day. By some snafu on Stumbleupon's part I can't view who actually did it, so I have to thank an anonymous soul for today. Please drop me a line (or a link) if you return.

    It's funny how many people took the end as funny. It was creepy to me as I wrote it. Perhaps I have a persona at this point where readers think it might be a joke? Regardless I'm happy to have made people laugh, especially in the face of sadness.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Sad but touching in a way. He's a coward though and a jerk. Oh my, you gave me contradictory feelings about this guy. I think it's a great achievement! heh

    I was kind of hoping she'd rise from the grave because of your #ZombieLuv tag. Will you enter the contest? :)

    Btw, can't count this one as entry, because the story must be a romance between two zombies. This element can't be abstract. Sorry?

    ReplyDelete
  11. What a sad, twisted little tale. I how her life went by in a list and I thought the end was a little disturbing myself. Not in a bad way, but you didn't get a laugh from me.

    ReplyDelete

Counter est. March 2, 2008