It was just another ordinary day at the laundry
mat until she started talking to him. |
Jack walked through the door into Jim's apartment and promptly raised his eyebrows. "I think you misunderstood when I said you needed to get some pussy, Jim." The cats were everywhere. A black one sat on the arm of the sofa, two more, orange and white, on the cushions. A fourth cat lounged on top the television, it's tail swishing across the glassy face of Barbara Walters. The last six were in a shallow box in the kitchen, a calico mother and her five kittens. Jim tossed his policeman's cap onto the counter then plucked a couple bottles from inside the fridge. "Cats aren't as tormenting as women and they are a lot cheaper." "But why so many? It's like a humane society in here." "I find strays and I feel sorry for them so I take them in," he answered between swigs. Jack threw back his Bud Light then slid his arm across his lips. "I know some strays on sixth street that can rub against your leg in a far more satisfactory way and they won't cost you more than you're willing to pay." The phone rang, but Jim checked his caller ID before answering. It was his ex-wife, Gloria. Jim let the phone ring until the answering machine clicked on. "I know you're home," Her voice was like a fork to a chalkboard. A very slow fork. She was drunk again. "Pick up the phone. Pick it up!" she waited a few seconds. "Damnit, Jim. This is the third time the check has been late. If it happens again I'm calling my lawyer." She must have slammed the phone down pretty hard. Jim was sure his own phone jumped at the click. Jim shooed the cats off the couch and pushed the shoes off his feet. "Cats don't get mad at the child support check being a day late. They don't take you on a guilt trip when you forget your grandmother's funeral. And cats certainly don't cheat on you." Jack joined his partner on the couch. "Women, can't live with them, can't shoot them and get away with it." "Amen to that!" Jim had the next day off work and he planned to spend every waking hour of it doing absolutely nothing. He was going to sleep until he woke up and not get dressed until bedtime. His plans were thwarted by the ringing of the phone. Since it caught him off guard, he forgot to check the caller ID. He answered and Gloria screeched back. "Where the hell is the check?" "Jesus, it's eight-thirty, Gloria, go back to bed." "Some of us have kids to take to school and jobs to go to in the morning." Jim sat up and rubbed his eyes. "I sent the check two days ago." "It should have been here yesterday. This is the third time, Jim. If it happens again I'm calling my lawyer." Another nuclear slam of the phone and Jim was awake for the rest of the day. He stumbled into the shower and back out again when he was clean. The search through the closet proved to be useless so he dove into the piles of clothes on the floor and unearthed something that didn't smell too bad. He would have to do laundry today. He hated doing laundry. That was the only thing he missed about Gloria. She loved doing laundry. She would search the house for dirty clothes just so she could run the washing machine. Jim couldn't figure out the obession. Just as Jim was sitting down to a plate of scrambled eggs, which he had eagerly prepared, there was a knock at the door. He checked the peep hole. It was his mother. "I know you're home, Jimmy, open up." Jim's mother's voice was even worse than Gloria's. He couldn't divorce this voice. It hacked through the door and practically turned the lock for him. She pushed her large frame past him and into the apartment, a bag of groceries in her arms. "What the hell are you doing with all these cats? It's like a humane society in here." She sat the grocery bag down on the table, hitting the edge of Jim's plate sending his breakfast to the floor. Jim hadn't moved from his spot by the door. He looked down at his eggs. The cats had begun to wander over to see what treasures had fallen from the sky. He had been looking forward to eating those eggs. "Mom, why are you here?" She turned. "A mother can't visit her son? Honestly, Jimmy, I don't know why you hate me so much. I raised you the best I could; never deprived you of anything you wanted and this is the thanks I get?" Jim opened his mouth. "I come all the way over here, braving the morning traffic," she sniffed, pulling a Kleenex from her housecoat pocket. "I'll just go, Jimmy. I'd hate to be a bother." She hauled her body to the door and started to walk out, but turned before leaving. "Just don't forget about my funeral, okay, Jimmy?" Jim shut the door. "Will no one ever let me forget that?!" Jim hated Madonna. He hated Madonna almost as much as he hated doing laundry. Wouldn't you know it as soon as he turned the water on his first load of clothes, the radio station announced a Madonnathon. Three hours of uninterrupted music by the "material girl". "Please, dear God, let my laundry be done before this commercial," he begged, pulling his hands down through his hair. Someone laughed. A female someone. "Do you hate Madonna too?" He didn't look up. He wasn't about to get into any kind of relationship with a women even if it was just a conversation at a laundry mat. He didn't have the energy. "Madonna should be tarred, feathered and burned at the stake." She laughed again. It was a rather nice laugh. He thought about looking over at the mystery woman just to see what she looked like, but put the idea in the garbage. Instead, he closed his eyes and leaned his head on the washing machine behind him. This one was in the spin cycle. It rattled his head gently, jiggling the inside of his ears. "I think I know why Gloria liked doing laundry so much now." Again, she laughed. Why did she have to laugh like that? "Who's Gloria? Your wife?" "Ex-wife." What the hell? Just one look couldn't do too much damage. Jim opened his eyes and turned his head. He almost did a double take. She was wearing a shirt identical to his, which was ridiculous. It was black with a neon green dinosaur over lemon yellow lettering that read "dinosaur cook out". Jim didn't even know where he got the shirt or if it was even his. She smiled. She just had to smile. "Nice shirt." "I just pulled whatever was clean out of the drawer." he laughed, again! "Not me. I wore this to bed." She grinned. Grinned! "Oh no, not "Like A Virgin". Please not this song!" Jim laughed. He couldn't help it. Whoever this woman was, she was amazing. Her laugh, her smile, those hazel eyes that drilled tiny holes in his pupils. Jim was sure she could see right into his mind. "I'm Kat," she said. "Actually, Kathrine, but I hate it so I make everyone call me "Kat". How about you?" Her hair was the exact color of a vanilla cake fresh from the oven. Jim could smell the peaches from her shampoo. Or maybe it was from her hand lotion. Maybe it was just her. He woke up from his trance when Kat waved her hand in front of his face. She was, of course, smiling. "Your name, sir?" Now she was teasing him? She couldn't be. Women only tease men when they think are attractive. Jim wasn't terrible to look at, not at all, but this woman could not be flirting with him. She looked all of eighteen. Way too young for Jim. No eighteen year old would want a thirty year old divorced guy. "I'm Jim. Jim Paige. James, but people call me Jim." This time she laughed so hard she started coughing. God, he sounded like an idiot. He sounded like a thirteen year old at a school dance. "I'm sorry, but it's not every day that I meet Jimmy Paige." Led Zepplin? This woman liked Led Zepplin. He asked her if she liked Led Zepplin. She couldn't. She just couldn't. She was too young. "Hell yeah I like Led Zepplin. One day I played Ramble On for two hours straight." Yes, Jim was now in love. A Kat picked up Jim today and took him to her apartment. She couldn't help it. She felt sorry for strays. |