Nobody trusted Dick. Nobody. January trusted Dick, so she was a nobody. That was how it was those days. Those days, if you trusted a man like Dick, the other women would stop trusting you. Was it ruthless? Yes. Was it necessary? Undoubtedly. Enough women had gotten into trouble trusting the Dicks of this world, and it was time their follies led to something positive: a lesson for everybody else. January didn’t want to be a lesson. But she could not not trust Dick either. To her, there was nothing to not trust; there was just holding hands while waiting in long lines and scooping watermelon into each other’s mouths and lying in bed sharing each other’s favorites. Lilies, she remembered telling him. My favorite flower. In her own little way January knew Dick would not forget that, and she trusted him all the more for it.
Things got pretty lonely in Piano, Texas without any women friends though, and as much as she trusted Dick, he didnt make the best company. January liked watching the occasional chick flick, she liked going shopping for something besides food, and she enjoyed physical activity, all things that Dick took no interest in. Sure the occasional lily was nice, but the longer they stayed together, the more she sat at home. Waiting. Waiting for Dick...or, waiting for something, She wasnt sure what.
But one Saturday morning she just got tired of waiting. She jumped at every creak in the house, hoping it was the phone. January made sure she always looked presentable, just in case Dick decided to come by. So she just hopped in her car, intending to go shopping or maybe catch a movie. But she ended up at a local coffee shop, The Lily Pad. After filling her mug with coffee, she settled into a booth for four and began to read.
The book, Child's Play, was engaging enough. It chronicled the relationship between a girl named Lily Davis and her high school English teacher, who came to be a mentor to her during his own messy divorce. Although unstated, the two developed a dependence on each other that was not so much romantic but conditional. After moving to Texas by herself and soon after starting to date Dick, January avoided making the connections to her own life. She grew restless with the lines on the page and began to strum her fingers on the table, gazing out the window. The day was bright and getting hot, the sun blinding as it reflected off the dashboards, mostly of pick-up trucks, in the lot. Lost in a daze, January didn't notice that someone had been standing by the table for a moment waiting for her to look up.
"Oh," January exclaimed. Not knowing what to do or say, as she had never seen this woman in her life, she asked, "Can I help you with something?"
"The real question, my dear, is can I be of help to you?"
January was not impressed. She was tired, upset, forlorn-- in a word, thoroughly delilified. She had no intention of wasting her time talking to a wannabe new-age fairy godmother.
"No thanks. Doing just fine," she said offhandedly and looked back down at her book. Ms.Davis and the English teacher were having an engaging argument that might or might not lead to the death of their long lost pet turtle. And January hated to have her climaxes interrupted.
"You will never find happiness in that book my child, nor with the man you cling to. Happiness will present itself to you in one way in the next twenty four hours. And if you miss it, you will be doomed to devastation for the rest of your life."
January laughed, "I thought people like you were supposed to give out three wishes, not death sentences."
"I'm having a bad day," the woman said.
The woman walked away, leaving January to continue reading. Though anxious to return to the story, the woman's silly words were running through her head. January couldn't concentrate on the possible death of the turtle because she was becoming increasingly frightened that perhaps the woman was right. And she couldn't really risk the devastation of her entire future, could she?
January looked around, and knew only one thing for certain. Happiness was not going to present itself in The Lily Pad's sad excuse of a coffee shop. So she stuck a napkin in her book to mark her place, then left.
Things got pretty lonely in Piano, Texas without any women friends though, and as much as she trusted Dick, he didnt make the best company. January liked watching the occasional chick flick, she liked going shopping for something besides food, and she enjoyed physical activity, all things that Dick took no interest in. Sure the occasional lily was nice, but the longer they stayed together, the more she sat at home. Waiting. Waiting for Dick...or, waiting for something, She wasnt sure what.
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