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- Story Listed as: Fiction For Adults
- Theme: Love stories / Romance
- Subject: Inspirational / Uplifting
- Published: 08/12/2024
M06 - Only The Lonely
Born 1950, U, from Arlington, TX, United StatesOnly the lonely, know the way I feel tonight…
The rich voice of Roy Orbison filled the room with his signature song. The lyrics hit home deeply with Jack Hanson, who thought wryly that he knew the feeling all too well.
At sixty-two, he still considered himself to be late middle age. He took care of himself physically, maintaining around 190 lbs. on his 6’1” frame. He still had his hair, cropped short so he did not have to mess with it, but nothing was receding in that area. It was still mostly brown with only hints of grey showing at the temples. It was emotionally where he lacked any stability. He was becoming more and more lonely and withdrawn with each year that passed since Elaine had gone.
Elaine, his wife of twenty-two years, had fought the cancer invading her ovaries for most of the last two, before it had finally defeated her best efforts. It had seemed so unfair, this stealthy disease that did not have the relatively easy to spot symptoms of its more well-known counterpart in breasts. Far fewer people knew of the National Ovarian Cancer Coalition than the Susan B Komen.
Her lot had been the intense physical pain, while he had dealt with the emotional devastation of knowing how much she stoically suffered and being unable as her protector to make it all better.
Memories haunted him of the times when her sharp intake of breath, accompanied by the crease of her brows as she looked down momentarily, and sometimes although rarely, punctuated by a quiet, suppressed moan, as she fought to control the pain that ravaged her existence in those last months. She tried hard to shield him from the anguish that she knew he dealt with over the agony she endured. Life was NOT good for anyone during those days.
After she had finally lost the battle, there were the usual crowd of well-meaning friends and relatives to tell him that they were there for him. The number of people who had known her and grieved her passing was far larger than most such groups, but he was only aware of this months later. His days at that time were a blur of agony and loss, knowing that the light that had guided his life was forever extinguished.
The huge press of mourners gave way within days to a steady stream of casseroles and condolences over the following weeks, to eventually settle down into the occasional offer to get back in the saddle, as the years dragged on. There was seemingly no end to the parade of friends offering the names of other friends, or divorcees/widows offering homemade goods with benefits.
He had been polite but firm in his refusals, a fact that he was finally beginning to regret.
Time went by slowly for someone who’s days and nights were constantly interrupted with memories. The sight of a certain kind of flower would precipitate visions of Elaine gathering them into a vase to place on the sunny sill over the kitchen sink. Driving by a local restaurant that she had really liked surfaced memories of their time eating and laughing there together. Things that they had so enjoyed doing together no longer held any appeal. Apparently, it was the sharing of the experience with her, more than the experience itself that had been desirable. There were a hundred locations in their hometown of Warwick, Rhode Island, that reminded him of her and what he now would never have again.
At least the winters were chilly enough and the weather frequently damp enough that he could avoid getting out of the house too often. The summers were harder. The waters of Narragansett Bay, just outside his back door called to him. Sailing, swimming and just lounging about listening to the seashore sounds had always been a big part of their lives.
Now, here was Jack in his living room on his favorite recliner, on a cloudy, damp morning in mid-September, listening to Roy Orbison on the radio, his Yorkie, Clarence dozing on his lap. It occurred to him that he had become 'That Old Man'. Elaine had been gone for twelve years now, and life was finally starting to intrude on his consciousness.
“Clarence, do you think I’ve become crotchety?” he asked the dog. His voice was raspy with lack of use. He rarely spoke to anyone but Clarence.
Hearing Jack’s voice, Clarence raised his ears, and then his head in response, as if waiting for his human to go on.
Jack continued the conversation with, “I think you may be right. I have become quite the dull one.”
Clarence, who was doing his usual stellar job of quietly upholding his end of these exchanges, just stared at his human with those huge expressive brown eyes, as if agreeing wholeheartedly and urging the man to go on.
Jack did not actually hear Messenger Erik as he continued whispering in his ear, but he did have the resulting thoughts.
“I need to get out more,” Jack continued, and rose from the chair, easing the dog into the place he had just vacated on the cushion. Clarence immediately took the proffered opportunity, turning in two quick circles and plopping down into the warm spot, his chin resting between his paws, his eyelids drooping closed.
