Easy Melody

“No, it’s nothing.” I glance around, surveying our handiwork. “Do you see the brick I exposed near the outside wall?” I ask, pointing. Declan nods and we walk over to inspect it. “I didn’t see any brick on the outside of the house.”


“It’s not brick,” he confirms with a frown. “Back up.”

I comply, and he continues to punch out the dry wall on the adjoining wall, exposing more brick.

“I bet it was a fireplace,” I say, excited that we found it. “Someone decided they didn’t want it anymore and just hid it.”

“You’re right,” he says as he uncovers the actual fireplace part and smiles. “Let’s take this drywall out too and expose the brick. Even if it’s no longer functioning, the brick is beautiful.”

We spend another hour carefully uncovering the fragile brick. We don’t want to take out too much. It’s going to be a challenge for the carpentry crew as it is.

When we’re finished, Declan offers a fist for me to bump.

“We kicked ass today,” he says.

“And made a mess.” I wince and survey the dusty mess around us. “Let’s haul it all out to the dumpster, then rip out this carpet.”

“Then I’ll order in pizza.”

I check the time on my phone. “How did it get to be four in the afternoon already?”

“Knocking down walls takes time,” he says as he picks up an armful of drywall and heads out back to the dumpster. Hauling it all away takes almost as much time as it did to tear it down.

Finally, we rip the carpet out, roll it into manageable strips, and take it out to the dumpster together. After the last of the carpet is in the garbage, I brush the dust and dirt off my clothes then Declan’s back, and he returns the favor.

“We are dirty.” As soon as the words leave my mouth, I know it was the wrong thing to say.

“Not in a couple weeks,” Declan says, right on cue, making me laugh.

“Har har,” I reply. “Okay. I’m starving. You promised me pizza.”

“Coming right up.”

***

“It’s so nice out here,” I say between bites of loaded pizza. We’re sitting on the front porch now, me on the top of the steps with my back leaning against the top of the railing, and Dec sitting opposite me, in the same position. The box of pizza is open between us.

It’s early evening now. Traffic, both motor and foot, has slowed. The trees are moving a bit in the breeze.

“Mmm,” he agrees, his mouth full.

“How old do you think these oaks are?” I ask, looking up into their branches.

“A few hundred years,” he replies lazily.

This. This right here is what I want with someone someday. I want the comfort. I want to be able to laugh and work hard together. Share a pizza and soak up a nice evening.

It’s a good start, anyway.

I reach for a third slice and sigh in happiness with the first bite, then swig the beer Declan opened for us.

A piece of my hair slips out of the bun on the back of my head, so I set my pizza down and fix it, then glance at Declan, who’s stopped eating and is just watching me quietly with sober eyes.

“What?”

He shakes his head and turns his attention back to his pizza. I feel like I just missed something, but I have no idea what it is.

Finally, after a long ten minutes of silence, I wipe my hands on a napkin and then throw it at Declan, hitting him in his hard head.

“You have a habit of throwing things at me, sugar.”

“What are you thinking?” I ask with a smile.

“That you throw things at me.”

“Before that.”

“Why do women always ask what men are thinking when they don’t speak for a while?”

“Because we want to know,” I reply and sip my beer. “Come on. Spill it.”

He laughs and shakes his head, takes a sip of his own beer, then leans in like he’s going to tell me something really good. “Do you want to know that big secret? The answer to the question every time a woman asks a man what he’s thinking?”

I nod.

“Nothing. He’s not thinking anything, except maybe damn, this pizza is good.”

“You were that quiet because the pizza tastes good?” I tilt my head to the side, not buying it, but he just shrugs good-naturedly and sips his beer.

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