The Golden Band
by
Callie Hutton
Aileen Kramer
glanced out the car window and her breath caught at the magnificence of
Valentine, Colorado spread out before them like a picture post card. The soft
glow from the cabins and snug homes radiated against the glistening snow, serving
up a magical backdrop for the SweetHart Lodge, where she and Spencer headed.
Magic. That’s what they needed, and what
Spencer hoped to find here. At least that’s what he’d told her when he proposed
this trip. Their last getaway before the divorce became final. She slanted a
glance at her almost ex-husband. Eight years of marriage hadn’t taken a toll on
him as it had her.
At twenty-eight he
was still handsome, the lines in his face only adding to his appeal. He’d
maintained his muscular build with years on oil rigs. He could easily grace the
cover of GQ with thick black hair falling over his forehead, and riveting blue
eyes surrounded by eyelashes a woman would kill for.
She, on the other
hand, looked every bit of her twenty-seven years, plus many more. Despair and
depression did that to a person. She’d stopped paying attention to herself
somewhere along the line while she cared for Becky. Then the numbness following
her death brought every part of living to a grinding halt. She sighed and
returned her notice to the lodge growing closer.
Built on a small
rise, with several populated well-lit ski runs behind it, a welcoming sign with
two hearts, entwined with the names Val and Tina Hart underneath, teased her
lips with a rare smile.
“I’ll drop you off
in front and park the car.” Spencer threw the car into park and hopped out. In
his usual energetic manner, he strode around the car and opened the door before
she could even do it.
She cringed at the
hopeful look on his face. Why didn’t he understand there was nothing left in
her to give? That everything she was, and would ever be, she’d buried with
their three year old daughter?
Please, Spence, don’t make this weekend
harder than it already is.
Aileen had been
flabbergasted when Spence had stopped by her apartment to suggest a Valentine’s
Day weekend fling. ‘One last trip’ he’d called it. When she’d pushed him to
tell her why after all this time, he merely asked her to give them one more
chance.
Valentine’s Day
weekend. They’d had sex for the first time on Valentine’s Day. Two teenagers,
fumbling in the backseat of the Kramer family Volvo. She was his first, and he
was hers. First and only. For her, anyway. She really didn’t know what Spence
had done to relieve the strong appetite he’d always had. Didn’t want to know,
either.
“Come on, honey. I
understand the owners are a real hoot.”
“Sir, I’ll be
happy to park your car.” A young man dressed in black slacks and a hooded
jacket with the SweetHart Lodge twinning hearts embroidered on the chest walked
up to them, snow crunching under his feet.
“Hey, that’s great,
thanks man.” Spence reached in for Aileen’s hand and pulled her out, almost as
if he thought she’d rather spend the trip sitting in the car.
He retrieved their
two suitcases from the back seat and started toward the door. Aileen glanced
back at the car, not anxious to leave the sanctity of the dark interior. Now
that they headed into the light, she felt stripped, vulnerable. She would have
to spend the next forty-eight hours trying hard to act normal, feel normal.
An older woman
dressed in ski pants, furry boots and a white sweater with a huge heart on the
front greeted them at the front door. “Howdy, folks. I’m Tina Hart, and welcome
to SweetHart lodge.” Had she been dressed in a red and white fur suit she could
easily have passed the most cynical child’s scrutiny as Mrs. Santa Claus. Round
and red cheeked, her smile took up most of her face. Despite Aileen’s mood, she
smiled back at the woman, her spirits lifting.
“We have a
reservation for Mr. and Mrs. Kramer.” Spence followed Mrs. Hart to the front
desk and dropped the luggage at his feet.
“Spence?” Aileen’s
heart sped up, and she tugged on his sleeve, pulling him aside. “I thought you
said we would have separate rooms?” she whispered, darting a glance at Mrs. Hart.
“Honey, there’s no
point in coming here,” he waved his hand around, “and staying in separate
rooms.”
“But you
promised.” Her already thumping heart sped up even more. She couldn’t stay in
the same room with Spence. No, no. This would never work. She licked her lips
and approached the counter. “Is it possible for us to have separate rooms?”
Mrs. Hart glanced
briefly at Spence and shook her head. “I’m sorry, Mrs. Kramer, but we’re booked
solid for the entire weekend. Valentine’s Day, you know.”
Aileen chewed on
her lip. Could she break her promise and insist he take her home, since he’d
broken his promise for separate rooms?
