'A Dance Perfect for Two' -- Part 1b
-- doc, 21:47:09 02/21/08 Thu [1]
Part
1b
***
She awakened to the brilliance of sunshine
streaming through the glass. Squinting in the glare, her eyes slowly
accustomed to the early morning dawn, and she snuggled into the
warmth provided by the many layers of covers. She studied the scenic
view of the lake just beyond the windowpanes, and once again marveled
at its breathtaking beauty. After the turmoil of the last several
months, it felt strange to awaken to such peacefulness, renewed and
excited about the promises of a new day. Stretching languorously into
the plush depths of the featherbed, she vowed to pursue all the
promises and possibilities, and burrowed even deeper into the
covers.
Just as she started to lazily drift off, something
white and fluffy caught her eye. Perplexed, she pushed up from the
pillows and stared wide-eyed at the downy chaos strewn across her
bed. Lifting a piece of the cottony fluff aloft for further
inspection, she twirled it between her fingers, then shrieked in
horror. She frantically scanned the expanse of the room.
Searching…seeking…hunting. Sighing, she collapsed in
relief, as her eyes finally fell upon the beloved target of her
quest. He was positioned playfully on the edge of the pillow, nestled
and waiting patiently beside her head, asking only to be noticed.
Clutched in his paws was a folded note card with her name scribbled
in flowing cursive across the front. She confiscated the note from
his grasp, and settled Winnie into her lap. Opening the card, she
giggled for the first time in ages, as she lightheartedly read
aloud:
My Dear Marine,
Relax, neither beast nor Pooh
bear have been harmed in my quest for discovering the truth. Though,
I cannot say the same for my mother’s pillow. Suffice it to
say, I have been successfully de-fluffed, de-waxed, and de-cleaned,
and am now ready to pay heed to anything and everything you wish to
share.
--Yours forever or as close as possible, Harm
She
fell back into the mountainous heap of pillows and laughed with
unbridled joy. The day was truly shaping up to be unexpectedly
spectacular.
***
An hour later, he bounded through the
cabin door; cheeks red and rosy, sweat pouring down his face. He was
wheezing for air, but all things considered, the eight-mile run had
been wonderfully invigorating. He’d forgotten how much he
enjoyed running in the wilderness during the autumn season. Though,
the altitude and his forced exile from the sport had tested his
endurance, he had persevered in his renewed commitment to running
marathons. It might have only been eight miles, but you have to start
somewhere he mused.
He stripped the drenched sweatshirt over
his head, and toed off his running shoes by the door. Wiping his face
on the soft fleece, he tossed it over his shoulder and headed off in
search of a shower. Midway to his destination, his nose caught scent
of the most tantalizing aroma, and he veered off course, curiosity
winning out. He strolled into the kitchen to discover Mac flipping
pancakes over a cast-iron skillet. A smudge of flour colored her
chin.
“Ah, what’cha doing, Mac?” his bemused
smile lit up the room.
“Making breakfast,” she
proudly beamed back.
His eyes scanned the ingredients
scattered across the counter. “You found all this in my
kitchen?”
“Nope,” she slid a couple of
pancakes onto a pie tin and slipped them into the oven.
He
leaned against the doorjamb; arms crossed on his chest, and casually
hooked one foot over the other. He looked relaxed and at ease, as he
watched her flit about his kitchen, taking extreme pleasure in the
idea of her cooking breakfast just for him. He marveled at how
effortlessly she had wormed her way past the walls his heart, yet
again, and pondered with dread how he would survive if she chose to
walk away. Shaking away his unsettling thoughts, he emerged back into
the present.
“Borrowed the ingredients from the
neighbors?” he decided he could play the question game
too.
“You don’t have any neighbors,” she
laughed.
“That’s not true…there’s
probably a bear or two out there,” he teased.
“Nope,
I already checked…he’s on the table waiting for
breakfast,” she nodded toward the stuffed teddy bear sitting
patiently in the sun.
He wandered over to the table, and
flicked Winnie’s ears, “You gonna tell me what we’re
having, or did Pooh make a special request?”
