Chuck got a job as soon as it was
legal at the one place worth working in Ashmut. Starting as a stockboy at
sixteen, he figured on making foreman after high school. The night he proposed
to Linda, he confessed his ambition to one day become manager. Shit, with a
little luck, company president before he retired, gold watch and all, like old
man Cutting. Linda smiled, glad she had chosen the one boy in town with some
fire under him.
Linda’s dream was to dance in a
Broadway show, maybe even the movies. Her dance teacher was enthusiastic about
her talent, and Chuck was sure his Linda would one day be a star. He was ready
to make the sacrifice of holding down the fort while she went off on tour.
Chuck wasn’t the travelling type, anyway, and neither of them was anxious to
start a family. They talked about it at Christmas sometimes.
By the time they were thirty, Chuck
and Linda had stopped talking about executive suites and tour buses. Chuck was
senior forklift operator, not a managerial position. Linda was teaching yoga
out at the community college, where she got a faculty discount on dance
classes. They still talked about starting a family, usually while Christmas
shopping.
On Linda’s thirty-third birthday,
Chuck stood at the teller’s window counting his pay. ‘Tell ya what,’ he said to
the teller. ‘Do me a favor and give me a hundred ones.’
The teller shrugged, as tellers do, and
then complied, as she would do every Friday for the next fifteen years.
When Chuck got home, he gave Linda
her present, an authentic Las Vegas poledancing outfit. ‘Dance for me babe,’ he
said. He loaded his wife’s music on the player, poured a drink, pulled up chair
and waited. Linda came out of the bedroom dancing and didn’t stop until the
rain of singles ended, three songs later
Chuck drained his glass, knocked back the chair, and gave his wife a standing ovation.
An interesting story. Strong undercurrents!!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! Glad you liked it.
DeleteAgain -I told you yesterday-, a very good ending... It's a moving story. Like Jo said: Strong undercurrents. Very enjoyable when you read it twice. A rich world of your own. Congratulations! -Joaquin
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joaquin!!!
ReplyDelete