HOMELESS–Part 6
Introduction:
I become a dad!
CHAPTER 16
We woke early the following morning, but could hear that we werenât the only ones. There was activity in the kitchen and we decided to dress. Jennie walked upstairs while I shaved, dressed, and cleaned up the bed before joining everyone for breakfast.
I was on my third piece of bacon and my fourth pancake when Jennie asked Toni if theyâd like to come for another visit before school started. The girls looked to their parents with pleading eyes. âI donât know if I can get off work again,â Charlie said.
âHow about if we take the girls for a week? They could fly down and back. Then you and Toni could have some time alone for a change.â
Charlie laughed. âThat WOULD be a change, but I donât know if Iâd feel comfortable with them flying on their own, Jennie. Theyâd be on their own in the terminal and who knows what could happen.â
âI agree,â I interrupted, âbut Iâd see to it that they werenât alone. I could fly up and take them back later in the day. Either that or arrange a charter.â
âWhatâs a charter, Doug,â asked Allison.
âEssentially, itâs like renting a car except in this case it would be a plane. You and Andrea would be the only passengers. Thatâs how Jennie and I came to New York the first time because I couldnât see wasting two hours in Charlotte or Atlanta for what is essentially a two hour flight. We have some time so, if your parents agree Iâll investigate all the options.â
What happened over the next fifteen minutes showed me our future as parents. Andrea and Allison begged and pleaded while I chuckled silently, stuffing myself with even more pancakes and knowing that Jennie and I would have two teenage visitors in mid-August. It had been determined as soon as Jennie had asked if they might visit.
Charlie said good-bye, leaving for work at 7:35, but Jennie and I dallied. Weâd be going against the traffic into the city, but weâd still hit huge traffic jams if we left before nine. I spent the time arranging and rearranging our suitcases in addition to Ladyâs bed, bowls, and the small amount of Purina Dog Chow that remained in the bag. I thought it would be enough for tonight and probably tomorrow at best.
Finally, the time for our departure had come. We hugged and kissed Toni, Andrea, and Allison before loading Lady into the back seat behind Jennie where she could rest her head on Jennieâs shoulder. I had noticed that all three Blasi women were wearing their new earrings. We had spent more than $2,000 on their presents, but it was a drop in the bucket so far as we were concerned. The looks on their faces when they received their gifts from Jennie had made it all worthwhile.
We waved as I backed out into the street and again as I drove away. âI think of them as family, Doug. Is that silly?â
âNot at all, Jennie; I feel the same way and Iâd bet they feel the same about us. Itâs kind of funny that we only met them because of that womanâs detestable behavior. Too bad we canât send her a thank you note.â Jennie laughed and I joined her. A minute later I pulled into the parking lot at 7-11. I bought four 20-ounce bottles of Coke, a gallon of water for Lady, and a small bag of ice. The soda and ice went into our small cooler; the water onto the floor behind my seat next to Ladyâs bowls.
I drove south until I was able to get onto I-78, following that through Jersey City to the New Jersey Turnpike. We moved along at a steady pace and fairly quickly due no small degree to the E-Z Pass Iâd kept after moving from New York to North Carolina. We didnât have to stop to get a ticket or to pay at the southern terminus of the Turnpike, nor did we have to stop in the long lines at either the Delaware Memorial Bridge or at one of the toll booths on I-95 in Delaware.
Our first stop was about two hours after leaving, around 11:20, at the last rest stop on the Turnpike. I needed to put Lady out for a walk and Jennie and I needed a bathroom break, too. By now we had our routine down pat. Jennie walked into the restroom while I took Lady onto the lawn. I had already poured water into her bowl on the sidewalk when Jennie reappeared with unwanted attention from a guy who looked to be in his late thirties. Twice I saw Jennie try to walk away from him and twice he grabbed her arm to stop her. Bad moveâLady also saw him. I let go of her leash and she was bounding down the walkway less than a second later.
Lady stopped when she reached Jennie, but even 100 feet away I could see her anger at his touching her mistress. The hair on the back of her neck was up and I could see other travelers back away cautiously. Jennie calmly took Ladyâs leash and it was clear to all that Lady was only a second away from taking down Jennieâs admirer. She was in attack modeârear legs bent and ready to spring, fangs baredâa low guttural growl coming from her throat. Only her rigid discipline and training saved that manâs life. I could see Jennie explaining that to the man as she turned away, leading Lady back to me.
âThanks, darling; he was making a real ass of himself. He stopped me on my way in and ignored my telling him that I was a very happily married woman. I couldnât believe that he was still there when I walked out of the ladiesâ room. What on earth did he possibly thinkâthat Iâd jump into a car with a total stranger for a quickie? Eeeww! Thank you, too, Lady,â she said as she ruffled Ladyâs ears.
I left to use the facilities and on the way some guy told me that I had a dangerous dog. âYes and no,â I replied. âSheâs a danger to anyone who tries to hurt either my wife or me, but sheâs extremely well trained. That man was a fool, but he was in no real danger unless he put his hand on my wife again. Neither my dog nor I would have accepted that a third time.â I turned away to enter the building. We stopped for gas before continuing. Gas prices in New Jersey are relatively low and thereâs always an attendant to man the pump and wash your windshield. Jersey was the only place I knew of where that was the norm.
â
We stopped again around one that afternoon for a quick lunch and again around four before stopping for the night around 6:30. For the first time since getting Lady I had trouble with the motelâs registration. The clerk absolutely refused to allow us to register with Lady. âHave you ever heard of the ADAâthe Americans with Disabilities Act,â I asked. âThatâs why you have ramps and bathrooms that are handicapped accessible. Part of the federal law covers service dogs like Lady or dogs for the blind. Youâd better check with your manager or owner. Iâd hate to have to sue you for being turned away.â
He did phone the owner and from the little I heard he wasnât too happy about what he was told. He tried repeatedly to argue his point, but apparently got nowhere.
Eventually, he hung up the phone and reluctantly told us, âIâve been advised to apologize and offer the room on the house.â Instead, Jennie and I said, âNo thanks,â turned away and walked out. We stayed instead at a Best Western just down the road. Not a word was said about our service dog.
This trip would normally take about ten hours. With Lady, I figured about twelve because of all the extra stops we had to make. That was why Jennie and I had driven almost eight hours that first day. We wanted to get home by noon so we could hit the supermarket. Other than the occasional can and a jar of peanut butter, there was nothing much in the house to eat.
Thatâs almost exactly what happened. We turned into the driveway at 11:43, remembering just in time to press the remote for the gate. I doubted that either of us was as happy as Lady. She ran around the back yard and in and out of the garage aimlessly until Jennie and I had removed everything from the SUV. I had to admit that the BMW was a good investment. It rode well and got great gas mileage, even if it needed premium fuel. Jennie told me that both her car and mine were twin-turbocharged, whatever the hell that means. I know a lot about computers, but almost nothing about cars.
We shopped most of the afternoon, spending hundreds to fill our refrigerator and pantry. Once we were done Jennie insisted we go to the range. I threw the clubs into my trunk and Lady climbed into the rear seat. The first time weâd taken her she raced out onto the range the instant I hit, thinking apparently that this was a gameâsome kind of fetch. Today she simply sat by our clubs watching and protecting us from the occasional vicious squirrel.