Jack took a beach towel with him and decided to bask in the warm rays of the sunshine in his backyard. The sounds of the bay would be relaxing.
Messenger Erik, who was an ethereal being who sometimes visited Jack, whispered in his ear that the attractive lady about his age walking along the shoreline trail, certainly seemed to think so. Jack glanced casually in her direction, not noting much more at this distance than the way the short black hair bounced in the breeze.
* * *
Somewhere across town, Diane Drummond had also been listening to the same radio station, WWRI 105.1 FM, thinking about how true Roy Orbison’s lyrics were.
At sixty years old, she was still enjoying a healthy life. She had never been accused of being pretty, but she was not ugly either. Her 112 lbs. fitted her 5’2” body nicely. Yes, it was true that she colored the grey out of her short black hair, which curved to a chin length French bob cut, but this was not really aging, merely vanity. She definitely did not think that she was frumpy or matronly, but she had never had much luck in the male department.
She had had many failed relationships with less than satisfying partners. Burnt too many times and tired of trying, she had given up on love for years. It did not seem that it was possible for her to attract a good man. Everyone she had ever dated had ended up being a total Loser. Some had lasted longer than others, but they had all showed their true interests, or lack thereof, eventually. They liked her bed. They liked her cooking. They liked her apartment. They did not want a wife.
She had lost count of how many ‘They’ were. It did not matter. She had given up on trying to find happiness in that direction. Roy was right! Only the lonely knew how her life was going.
Messenger Françoise, another invisible being, was watching Diane, as she frequently did. She did not like it that a woman with so much goodness in her could always make such bad choices in her relationships. She was not supposed to interfere in the life of her bonded human unless the need were great. She decided that Diane’s need for love in her life qualified as ‘great’ and hoped that it would be judged so by the Review Council later.
Not wanting to attack the problem directly, thus inviting resistance, Françoise began on a different tack. Slipping up near Diane, she whispered in her ear, ‘Why do you not get out? You could walk the shore down the street and feel the fresh breeze.’
This thought occurred to Diane as she sat reading her new book, ‘None of This Is True’ by Lisa Jewell. It seemed a little unusual that she should suddenly think such a thing, especially at this time. Her book was very good. Returning to the idea of a walk, she noticed that the sky was overcast but not cold. It was a little damp, but maybe that would burn off if the clouds lifted. She decided to go the couple of blocks to her favorite walking paths at Rocky Point State Park. She could choose either the wooded paths or the beach path depending on the weather.
She thought that she would walk to the park, rather than drive, since it was so close. When she got to Rocky Point, the walk had warmed her enough that she decided that she would continue down the path at the water’s edge. She loved to watch the antics of the Killdeer gliding smoothly along on their thin legs, moving in and out between the Gulls and Terns. Her phone was in her hand because she had hoped to get a picture of a Brant or a Mule Swan, but she had only seen the Canada Geese in that habitat.
As she strolled along the shoreline path, the gentle waving of the reeds growing at the water’s edge, combined with the quiet lapping of waves soothed her. The waves in the bay were nothing like their sea borne cousins which strike the shore of the Atlantic with such force.
Contentedly walking down the path, she exited the confines of the State Park and continued along in front of the houses of those lucky enough to own property right on the bay. Rhode Island was one of those states where all the beaches were public land, which is why the path continued through private and public land alike.
She saw a man at the first house taking the sun in his lawn chair facing the bay, but he seemed to pay no heed to the stranger walking by on the shore trail.
* * *
The next morning Jack was sitting in his lawn chair again, sipping his second cup of Lavazza coffee and shielding his eyes with his newspaper from the early rays of the sun bouncing off the bay.
Messenger Erik decided that it was time for Jack to reenter the human race. He whispered, “Some clam chowder for lunch would hit the spot.”
Jack lowered his paper and finished the last of his coffee as he let this thought bounce around his brain for a bit. Finally, he decided that he would visit Iggy’s Chowder House down by the Boardwalk for lunch. It was time for him to rejoin society again, and chowder did sound good.