Spence rested his
palm against her cheek. “Please, honey. Two days. That’s all I’m asking for.”
She gave him a
curt nod, rubbing sweaty palms against her thighs. Somehow she’d get through
this. Then she’d never have to deal with him again. All the breath left her
body as she pondered that thought. Never was a long time.
*
Spencer grabbed
their bags and followed the directions Mrs. Hart had given them to their room,
leaving Aileen to reluctantly trail behind. He’d known it was a dirty trick to
tell her they would have separate rooms when he’d had no intention of doing
that. There didn’t seem to be a point to them coming here if they were to be
separated. Especially at night. He’d made sure their room had only one bed,
too. Although, Mrs. Hart laughed when he’d asked, and assured him SweetHart
Lodge would never have rooms with more than one bed. He could almost see her
giving him a conspiring wink at the other end of the line.
He slid the
plastic card into the reader and pushed the door open. Yes! Perfect. A huge bed
sat smack in the middle of the room, covered by a white satin quilt with
several pink and red hearts embroidered in the center. Rose petals had been
strewn over the generous pillows. The bottle of champagne he’d ordered rested
in a silver bucket, beads of condensation running down its sides. The
confirmation he’d received from the Lodge assured an unforgettable weekend of Chocolate, Flowers and . . . He knew how
he wanted that promise to end.
To the right, he
spied the bathroom with a heart shaped tub, big enough for two. Or more,
depending on your inclinations. Not his. All he wanted to do was get Aileen in
that tub with a glass of champagne in her hand.
All the sorrow of
the last two years marked her face. Although he’d loved running his fingers
through her long blond hair, her new cut with the springy curls surrounding her
cherub face, softened the tense lines. She’d lost weight, and he guessed she
barely broke a hundred pounds on the scale. But since she was a tiny woman
anyway, she didn’t have the scarecrow look of a fashion model.
But the saddest
thing about his wife was her huge brown eyes, that one time sparkled with
mischief and humor, and now looked vacant and dead. Like their Becky.
He shook his head,
pushing the dark thoughts to the back of his mind. He loved Aileen, and wanted
her back. But not the shell of a woman he’d known since Becky’s death. He
wanted the woman he’d fallen in love with, who lay in bed beside him at night,
whispering, sharing dreams and hopes for the future. The wife who surprised him
with special dinners when he returned from work, who loved him with a passion
he knew he’d not find anywhere else. Hadn’t tried to find, either.
“Let’s get some
dinner.” Spencer shrugged out of his ski jacket and tossed it on the bed.
“All right.”
Aileen slowly unzipped her coat, the entire time nervously glancing at the bed.
*
The Lodge teemed
with people, couples with their arms wrapped around each other, clutching
coffee cups and wine glasses. The lobby stayed cold with guests entering,
checking in, and heading to their rooms. They passed the packed cocktail
lounge, two bartenders racing from one end of the highly polished bar to the
other, pouring beer and mixing drinks. The laughter and shouting rubbed her
raw.
Now that she’d
seen their room, Aileen knew this entire idea was a huge mistake. Better they
should have just parted friends and gone on with their lives.
Spence rested his
warm palm on her lower back and bent toward her ear. “Did you want a drink
before dinner?”
She shook her
head, no point in trying to answer him with all the noise.
He slid his hand
up to her shoulder, leaving a trail of fire against her skin, and moved her
forward, toward the hostess seating guests. The familiar smell of Spence’s
favorite cologne, Giorgio Armani,
mixed with the unique scent that was all him, wafted to her nostrils, bringing
unwanted memories. Tears sprang to her eyes. Eyes that until now had remained
dry for what seemed like forever.
Despite the
bustling crowd, they were seated right away, in front of a large bay window with
a breathtaking view of the mountain, lit up with red and white lights. A few well
bundled skiers rode the lift, skis dangling from their feet and poles clutched
firmly in their hands.
“You do know I
don’t ski.” Aileen fumbled with the pink cloth napkin, snapping it and placing
it on her lap.
“I know. I thought maybe we could give it a go tomorrow. They have lessons at ten o’clock for beginners.”
“I know. I thought maybe we could give it a go tomorrow. They have lessons at ten o’clock for beginners.”
“And do they have
first aid lessons for the beginners in the afternoon?” She smirked, then her
brows drew together. She’d actually said something humorous. It felt odd,
actually. Strange. Like she’d crawled out of the rabbit hole to view the real
world where she no longer belonged.
Spence grinned.
