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On a 12 hr train with a stranger who talks nonstop. 995 wds for contest, now 1080 wds. |
| āI killed a guy onceā she said, as I was just getting into my e-book, oblivious at the time that a twenty-something with over-sprayed helmet hair had taken the seat beside me, smacking her gum. At the time, my mind was buried in the newest Ken Follett book. Ordinarily, Iām the Chatty Cathy of the family but I had looked forward to the long trip to get through the two enormous books of the latest saga. āIām sorry, you did what?ā I just knew I had heard her wrong. I mean, who admits that kind of thing? āYou heard me, I said I killed a guy once. Youād be amazed what a good conversation starter that is. Pulled you out of that book youāre reading, didnāt it?ā Smacking voraciously, she added āWhatās your name?ā āIām not so sure I should tell you? Were you just trying to get a rise out of me or did you really kill someone?ā āIām Scarlett, as in OāHara. Iām from Mississippi by way of New Jersey. Iāve always loved the South, though. I was dragged up up north as a teen, kicking and screaming but momās husband convinced her to move. Got married to get away from him and ended up moving back back with my mother to get rid of that jerk I was married to. Then, I got to thinking, ānow Scarlett, you just need to go down South and find you a gentleman.ā So, Iām coming home for good. Leaving the past behind. You ever been married? Oh, never mind. Thereās your ring right there, I didnāt see it under that book of yours. Whaācha reading?ā I told her a little bit about the book but then started reading again, thinking Iād give her time to start another conversation. With someone else. āSo, I guess you want to read that book, huh? Sorry. My daddy always called me a jabberwacket. I guess he was right. Never could shut my mouth, especially when I was nervous.ā āAre you?ā¦nervous, I mean? First time on a train, huh?ā Or are you wanted by the police, I thought, but I kept that to myself. I knew I had invited a torrent of conversation but I realized I had plenty of time to read, and less time left on the battery. āItās a long story, but then, I guess we have plenty of time. You want a piece of gum. I got plenty. Here, open up your hand.ā She shook several tiny pieces of multicolored Chicklets into my palm. I thanked her and presented my hand. āI havenāt seen these in the stores lately.ā āThese are the best, arenāt they? My daddy sent me a care package for Thanksgiving. Heās so sweet that way. Gets this stuff on Amazon, you know, the old candies they donāt make anymore. Rodney always griped at me for the dumbest things. Once, he even slapped me in the face out of nowhere just ācause I was smacking my gum and he was on the phone with his boss and couldnāt hear over all the noise I was making. What a mistake he was. But I showed him. I know itās a disgusting habit but when I chew gum now, I just think to myself with every smack what a relief it is not to have to worry about where that hand was going, and I donāt just mean slapping my face.ā āWas, I mean, is Rodney your ex?ā āNo. Gross. No, heās my motherās husband. Heās why we had to move up north. He was my motherās prince charming; a looker, but what a louse.ā Tried to slip his hand up my skirt one too many times.ā āIs your mom still with him?ā āMarried, yes. With himā¦Iām not exactly sure. It dependsā¦ā āDepends on what? Cāmon, donāt stop now.ā What was I doing? I have just baited the jabberwacket. My e-book was calling, but as they say, the truth is stranger than fiction. I decided to think of this trip as research. Twelve hours just might give birth to a novel. So, I baited the hook and threw it in. Eleven hours to go and counting. āWell, it all started with Rodney having to work late and mom had promised sheād have a pie baked so he could impress his boss. He was forever brown-nosing and it seemed to be working. His boss had a mean sweet tooth. Well, mom was running late and I was staying at her house on account of my upcoming divorce. See, I couldnāt stay under the same roof as my husband, at least, thatās what the restraining order said. Anyway, mom called me saying she was running late and could I start the pie. I remembered the recipe for a peanut butter pie so thatās what I made. I didnāt know, honestly. I really didnāt. But anyway, I finished the pie and put whipped cream all over the top. I taped a note on the cellophane. It said āHereās your pie, Rodney. Whereās my raise?ā But whoāda thought the boss was, well, allergic.ā āUh-ohā I mumbled. I could see where this was going. āThe next evening, Iām sitting there watching television and thereās a loud bang at the door. I peeked through the hole. Two cops. I opened the door they started asking me about where Rodney was and when would he be home. He was being questioned for the murder of his boss. My mouth dropped. Then he said something about a pie and a peanut allergy. That's when I knew I was the one responsible. I should have said something. I know it was a mistake but I thought, maybe this is the one chance I got to get rid of Rodney. So I played dumb. "I'll tell him you came by, officers." I drawled, just for effect. They gave me a card and asked me to call when he got home. I shut the door and before long Rodney got home. I left with my bags and called the cops from the train station.ā āSo, when did all this happen?ā āA couple of hours ago.ā There was a commotion behind us on the train car. I turned around to see what was going on. A flash of blue passed through the door, a man with a gun strapped to his back like in the police shows. He was holding a photo. āUm, Scarlett, donāt look now, butā¦ā SWPoet 995 Wds (for Writerās Cramp entry only) 12-18-12 1080 words now that contest is over. Note: after contest was over, I added 70+ words to fill in some areas I had to cut for the 1000 word limit. |