As
Wes was putting together the final touches to his costume, he marveled at his
good fortune. He hadn’t seen his cousin Gabby
in a few years, and he couldn’t believe he had talked her into another visit to
the country. He knew when she agreed
that she hadn’t thought about the time frame because if she had, she wouldn’t
have agreed to come during Halloween.
Once she did realize her error and tried to postpone the trip, Wes
wouldn’t let her. He knew crazy
Halloween parties were big in the city, but he would show her that they could
party in the country, too. ‘Yeah, good luck with that’ he thought to
himself, and couldn’t hold back a chuckle.
Lost in his thoughts, it was forty-five minutes before he looked up at
the clock. “Oh, crap!” he exclaimed as
he jumped up. “Gabby’s going to kill me
if I’m late.” Not even bothering for his
jacket, Wes grabbed the keys to his truck and headed out to the airport.
Fortunately
for Wes, Gabby’s flight was late. As he
was nearing the Arrivals curb, she was just walking out of the terminal. Wes noticed with surprise that Gabby was only
pulling one rolling suitcase behind her.
But as he got closer he noticed a man stop behind her, struggling with
two oversized bags. Curiously, Wes
watched as Gabby took a couple bills from her wallet and hand them to the man,
who unceremoniously dropped the bags at her feet, took the bills and went back
inside. Wes shook his head in amusement
as he climbed out of his truck.
“I’d
tell you that you over-packed again, but I know better than to start that
argument” he teased as he held out his arms.
“Ah,
all this fresh air’s finally cleared your head” Gabby teased back as she went
in for the hug.
During
the drive back to his house, Wes mostly listened and nodded as Gabby chatted
away. Mostly, he was trying to get up
the nerve to spring something on her, and finally decided to just hit her with
it.
“So,
guess who’s going to be at the party tomorrow night?” he asked her.
“No
one I would know,” Gabby tossed back.
“Well,
no one you’ve met,” Wes
continued. Gabby looked sideways at him
and arched a brow.
"What?”
asked Wes. “Don’t give me that look.”
"I’m
sure you deserve it. What are you up
to?”
“Remember
my friend Wyatt that I told you about?”
“The
one that you mentioned every time we talked on the phone? Your new best bud that you’re constantly
raving about?”
“I
don’t rave about him,” muttered Wes.
“You
do. But whatever.”
“Well,
whatever, the fact is that guy has done
amazing things so far in life and he’s not even thirty-five yet – even you
would be impressed.”
“I’m
sure I would be,” replied Gabby.
Now
it was Wes’ turn to arch a brow.
“Sarcasm?” he asked.
“No,”
Gabby said. “How could I not be
impressed by someone so amazing that you hold him to the same level as Zechariah?”
Wes turned to look at her.
“Sarcasm,” she stated.
Rolling his eyes, Wes turned into his driveway. Turning off the ignition, his hand went to
the door but he stopped and looked back at Gabby before he opened it.
“Zechariah? Really??”
“Hey, I used to go to church, remember?”
“Used to? You don’t go to church
or worship anymore?”
“Yes, I do” replied Gabby as she opened her door. “Every morning at the House of Latte.”
Muttering
something about Hell and hand baskets, Wes jumped out of his truck. Laughing, Gabby followed and helped him bring
her things into the house.
Deciding
to save the unpacking for later, Gabby chose to first kick back on Wes’ couch
and relax with a glass of wine. “You
know, I might actually get used to the simple quietness of this place,” she
said.
“It
grows on you.” Wes smiled at her as she closed her eyes for a moment and sunk
back into the couch. Her peacefulness
was short-lived, however, when a sharp screech startled her enough that she
nearly spilled her wine.
“What
the fuck?!” she asked as she quickly sat up.
“Oh. Blue jay,” explained Wes.
“Where? In the house?”
“Yeah.” Wes shrugged.
“The cat drug it in.” He chuckled
at the look of disbelief on Gabby’s face.
“I caught Sam with it in her mouth last week. I thought it was dead but when I took it away
from her, I saw that it was just in shock, and hurt. So I bought a little cage for it while it
healed.” Wes paused as the bird
screeched again. “He seems to be doing
better,” he noted.
“And
the bird is where?”
Wes
held back a smile. “In the guest room.”
“Which
is where you’re sleeping,” Gabby replied dryly.
Wes
laughed and stood up. “I’ll move the
bird,” he said as he started upstairs.
“Oh hey! While I’m up here, I’ll
get my Halloween costume to show you.”
“Who
are you going to be? The Bird Man?” Gabby shot out after him. Shaking her head, she reached to the coffee
table to refill her glass.
