Welcome to the Spot Writers. This month’s prompt is
“unfinished business.” Today’s tale comes to you from Val Muller, author of the
Corgi Capers mystery series (www.corgicapers.com).
Unseasonable
by Val Muller
It was after Christmas, that relaxing lull before going back
to work but after the disasters of family gatherings had already happened.
Normally, Sharon would be cooped up inside, organizing her holiday things in
hope of having a better holiday next year. Like maybe her mom wouldn't gripe
about her house being un-renovated, or her dad would stop talking about
grandkids. Or her aunt wouldn't mourn her as an old maid. She was barely
thirty. And besides, after the way her little nieces and nephews tore apart her
home every year, what rush was she in to spawn her own?
After the family went home, Sharon kept inside. If she felt
especially trapped or restless, she might venture out to tackle some
post-holiday clearances. Once in a while she could find stocking stuffers for
next year.
But mostly she stayed in. She would stand at her sink with
her endless line of dishes to wash...the cookies relatives had brought and left
all came in their own containers which were never dishwasher safe, the fancy
turkey platter and silver and crystal all had to be hand washed, so she lined
it up on the counter to do a couple pieces at a time. Each piece had to be
hand-dried and placed in its little box. A gift from Mother, thinking Sharon
ought to have grown up serving-ware by now. While she labored, she looked out
at her yard at the unfinished garden that always would be done "maybe next
weekend."
It have been left by the previous owners and included a
lovely birdhouse and bird bath that the owners explicitly listed in the
contract as conveying with the house. The woman, her name was Martha or
something like that, invited Sharon over for coffee before the house got sold.
She wanted to tell her things about the house, important things. Like how
important it was to feed the birds, since they had grown accustomed to it. So
for the first couple years, Sharon had kept the bird feeder stocked and the
bird bath full of water. But it was old, and the bird bath concrete absorbed
water, which froze each winter. It started out with a few cracks until it
wouldn't hold water and then the birds went away and then the big wind storm
came and snapped the birdhouse in half.
Without the birds, there was no need to weed, and the whole
thing got overgrown. For the last two years it had been staring at her every
time she did the dishes. It was one of those unfinished things that she never
found time for since it was so dependent on the weather. But it always seemed
there was something more important. The timeliness of Thanksgiving preparations
or Christmas cleaning or wrapping presents.
And then when there was so much time in the winter, it was
too cold or buried in snow so that there was no use thinking about it until
spring. Then when spring came along, spring cleaning always seemed more
important, or going for a run, or catching up on reading.
But this year, Christmas was followed by a strange warm
streak. It had been off Sharon's radar because she always assumed Christmas was
followed by cold. She had her snow boots already taken out and snow shovel wind
up in the garage ready to go. So when she went to take the trash out and the
weather was 60 degrees and then 61, she knew it was her second chance.
She hurried inside, knowing at any moment winter weather
could return. The crystal could go in the dishwasher later, for all she cared.
What would it hurt? And she donned her gardening boots and work pants, clearing
out weeds and dilapidated bird equipment. Several new gift cards would help
provide new ones.
As she stood back to survey her handiwork, a voice cleared
its throat above her. It was a neighbor, a young man she had seen a few times
before, but who has time to talk to neighbors these days?
He was standing on his balcony with a pizza box and a paper
plate. "Beautiful weather," he said.
Sharon startled.
"I'm sorry. I've been watching
you." He blushed. "I didn't mean it that creepy. I just meant,
well...they build these houses so close together." He chuckled. "I'm
so bad at these things. I guess what I mean to say is, I have this whole pizza,
and it's just me. Would you like some?"
Sharon nodded. She had enough leftover turkey lately. Pizza
sounded amazing.
The Spot Writers—Our
Members:
Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/
Catherine A. MacKenzie: https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/
Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com
Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/
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