“I’ll have to check the schedule for tomorrow. They have a lot of activities.
If we don’t want to ski, we can ice skate, snow tube, take a dance lesson.”
“A dance lesson?”
“Yes. I understand
there’s a real hot couple who teach the Salsa.” He wiggled his eyebrows, and
she grinned. Then his eyes grew heated and her stomach fluttered. Spence could
still turn her knees to jelly. But it had been so long since she’d paid
attention to those feelings. She flashed back to their room with the one bed.
And the sunken bathtub. No. She didn’t want to go there.
The waiter
approached them and took their orders, leaving them with a basket of warm
rolls. Spence reached for one, and broke it apart. “You look like you’ve lost
weight.” He glanced at her as he buttered his roll.
Aileen shrugged.
“A little.”
He chewed and
swallowed, then wiped his mouth. “How’s the new job?”
“All right. I
still can’t believe they hired me as assistant manager.”
Spence leaned
back. “Why not? Before Bec… Well, before, when we were first married, you
worked as a front end manager in that supermarket.”
“I know, but I’ve
only worked as a sales clerk since Bec…” She stopped and dropped her hands in
her lap, her shoulders slumped.
“Aileen, we can’t continue
to avoid saying her name.” Spence lowered his voice and leaned forward. “She
was our daughter. We made her together, we loved her together, and we lost her
together.”
She shook her
head. “I can’t do this. I have to go home.” She placed her hands on the table
to rise, but Spence reached over and stopped her.
“Don’t go.
Please.”
“This was not a
good idea.” She tugged her hand free, tossed her napkin down, then fled the
room, just as the waiter arrived with two plates.
*
“Can you box those
up? I’ll take them with me.” Spence spoke to the waiter and watched Aileen
retreat, his gut clenched with anger. They had to have this out, and she wasn’t
going to run this time, if he had to tie her to a chair with his belt.
The waiter
returned to the kitchen, and as Spencer finished signing for their meal at the
hostess’s desk, the manager arrived with the boxes. Spencer took them from him
and strode toward room 717.
When he entered,
Aileen sat on the bed, her arms wrapped around her middle, staring off into
space.
“Honey?” When she
didn’t acknowledge him, he set the boxes next to the TV and joined her on the
bed. “Can we talk?”
She took a
shuddering breath, but remained silent.
Spence rose,
running his fingers through his hair. He stood in front of her, his hands on
his hips. “Talk to me.”
She shook her
head, a low keening sound coming from her stiff body as she rocked back and
forth.
Spence sat again,
unclenched her arms and took her ice cold hands in his. “Honey, it’s time. Talk
to me.”
“I can’t.” Her
soft whisper tortured him.
“Yes, you can.
Try.”
He remained silent
gripped by the pain in her face. Eventually, she seemed to draw strength from
somewhere deep inside her.
She started off
soft, slow. Then like a wave engulfing the shoreline, the words tumbled out. “All
the months of Becky’s illness, the trips back and forth to the hospital, the
hopes that a new treatment for her leukemia would surface before it killed her,
I was alone. You never talked to me, never told me how you felt.” Her bleak
eyes pinned him.
“How do you think
I felt?” His voice rose, bouncing off the walls of the room. He took a deep
breath and spoke softer. “I couldn’t tell you. Don’t you see? You pushed me
away. I tried. God did I try, but you never wanted me, never cared that I was
suffering, too. You closed me out when I needed you the most.”
“Becky needed me!”
“And so did I.”
Aileen’s throat
worked, misery on her face. “You never told me. You went to work, came home and
ate, and went to bed. The only time you spoke out loud was when you talked to
Becky.”
“God, honey, don’t
you remember? You were like delicate glass, so fragile, ready to shatter. What
was I to do, add the burden of my grief to yours? Watch you crumble like dust,
and leave me forever?” He whispered, almost to himself. “Like Becky did.”
“Don’t do this,
Spence. Don’t dredge all this up again. This was a mistake, coming here. I’m
leaving.” She attempted to stand, but he grasped her shoulders.
“No! You’re dying
inside, Aileen. You’re fading, disappearing. And I can’t let you go.” He
kneaded her arms. “I love you. I’ve always loved you. And I need you. You’re
the only person in the world who feels like I do, who’s suffered like I have.”
She closed her
eyes, but didn’t move away. “You’re wrong. I’m not dying, I’m already dead.”
“No, you’re not.”
He shook her slightly as her mouth worked, fighting back tears. “Cry, dammit.