“Gingerbread
pancakes with lemon sauce,” she quirked a brow and waited for
his sarcastic retort.
“Wow,” he released an
impressed whistle in a low tune, “…when did you learn to
cook?”
“Always could,” she shrugged and
proceeded to pour more batter into the pan, “…but seldom
needed to with you around.” She peered up through her lashes,
“After you left,” her eyes jumped away from his, “…I
needed to find my way around the kitchen again.”
He
swallowed hard against the lump in his throat, “So, ah…where’d
you say you found the ingredients? I’m pretty sure there wasn’t
any molasses in my cupboards.”
“Did some grocery
shopping on the way up,” she flipped the next set of pancakes
up in the air. “I figured you could use a good meal or two,
while I was here. If you’re like me, you haven’t been
eating much of late.”
His eyes misted over at her
obvious concern. Blinking back the tears, he cleared his throat, and
pointed toward the bedroom, “Do I, ah… have time to hit
the shower?”
“Sure, I’ll keep’em warm
in the oven,” her eyes followed him as he headed away from the
kitchen, “…just don’t take long. Think MARINE
shower not NAVY!” she yelled after him, chuckling at her own
joke.
When she returned her attention to the task at hand, he
circled back, leaned in close and kissed the top of her head. “Thanks
Mac,” he whispered and quickly scurried from the room.
One
of those tight places in her chest, the one that choked her heart,
loosened another notch. And she hummed along with the chickadees, as
they sang their morning song.
***
They spent the
afternoon together. Packed a picnic lunch and an armload of blankets,
before heading out on the boat. The sun was warm, and the fall breeze
nippy, as they steered the vessel along the inlet to the larger lake
beyond.
During the mundane tasks of fishing…baiting
hooks, casting lines, interminable waits…they swapped stories,
rehashed childhood adventures, and embellished college-day pranks.
Finally, as the sun dipped toward the west, they cautiously broached
the subject of more recent days…unclassified missions,
perplexing cases, updates on colleagues and friends. They
purposefully tiptoed about, skipped around, leaped over, and
skillfully dodged all reminiscence linked their South American trip.
Neither quite brave enough nor foolhardy to pick at the unhealed
scabs of that snake-infested bottomless pit.
As dusk drew
nigh, he deftly steered the boat back into its mooring with the
practiced-ease of one trained in maritime acts. And as they unloaded
the fishing gear, blankets and picnic supplies, their hearts buckled
under the weight of the baggage that remained unspoken, unquestioned
and misunderstood. Too afraid to inquire after the answer their
hearts both coveted and feared the most, they remained shrouded in
paralyzing silence. He sulked away despondent to clean fish and
prepare the grill, while she chopped at veggies trying to cut away
the hidden meanings and mishandled words. Dinner was served in
silence, and dessert in hushed tones. And as the evening wore on, the
amassed burden of the unsaid words threatened to topple the tenuously
reconstructed bridge linking the two adrift souls.
As she
dried the last of the dishes, he slinked off muttering something
about air. One final swipe of the counter banished her too, deep into
her thoughts and the solitude of bed. But even buried under the
mountainous security of blankets and bathed in the warmth of the
moon, she couldn’t halt the quivering trembles or silence the
shaking voice…that soulfully insistent little echo starved and
frozen near to death at the center of her core. The one that only
flamed to life when communed in oneness with him.
Inevitably
and unfailingly, she found her way back to him. Hot chocolate in
hand, down comforter wrapped around tight, she stood before him on
the deck…eyes silently beseeching her case. She handed him
first one piping hot mug then the other. Sitting beside him, in the
rocking chair to the right, she untwisted the duvet and gently shook
it aloft, allowing the downy warmth of it to settle over them both.
And with the contented sigh exhaled from a soul finally home, she
reached for the ceramic mug mounded in marshmallow foam.
They
sat in relaxed silence watching stars burst overhead, and she
marveled at the perfect tranquility of this moment in time. How the
mere proximity of him hushed the reproving shrill voices and stilled
her quivering fears.
When he released a sigh from somewhere
deep inside, she decided to cautiously broach a perilous question.