As he was opening the door to enter Iggy’s, he had to step back and hold the door for a lady by herself, who was coming out at the same moment. Something about the short black-haired woman tugged at his memory. He was sure that he did not know who she was, but she seemed familiar.
For some reason, he found himself saying, ”Have a nice day!” This surprised him, since it was not like him at all to speak to a stranger like that these days.
“You too!” the lady responded with a bright smile as she passed by.
Both Messenger Erik and Messenger Françoise whispered into their respective charge’s ears, ‘That was nice.’
A few seconds later, both Jack and Diane caught each other turning to get a second look. Diane broke the eye contact first, glancing down with a secret smile playing on her lips, as Françoise whispered, ‘You are not dead yet!’
Jack continued into the restaurant. Thoughts of the unknown but becoming more familiar woman vying for attention with the memory he had of Iggy’s chowder. It was the creamy New England style, not the Boston kind. It had been too long since he had eaten any of it.
* * *
When he came out an hour later feeling totally satisfied with his lunch choice, Jack decided to continue his day on the town by walking around the corner to Oakland Beach. He heard the water calling again.
He took off his Docksides and held one in each hand, to experience the warm sand between his toes. Two children wrestling a kite on the beach caught his attention as he walked out onto one of the long piles of granite rocks that the town used to create jetties out into the bay. The sound of youthful exuberance was refreshing to his scarred psyche.
A flash of light caught his attention out of the corner of his eye, causing him to turn.
* * *
At the same time, Diane was enjoying the breeze blowing her hair back from her face at the end of the jetty that she was standing on. The day had been good. She always enjoyed the area around Iggy’s. The seafood was great. The ice cream at Iggy’s other shop was above average and the bay was right there to indulge.
A flash of light glinted off something and she turned to see what it was.
* * *
Both Messengers were together on the jetty watching over their humans, who were each just a few feet away on either side. They decided that it was time to give the two lonely people a push. Grasping hands, they both flashed simultaneously for an instant and then disappeared immediately.
When Diane saw the man standing there that she had recently passed coming out of Iggy’s, she smiled broadly. Jack also recognized the lady from before and his hand came up of its own volition in a friendly wave.
“Are you stalking me?” Diane asked him in an obviously jesting tone, tilting her head playfully.
“No, but I’m starting to think that maybe I would like to,” Jack responded, smiling also.
Messengers Erik and Françoise shared some satisfying thoughts in their near instantaneous, unspoken method of communication about their successful mission.
It seemed that Roy Orbison’s ballad about loneliness was about to be replaced with a new Jack and Diane song, one not at all like the John Mellencamp version!
M06 - Only The Lonely(Denise Arnault)
Only the lonely, know the way I feel tonight…
The rich voice of Roy Orbison filled the room with his signature song. The lyrics hit home deeply with Jack Hanson, who thought wryly that he knew the feeling all too well.
At sixty-two, he still considered himself to be late middle age. He took care of himself physically, maintaining around 190 lbs. on his 6’1” frame. He still had his hair, cropped short so he did not have to mess with it, but nothing was receding in that area. It was still mostly brown with only hints of grey showing at the temples. It was emotionally where he lacked any stability. He was becoming more and more lonely and withdrawn with each year that passed since Elaine had gone.
Elaine, his wife of twenty-two years, had fought the cancer invading her ovaries for most of the last two, before it had finally defeated her best efforts. It had seemed so unfair, this stealthy disease that did not have the relatively easy to spot symptoms of its more well-known counterpart in breasts. Far fewer people knew of the National Ovarian Cancer Coalition than the Susan B Komen.
Her lot had been the intense physical pain, while he had dealt with the emotional devastation of knowing how much she stoically suffered and being unable as her protector to make it all better.
Memories haunted him of the times when her sharp intake of breath, accompanied by the crease of her brows as she looked down momentarily, and sometimes although rarely, punctuated by a quiet, suppressed moan, as she fought to control the pain that ravaged her existence in those last months. She tried hard to shield him from the anguish that she knew he dealt with over the agony she endured. Life was NOT good for anyone during those days.
After she had finally lost the battle, there were the usual crowd of well-meaning friends and relatives to tell him that they were there for him. The number of people who had known her and grieved her passing was far larger than most such groups, but he was only aware of this months later. His days at that time were a blur of agony and loss, knowing that the light that had guided his life was forever extinguished.
