351 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
351 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
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Wide Brown Eyes
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At home...
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"Juliet! Come down!"
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"In a minute..."
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"Juliet!"
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She rubbed her hands on a red and white checkered cloth as she
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headed back into the kitchen, walking slowly across the freshly mopped
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floor. The microwave beeped insistently until she reached over and
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pulled the door open, releasing the scent of hot, wilted green beans,
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yesterday's vegetable reheated. Sliding the cloth deftly under the
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glass dish, Kate carried it across the kitchen to the table to join
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the meatless lasagna.
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The last spring sunlight was streaming across the table in low shafts
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tinged with red. She pushed past two chairs to stand by the window,
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looking at nothing while she ran over plans for the weekend in her
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head. Find a sitter for Friday night, buy new shoes for the concert,
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call Irina and invite her and Alex to dinner. Kate stood motionless
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as the sun caught at her hair, waking an answering red in the
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richness of brown. Sylvan was a good word to describe her...at any
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moment she seemed ready to step through the window and disappear into
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the woods surrounding the house with only a flash of chestnut eyes to
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remember her by. The kitchen clock striking six startled her into
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motion again, so that she moved too quickly and slammed her elbow into the
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window. A muffled "oh!" of frustration escaped her as she grabbed at
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her elbow. Rubbing it, Kate walked out to the stairs and paused at the
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base.
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"Juliet! Oh Juliet! Wherefore art thou, Juliet!"
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"Mom! You know that's not right!" Julie said, exasperated, as
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she came pelting down the stairs. Her voice trailed behind her as she
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headed into the kitchen. "Juliet says that to Romeo - and
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she isn't asking where he is, she's asking why he's Romeo and from the
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wrong family. What kind of English major were you, anyway?"
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"A very good one, thank you very much. I only do that
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because I like saying it, and besides...hey, put that down! We're
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about to eat." Kate stared sternly at her impulsive daughter.
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Julie guiltily put down the apple she'd been about to
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munch...then went on the attack. "How can we eat? Dad isn't even
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here yet."
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But Kate had her response ready. "He called and said he'd be
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working late at the studio tonight. A burst of inspiration."
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"Oh, great...maybe he'll write a song for me!" Julie said, as
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she went to get a glass of water.
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"Maybe he will." Kate said, a little wistfully, as she looked
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at her daughter. Even at a slightly awkward fifteen, the promise of
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beauty lit up Julie's face. In a few years, scores of boys would
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doubtless be writing her love poetry and songs about her emerald eyes.
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Julie had inherited all of her father's dark good looks, with long
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black hair and a slight figure. Kate sometimes thought she should
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have named her Ariel instead...she was so like a sprite sometimes
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in the way she moved. But it had been hard enough to convince Johnny
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to let her name the child Juliet. Kate had only won that argument
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by pointing out that Julie was a perfectly good nickname, and the
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child wouldn't be scarred for life with a difficult name. He would
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never have let her choose Ariel.
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Suddenly she was overwhelmed by a bear hug as Juliet threw
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her arms around Kate.
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"I love you, mom!"
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Kate laughed. "I love you too, hon. But what was that for?"
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"You just looked sad all of a sudden. Let's eat!" Julie said,
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with her usual impulsiveness, and they sat down next to each other at
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the large tiled table.
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***
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Some hours later...
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-------------------
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Kate gazed with apprehension at the glass baking dish. The
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grease had caked on after four hours left sitting on the table, and
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the cheese that had baked to the sides would doubtless take fierce
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scrubbing to remove, since she had forgotten to put the dishes to
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soak. She'd been so eager to start the new Card novel she had bought
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that weekend, and she was enjoying it, though it wasn't quite what she
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had been expecting. Kate had gotten hooked on his Ender's Game series
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back when she was a serious science fiction fan, but this new novel
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was more Stephen King-ish...a sort of family suspense, though thankfully
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without the typical blood and gore. She sighed, picked up the baking
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dish and carried it over to the sink. She filled the dish with hot
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soapy water and then brought over the other things from dinner. She
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was tempted to make Juliet do it, but the child had already started
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practicing. Funny how it was such a chore to get her to do her
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homework or wash some dishes or even read a good book, but she was
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always eager to go and practice. Even when it was just scales, over
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an dover and over again until sometimes Kate wanted to go and slam
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down the cover on the piano, Juliet had the most intense concentration
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on the keys. The other thing, along with her looks, that she had
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inherited from Johnny. She might be a brilliant pianist someday, but
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Juliet's shining personality was all her own.
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As Kate settled into the comfortable rhythm of dish washing
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she sank once more into reverie. Kate was known for being able to
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drift into a daydream in the middle of anything. It was why Johnny
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had forbidden her to drive a few months after they'd met; he was
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concerned that she would start drifitng in the middle of a four-lane
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highway and drift right over into the other lane...or another car.
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Right now the tempestuous Rachmaninoff piece carried her back to a
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summer seventeen years ago, when she'd been only an English major and
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Juliet not even an idea.
