Thursday, November 8, 2018

Post #2

Donna accepted the call.


“Hey mama!”


Nina’s voice was a welcome sound.


“Hi honey. How’d your classes go this week? You feeling all better?”


Nina had come home for the long weekend last week because, supposedly, she’d been
feeling under the weather. But Donna could tell that she’d been more homesick than anything
else. And about ready for a break from her roommate.


She listened to Nina talk for a while. She went on about her Physics class and all that the
concepts that she had to learn before the “midterms.” Most of what her daughter was
describing was going straight over Donna’s head. She herself had never gone to college;
she’d just continued helping her mother with the daycare’s operations for the year after high
school.


“I saw something on one of my Colombia friends’ Twitter about someone dying in our complex,”
Nina said. “What happened?”


“I’m… not sure,” Donna responded stoically. “They found a man dead in the parking lot a few
days ago. Do you remember Mr. Evans?”


“Yeah… he used to stop by for dinner sometimes or something like that, right?”


“Yeah Nina, something like that,” Donna responded.


Nina had a club event she was getting ready to go to, so the two bid each other goodbye and
Donna sat back in the kitchen chair.


Or something like that,” she thought. “He used to come most every Sunday after church!”


For a couple hours in the afternoon, he would help her with whatever needed fixing or
maintenance around the apartment, and he’d entertain Tommy and Nina with stories and
games while she made dinner for the four of them. Sometimes he’d stay later after the kids
went to sleep, especially in the first couple of years when she was figuring out how to manage
the kids on her own. But later on, as their relations headed south, the time came where the
chair opposite Donna at the kitchen table was never occupied during those Sunday dinners.

Donna hadn’t spoken with him in years now. Their falling out had left her bitter, and though
she’d be intermittently bothered by the unspoken, unclarified truths between them, that was
nothing compared to her experience these past two days. Every aspect of her everyday life
seemed to remind her of their suspended past, that, now, she’d never get to attempt to reboot.

Friday, October 26, 2018

Post #1

The previous day had never really ended, it seemed. Her current work schedules
made the last couple of days each week real tough: she worked the graveyard shift
over at the gas station downtown from 9 Thursday evening until 3, then rode the bus
back to its stop near the Park and walked to the Foxberry, where she hopefully would
get a few hours of sleep before her 8 A.M. shift at Grumble Bee.

This past night, though, she got no rest at all. She was worrying about Tommy, as usual.
It was Nina who’d left just earlier that week, but Donna wasn’t worried about that. No, her
daughter had always had a head on her shoulders: shoot, that’s how she got to be one
of the three Colombia High kids in her class going to State on scholarships. She knew
Nina’d call over the weekend as they’d arranged.

But Tommy? Donna hadn’t heard from Tommy in a few weeks now. The last she knew
he was still staying across town with that girlfriend of his, working at the garage. He was
in a better place than he had been but Donna knew from experience how quickly things
could turn South with Tommy.

Maybe now that Nina had moved out she’d go back to a smaller apartment. Rent was
cheaper down there and she would be able to drop a couple shifts at the station and hopefully
get better sleep.

Had Donna not been working the graveyard shift, she probably would've been home when
Mrs. Rose from down the hall came knocking with news of Mr. Evans' passing. But now as
she listened to the 7 o'clock news while preparing the coffee, she heard the anchor read out
a headline that shot through her heart.

"Yesterday evening a middle-aged man was found dead in the parking lot of the Foxberry
apartment building near the power plant. Mr. Evans, a long-time resident of the complex, was
deemed to have suffered a heart attack and died before medical help arrived."