“Harm?”
“Mmmm?” his voice was soft and
easy.
“About the Admiral’s offer,” she set
her empty mug off to the side and reached for his.
“What
offer?” he bristled.
“Coming back to JAG…”
“Mac,
I don’t think…” he shifted restlessly, as he cut
off her comment.
“Just hear me out,” she rested
her hand against his arm, “…we’re so overwhelmed
with, ah…or um…” she stumbled over the words at
his incensed glare.
“That’s why….”
“No!
No, I mean…of course not! We…we want you back…we
NEED you back…your expertise, your…”
“I
should’ve known that you had only come…” his voice
trailed off, and eyes flicked away to hide the intense
disappointment.
Her response was immediate and heartfelt,
“That’s not why I came! I hadn’t seen or heard from
you in months, and I wanted to make sure you were okay…especially
after Beth. But, first and foremost, I came as a friend, because I
care.”
He shrugged noncommittally and continued staring
straight ahead. An uncomfortable silence settled in.
After a
few moments, she tried again. “Harm, we are overloaded, and
indeed, do need your help…but more than that, we need you
back…’want’ you back. If all we needed was help,
we could request additional personnel…more lawyers, ancillary
staff. But that’s not what we need; we need you. JAG…it’s
just not the same without you.”
He glanced back her way,
expression masked. “So, what’s going on that has everyone
so flustered?”
“You won’t believe it,”
she flashed him a tentative grin. “Carolyn Imes? Turns out
she’s not a lawyer.”
“I could’ve told
you that!” He snorted a riotous grunt.
“Harm, I’m
serious…she never passed the Michigan Bar,” she shook
her head at his incredulous look. “All the cases she prosecuted
and won are being reviewed. It’s a huge burden of work, on top
of our already ridiculous caseload.”
“Ah, so
that’s way Chegwidden decided to ‘invite’ me back.
He’s short an attorney, and the Sec Nav is breathing down is
neck for the Imes’ debacle,” he snorted in disgust. “I
don’t know, Mac. After all, who’s to say I won’t
ride off half-cocked on some flight of fancy ruled by my emotions
again?” He shook his head in derision.
She held her
tongue a moment to let his emotions calm. When he peered sideways in
her direction, she looked down and studied her lap. “You’re
right, Harm,” her voice was quiet and introspective, “…what
the Admiral said that day in his office,” she gritted her
teeth, “…it still frosts me. You saved my life, rescued
Webb, destroyed the Stinger missiles and a terrorist plot…and
all he could see was…”
“It’s okay,
Mac,” his voice came out soft and soothing, “…I
accomplished my primary goal…you came home safe. The rest of
it,” he waved his hand dismissively, “…it was
important too, but that’s not why I went.” He looked away
again, “I just didn’t expect to lose it all in the
end.”
“I know,” her hushed words were
swallowed up by the wind, “…me either.”
He
squinted his eyes, hoping to bury the overwhelming sadness, and
inhaled deeply. “So, Chegwidden wants me back in the Navy…at
JAG…under him? What’s he plan to strip me? You know,
teaching me a lesson and all?” He shrugged, bravado rapidly
waning.
“No cuts, no payback, no retribution…you
come back just like you left, Sailor.”
“Flight
status?”
“Intact,” she paused, a subtle
smile playing at her lips, “…flyboy.”
He
nodded, “So, AJ wants me back, Bud and Harriet…Sturgis?”
She nodded in the affirmative. He glanced away, before his eyes
settled back to hers, soft and gentle, searching. “What about
you, Mac? Do you want me back?”
Staring into the wide
expanse of the evening sky, she wondered why she always had to go
first, laying out her battered heart on display for yet another round
of rejection and pain. A falling star burned bright then streaked
across the inky blackness of the night, and in that moment she just
knew. Tears formed in her eyes blurring her vision, but she steeled
her nerves and called upon her waning courage. Taking a deep breath,
she slipped her hand under the blanket and unerringly sought out his.
Fingers curling around his roughened skin, she whispered back,
“Especially me, Sailor…especially me.”