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***
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Several years earlier...
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------------------------
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Kate and two of her close friends had been attending a series
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of classical music recitals in an effort to become more 'culturally
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enriched'. They were free graduate student recitals, and so far Kate
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had only fallen asleep in one of them; a vocal recital by a very
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intense young man singing in incomprehensible German and by a soprano
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alternating with English madrigals. She'd enjoyed the English songs,
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but couldn't keep from dozing through the seemingly endless German
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pieces. She'd kept coming though, usually with Beth and Ingrid as
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company. Tonight, though, they'd ditched her for the promise of pizza
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with two fraternity guys, so she was alone and lonely as she entered
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the small concert hall. Determined to at least enjoy the music, she
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sat in front, directly in front of the huge grand piano. It dominated
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the room, flanked by some green ferns on one side and a probably
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defunct pipe organ on the other. She couldn't tell from that distance
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whether the ferns were real.
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The audience was particularly unruly that night, speaking in
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loud whispers as they waited for the lights to dim and the recital to
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begin. Kate caught snatches of the words "brilliant", "temperamental,
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though", "so talented", and a sighed "gorgeous" from a cute freshman
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behidn her as the pianist walked across the stage and sat at the
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piano.
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"You're not his type" his friend whispered snidely. "He goes
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for leggy blonde babes."
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"I don't care," the slim freshman responded. "I can still
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dream, can't I?"
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If you had asked Kate at that moment if she agreed with the freshman,
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she couldn't have answered you; she honestly hadn't noticed. All her
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attention was focused on his hands lying calmly for a moment on the
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keys. Long, pale hands that looked as if they could easily encircle
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her waist. Strong fingers that came crashing down on the keys as he
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began the first piece. A delicate touch that later wound its way
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wistfully through the andante movement. As the concert went on, she
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couldn't keep her mind on the music for the thought of those hands,
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and how she wanted them on her body. She was so very lonely just
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then.
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Hours afterward, she waited patiently near the pipe organ
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while the crowd of awed well-wishers congregated near him. Kate
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swayed lightly while she waited, a slight figure almost hidden by the
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swarm of people. But somehow he saw her. Somehow his eyes locked on
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hers for a brief moment and she smiled at him, offering...something.
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Then he was caught in the people again and drawn away. It was after
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midnight when the last one left, and he walked away towards the doors
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and shut off the lights and she thought he hadn't noticed her standing
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there after all. But then he turned and came back to her. A question
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was in his eyes as he leaned over her, his slim height dwarfing her as
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she stepped out from the wall and into the light from the window.
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Kate stood on tiptoe to answer, kissing him as her long auburn hair
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fell away from her face. He kissed back, gently for a moment. Then,
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as her arms wound up around him and she pulled him towards her sweet
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body, the pent-up tension of the night and the long recital and the
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many people broke over him in a wave and he was suddenly kissing her
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fiercely.
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He reached out and picked her up and placed her on the bench,
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facing away from the piano. Slowly he unbuttoned her white cotton
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dress, from its scooped neck all the way down to her knees where it
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ended. Kate let go of him long enough for him to slip it off. She
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was dressed in nothing else on that hot night in mid-August. He moaned,
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low in his throat, and then was kissing and tasting and licking her
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body, still fully dressed in his formal suit. She was pushed back by
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the force of his touch and she leaned her elbows heavily against the
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piano, creating an odd discordant sound as she arched up against him.
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After a few minutes he picked her up and laid her down on the scratchy
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institution carpet near the potted ferns. It was a long time before
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she was able to check if they were real.
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Eventually they surfaced, long enough to introduce themselves
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and pick bits of crushed bitter fern off each other's bodies.
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"Kate. And you, of course, are Jonathan Q. Taylor."
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"Johnny, actually. Jonathan is to impress people who think
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all classical musicians must be aristocrats with potloads of money.
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I'm just a poor grad student from Denver, so I decided to fancy up my
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name for the program. I invented the Q." He smiled as he said it;
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the first smile she had seen from him that night. That smile lit up
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his long, brooding face which otherwise was a little too handsome, a
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little too cruel. It was then that she decided that she wanted to see
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him again.
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"I love your smile" she told him later, when the light of
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early morning was warming the room. He laughed. "No, really." Kate
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protested.
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"I believe you." Johnny said softly. "That's why I was
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laughing, actually. From anybody else, that would be just another
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line, but I coudl tell you were telling the truth."
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"You just met me. For all you know, I could be a champion
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liar." Kate said, somewhat indignantly.
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"Nope. Your eyes have this funny way of going all wide when
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you really mean something. When you looked at me earlier in the crowd
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they did that. I don't think you know how to lie at all." Johnny
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said, assuredly.
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Kate bristled for a moment, but then laughed and relaxed. She
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wasn't very good at staying angry, and he was so beautiful in the
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light, with ferns hanging down around his shoulders. 'Puck in the
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woods', she thought briefly. She told him, "My family says that
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too...that my eyes go wide, I mean. I've never seen it, but I guess
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it's true."