The huge press of mourners gave way within days to a steady stream of casseroles and condolences over the following weeks, to eventually settle down into the occasional offer to get back in the saddle, as the years dragged on. There was seemingly no end to the parade of friends offering the names of other friends, or divorcees/widows offering homemade goods with benefits.
He had been polite but firm in his refusals, a fact that he was finally beginning to regret.
Time went by slowly for someone who’s days and nights were constantly interrupted with memories. The sight of a certain kind of flower would precipitate visions of Elaine gathering them into a vase to place on the sunny sill over the kitchen sink. Driving by a local restaurant that she had really liked surfaced memories of their time eating and laughing there together. Things that they had so enjoyed doing together no longer held any appeal. Apparently, it was the sharing of the experience with her, more than the experience itself that had been desirable. There were a hundred locations in their hometown of Warwick, Rhode Island, that reminded him of her and what he now would never have again.
At least the winters were chilly enough and the weather frequently damp enough that he could avoid getting out of the house too often. The summers were harder. The waters of Narragansett Bay, just outside his back door called to him. Sailing, swimming and just lounging about listening to the seashore sounds had always been a big part of their lives.
Now, here was Jack in his living room on his favorite recliner, on a cloudy, damp morning in mid-September, listening to Roy Orbison on the radio, his Yorkie, Clarence dozing on his lap. It occurred to him that he had become 'That Old Man'. Elaine had been gone for twelve years now, and life was finally starting to intrude on his consciousness.
“Clarence, do you think I’ve become crotchety?” he asked the dog. His voice was raspy with lack of use. He rarely spoke to anyone but Clarence.
Hearing Jack’s voice, Clarence raised his ears, and then his head in response, as if waiting for his human to go on.
Jack continued the conversation with, “I think you may be right. I have become quite the dull one.”
Clarence, who was doing his usual stellar job of quietly upholding his end of these exchanges, just stared at his human with those huge expressive brown eyes, as if agreeing wholeheartedly and urging the man to go on.
Jack did not actually hear Messenger Erik as he continued whispering in his ear, but he did have the resulting thoughts.
“I need to get out more,” Jack continued, and rose from the chair, easing the dog into the place he had just vacated on the cushion. Clarence immediately took the proffered opportunity, turning in two quick circles and plopping down into the warm spot, his chin resting between his paws, his eyelids drooping closed.
Jack took a beach towel with him and decided to bask in the warm rays of the sunshine in his backyard. The sounds of the bay would be relaxing.
Messenger Erik, who was an ethereal being who sometimes visited Jack, whispered in his ear that the attractive lady about his age walking along the shoreline trail, certainly seemed to think so. Jack glanced casually in her direction, not noting much more at this distance than the way the short black hair bounced in the breeze.
* * *
Somewhere across town, Diane Drummond had also been listening to the same radio station, WWRI 105.1 FM, thinking about how true Roy Orbison’s lyrics were.
At sixty years old, she was still enjoying a healthy life. She had never been accused of being pretty, but she was not ugly either. Her 112 lbs. fitted her 5’2” body nicely. Yes, it was true that she colored the grey out of her short black hair, which curved to a chin length French bob cut, but this was not really aging, merely vanity. She definitely did not think that she was frumpy or matronly, but she had never had much luck in the male department.
She had had many failed relationships with less than satisfying partners. Burnt too many times and tired of trying, she had given up on love for years. It did not seem that it was possible for her to attract a good man. Everyone she had ever dated had ended up being a total Loser. Some had lasted longer than others, but they had all showed their true interests, or lack thereof, eventually. They liked her bed. They liked her cooking. They liked her apartment. They did not want a wife.
She had lost count of how many ‘They’ were. It did not matter. She had given up on trying to find happiness in that direction. Roy was right! Only the lonely knew how her life was going.
Messenger Françoise, another invisible being, was watching Diane, as she frequently did. She did not like it that a woman with so much goodness in her could always make such bad choices in her relationships. She was not supposed to interfere in the life of her bonded human unless the need were great. She decided that Diane’s need for love in her life qualified as ‘great’ and hoped that it would be judged so by the Review Council later.