That night after grilling a thick steak that we ate with a salad I retreated to my study. There was something I needed to check on. I had a program that, when opened, showed a screen of textânot words or sentences, but line after line of random letters and symbols. When a certain password is entered the text dissolves leaving a series of email addresses and their corresponding passwords. Why go through all of this, you ask? Because as I mentioned earlier Iâve had some shady clientsâclients on the wrong side of the lawâand I canât afford to be caught communicating with them. Once you go online you should always assume that everything you do is public and subject to scrutiny from the government or anyone else who might be interested.
Sitting at my keyboard I accessed my home page on the internet. From there I typed in the URL for the University of Chicago and from there a university in New Zealand. Most universities have decent security, but anyone like me can get through it without too much difficulty. Should anyone inquire it would appear as though someone in the University of Chicago library had hacked into the University of Auckland. From there it was safe to access the email Iâd used to contact the motorcycle gang.
There was a message and several photos I thought Jennie would find interesting. I had no idea how they had managed to get a camera inside a state prison and I wasnât about to ask, but here in all his glory was a severely beaten former sheriff from Waterloo, Iowa. I was laughing so hard as I called Jennie that I could barely get her name out.
She came in wondering what was going on so I explained then I showed the photos of her stepfather with his two black eyes, band-aid on his forehead, and his arm in a cast, bandages wrapped tightly around his torsoâa sure sign of bruised or broken ribs. She took one look and joined me in laughter. âThis was you, wasnât it? Some friends or contacts you have?â
âI cannot tell a lie, but I do plead the fifthâa person does not have to testify if his answer might incriminate him.â
She leaned down to kiss me then whispered, âThanks.â Then she kissed me again. I scrolled down the screen to read the text againââWhat a complete fucktard this asshole is. He thinks he is still a hot shit, trying to boss everyone around. He has pissed off all the prisoners who have met him and more than half the guards. Heâll be lucky to live out his sentence. Doubt he will. Thanks for the upgrade. Itâs working great. A friendâ After deleting the message I went to join my beautiful wife on the deck.
Jennie and I spent the next three weeks having funâgoing to Bird Island on the southern end of Sunset Beach in the boat with Lady, or playing golf, or going to the beach. The only other thing we did was prepare for our visitors. There were no direct flights to either Myrtle Beach or to Wilmington, North Carolina, roughly fifty miles north of us so I phoned Executive Jet to make the arrangements once I had checked with Toni for dates and times. I insisted that the attendant be a woman to make the girls more comfortable. Take-off was scheduled for 9:00 Saturday morning so Toni and Charlie had their daughters at the Newark Airport General Aviation terminal at 8:20, giving them plenty of time to meet the captain and crew and double-check the arrangements before departure. Two hours later they were safely in Myrtle Beach, riding in Jennieâs SUV with Lady seated between them and they were talking nonstop. I grinned toward Jennie, but she was into the conversation as much as the girls.
They ran into the house and up the stairs to the bonus room closely followed by Lady. She jumped and capered, playfully nipping at their feet, as they put their clothes into the dresser and closet. I couldnât help but laugh. This was going to be some visit!
I grilled hot dogs for lunch and then we took them to Bird Island in the boat. We liked Bird Island for several reasons. First, we could take Lady, even in the summer. She loved the beach and often scampered in the waves with us. Dogs were restricted from the town beach between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Also, Bird Island was on the Little River Inlet so we had a choice of the waves in the ocean or the calm water where we and others parked our boats. Bird Island had ceased to be an actual island decades ago when the narrow inlet between it and Sunset Beach had silted in. Still, it was more than a mile from the nearest road so it was virtually deserted even on the busiest weekend. The only practical way to get here was by boat. Weâd brought the Blasiâs here on their first visit and they loved it as much as we did.
Lady raced back and forth when I pulled her Frisbee from the beach bag. The many holes from her teeth showed clearly how much she enjoyed playing with it. I reminded Andrea and Allison about the heat and Ladyâs need to rest and drink then sent them off to the ocean side which was completely deserted while Jennie and I set up our umbrella and beach chairs.
Jennie was five months into her pregnancy so her baby bump was obvious. Sheâd bought a new swimsuit, telling me how much she hated seeing womenâs bare abdomens when obviously pregnant. âSome things should be private, donât you think?â
Iâd never given the idea much thought, but I could understand her reasoning. Some things should be private.
The girls and Lady returned after about a half hour. They hadnât been in the oceanânot yetâbecause our rule was not to swim unless one of the adults was present. Iâd read and heard of many idiotic things done by people at the beach. One of my roommates at Harvard had worked as a lifeguard at a state park near my home. I cringed at the stories heâd told meâhow parents endangered their own children through things theyâd never consider doing at home.
We sat under the umbrella enjoying a Coke from the cooler and some fresh sliced veggies with a cup of ranch dressing. We dug in, eating and laughing until weâd had our fill. We went for a swim, staying fairly close to the shore. There was a lot of boat traffic farther out in the channel, some of it involving fairly big ships, so there was danger in swimming out too far. We all jumped into the water at the same timeâall of us, except Lady. Dogs can swim, but they tire quickly. The dog paddle is a very inefficient stroke, using a lot of energy to go nowhere. Jennie had read of several dogs drowning at one of the local beaches. I always forced Lady to âstayâ under the umbrella. Yes, dogs can get sunburned, too. We picked up our mess around four for the twenty minute trip home. I had the boat on the hydraulic lift, washing it carefully while Jennie and the girls carried the umbrella, chairs, and beach bag up to the house. I followed a few minutes later, carrying the cooler. We were ready to go out for dinner by 5:15, driving into Calabash for pizza.
We were back about ninety minutes later and I fed Lady, noticing how quiet things were in the living room. âEverything okay in here,â I asked.
âJennie, could we ask you something? Itâs kind of personal.â
âOkay, Andrea; go ahead.â
âMom told us that you ran away from home.â
âThatâs right; did she tell you why?â Andrea shook her head âno.â âYouâre so lucky to have wonderful loving parents. You should thank God for them every day. I had a wonderful father, but he died in an industrial accident when I was ten. My mother remarried almost two years later. She wasnât married even a month when my stepfatherâthe county sheriffâmade his first nighttime trip to my bedroom. I screamed the entire time he raped me, but my mother ignored me. I screamed every time he did itâtwo to three times a weekâfor the next five years. I hated that manâI still do. I hated him so much that I ran away when I had the chance. Anything was better than having to lie under his fat sweaty body almost every other day. I knew that Iâd have to have sex with some of the men who picked me up, but most of them were nice decent people who just wanted to help me.
