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by Norni Author IconMail Icon
Rated: E · Short Story · Women's · #1707056
A topical short story
The removal people have arrived.  I rush to get to the door before Leo has a chance to moan at them for the breakages he’s convinced we’re going to have.  Typical Leo. Always worrying about what might happen and missing what’s going on right under his nose.  It doesn’t take long to organise our possessions into two groups; those we’re taking to our new place and the rest that’s going into storage.  The middle-aged supervisor gives my shoulder a sympathetic squeeze when we finish our short tour through the house.  He instructs his two assistants according to my list and as they pass by me with the hall mirror I shudder.  My dark curly hair has lost its bounce and sits forlornly around my head, its colour reflected in the craters under eyes more gray than their usual blue. My mouth droops at the corners as if it has forgotten how to smile and I quickly turn away before I get too full of self-pity.



I grab my handbag and go outside to sit in the car until Leo has gone through the house and his precious shed again.  I’m agitated as I wait.  I’d really like to be gone now.  Curtains twitch across the road and I resist the impulse to lean on the car horn.  Finally, I see Leo appear. He’s pulling weeds from the path at the side of the house, as if it matters. His shoulders are drooping and he seems smaller - thinner for sure but shorter too. In the spirit of the new life we’re going to, he’s wearing a lumberjack shirt hanging loose over jeans. It doesn’t quite work because his blonde hair is too neat and tidy for the effect to be convincing.



Tears, those tears that never seem far away recently rush to my eyes and I swallow with the effort of not allowing them to fall.  I pretend to look for something on the back seat so that I can surreptitiously wipe my eyes and blow my nose.  I can’t manage a smile as he climbs into the car but at least I’m not crying.



Leo sits with his hands on the wheel - staring straight ahead until the curtains twitch again and he takes a deep breath. He turns the ignition key and we pull quickly away from the house we’ve called home for the past seven years. 



“Don’t mention the “R” word” my ten- year-old nephew had begged me the day I told my sister we were going to lose our house.  Jason thought the Recession with a capital R was a plan to curtail his enjoyment.  He wasn’t all wrong either.  Jill confided that she did occasionally use the Recession as an excuse not to buy him some useless fad that he swore he couldn’t live without but had forgotten within a week.



In the real world though, the Recession is another way to spell despair for an awful lot of people.  Leo and Betty Berkley included.  We’d been made redundant within six weeks of each other and it was only three months when we missed a mortgage repayment.



During the past week as we’d packed and labelled I sometimes found it hard to believe that only one year ago we’d been talking about where we’d go on holiday.  How quickly life can change.  This time next week we’ll be housekeeper and handyman on a farm three hundred miles away.



As Leo indicates to leave our street, I feel deep within myself a tiny bud of something that could be excitement.  Yes, everything changes.  Good times change to bad and bad times change to good.  Our lives had become quite boring and we hadn’t had the will to do anything about it.  Having this momentous change forced upon ensured we had no choice other than to make changes.



I look over to Leo and he glances quickly at me.



“Are you ok Bets?”



I lay a hand on his knee and say “I think I am.  I think we will be”.



Leo takes a hand off the steering wheel to cover mine and he squeezes it tightly.



“That’s all I need” he says and I can hear the truth of that in his voice and see it in his suddenly squarer shoulders.  I lean over to him and for a few moments as he puts his arm around my shoulders it’s as if we’re teenagers again.  A blast of a hydraulic horn nearly puts us into the ditch and we look sheepishly at the burly driver who’s shaking his head at us in mock despair.  I wave at him and he grins and I feel the corners of my mouth lift and a giggle forms in my throat.



I settle back in my seat and gaze out the window as the suburban streets give way to urban sprawl. As they disappear and cornfields and summer meadows begin to appear I know that even though this situation was never what we wanted maybe it’s going to turn out to be what we needed.  Only time will tell but at least we still have time.  The R word didn’t take that away from us7`

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