Where Would I Be Without You

Chapter Two

The sound of tires crunching on the dirt road had me still myself on the swing. Could this all have been a very nasty joke? Were they back? I peeked through the weedy bush while hiding on the porch and saw a black Range Rover, on large tires, turn into the driveway at the house across the road. You could barely see the house as it was set back among trees and professionally hidden by nice landscape. A far contrast to this house or shack as it appeared sitting right on the road.

Thankful for the unruly bushes I was hiding behind, I watched the Range Rover disappear down its driveway to the back of the house. For minutes, I heard nothing. Not even the sound like a car door slamming. I sat myself back down on the swing. I began to move myself in a rocking motion and wondered if my neighbors would be friend or foe. I wondered if the sight of my expensive luggage on the porch was as much a shock to them as it was to me.

I finally heard a faint car door slam among the whispering leaves, then nothing. No person or persons came my way. I was relieved, as I had no way to explain why I was here.

I tried to soak in my surroundings. The colors of fall were just beginning to show on the outer edges of all the aspen leaves surrounding the area. It seemed as if the house was up towards the top of the dirt road.

Several minutes passed and nobody ever showed. I couldn’t blame them. This house looked like it should have been condemned years ago and torn down for something prettier to be built.

The sun had moved further into the horizon, and it seemed like it was at least three o’clock. The sounds of my grumbling tummy echoed throughout the porch. I doubted that any food possibly existed in the house. I was afraid to go in and look. I reached down to the old faded gray porch and picked up my purse. Inside laid my wallet with the thousand in cash I took out just for the trip and shopping. Now it was going to have to last me until I could figure out what to do next.

A small pink envelope was inside my purse. I reached in and opened it. It was a generic card with a scene of flowers and a puppy. The kind of card you would buy in a box of a dozen of cheap cards. A small note in a man’s handwriting appeared inside the card. “I’m very sorry. Haus” I was stunned. Perhaps Haus knew all along. I doubted he kept these kinds of things handy in the car. If he did, he was a sensitive man. From the stories Sabrina told me and my experience, he was anything but.

A MasterCard gift card was nestled between the card and envelope. That confirmed my suspicions that he knew all along. It didn’t say how much was on it. I wasn't going to expect much seeing as Haus was a paid employee of my husbands, and he didn’t exactly pay the top pay rate. Then, on the other hand, how much money did he make in this little stunt to keep his mouth shut?

The small acknowledgement did warm my cold heart. However, it did not stop my tummy from grumbling. As if in robotic mode, I began to lift my luggage into the house and set about exploring my new humble abode. A sudden movement of eight long legs stopped me quick in my path. I squashed it within a flick of a moment. The one thing I hated most was spiders. The second thing was dust and cobwebs. The humble abode held more of those then I could digest. I ran looking for the bathroom to puke. Only to find a nonfunctioning toilet full of old pee.

Damn that Sabrina. She had bought a house that squatters had lived in. That or she had peed in it herself. Just at that thought, my stomach contracted. The puke ended up in the sink. I quickly reached for the old-fashioned nozzle to turn on, and I was thankful that the water worked.

Upon further inspection of the small house, I discovered broken glass on the backdoor. It must have been how the squatters or wild teens had gotten in and out of the house. It was dirty. It was small, only one bedroom and one bathroom if you could call it that. It had a small kitchen and laundry room off the back of the house. The largest of living space was up front, and it was smaller than my dressing room back home. It was a joke. It had to be. They would come back tomorrow. No one could be this cruel.

I quickly texted both Mathew and Sabrina. “Joke? Right?” I closed the lid to the toilet, and sat down and waited. I stared at my phone with only two bars hoping the signal stayed strong, and they would text me back that Haus was on his way to get me. I waited minutes that felt like hours, and my phone vibrated a text back and then again. With much trepidation, I read the messages from both. “No joke good luck” Sabrina. “Good riddance” Mathew. Seriously?

“GAH!” I screamed at the top of my lungs. I took a deep breath and realized my worst fears had come true. Deep down, there had been signs I had chosen to ignore. Little bits and pieces were coming together like a difficult bazillion piece puzzle.