âI had sex with lots of other men, but Iâve only made love with Doug. Do you understand the difference?â
âI think so,â Allison said. âDumb animals can have sex, but they donât make love.â
âThatâs true,â Jennie told them. âFor meâI would lie down and allow men to use my body, but I was somewhere else. I never had an orgasm and I didnât want one. With Doug Iâm always an active participant because I love him. I want it to be good for him just as he wants it to be good for me. Are you guys ready for Monday at the doctor?â
âOh yeah, Jennieâweâre looking forward to it,â Andrea replied eagerly. Jennie had realized that she had an appointment for a sonogram scheduled for the week they would visit. She presented three options to Toni: cancel the appointment; take them, but leave them in the waiting room; or take them in to experience the test with us. I wasnât surprised when Charlie and Toni said theyâd accept whatever we wanted to do, but thought that seeing a real sonogram would be an excellent and interesting learning experience for their daughters. Jennie and I agreed. Monday would be the dayâa big day for all of us.
Sunday morning Jennie and I drove them to church and then to brunch at a nice restaurant in Myrtle Beach. We spent the afternoon at Farmstead hitting balls and practicing our putting. Andrea did quite well, especially considering that they didnât have their own clubs and hadnât practiced since their last visit. Allison, however, smoked the ball. âGee Allison,â her sister commented, âwatching you makes me wonder if Daddy is really your father.â Allison howled in laughter then she went to the putting green and smoked everything under eight feet. Jennie and I must have given her a dozen high fives and even more knuckle bumps.
Everyone seemed more than a bit nervous at breakfast the following morning. We were in my car before any of us had even spoken. It was Allison who broke the ice. âI bet youâre hoping for a boy, Doug.â
After laughing, Jennie replied for me. âYouâd lose that bet, Allison. Doug wants a girl.â
âThatâs right,â I joined in. âGirls tend to stay close to their families even after getting married although Jennie is an obvious exception. Boys donât generally have much choice because their wives have made it for themâŠjust like almost every other decision.â
Jennie laughed and the girls joined her. Then Jennie ended the conversation with, âAnd donât you forget it!â
âYes, boss!â Jennie giggled then leaned across the console to kiss my cheek. Thirty
minutes later we were in Dr. Cullenâs office, sitting nervously until we were called then I thought the nurse would have a cow. I guess sheâd never had such a crowd follow her into the exam room.
Jennie was handed a gown and pointed toward the restroom. âYouâve got to be kidding,â she told the nurse. âWhy would I want to hide a body like this?â She took off her top and bra and pulled the gown over her arms. I tied a bow behind her neck, but left the other undone as Jennie removed her shorts and lay on the exam table.
She was there about fifteen minutes when Dr. Cullen entered with a smile. âI heard this was going to be a theatrical production.â I introduced Andrea and Allison and Dr. Cullen told them where they should stand in order to get the best view. She rubbed some gel on Jennieâs abdomen and asked what we were hoping for.
âDoug wants a girl,â Allison blurted.
âHow much do you girls know about sonograms?â
âWe went online to Google when our mom told us about being here for Jennieâs test,â Andrea replied.
âYeah, we must have read six or seven articles about it,â Allison added.
âAnd I bet we looked at four or five videos,â Andrea added. I just laughed; Jennie smiled. We loved their enthusiasm.
âWell then, can you tell me what we should look for to determine the sex?â
Allison giggled, but Andrea came straight out and answered, âA penis, but sometimes the umbilical cord gets in the way or is confused for a penis.â Dr. Cullen joined Jennie and me in laughing, but did ask if the girls were looking for work. âIâm hiring; Iâd bet you know more than most of my staff.â
Then Dr. Cullen got down to business. She applied the sensor to Jennieâs skin, rubbing it into the gel, and all of us paid the closest attention. We could see the babyâs body and head. The umbilical was obvious, but we never did see a penis. âWell, girlsâŠwhatâs the sex?â
âItâs a girl,â they shouted together.
âAnother correct diagnosis; are you sure youâve never done this before?â We shared a laugh then Dr. Cullen checked Jennieâs lungs and heart beat, reviewed her diet and exercise regimens and told us things couldnât be better. We were out the door five minutes later, laughing and hugging each other before I treated to lunch.
We encouraged the girls to call home every day and they did, usually around 5:15 so their dad would be home from work. Every day after theyâd spoken Charlie would ask to speak with me and heâd ask how his daughters were behaving. Every day Iâd give him the same answerâthe way Iâd want my daughters to behave. Todayâs conversation was more elated yelling and screaming than anything else. Andrea began with, âITâS A GIRL, MOM! A GIRL!! WE SAW HER INSIDE JENNIE. IT WAS INCREDIBLE.â Then Allison added that I had wanted a girl and the yelling started anew.
Once they had calmed down Charlie took the phone for his daily question. âExcited,â I replied, âand a bit noisy today, but thatâs to be expected. Itâs been an exciting day.â I ended the call and drove everyone down to Myrtle Beach to Captain Georgeâs, an excellent seafood buffet where the food was almost as good as in a high end sit-down restaurant.
We spent the rest of their visit either at the beach or on the golf course or shopping for baby clothes and accessories. We were actually sorry to see them leave on Sundayâthe day before Labor Day. We went shopping in earnest for furniture that week. One of the things we decided was that we wanted to buy a quality set that would last through her entire childhood. We decided on a dresser and crib with a matching twin headboard and desk (canât plan too far ahead if youâre a nerd) in a washed blonde maple finish. Weâd put the headboard and desk away for now in an air-conditioned storage facility about two miles away until it was needed.
The rest of Jennieâs pregnancy was uneventful, but she pouted something awful when Dr. Cullen told her to stop penetrative sex in her seventh month. âDonât worry, JenâI can still take care of you with my mouth and fingers.â
My Jennie kissed me then led me to bed. âItâs not me Iâm concerned about. I know youâre accustomed to getting off every day. Will you be satisfied with my mouth and hand for the next five months?â
âOf course, we both knew this day would come. Having a family with you is much more important than an orgasm.â
Jennie had an evil smile on her face when she replied, âThen you wonât mind doing without for the next five months, will you?â She laughed like crazy when I gulped several times then she kissed me and whispered, âLike Iâd ever make you do that. Plan on cumming every day just like youâve been doing. I hear itâs really good for my skin. Maybe youâll enjoy doing it on my titties. Huh?â I did; I enjoyed it very much, but I absolutely loved cumming within my beautiful wife.
CHAPTER 17
All nerds know how to plan ahead. Letâs face itâthatâs what we do best. I had a bag packed for Jennie and daughter by mid-October and had plotted alternative routes to the hospital in case there was an accident or construction. I had run several drills like the fire drills schools are required to hold. Jennie wasnât due until the first week of December. I just wanted to be prepared. Iâm a nerdâI admit it.
There was one thing I couldnât plan forâovercoming my own nervousness. I was on the computerâwhere else would I beâwhen Jennie walked in. âDoug, do you think you could drive me to the hospital?â
âHuh? Whatâs wrong?â
âNothing, darling; itâs just timeâŠyou know, time for you to become a daddy. Turn your computer off. Youâll probably be there for hours. Iâve already phoned Dr. Cullen.â I put Lady out then locked up and helped Jennie into the SUV.
