HAPPY 2017!
This post is for Susan Flett Swiderski:
Her comment on my WEP entry
Melting Snow
was:
Well dang, girl! You just
couldn't do it, could ya? You simply couldn't give us just one magical
happy-ever-after ending for Christmas. Sheesh. (sigh)
For the New Year
Thank you Jenny Baranick - your suggestion works!
MELTING SNOW
Judgement day for the winter ice
challenge had arrived, and they were
excited to learn if their favorites had won. Glenna had chosen the Dragon War,
and David had picked the Angels in
Flight. The winner would buy dinner at Anchorage's best restaurant, The
Crow's Nest.
David told her the freshly fallen
snow was the lure, but she knew that a proposal was his goal. Glenna was ready
for the commitment. After all, they'd been together for over a year, and two
people more suited didn't exist. They had similar goals, enjoyed all things
outdoor, and they both agreed that love and family were the keys to success.
She'd met the handsome pilot on a
flight she'd taken during a school training project. His knowledge and skill
made the trip a success, and their first
date left no doubt they had a future together. He'd cooked dinner for her over
a campfire in the back yard of the cabin he'd built with his own hands. Fresh
salmon, corn on the cob, new potatoes, and homemade blueberry ice cream. The
way to a man's heart may be through his stomach, but for Glenna, his down-home
cooking, adventure filled stories, and sense of humor had won her heart.
"Think twice, Sissy!"
David shouted and threw the first snowball; just a handful of snow, but it caught Glenna by surprise.
"You're in trouble now,"
she yelled, but quickly gathered two handfuls and formed a perfect ball. She
threw it, laughing and ducking at the same time. Their snowball fight lasted
just minutes, but his concussion and subsequent coma would mar their
future.
*****
Sissy, or Glenna Parks, as her
friends knew her, rinsed her face with cold water, and stared at her
reflection. Haggard looking after another sleepless night, she wondered how
life could take such a sharp, sudden
turn.
She'd just won the job of a
lifetime and would be teaching history at the University of Alaska in
Anchorage. David Carter, her beau, was
about to pop the question, his recent inquiry
the clue.
"How do you feel about
antique jewelry?" he'd asked.
"I love all things with a
history," she'd told him.
Life couldn't have been sweeter.
She recalled his last kiss, confident
that he was going down on one knee then. Instead, he gathered up a handful of
snow and changed their lives forever.
Now he couldn't even recall her
name. At first, he didn't know his own name, even denied being a pilot, claimed
to be afraid of heights, and a Texan living in Alaska, not reality. The man who
awoke from the coma was not the man who had slipped on the ice.
Dripping water reminded her of
the blood she'd tried to staunch with their woolen scarves but to no avail. The
paramedics hurried him away, and she
followed. Glenna willed him back to consciousness, but she wasn't prepared for
the hateful stranger who greeted her.
Now, a week later, a few memories
had returned giving her hope that the rest would soon follow. Glenna wasn't
sleeping, barely eating, and David's lack of recognition hurt on a level she
didn't even know existed. Yesterday, he'd asked her to leave him alone.
"I don't need a stranger watching
or commenting on my every move. Especially one with sad puppy dog eyes."
Hiding her tears, she left. Today
she'd returned with an entire picture album of their adventures together, something
to spark David's memory. She promised
herself she would just drop it off, but when she arrived, he was asleep. She
waited, watched, prayed, and eventually fell into a deep sleep herself.
Still holding his hand, she dreamed
of the David she knew. The warmth and strength of him were as she remembered, but reality
was waking in a sterile hospital room
with spittle dripping from her open mouth. She rushed into the bathroom to
revive herself. Gazing into the mirror, she vowed to recapture their happiness.
"Hey, beautiful. I was hoping you'd return for a visit," David said.
The tone, the comment, hey beautiful,
was pure David. Ready to answer, she dried her face, but someone else beat her to it.
"Hi, handsome. You look better.
How are you feeling?"
Giggling.
"Oh my, you are feeling
better!" The voice of the doctor who'd admitted him sounded too friendly, syrupy,
and seductive.
"Except for an almost
constant headache, pretty darn good, especially now that you're here!"
David cooed.
Glenna listened. Their
conversation wasn't the typical discussion between doctor and patient. They
were flirting.
"Why don't you spring me
from this place? I'll buy dinner?' David asked.
"First thing tomorrow
morning. Dinner sounds wonderful, but I
thought you were spoken for. What's her name? Glenda?"
"Glenna? No. No way, she's
not my type. Believe me. We're just friends. I actually had to ask her to leave.
I honestly hope she never comes back. That whiny voice of hers grates on the
ears. Besides, what adult woman would ever accept Sissy as a nickname?"
"You sure you remember everything. What about the ring we
found in your pocket?"
"Yeah, I know. The
engagement ring was my mother’s. Dad sent it to me along with a few other
mementos. That ring has nothing to do with Sissy."
The way he said her nickname hurt
deep in her soul. It was meant to be something only they shared. Sissy was an
endearment her grandfather used when she was younger,
and David claimed for his own. No one else could call her Sissy.
Glenna managed to leave the room without notice.
The silhouette of their embrace on the curtain, then the sound of kissing
assaulted her as she crept away. She dropped the picture album in the
wastebasket and left the hospital just moments after a blizzard hit, but she
didn't feel the Arctic chill, or the warm tears streaming from her eyes.
Nor did she see the car that
careened out of control due to the ice and snow. The handsome man who stepped
out of the wrecked car to see if she was safe had her heart beating with hope.
A fact Glenna wouldn't recognize until after their first date, but a blessing she
would still be thanking the Universe for on their 50th wedding
anniversary!
Yolanda Renée © 2016
1055 words
Do you prefer the Happy Ending?
11 comments:
Hey Yolanda. Okay, happy ending, but I liked the other one. Somehow doesn't suit your style. Happy New Year! If you've got time, pop over to see my bests of 2016. :-)
Nothing wrong with a happy ending, but I'd still go with the first one. Stirred the reader up more.
I'm okay with both both happy and sad, but agree with others here - the sad one suited that particular flash better.
Happy New Year! Wish you much success in all you do in 2017.
I'd go with #1. That's your signature, Yolanda and I look forward to those heart-clenching moments in your tales.
I didn't see the original, but I'd say this one was heartwarming if a bit sudden. That was a happy ending pulled back from the brink!
Thanks, Denise. It doesn't, does it. Funny, I enjoy writing the happy ending in my books but short stories - I like to go Twilight Zone. :)
Good point, Pat. Very good point! :)
Thanks, Nila, it did, and it was where the story took me.
All the best for you in 2017 too!
Thanks, Lee, that made me smile! :)
Thanks, Nick, link now posted. Always forget those. :)
Awesome! Actually, I'm not sure the happy ending works better, but I certainly am happier for poor Glenna.
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