Wes
moved the bird to the back of the house, covered the cage and went back to his
room to change. After a few minutes, he
walked back out toward the front room and stopped in the doorway. Gabby looked up and nearly spit out her
drink.
“You’re
going like that?? What the hell are you
even supposed to be?”
"You
can’t tell?” asked Wes in surprise.
“All
I see is a lot of corduroy and patterns that don’t match, and some weird hat
thing on your head.”
“Hey,
I made it myself,” Wes said proudly.
“Clearly,”
replied Gabby.
“Well,
I’m not going to tell you what it is, and you’ll be the only city girl at the
party who doesn’t recognize a classic costume when she sees one.”
Leaning
back into the couch, Gabby pointedly stared at Wes’ outfit. “You know, being unmarried can shorten a
man’s life by ten years.”
Wes stared
at Gabby. “What?”
“I’m
just sayin’,” she replied.
Wes
looked down at his costume. “Are you
implying that if I were married I wouldn’t go out like this?”
“Oh,
I’m not implying,” said Gabby
sweetly. Then she couldn’t resist adding:
“Instead of worrying about fixing me up with your friends, maybe you should be
looking for yourself.”
Wes
studied Gabby for a moment, and she saw that familiar look come across his face
that used to always get them into trouble when they were kids.
“What?”
she asked warily.
“What
are you doing for New Year’s?” he asked her.
“Pffft! Not spending it here.”
Wes
just leaned against the door jamb.
“What?? I’m not,” she said a little more firmly.
Wes
laughed. “I didn’t imagine you
would. But… I haven’t taken any trips in
a while.”
“Go
on,” Gabby prodded.
“You
go to the party tomorrow night, meet Wyatt and – ”
Gabby
rolled her eyes.
“ –
mind your manners,” Wes gave her a level look.
“Then I’ll come out and spend New Year’s with you and your kind.”
“My
kind??”
Wes
snickered. “Yeah, what do you call
yourselves? Divas??” He ducked just in time to miss the pillow
Gabby threw in his direction.
Gabby
leaned over and placed her glass on the coffee table. “I’ll have you know, there is nothing wrong
with being a diva.” She sat up
straighter and refilled her glass before reclining gracefully back into the
couch. Nodding, she thought aloud: “Yes,
this will be good for you. Now you will
see that you are out of touch in the country, and you need a good city girl to
set you right.”
“Oh,
I need a good city girl,” Wes agreed, “to set you right.”
“What
are you talking about?”
“A
good city girl,” Wes went on, “that isn’t close-minded to make you see there
are options ranging from Manhattan high rises to simple country homes.
“What,
you think you’re going to convert a city girl to the country?” Gabby asked
incredulously.
“Stranger
things have happened, Gabby,” Wes replied as he sauntered into the kitchen for
a beer. Grabbing one, he came back into
the front room, twisted the cap off, took a long swig and said straight to her:
“it’s on.”
Wes turned
and studied himself in the mirror, making sure to do so in a somewhat
exaggerated manner because he knew it would get Gabby’s goat. “Hmmm, I don’t think I really need to pack
much at all,” he said as he ran his hand over the length of his corduroy jacket
sleeve.
Gabby
knew what he was up to. Damn cousin
loved to get her riled. She wasn’t sure
if he was bluffing about packing that crazy outfit, but she didn’t really
care. She had a plan and wasn’t worried
at all. She would simply have her
cleaning lady “misplace” that suit and Wes would have no choice but to let Gabby
take him shopping for new clothes. And
she wouldn’t take him anyplace where he could buy something as ridiculous as
what he was now wearing.
“I
think I’m going to pack this costume.
With a few revisions, it would make quite a suit. That’s alright with you, isn’t it, Gabby?”
Gabby
smiled and replied “Of course it is.
Pack whatever you like.”
“Don’t
worry, I will. Oh, and I have some extra
fabric. I’ll have time to make something
that matches for you, too” Wes said as he turned toward his room to change back
into his jeans and t-shirt. He wasn’t
stupid, he knew Gabby too well to fall for her sweet dismissals. He wouldn’t let her suspect anything, of
course, let her have fun with her little schemes. But he had a few tricks up his sleeves, too, and
he was packing them in his suitcase. He
heard Gabby’s heavy sigh from the front room.
Now, he wasn’t sure which party he was looking forward to the most.
© Dahlia Ramone: January 5, 2014
This was written for Blogophilia Week 46.6
Topic: The Cat Drug It In
Bonus Points:
(Hard, 2 pts): Mention a
person you hold on a level of Zechariah
(Easy, 1 pt): Include an odd useless fact (Being unmarried
can shorten a man’s life by ten years)
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