I was shaking when I climbed behind the wheel and Jennie noticed. âClose your eyes, Doug, and take a deep breath. Relax. Okay, now lean across the console and kiss me.â I did and Jennie broke it about a minute later. âIâm counting on you, Doug. Take your time and drive carefully. Weâre in no rush. In fact, youâll probably have to come home to feed Lady. These things usually take hours and hours.â
âWhy didnât you tell me you were having contractions?â
âBecause I knew youâd react like this. Youâre as nervous as a cat in a rocking chair factory. Youâve been doting on me for the past week. I know itâs because you love me, but we have a long road ahead of us so letâs just take it one step at a time. Okay?â I nodded and leaned over to kiss her cheek. Jenny smiled then asked, âDid we just have our first argument?â
âI donât think so. Youâre rightâŠI am nervous, but mostly Iâm terrified that something will happen and Iâll lose you and the baby.â
âYou need to relax and have confidence in the doctor and the hospital. Women have been having babies for thousands of years. We have an excellent doctor and weâll be in an excellent hospital. Even more important, youâll be with me every second once the delivery begins. I know youâll be strong for me when I need it. NowâŠdonât you think we should leave the garage?â
âOh.â I put the SUV in gear and backed into the driveway. Then I began the drive down into Myrtle Beach to the hospital. I tried to drive normally, but there was nothing normal about how I was feeling. I doubted Iâd have been able to make it if not for Jennieâs support. I felt an enormous sense of relief when I dropped Jennie at the hospital door, giving the keys to the valet. I had her in a wheelchair seconds later on the way to obstetrics. Then began the worst part of this ordealâthe waiting.
Dr. Cullen came in to examine Jennie roughly every two hours. For all I knew she might have gone back to her office between visits. Finally, after weâd been there almost six hours she told me weâd probably have another four to five hours before the birth began. âGo home, Doug. Feed Lady and put her out and grab a sandwich for yourself. If you do that youâll still be back in plenty of time.â I was ready to protest when she pulled me down for a kiss. She whispered, âPleaseâŠdo it for me,â when she broke it. I knew I was finished when she batted those long eyelashes at me. I kissed her again then turned to walk out the door.
I was at home with Lady about forty minutes later and I was determined to be back at the hospital with Jennie as soon as humanly possible. I put Ladyâs dinner together while she was outside. She looked around for Jennie, even running to our room in search of her. Once she was finished eating I had a decision to make. How long would I be away? How long before our daughter would be born? What was the weather supposed to be like tonight? Once I knew the night would be relatively warm I made my decision, moving Ladyâs bed to the garage and leaving the garage door open for her. I backed out and drove through the gate, making sure that she did not follow me. I walked back into Jennieâs room just as she was going through another contraction. I hated seeing her in such pain.
âDid you eat,â she asked with a groan.
I responded with a sheepish look. âI couldnât. Iâm too nervous.â
She pulled me to her for a long kiss. âI figured that so one of the nurses offered to make a PB and J sandwich for you. Itâs here on the table. Would you go to the cafeteria and get two big drinks. Dr. Cullen told me not to get anything with caffeine, so Sprite or ginger ale for me. Okay? Please? Youâre going to be the best dad ever!â I practically ran from the room, down the stairs and into the cafeteria by the entrance. I was back in about five minutes with the drinks and I was panting something fierce from the run.
I ate my sandwich and helped Jennie with sips of her drink. I had just finished when Dr. Cullen came in again. She looked my way after examining Jennie for what seemed to be the thousandth time. âIt wonât be long nowâŠprobably two to three hours.â I breathed a sigh of relief and pulled my phone from my pocket.
Jennie and I had spoken by phone with Toni, Andrea, and Allison at least once a week, but more often when we could. They told us how school was going and we were pleased to learn that Andrea had applied to Villanova in addition to Rutgers. We knew that sheâd hear from them sometime in January. Allison answered the phone this afternoon.
âHi, Allison,â I began. âLooks like today is the day. Iâm in the hospital with Jennie as we speak.â I could hear her calling her mom and sister. Soon they were chattering away and I was sure theyâd continue when Jennie felt a huge contraction. I ended the call then, promising to phone when the baby was born regardless of the time.
Our daughter must have been impatient because she began to assert herself about an hour before Dr. Cullen expected her. Jennie was pushing and breathing and grunting when the doctor rushed into the room. I held Jennieâs hand and wiped the sweat from her brow. I gave her sips of Sprite and prayed like Iâve never prayed beforeâprayed for Jennie, prayed for our daughter, andâmostlyâprayed that Iâd be strong enough for both of them.
Someone must have been listening because at 10:13 that evening it was done. Dr. Cullen cut the cord, the nurse washed and weighed our daughter and handed her to Jennie. Damn! She looked just like my wifeâlight brown hair and clear blue eyes. She had her first meal, suckling at Jennieâs breast, and then she was taken to the nursery for a few hours. I hugged and kissed Jennie and told her how much I loved her about a hundred times before leaving. I knew Jennie was exhausted and needed to sleep.
Walking down the corridor to the elevator, I pulled my phone from my pocket. I was just leaving the building when I placed the call. Andrea answered. âSheâs hereâsix pounds, nine ouncesâŠJennieâs hair and eyes. Sheâs beautiful just like her mother.â
(MOM, ALLISONâSHEâS HERE! JENNIE HAD HER BABY! Whatâs her name, Doug? Did you decide?)
âYup! We decided on Andrea Allison.â
(OH MY GOD! MOM! MOM! THEY NAMED THE BABY AFTER ME AND ALLISON!) I was sure I could hear the celebration in progress up in Hoboken as though it was right in the parking lot with me. I hoped nobody in the neighborhood planned on sleeping anytime soon.
Eventually things settled down and Toni told me I was on speaker. âYes, theyâre both okayâŠbetter than okay. Andrea is a bit wrinkled, but, of course, I think sheâs beautiful. Her hair and eyes are just like Jennieâs.â I could hear the girls begging to come for another visit and I could also hear Toni tell them that theyâd imposed on us enough.
âJennie and I have talked about another visit and we think it will be fine, but we also think it should be after Christmas. You should spend the holiday with your families. Iâm on my way home now, but I promise weâll call tomorrow when Jennie and Andrea are home.â We chatted for another five minutes as I spoke with Andrea, Allison, and even Charlie before I was allowed to end the call.
I phoned my mother, starting my end of the conversation with, âHi, Grandma,â She agreed to come down to help as soon as she could get here. I was one tired nerd when I pulled into the driveway that evening and Iâd had the easy partâby far.
Lady was on her bed when I approached the garage. Leaving the car outside, I opened the door to the house for her then pulled the car into the garage. Once again, Lady searched the entire house looking for Jennie. âTomorrow morning, LadyâŠJennie will be back tomorrow morning and sheâll have a tiny surprise for you then, too. Câmon, I need a shower and then itâs to bed.â
I slept that night, but I missed my wife terribly. I was accustomed to the touch of her arm over my chest and the sensation of her smooth skin against mine. I missed the sweet aroma of her shampoo. Hell, I just missed HER!
I must have been thrashing in my sleep because Lady was aroused, pushing her snout under my arm and barking several times. I wondered at first if there might be an intruder, but she calmed down as soon as I did. âI guess it was me, eh Lady. Was I disturbing you? Wait until tomorrow night,â I said with a chuckle. I wrapped my arm around Ladyâs head, pulling it down to the bed, petting her and scratching her ears until I had fallen asleep once again.