Not wanting to attack the problem directly, thus inviting resistance, Françoise began on a different tack. Slipping up near Diane, she whispered in her ear, ‘Why do you not get out? You could walk the shore down the street and feel the fresh breeze.’
This thought occurred to Diane as she sat reading her new book, ‘None of This Is True’ by Lisa Jewell. It seemed a little unusual that she should suddenly think such a thing, especially at this time. Her book was very good. Returning to the idea of a walk, she noticed that the sky was overcast but not cold. It was a little damp, but maybe that would burn off if the clouds lifted. She decided to go the couple of blocks to her favorite walking paths at Rocky Point State Park. She could choose either the wooded paths or the beach path depending on the weather.
She thought that she would walk to the park, rather than drive, since it was so close. When she got to Rocky Point, the walk had warmed her enough that she decided that she would continue down the path at the water’s edge. She loved to watch the antics of the Killdeer gliding smoothly along on their thin legs, moving in and out between the Gulls and Terns. Her phone was in her hand because she had hoped to get a picture of a Brant or a Mule Swan, but she had only seen the Canada Geese in that habitat.
As she strolled along the shoreline path, the gentle waving of the reeds growing at the water’s edge, combined with the quiet lapping of waves soothed her. The waves in the bay were nothing like their sea borne cousins which strike the shore of the Atlantic with such force.
Contentedly walking down the path, she exited the confines of the State Park and continued along in front of the houses of those lucky enough to own property right on the bay. Rhode Island was one of those states where all the beaches were public land, which is why the path continued through private and public land alike.
She saw a man at the first house taking the sun in his lawn chair facing the bay, but he seemed to pay no heed to the stranger walking by on the shore trail.
* * *
The next morning Jack was sitting in his lawn chair again, sipping his second cup of Lavazza coffee and shielding his eyes with his newspaper from the early rays of the sun bouncing off the bay.
Messenger Erik decided that it was time for Jack to reenter the human race. He whispered, “Some clam chowder for lunch would hit the spot.”
Jack lowered his paper and finished the last of his coffee as he let this thought bounce around his brain for a bit. Finally, he decided that he would visit Iggy’s Chowder House down by the Boardwalk for lunch. It was time for him to rejoin society again, and chowder did sound good.
As he was opening the door to enter Iggy’s, he had to step back and hold the door for a lady by herself, who was coming out at the same moment. Something about the short black-haired woman tugged at his memory. He was sure that he did not know who she was, but she seemed familiar.
For some reason, he found himself saying, ”Have a nice day!” This surprised him, since it was not like him at all to speak to a stranger like that these days.
“You too!” the lady responded with a bright smile as she passed by.
Both Messenger Erik and Messenger Françoise whispered into their respective charge’s ears, ‘That was nice.’
A few seconds later, both Jack and Diane caught each other turning to get a second look. Diane broke the eye contact first, glancing down with a secret smile playing on her lips, as Françoise whispered, ‘You are not dead yet!’
Jack continued into the restaurant. Thoughts of the unknown but becoming more familiar woman vying for attention with the memory he had of Iggy’s chowder. It was the creamy New England style, not the Boston kind. It had been too long since he had eaten any of it.
* * *
When he came out an hour later feeling totally satisfied with his lunch choice, Jack decided to continue his day on the town by walking around the corner to Oakland Beach. He heard the water calling again.
He took off his Docksides and held one in each hand, to experience the warm sand between his toes. Two children wrestling a kite on the beach caught his attention as he walked out onto one of the long piles of granite rocks that the town used to create jetties out into the bay. The sound of youthful exuberance was refreshing to his scarred psyche.
A flash of light caught his attention out of the corner of his eye, causing him to turn.
* * *
At the same time, Diane was enjoying the breeze blowing her hair back from her face at the end of the jetty that she was standing on. The day had been good. She always enjoyed the area around Iggy’s. The seafood was great. The ice cream at Iggy’s other shop was above average and the bay was right there to indulge.
A flash of light glinted off something and she turned to see what it was.
* * *
Both Messengers were together on the jetty watching over their humans, who were each just a few feet away on either side. They decided that it was time to give the two lonely people a push. Grasping hands, they both flashed simultaneously for an instant and then disappeared immediately.