His
fingers flexed around hers, holding firm. Her head fell against his
arm, and his stubbled cheek brushed in the perfumed softness of her
hair. The wind rustled around them in cool darkness, and the waves
lapped the shore, as the crickets strummed the soft enchanting melody
of a soothing nighttime song.
He caught the tail of a falling
star and remembered a childhood verse. A little boy, he urgently
prayed, another place, another time. “Star light, star
bright…The first star I see tonight…I wish I may, I
wish I might…Have this wish I wish tonight.” Eyes
closed, he silently implored the twinkling stars above to grant just
this…his only wish…his heart’s truest joy.
As
the moments turned to minutes, and the minutes to near an hour, he
felt her body slump more heavily against his arm. Gingerly peering
downward, he regarded her relaxed features, closed eyes and gentle
breathing, and realized she’d fallen asleep. He studied her
closely in the soft glow of the moon and marveled, not for the first
time, at the incredible beauty that shined through from her
soul.
Finally, as the temperature dropped to near freezing, he
deftly stood from the chair, all the while supporting her weight.
Reverently, he lifted her into his arms and settled her upon his
chest. Creeping toward the patio door, she began to stir, but a few
whispered words and a “go back to sleep” proved the
magical command. As he shifted her in his arms, wrapping the
comforter around tighter, he was once again taken aback by her light
burden and willowy form. The last months had obviously worn heavily
upon her, just as they had him. He berated himself for his
stubbornness, the lack of communication and heedless neglect of her
care.
He gently laid her upon the bed, removing the slippers
and robe. Pulling the bedding up to her chin, he tucked it in place
and quietly knelt beside her. He stroked his fingers through her
hair, watching her sleep, and contemplated what possibly was and just
maybe could still be.
He lovingly kissed her cheek, whispering
to the moon. “I wish I may, I wish I might…Have this
wish I wish tonight…”
***
The next
morning she found him at daybreak perched upon a stone ledge. The sun
had barely crested the horizon, and the morning winds howled wild and
cold through the vibrant colored trees. She clutched her quilted
jacket tighter, staving off the chill, as she picked her way toward
him along the narrow path. Arriving at his side, she leaned over the
split-cedar railing, and watched a gentle stream meander on its
course. The water tripped along the pebbled bottom, wound around
boulders and rocks, before spilling out in a cascading waterfall to
the pool below.
She sidled closer to his side, but his eyes
never veered from the flowing water. Wind ruffled and mused through
his hair. The sunlight danced in his eyes, and kissed his cheeks to a
cherry-red glow. Finally, she wiggled closer still, and interlinked
their arms. He startled to the unperceived intrusion, but instantly
graced her with a warm and welcoming smile
“Hey,”
his voice came out hoarse and quiet.
“Morning,”
she whispered back in a similar reverenced tone. She inhaled the
clean mountain air, and exhaled on a slow easy sigh. Her breathing
finally hitched at the end, as she squirmed in nervousness.
When
he furrowed his brow in question, she diverted her eyes from his
inquiring gaze. “I have to leave today,” she grumbled
with overbearing regret.
“I know,” his monotone
response echoed resigned disappointment.
His eyes retuned to
the flow of the river, as he mapped out each subtle eddy and current.
The easy sounds of nature reverberated and danced around them in a
pleasant hymn of mirth.
She maneuvered even closer seeking out
his warmth. His extended arm obliged her, and she ducked beneath,
snuggling into his side.
“What’cha doing?”
she asked when the silence became unbearable.
“Watching
the stream,” he leaned over the wooden railing, gesturing with
his head.
“I can see that,” she chuckled lightly,
“…why?”
“Well, according to Pooh, who
I have on the best authority, is quite brilliant,” he winked
and flashed a teasing smile. “If you stand on the bottom
rail of a bridge and lean over to watch the river slipping slowly
away beneath you, you will suddenly know everything there is to be
known.”
“Oh,” her eyes danced with
amusement, “…so, it’s wisdom you seek?”
“Kind
of, but not exactly,” his gaze drifted back to the water, and
his expression grew serious and circumspect. “It’s more
like, umm…I’m wondering about the course of my future.