I was told to be at the hospital at ten and nerds are always punctual. Itâs part of who we are. I was just outside the door when I heard the nurse tell Jennie she thought Iâd be late. After a brief chuckle Jennie told her, âThatâs because you donât know my husband.â
She asked me what the time was when I walked in about five seconds later. âExactly ten, why?â
âOhâŠjust a little bet I had with the nurse. What was the reaction in Hoboken?â
âGuess.â I continued when I saw that Jennie was busy with our daughter. âTotal pandemonium; Andrea was thrilled with the name and she asked if they could come for another visit.â
âIâll bet Toni told her theyâd imposed enough.â
âExactlyâŠword for word. I told her weâd already discussed it and you can offer this afternoon when we call them. Iâll have to email some photos, too.â
âOkay, but no flash; Dr. Cullen told me her eyes arenât ready yet. Why donât you take the bag? Iâll take Andrea as soon as Iâm in the wheelchair.â I was thrilled now that Iâd made all the payment arrangements more than two weeks ago. I thought Iâd be a nervous wreck if I had to sit in the accounting office for even a minute now.
I went downstairs a few minutes before Jennie so I could have the car ready for her and Andrea. I took my daughter from her mother and placed her into the car seat with the utmost care, making doubly sure she was safe and secure then I helped my wife into her seat. I thanked the nurse and the valets and began the most careful drive of my life.
I drove five miles under the speed limit all the way home, even waving politely when some drivers honked their horns in frustration. I breathed a sigh of relief when I finally pulled into the garage. âI want to go in first, Doug. Iâm sure Lady will be a little wild when she sees me. Leave Andrea here for a minute until I get seated then you can bring her in. Sheâll be okay.â I was sure she was right. The fence was closed and secure, but just to be sure I closed the garage door with the remote.
I helped Jennie to the door and I could see the wisdom in her remarks immediately. Lady was never permitted to jump up at us or our visitors, but she raced wildly around the room when she first saw Jennie. I took her coat and helped her into an easy chair while she told Lady to âsit.â Only then did I put the jacket into the closet and return to the garage for our daughter.
I was holding her carefully, my hand under her neck, as I placed her into Jennieâs lap. Lady looked at Jennie then took a sniff and looked back at Jennie again. âProtect,â Jennie told her as Lady leaned in for another sniff. I knew the introduction was complete when Lady pushed her nose under Andreaâs hand and kept it there leaning against Jennieâs thigh.
Andrea slept for more than an hour then awoke crying. I took her into our room and changed her diaper and her onesie. Her head on my shoulder I returned to the living room where Jennie had already opened her blouse to expose one of her breasts. Andrea suckled as soon as her mouth found her motherâs nipple.
I sat next to Jennie to watch this timeless tableauâmother and child. âI donât think that anyone could love more than I love you at this moment. I thought that I really loved you before, but nowâŠ.â
âI know exactly how much you love me. Dougâjust ever so slightly less than I love you. Iâve often thought how fate brought us together. Now I believe it was divine providenceâan act of Godâthat brought us together. And I was rightâyou did want to fuck me.â
âHell, I always want to do that, but, unfortunately, our sex life will have to be second now.â
âI donât knowâbabies sleep a lot, you know.â I smiled and kissed Jennie. I did know that. Nerds know a lot of stuff like that.
CHAPTER 18
I took a few photos of Jennie and Andrea, emailing them to Toni and Mom almost immediately. Mom called and told me she had reservations to Myrtle Beach tomorrow morning, arriving around one. Then she hit me with something out of the blue. âWould it be all right it Paul came down in a few days? Heâll have a reservation for one of the hotels just in case your fatherâI always cringed when she called that bastard âyour fatherââhas him followed.â
I explained that we had invited our friends and that they had two teenage daughters. I ended the conversation by telling her Iâd call her back tonight. I explained to Jennie when she woke from her nap. Sheâd told me that between feeding Andrea and the hard hospital bed sheâd barely slept a wink. âI think I just missed you,â she said with a wan smile. My smile in return told her the same.
We phoned Toni and the girls around five. They said they would come on the 26th if that was okay and that Charlie would be able to join us on the 30th. Christmas and New Yearâs Day were on Friday this year so the girls didnât have to be back in school until January 4th, the following Monday. Jennie explained my Momâs situation and told her that we wouldnât have her âfriendâ visit if she or the girls would feel uncomfortable. âDonât be silly, Dougâthey may go to Catholic school, but theyâre hardly nuns. Actually, it might be good for them to realize that people older than their parents enjoy sex.â
âAre there any people older than their parents?â We shared a laugh before I gave the phone back to Jennie. After walking into my office I phoned my mother about arrangements for Paul to join us. I had just ended the call when Lady rushed into the room. She turned and, making sure I was following, led me to the bedroom where Andrea was just waking up. How? How did she know that?
Jennie and I talked about that over dinner. The only thing I could think of was that Lady could detect some tiny change in Andreaâs breathing. Weâd never know for sure, but Lady always seemed to know when Andrea was waking up. During the day sheâd run to either me or Jennie. At night she pushed her nose under my arm and she was never wrong.
I met Mom in the airport as planned. She was almost as excited as I was. I was her only child and sheâd long ago given up any hopes of ever having even a single grandchild to spoil. She had been completely surprised to learn that Iâd gotten married.
Paul was coming in tomorrow and had a reservation at one of the oceanfront hotels in Myrtle Beach. I agreed to drive to the hotel that evening when he took a cab to one of the local restaurants. I would follow to ensure that he wasnât being followed by either my father or some private investigator. If he wasnât Iâd pick him up at the restaurantâs parking lot and weâd return together to my home.
Mom was thrilled to hold Andrea and even to change her. She helped Jennie bathe Andrea in the kitchen sink. Andrea was safely and snugly in her bassinette with Lady on guard when Mom told us how her divorce was going. âHe acts as though he was the innocent party even though I have depositions from four of his former students stating that he coerced them into sex with him. He has also been treated for STDâs twice while Iâve always tested clean. Those are county health records. I used them to track down his lovers. My attorney says that he can subpoena them if necessary. Itâs not going as easily as I had hoped. Thatâs why I want to be careful with Paul. Thereâs no indication that he knows about us yet, but heâs totally irrational. We had one meeting with our lawyers and his had to restrain him. I wonât meet with him again and Iâll continue to refuse counseling. Incidentally, Iâll be getting another deposition from his current squeeze who described sex with him as âsleeping with a grunting pig.ââ Jennie howled with laughter then caught herself. âDonât worry. Youâll learn soon enough that sheâll sleep through a hurricane. Thatâs what babies do.â We said good night and headed off to bed.
Jennie and I were lying in bed, naked as usual when she whispered to me. âI miss making love with you. Thatâs the only part of having a baby that I donât like. I canât wait for these stitches to come out and for Dr. Cullen to give her okay. I always feel soâŠcompleteâŠfulfilled with you inside me.â
âI always feel so horny when Iâm not. Itâs clear we were meant for each other. You make me feel like Iâm the luckiest man in the world.â
âThatâs because you are, silly.â She leaned over to give me a kiss then settled in forâŠwell, not the night, thatâs for sureâŠfor as long as Andrea would permit.