You never cried even one single tear while Becky was sick, at her funeral, or
after. You have to get it out. Cry, honey, cry, please.”
“I can’t”
“Why not?”
Her voice grew
thick. “Because if I start, I’ll never stop. Don’t you understand? As long as
it’s bottled up inside me, I can stand it. If I let go…”
“Let it go, baby,
please,” he pulled her to his chest and whispered in her hair, his lips leaving
a scattering of kisses along her forehead
She shook her head
frantically, taking great gulps of air. Then her shoulders started to shake
before racking sobs burst forth from her body. Spencer drew her onto his lap, nestling
her in his arms. He rubbed her back as her body trembled, losing her breath at
times as her grief erupted in a torrent of weeping.
Time stood still,
their combined grief the only presence in room 717 at the SweetHart Lodge, as
they clung to each other like they should have two years before.
Soon Spence’s
tears mixed with Aileen’s, and they hung on, so tightly he knew there would be
marks on her thin arms tomorrow. She burrowed into his chest as if she wanted
to enter his body, lose herself, become part of him.
After about a half
hour, when Aileen’s sobs had turned into soft hiccups, he kicked off his shoes
and removed hers. He left her long enough to pull down the quilt and slide her
under it. She rolled to him as he climbed in alongside her.
Spence settled her
on his shoulder. “Sleep, baby. Right here in my arms where you belong.”
*
Bright sunshine
poured through the immense wall of windows as Val Hart took his usual stroll
through the dining room, happy to see a full house again. Even though The SweetHart
Lodge always did a good year round business, he always liked Valentine’s Day
weekend the best. The place was crammed full with lovers. It brought a glow to
his old heart. Made him appreciate his Tina even more.
He stopped and
chatted with a few diners enjoying their breakfast. He spied a couple in the
corner, eyes for no one else but each other. “Howdy, folks. Glad you joined
us.”
The man stood and
shook hands. “Spencer Kramer, sir. And this is my wife, Aileen.”
“And I’m Val
Hart.” He studied their hands clasped together like they would never let go.
“Let me guess. Y’all are newlyweds, right?”
They glanced at
each other and smiled. “Yeah. Newlyweds I guess you could say that,” the man
said as he moved his wife’s hand to his lips and kissed the golden band on the
third finger of her left hand. “Newlyweds.”
Val grinned and
moved away. He could always pick ‘em out.
The End
Your chapter put a smile on my face. What a great read to start my day.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Thanks, Sandy. And there's lots more to come over the next several days.
DeleteGreat start - so glad you all are doing another anthology, and I love the premise. Looking forward to the morning reads!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Janet. I'm sure you'll enjoy the others.
DeleteWell done, Callie! I love the last line. LOL
ReplyDeleteThanks, Calisa. Hopefully you'll join us for one.
DeleteNice job Callie :) Congrats!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Christine. I;m glad you liked it.
DeleteLovely story, Callie. Depression can be so hard to deal with alone. I like that Spence is willing to fight to get his wife back. Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for stopping by. Glad you enjoyed the story.
DeleteWe're off and running. Beautiful story, Callie. Everyone should have Chocolate, flowers and ...
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kathy. Yes, there will be many Chocolate, Flowers and .... Stay tuned, folks.
DeleteLovely beginning, Callie. Looking forward to the next installment.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Barbara. Yes, there are many wonderful chapters ahead.
DeleteGreat chapter, Callie. You captured the grief and turmoil the couple were experiencing and their need for each other so well.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Barb. Glad you were able to stop by.
DeleteI loved this the first time I read it ... it's renews your faith in love. Nicely done Callie. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Maxine.
DeleteGreat job, Callie. Thank you so much for giving us such a strong start to the anthology. Beautiful story. I can't wait for tomorrow's installment.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anna. Can't wait to read yours.
DeleteSuperb story! I literally ran over my quitting time last night reading it. Had to close my computer halfway through & I couldn't wait to find out the ending.
DeleteThanks, Debi. Glad you liked it -- sorry you ran over your quitting time, lol.
DeleteCongrats on the terrific start to the series, Callie. You made me smile through my sniffles.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Silver.
DeleteStunning design that inspires me a lot...
ReplyDeleteThanks for coming by.
DeleteHey, Callie. I felt both sad and happy reading this story.
ReplyDeleteNice job.
-Cheryl
Thanks, Cheryl. Hopefully, you felt happy at the end!
Delete