When Diane saw the man standing there that she had recently passed coming out of Iggy’s, she smiled broadly. Jack also recognized the lady from before and his hand came up of its own volition in a friendly wave.
“Are you stalking me?” Diane asked him in an obviously jesting tone, tilting her head playfully.
“No, but I’m starting to think that maybe I would like to,” Jack responded, smiling also.
Messengers Erik and Françoise shared some satisfying thoughts in their near instantaneous, unspoken method of communication about their successful mission.
It seemed that Roy Orbison’s ballad about loneliness was about to be replaced with a new Jack and Diane song, one not at all like the John Mellencamp version!
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- 5
Martha Huett
11/13/2024Aww! Thanks for this sweet story, Denise. It's so hopeful and inspiring. I love those Messengers!
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
11/13/2024Thanks Martha. I really liked writing this story. It and number 10 are probably my favorites so far.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Cheryl Ryan
09/24/2024This is a lovely read. Thanks to messenger Erik and Francoise for the silent whisper that led to the meeting of the two wonderful souls. And thank you for sharing!
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks Cheryl. I was happy that the Messengers could help the two get together here also. I really enjoyed writing this story and I'm glad that you liked it too.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks Ben. I appreciate your comments.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Joel Kiula
09/24/2024I am always fascinated by the stories of love and pain and how they relate to each other in a strange circumstances. A very good story. Thank you
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks Joel. I had been planning on covering this topic for a while. Several other authors had recently done a good job of it in the True Stories area. I'm glad you liked it.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Shirley Smothers
09/24/2024What a nice story. Very detailed with nauances that add to this. No one is too old to fall in love. Sweet and inspirational, I really enjoyed reading this. Congratulations on Short Story Star of the Day.
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks Shirley. I'm really glad that the story was enjoyable. I hope everyone agrees with you on the not-to-old part!
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Barry
09/24/2024Very nice story. All the detail really fleshes out the plot and makes your characters come to life. It requires a ton of thoughtful preparation and infinite patience to put this much nuance into creative fiction. Because I live in southeasterm Massachusetts, I have visited Iggys on many occaisions with my wife and children. I'm famiiar with both the creamy New England style chowder and their better-than-average ice cream. You got it all down on paper.
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks Barry. I'm glad I got my facts correct! I lived in Rhode Island for a few months, but never actually visited the locations in my story. They were all just research. I have been planning on going to Iggy's when I eventually do make it back up to New England for the fall foliage, which is next years planned vacation. My favorite clam chowder used to be from Portsmouth NH but that restaurant was not the same when I went back some years later.
Thanks also for the kind words about my plot and characters. Your writing has inspired me to try to do better.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Meena
09/23/2024Your best story Denise,the way you express their pain and love to each other is so smooth that catch readers attraction just like me....waiting for your next story...
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks Meena. Your stories inspired me to try to write more about how my characters were feeling. Glad you liked it!
Help Us Understand What's Happening
JD
09/23/2024That was sweet, tender, and inspirational. Lovely heartfelt story of love and loss and love again. Thanks Denise. Happy short story star of the day.
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
09/24/2024Thanks JD. I had been reading several other stories about lost loves here and decided to try my hand at it.
Help Us Understand What's Happening
Belle Renard
08/13/2024WOW! Denise, this was your best! I really felt the pain and loneliness in Jack's memories of his wife. I loved the descriptions of the town. I felt like I was right there. Not sure if "Jack and Diane" was intentional but I thought it was humorous. I really liked the back and forth glimpses into the lives of both of them, getting shorter and shorter until they came together. It was like when then momentum of the swinging balls becomes shorter each time until it stops. I really enjoyed this installment. 10/10!
ReplyHelp Us Understand What's Happening
Denise Arnault
08/13/2024Thanks so much for your words Belle. Yes, I did make the 'Jack and Diane' connection deliberately. I like to put a little Yin/Yang in my stories. I actually was half way through writing this one before I thought to research details of that song, since the reference in my memory was a more recent song about it rather than the actual song. That's why I put the last sentence in about not being like Mellencamps version of the song. Funny how stories evolve in your head while you are writing them. I'm really glad that you enjoyed it!
COMMENTS (9)