We were up an hour later, warned once again by Lady who seemed to enjoy her new job. I changed Andrea while Jennie prepared herself, pushing the pillows against the headboard and getting a cloth diaper for her shoulderâfor when she burped our daughter. Back in bed twenty minutes later, I congratulated Jennie on becoming a pro. âMe? All I did was sit there while she suckled. I think you did all the workâŠDad!â
She snuggled up against me and I pulled the blanket up to our chins.
All told, we were up three times that night so a nap was in order the following afternoon. I left at 5:30 for the drive to Myrtle Beach. Paul had a reservation at the Landmark and I saw him exit at exactly 6:12 with his suitcase. He was easy to identify because everyone else with a suitcase was going in the opposite directionâeither checking in or going to their rooms.
I watched carefully as he entered the taxi, lying back because I knew where he was goingâwatching to see if anyone would follow. Myrtle Beach is usually pretty dead at this time of year. Even the snowbirds stay home for the holidays. There was no traffic even though I waited until they were almost a mile up the road before I put the car in gear. The cab pulled into the lot at Margaritas, an authentic Mexican restaurant. I picked it because the restaurant and the parking lot were small and I could get in from the back entrance, behind a jewelry store, but I doubted a private detective or my idiot father would know that.
Paul stood outside, calmly looking around as if waiting for someone to join him. I let him stand for about ten minutes before calling his cell. âIâm hereâŠover on your left behind the jeweler. Iâll pick you up in another minute. You can put your suitcase in the trunk. Iâll have the passenger side door open for you.â I started the car and turned on the lights. Ten seconds later I pulled in front of the restaurant, the trunk already up. Paul was ready for me. I left and was back on the highway in less than ten seconds.
Mom ran out to the garage as soon as I pulled in. She hugged Paul then said, âCome meet my granddaughter. Sheâs beautiful, just like her mother.â Sounded just like my momâbragging about everyone except me. There were a lot of reasons why I left Long Island. The weather, cheaper housing and living (like I had to worry), getting away from my father, and maintaining a comfortable distance from my mother; I was sure that she loved me, but she was never too expressive of her love. Iâd learned not to take it to heart a long, long time ago.
Lady greeted me once I was in the house and she was followed closely by Jennie. Mom was right about one thing. Andrea was beautiful, just like her mother. Jennieâs beauty went far beyond her physical being. She was mostly a beautiful person.
Weâd had no way of knowing what would happen tonight, so neither Jennie nor my mom had cooked and now it was kind of dark to grill so I suggested getting take-out pizza. Paul offered to come with me, but I thought it safer if he stayed here where we knew he wouldnât be seen. We still had no idea if dear old Dad knew about him and Mom or if he knew about Paulâs trip near to where I lived. I had a listed phone so it would be childâs play to find me. Then again neither Jennie nor I were hiding. We no longer had any reason to.
Iâd taken an online subscription to the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier and Iâd been rewarded with several articles on the former sheriff. The first told about how he was injured in a fight in the shower. I already knew about that. The second described another attack in the prison yard that had resulted in injuries so severe that he had been restricted to a wheelchair. There was conjecture as to whether he would ever be able to walk again. His attorney had appealed to the court to have his sentence reduced, but Judge Pepper steadfastly refused. I made a note to contribute to his reelection campaign. We needed more judges like him.
We had a wonderful visit with Paul. Jennie and I both liked him. Most of all we liked the way he treated my mother. âI donât often run into your father, Doug. Heâs in the school of science and Iâm in humanities, but I have seen him often in the Faculty Senate. He has quite the reputation as a blowhard. We can always count on him to monopolize the meeting. Heâll go on and on until the president has had enough then he sits down and pouts for the rest of the meeting. He thinks heâs been discreet in his relationships with his students, but there have been rumors going around for yearsâalmost as long as Iâve been trying to get Eleanor to divorce him.â
âYou know, MomâIâll testify for you, if necessary. I have first-hand knowledge I can share. Iâll bet having his only child testify will drive him crazy.â
âI donât want you to get involved, Doug.â
âMom, Iâve been involved for the past twenty years. Iâll only be bringing my annoyance to an end. Iâll still hate him, though it could be worse. He could be Jennieâs step-father who repeatedly raped her when she was a child.â
About a week before Christmas Mom asked why we hadnât decorated for Christmas. I was ashamed to admit that I hadnât done anything last year when I was alone. We put some formula into a few baby bottles and Jennie and I took our first time off as parents to do some shopping, knowing that Andrea was in good hands with her grandmother.
Our first stop was Home Depot where we bought several wreathsâa matching pair for the stone columns at the driveway and another for our front door. We even bought one for the rear gate. We bought a treeâone with the lights already wired onto the branches and dozens of ornaments. Then we went to Loweâs and we were almost there when I remembered the Christmas shop in Calabash.
The store was expensive, but had a huge selection of everything. We bought a nativity set and a big wreath for the large stone area over our fireplace. Most of all we had some ideas we would think about for next year. The good thing about this shop was that it was open all year around. The Christmas stuff at Home Depot, Loweâs, and even Walmart disappeared by January.
We had a lot of fun decorating with but one problemâLadyâs tail. She must have knocked twenty decorations to the floor and twice almost knocked the tree to the floor, a problem I finally solved by placing a screw eye into the wall and connecting it to the tree with steel wire.
Jennie and I did all of our shopping online, and most of it at Harry Winstonâs. Jennie suggested pearl earrings and necklace for Mom. We bought similar sets of small diamond studs and pendants for Andrea and Allison. For Toni we went a bit overboard, buying what Jennie thought was an exquisite diamond and emerald pendant with matching earrings. For Paul sweaters and shirts were all we could come up with.
Charlie was a fisherman and the girls had told us of a rod and reel combo that he just drooled overâa Shimano Stella reel and matching rodâexactly what I had on my boat. Jennie insisted that she didnât want anything so, naturally, I bought her an expensive gold and diamond watch by Movado. I had the best presents I could imagine in Jennie and Andrea.
Christmas day began like every other with Lady sticking her cold nose under my arm to tell me that Andrea was about to wake up. Fifteen minutes later Jennie carried her out to the living room. I placed a blanket on the floor as Iâd done almost every day. She seemed to enjoy watching the lights and she always reached out for Lady who always lay right next to her, her dangerous claws facing away. Several times weâd seen Andrea reach over to touch Ladyâs fir and sheâd laughed every time.
We exchanged gifts with Mom and Paul. Jennie loved her watch. She bought me a new watch, tooâa solar powered Seiko. We spent a quiet dayâas quiet as a day can be when thereâs a three-week old baby in the house. The Blasiâs phoned around noon to wish us a merry Christmas and we discussed their visit.