I pushed myself off the toilet with my hands to my knees and went in search of a breath mint in my purse. I chewed feverishly then went in search of my toothbrush, toothpaste and mouthwash. I hadn’t thrown up since I had the flu last winter. Memories of Sabrina by my side, day in and out, came to mind then I mentally took a red sharpie marker to her face and scribbled her out.

All the happy memories I had of her, were now jaded by the fact she had ulterior motives. I could fight this and try to convince Mathew. She was always quicker and smarter than me. Yet, a small part of me was glad. It wasn't the dreamiest or the most romantic of marriages. However, it was better than my life before. It wasn’t the money and lavish things so much as I was going to miss the security that I wasn’t on my own anymore.

I had to buck up and think of this as an adventurous camping trip. I had to find the silver lining in the clouds, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. I had to realize that my options were few and that my first priority is food because the sound of my stomach grumbling had just gotten louder.

The search of the cabinets came up empty, only dead bugs and cobwebs. The laundry had a closet full of stuff, old broom, dirty mop, a few cleaning supplies and rags. A note hung on the mop. “Have fun!” It was in Sabrina’s handwriting. I had to wonder what I did that was so mean to her that made her be this cruel.

The old washer had seen better days and there was no dryer. A clothesline in the backyard among the tall weeds caught my eye out the laundry room window. Sabrina had to of picked this house with the cruelest of intentions. She knew my hatred for laundry and cleaning. The small closet, in the bedroom with no bed, had old linens in it and several dead moths. This most likely meant the linens were full of holes.

The front room had an old looking, black and dusty, fire-burning stove with no wood around. Probably what heated the house? The couch smelt funny, and all the windows had a fine layer of dust with the lightest of sheer curtains covering the windows. I wouldn’t be able to last here a week let alone a cold mountain winter.

The fast thought of driving into town entered my mind to get my bearings until I realized I didn’t have a car. I didn’t see a garage, and I doubted that they left me one in fear I would jump in and drive back to Denver, exposing them for the weasels they had become.

I wrestled with the thought of introducing myself to my new neighbors but at that very moment, I was embarrassed and sick with grief and despair. The lurching of my stomach indicated I wanted to throw up but there was nothing in my stomach. The pounding inside my head seemed to have gotten worse, and I was sure I felt the slight sway of my body like it wanted to collapse onto the floor.

I slowly sank to the floor with my back to the wall facing the front door. I sat there for minutes crying empty tears and wondering what my next step should be. I hadn’t talked with my parents since I ran away to Vegas to strip. I was just shy of my eighteenth birthday, a virgin. Yet, anything was better than a mom on drugs and a dad who was drunk all the time.

Back then, my body screamed sex with any man who looked at me due to my full figure, long blonde hair and piercing blue eyes. Or so, I was told. I hadn’t seen a lot of options back then, so I used what I thought was my advantage.

In my mind, I didn’t see me running back to mommy or daddy. The last phone call I had made to them left me with the discovery of a disconnected phone. I felt that was a sign that I shouldn’t go back.

Looking back it was easy to see how Sabrina and I hooked up. She acted like an older sister and mother figure.

Then Mathew came along and offered to take care of me. Giving me all the love and affection I craved along with lavish gifts and an offer of a lifestyle I never imagined I could have. Once we were married, things were always good, as long as I kept his high sexual appetite sedated and myself in tiptop shape physically. My credit cards had no limit; my best friend was always welcomed in his home, and his friends became mine. Or so, I assumed. I was sure they wouldn’t give me the time of day now.

The sun was starting to get lower, and I knew if I was going to get into town and back with a few essentials, I needed to start out now. I eyed my luggage with my yoga and snorkeling gear. I had really looked forward to our snorkeling excursion. I crawled on my knees and quickly entered the combination to the luggage lock. I popped it open and tossed the lock on the floor. I unzipped the luggage and found my yoga top and pants. I undressed in the front room. I wasn’t worried if someone could see in if you couldn’t see out from all the dust and grime on the windows.

I found my running shoes and a pair of ankle socks, and set myself out for what would be a short journey to town. I didn’t bother locking the door. At that point, I was hoping to find a motel/hotel in town, and I would stay there until morning. With my wallet and phone in my small black sports backpack, I set out of my new humble abode for any site of human life.



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