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Johnny smiled down at her, and she reached up to brush the
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hair out of his damp face. "Let's see whether I can get it to happen
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again" he said, and stretched out his long, strong hands towards her.
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***
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Home again...
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-------------
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Kate was brought back to reality by the shock of ice-cold
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water on her hands. She jerked them out of the water, leaving the
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half-scrubbed dish to fall back into the pool of soapy water with a
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muffled clang. She'd been daydreaming long enough to run out of hot
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water. Kate made a mental note to tell Johnny to wait until morning
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to take his shower. The slow strains of a Chopin nocturne sang
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sweetly in the night. Kate glanced at the clock and saw that it was
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almost ten. Time to get Juliet off the piano bench and in front of
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her textbooks. As she turned towards the hall leading to the living
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room she noticed a small scrabbling noise. She glanced back over her
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shoulder, and saw the shadowy shape of a figure through the frosted
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glass of the kitchen door. She'd left the porch light on for Johnny.
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Somebody was fumbling with the doorknob. She raised her voice in a
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half-muffled call to her duaghter. "Juliet!"
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"Coming..." Juliet continued playing - she had almost finished
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the nocturne. The figure soon tired of his attempts to actually open
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the door, and started pounding on it fiercely. The fragile glass
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shattered under the continued assault, crashng inward in a few large
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pieces and many tiny fragments. A hand reached in and carefully,
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almost calmly, undid the lock and turned the knob. And then he was
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inside.
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The noise had brought Juliet running into the room, and as the
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man entered, she stepped in front of her mother.
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"I'm sorry about the glass," he said softly. "You should have
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just let me in." Several days growth of beard hung heavy on his face,
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and the scent of alcohol came clearly across the room. He stumbled
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slightly as he stepped across the glass strewn floor into the carpeted
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hallway.
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The women stood silently, Juliet poised to attack and defend,
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Kate simply waiting to see what happened.
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"This is a beautiful house, you know that?" he muttered.
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"And that was beautiful music you were playing, dear. And you are two
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beautiful women." Juliet had changed for bed before starting to
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practice, and stood dressed now in only a thin blue nightshirt. In
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the wind from the open door it clung to her slender body, outlining
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every half-developed curve.
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"Julie, go upstairs." Kate said quietly. Juliet looked up at
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her mother, somehow managing to look pleading and defiant and
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terrified all at once.
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"No, stay, beautiful," he said, reaching out a calloused hand
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to touch her soft black hair.
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"Go now, Julie! Just go!" Kate commanded. Juliet had flung
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herself backward, away from the reaching hand and with one last glance
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at her mother, she fled into the hall and up the stairs.
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"What did you do that for?" he said, reaching out to grab her
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shoulders and shaking her so her head swung back and forth. "Think
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you're good enough for me? Well, you're not! She's beautiful.
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You're old! You're old and ugly!" His voice had risen to a shriek,
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muffling the sobs coming faintly from upstais. He pulled back one
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hand and slapped Kate hard across the face.
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"No..." she said, pleading with him, almost inaudibly.
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"What did you say! Shut up! Just shut up!" And with that he
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shoved her to the floor and pushed up her skirt, holding her trapped
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beneath him, pinned beneath his heavy weight. She lay there limply,
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waiting.
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***
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An endless time later...
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------------------------
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He was sobbing. His head was cradled on Kate's shoulder, his
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arms pulled up tight against his chest, below her soft breasts.
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Ordinarily, sobs like these would have torn at Kate's soft heart.
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Now, all she felt was the pain in her elbow where he had slammed it
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again against the floor, a sharp, biting pain which somehow obscured
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all the other hurts. All she desired was to get away, to take Juliet
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and some money and run away from this house. Home ot Chicago, to
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family, to old friends. Away from this wreck of a man sobbing in her
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arms.
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He finally stopped sobbing and started apologizing. Again.
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"I'm so sorry, Katie; I'm so sorry. You know I would never
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have hurt her, don't you?"
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"Of course you wouldn't have, Johnny" she responded
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mechanically, deciding to leave in the morning. He would go to the
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studio in the morning, to sit in front of the piano and stare at the
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blank sheets of paper, waiting for the inspiration that no longer
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came.
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"She's so precious to me. You are so precious, so lovely.
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You two and music are all I have, you know that. You and music..."
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He broke down into tears again, taking huge gasping breaths in
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between. She held him against her and made soft murmuring noises as
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she planned her escape. Tonight had been the end.
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"I love you, Katie. Stay with me always? Promise me you love
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me?" He tilted his head back so his sad dark eyes were staring into
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hers, bleak with his despair. For a moment, her heart was wrenched
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once more. Kate said, "Of course, Johnny. I'll always love you", but
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in her mind she continued, 'and I'm leaving you tomorrow'.
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And her eyes were so very, very wide.
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*****
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M.A. Mohanraj
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November 20, 1993
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