I met them at the general aviation terminal andâwowâwere they excited! They had several plastic bags with brightly colored boxes in addition to their suitcase. I drove into the garage not more than forty minutes later. After hugging Jennie and being introduced to Mom and Paul the girls ran upstairs to unpack. We had planned to exchange gifts at that time, but apparently Lady had other ideas. She took Andreaâs wrist in her mouth and led her to our room, stopping right in front of the bassinette with our sleeping daughter. Andrea, Allison, and Toni stood there for a good twenty minutes
They took photos and commented on how beautiful and how tiny she was. When she woke up they commented on how loud she was. The girls asked if they could watch when Jennie nursed and we agreed. Then while Andrea was still awake they gave her their presents. Andrea had bought her a pink bear with the softest covering. It became her favorite. Allison bought her rattle with several colorful bands on a plastic ring and was thrilled when Andrea was able to hold it. Of course, she tried to put it into her mouth. We gave them their gifts then and they were understandably pleasedâmore than pleased, they were ecstatic. âYou shouldnât have,â was what Toni said, but the expressions on her and her daughtersâ faces said otherwise. Iâd hear that expression several times over the next few months.
Charlie arrived as scheduled on the 30th and I met him in Myrtle Beachâs main terminal. The first words out of his mouth when he saw the gift from Jennie and me wereâyou guessed it!ââYou shouldnât have.â Yes; his face said otherwise.
We would have normally taken everyone out for dinner several times, but neither Jennie nor I were ready to take our newborn daughter out into crowds of coughing and sneezing people with colds or flu, or worse. Instead, Mom and Toni handled the evening cooking, Mom making pot roast and baked ham and Toni doing both homemade lasagna and spaghetti with homemade meatballs and Italian sausage. I handled most lunches, grilling hot dogs, homemade burgers, kielbasa, and bratwurst. We all wanted Jennie to take things as easy as possible.
The girls chipped in with caring for Andrea who we decided to call âAndiâ to separate her from Andrea, her namesake. They changed her diapers and helped with her bath. They loved to hold her and did so often.
We had a great time New Yearâs Eve, but when Lady ran out of the bedroom at 12:30 to get us we called it a night. All of our guests left two days later by limo. There were six of them and our largest car, Jennieâs SUV, could hold them, but not their suitcases, too. There were hugs and kisses aplenty and even a few tears, even though we assured them that weâd see them soonâSpring Break at the latest.
Jennie and I took Andi to her first doctorâs appointment about a week later. It was a well-care visit, one of many that would be scheduled over the next few years. Sheâd received her first shot and she wasnât happy. Poor Andrea cried and cried even after we had left the office and were on our way home. We needed some baby powder and some ointment so Jennie asked me to drop her at Walmart. Sheâd go in while I waited in the car with Andi. I found a parking spot and stood outside the car so sheâd be able to see me. Luckily, she wasnât in the store too long. I waved, she saw me and we were back in the car less than ten minutes later.
I drove out toward the highway, paying keen attention to the traffic. Whoever designed this parking lot should be strung up by his balls. There are so many blind turns that anyone who does more than ten miles an hour is a fool. One of the exits requires a left-hand turn straight into entering traffic. I was almost out when I felt Jennieâs grip on my arm. âDoug!â I looked first at her then saw what she was looking at. Rather than driving to the highway I found a parking spot and walked up to the stop sign. Seated there with a homemade cardboard sign was a manâyes, it was a man this timeâbegging for help.
âWhatâs your story, Mister,â I asked as I approached.
âI lost my jobâŠmy career, actually. Then I lost my house. My familyâs been staying at the city shelter for the last week. Itâs dangerous there. I worry about my wife and my little girl every night. Even worse, if we donât get there on time we have to sleep in my truck. I donât even know if I have enough gas to get back to them.â
âWhat did you do for a living?â
âI was a roofer. Then I fell and broke my hip. I got workersâ comp and disability, but theyâre nothing compared to what I was making. Then they dried upâŠfucking governmentâall they ever do is screw you. Can you help me? Will youâŠplease?â
âI can and I will. It was about a year ago that I met a young woman at this very stop sign. Weâre now married and we have a little girl of our own.â I reached for my wallet and pulled out ten fifties. Handing them to the man I told him, âGet your family out of the shelter and into a motel. Thereâs a gas station about two blocks down the highway. You might want to go there first.â I took a business card from my wallet and wrote on the backâBlue Ribbon Cleanersâwith their phone number. âI spoke to the owner just the other day. They clean our house every week and theyâre in dire need of people. You can tell them I told you to call. Itâs only $10 an hour, but theyâll be happy to get you. Maybe your wife would like a job, too if you can find daycare for your daughter.â
He shook my hand as he thanked me repeatedly until I suggested his wife and child needed him. He grinned, probably for the first time in weeks then jogged across the exit to an old pickup truck. I returned to my wife, realizing for perhaps the millionth time how lucky we actually were. I was barely in the car when Jennie leaned across the console, planting a huge kiss onto my lips. âYouâre such a wonderful man. How much did you give him?â
âFive hundred and the phone number of Blue Ribbon.â
âOhâŠgood idea; no wonder I love you so much. And to think itâs our anniversary. Yes, darlingâitâs exactly one year since I met you hereâŠthe very best year of my life.â She kissed me again and I drove down the highway to our home and our future.
EPILOG
Jennie had offered me sexâher hand and her mouth–as soon as we left the hospital with Andi. I had looked at her with the total love she deserved, but turned her down flat. âSexâŠexcuse me, making love is about giving as much as it is taking. I canât do anything for you now so I plan to abstain until I can–besides you need to rest. God, I never realized what an ordeal giving birth can be. I was wasted afterwards and all I did was watch.â Jennie laughed hysterically then took my hand. I knew that sheâd find a way to tell me when she was ready–the very first second after she had her doctorâs okay. That day came in late January and it was well worth waiting for. We were back to a minimum of once a day from that day forward.
Andrea phoned us as soon as she heardâshe had been accepted at Villanova and was given a full scholarship. We did our best to act surprised. We told her that we were extremely pleased for her. Later, we received a phone call from Charlie. âI know you had something to do with it. They told me at Rutgers that my income meant sheâd get a partial scholarship at best.â I denied knowledge and responsibility repeatedly until Charlie rang off, saying, âThanks. I really mean thatâthanks so much.â
As promised we did see them at Easter when Andrea asked if we would come to her graduation. She explained that in good weather the rite would be conducted at the football field with unlimited seating. If it rained, only Mom and Dad could actually attend due to restricted seating. We assured her that weâd be there for her big day and we were. The weather was gloriousâmid-eighties with a light breeze coming off the Hudson tidal estuary and the Atlantic. Jennie sat to my right, Andi on my lap looking as cute as a button in her little brimmed cap, and my service dog to my left. Charlie, Toni, and Allison were on the bleachers just in front of us. Charlie thanked me again after the ceremony, but I pleaded total ignorance. Andrea went on to med school, again earning a full scholarship. Allison wasnât quite the student her sister was, but she also earned a full scholarship to Penn State where she studied Elementary Education.
We remained friends with Charlie and Toni long after their children became productive adults with families of their own. It was on one of our fishing trips that Charlie asked me for help one more time. I promised him that Toni would never lack for anything should he pass on. His thoughts that day seemed prophetic two months later when he suffered a fatal heart attack while at work. Our family spent a full week in Hoboken in support of Toni and his two wonderful daughters. I had mixed emotions when Toni asked if I would speak at the funeral.
âItâs funny how people meet,â I began. âI brought my wife to New York to buy her engagement and wedding rings and one night we went to see the musical âHamilton.â I had my service dog with me and a woman took exception to sitting next to her even though I had purchased a seat for my dog. Charlie and I struck up a conversation during intermission about that womanâs terrible behavior and I asked if he and Toni would like to join us for a drink after the show. They agreed and thus began the best friendship weâve ever known. Charlie, Toni, and their daughters are a part of our extended family. Neither Jennie nor I have much of a relationship with our parents for reasons that arenât important today.
âCharlie and I shared a love of fishing and good food. We also shared a love of our families. Charlie was an excellent role model for me and for his sons-in-law. He loved Toni with all his heart. He loved his daughters and grandchildren every bit as much and he was a man who believed strongly in his God. Good-bye, my friend. Iâll miss you more than I could ever say.â I returned to the pew and broke down, crying unashamedly while Jennie comforted me. We met at that tiny Italian restaurant later where we celebrated Charlieâs life. Only when everyone had left did I share with Toni the solemn promise Iâd made to Charlie. I gave her fifteen million dollars. After taxes sheâd have roughly half. That was invested in a tax-free mutual fund that would pay more than three percentâmore than $200,000 tax free annually. The money would go to her daughters and their families when she passed.
Jennie gave me three childrenâAndrea, Brianna, and Jefferyânamed after her father who had died much too young. I didnât pray often, but I prayed then that our children would turn out just half as good as Andrea and Allison did. The schools in North Carolina are only fair. The teachers work hard and do their best, but their salaries are so low that the best and brightest either move to states that pay better or try other more lucrative fields. I didnât know how a teacher in North Carolina could support a family without a second job. Thatâs why we looked for housing on Long Island when I went to testify at my parentsâ divorce hearing.
Momâs attorney took a lot of time establishing my intellect and achievements for the court before asking about my relationship with my father. âEssentially, there is no relationship,â I answered. âIt died when I was sixteen–the day I walked into his laboratory and saw him engaged in sexual relations with a young woman. He had her bent over the lab table and was driving his erect penis into her even after I announced my presence. I havenât spoken to him since.â His attorney tried unsuccessfully to discredit my testimony first by saying that I didnât know what I had seen; I was too young to know. I laughed in response. Finally, he suggested that I hated my father. âHow would you feel if you found your father screwing some woman other than your mother? Of course, I hate him, but not enough to lie about it. I have no reason to lie. I know what I saw. It was exactly what I described here today. He was fucking this young woman and he continued in spite of my presence.â My testimony ended, I got up and walked out the door, but not before hugging my mom and sneering at my so-called father.
Jennie and I spent the next week looking for housing, deciding at last on a large home in exclusive Old Field, the lot abutting Setauket Harbor where there was an old, but serviceable dock. Weâd make this our permanent residence to take advantage of the outstanding public schools, but keep the Sunset Beach house for vacations and for use once our children were out of high school. Jennie hired a decorator and we bought all new furniture, carpets, and decorations for the walls and shelves. We moved in about six months later, establishing our residency well before Andi was ready to attend school. I also bought another boat, making good use of it during Charlieâs and Toniâs frequent visits.
Jennie planned her pregnancies well. Our kids were spaced almost exactly two years apart. I recall Charlie telling me that we had good planning for tax deductions since all of our children had been born near the end of the year. If he only knew; my investment program made money faster than we were able to spend it. Jennie and I met every December to review the yearâs earnings and to decide what to do with them. I typically donated ten million every year to both Harvard and MIT. Jennie found several charities that taught homeless people new job skills, helping them to turn their lives around much as I had done with the homeless man Iâd met at the stop sign.
We used my wealth productively in both Myrtle Beach and Long Island, converting older hotels into temporary housing for the homeless. We hired directors and social workers to provide the homeless with direction. The rules were simpleâ90-day maximum stay, required vocational training, no drugs or alcohol on premises. That last one resulted in forcing more people to leave than anything else. Our expenses came to a bit over five million dollars a yearâan excellent investment in our opinion.
Lady had been a major force in the development of our children. I always thought that Andi learned to roll over and crawl because of her love of Lady. Unfortunately, big dogs tend to have severe physical problems as they age and Lady, once a power in our lives, went downhill fast after she turned twelve. The vet told us she was lucky to have lived that long. It was a sad, sad day for our family when she had to be put down. The kids were excused from school as we paid Lady a final visit before the vet gave her the fatal injection. Jennie took our sobbing children to the waiting room while I stayed with Ladyâpetting her head and soothing her–to the end. I felt it was the least I could do after all she had done for us. I also knew weâd find a new dogâa shelter dog this time–very soon.
Jennieâs stepfather surprised me. He actually did live to leave prison, getting parole after ten years for reasons of health. He was a broken man, restricted to a wheelchair and needing oxygen; he never tried to track down the woman heâd raped ruthlessly as a child. Personally, I thought he was lucky to be alive in any condition. I knew heâd been beaten at least twice a year on average as reported by the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier online.
Jennie maintained her friendship with Amber, her rock during her five years on the road. They spoke often on the phone and emailed photos, especially of our children and hers. We traveled to Waterloo to participate in her wedding to a local lawyer and again when she had their first child, entrusting ours to my mother and her new husband, Paul. He told us that my father went berserk when he learned that Mom had married him. Too bad Jennie and I werenât there to see it.
Jennie and I had more than enough money to last until the sun died, but we felt that our kids and theirs needed to understand the value of work. They always had chores as kids and summer jobs when they were older and they were always required to do well in class, not that any of them had to struggle. Physically, they took after Jennie, especially the girls, but intellectually they took after me. They all had nerd IQâs, well above 140 which is considered genius level. We established trusts for each of them as weâd done for Charlieâs daughters and for Toni, fulfilling my promise. The largest trust was set aside for my wonderful Jennie, the woman whoâd given my life direction. The rest of the money was given away.
The constant in my life through our years together has been my wife. No matter how busy she was with the children she always found time for meâtime to show me her love. Being rich helped, Iâm sure, but even if weâd been poor weâd still have our love for each other.
Iâm a nerd. I think and I planâthatâs what I do. Nothing ever happens to me by accidentâwell, almost never. Yet, I never did fully understand exactly why I returned to the parking lot for Jennie. Nor did I understand why I took her shopping, to my home, or to dinner. Maybe Jennie was right about that, after allâshe was sure it had been divine intervention. All I knew was that I had been blessed by every second we spent together and would be until the day I died. Noâthatâs wrong. A love like ours is eternal.
Note: While this story and all the characters are fictional, all of the placesâthe restaurants, stores, golf courses, and even the hotel/casino in Waterloo, Iowaâdo exist exactly as described. The Walmart and Home Depot where Doug first meets Jennie are in the Gator Hole Plaza in North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. I used people from my past life as models for those in this story. Unfortunately, Iâve had too many models for homeless Jennie and the others described in the story.