How my life’s events will play out.” He waved a hand
across the rambling water, “I thought I’d give Pooh’s
philosophy a try, and see what the river foretells.”
She
leaned over the railing hoping to glean an understanding of him. He
pointed toward the middle of the stream just a few feet beyond. She
watched the river gently trip and flow along the stone covered bed.
It shimmered and sparkled, catching the sun, reflecting the
brilliance back. Peace was her unbidden thought, as her eyes followed
the water’s course further still. She watched the rippled calm
of the surface wind around a bend, slow down, speed up and curve back
again.
She glanced back at him and studied his face, perplexed
by his unyielding interest. He merely blushed a soft smile, pointed
straight ahead, and whispered his command, “Watch.”
She
returned to her careful observation displaying a rapt seriousness
commensurate with his own. The water’s current suddenly
roughened and churned, as it rose to impact a huge boulder positioned
in its path. The imposing rock lurched far above the current’s
surface in the middle of the stream. The water, unable to swerve off
course, crashed upon the boulder, and veered up in a rolling wave,
before dividing into two separate eddies. Seemingly wild and aimless,
the two eddies continued on in an independent and separate course,
winding round the boulder both left and right, skirting a sand dune,
dropping over a rocky ledge into a cascading waterfall, before
finally merging in the bubbling shallow pool below. Undeterred in its
course, the stream continued on. Gentled and slowed, the independent
eddies once again coalesced into a single flowing stream, drifting
harmoniously as one, a united solitary being.
He stepped back,
regarded her expression of dazed amazement, and awaited her response.
She remained motionless and stunned, overcome by the simplicity of
nature’s answer to the mystery that had plagued them for years.
Gently grasping her shoulders, he turned her away from the lesson
found in a meandering stream, and begged an answer to the question of
their future with the depths of his eyes.
“Mac?”
his voice was hushed and pleading, as hope warred with fear.
When
her eyes remained downward cast, he traced a finger over the angle of
her chin, lifting her face to his view. Her eyes darted away, first
left then right, before settling into his.
“Sarah,”
she shuddered at the utterance of her given name whispered like a
prayer, “…before I can give the Admiral an answer about
my desire to return to the Navy, I need to know what you
want.”
“Haaarm,” his name was stuttered in
nervous apprehension, “…I…why…” She
trailed off as fear won out, and immediately sensed him withdrawing
from her, both body and spirit.
“No!” She urgently
clasped his arm stopping his retreat, “…this can’t
be just about me!”
“It’s not,” he
fought to summon his courage, “…but before I can decide,
I need to know, if you think…’you and I’
will ever be ‘we’?”
Eyes clenched
tightly, she tried to transcribe the meaning of the Harmonesque
cryptic words. Scrubbing his face in frustration, he wondered why
eloquence always abandoned him when it came to her.
“Ah,
let me try that again,” he flashed a heartfelt, but disarming
smile. “The answer to the question of ‘us’,”
he wiggled a finger back and forth in the space between them, “…will
affect my decision on how or whether we work together. Does that make
sense?” he shrugged his shoulders to his ears with befuddled
boyish charm.
“Okaaay,” she drug the word out,
then ducked her face in embarrassment and tried again.
“What
if,” her thumbs grazed his forearms in a soft soothing
caressing, “…I could assure you, the Admiral will work
it out, no matter what we decide?” She gazed into his eyes
unwaveringly, trying to transmit the true intent of her words, both
spoken and implied. Fleetingly, she wondered when they both became
such cowards.
“Okay,” he nodded, surmising a
quarter step forward, zero back was a tiny bit of progress, “…but
that still doesn’t tell me what you want.”
She
withered in hopelessness under the interminable stalemate that
defined their dance. Neither one was brave enough to state their
intentions first…two step forward, one step back. His fingers
trailed up the length of her arms, drawing her in closer, lending
strength and support.
“Mac, you uttered the one word
that proclaimed an end to us…to any hope of what we could be.
I need to know, if you still believe…”
She pulled
away from him, tears cascading down her cheeks. “I already told
you… I used to believe in forever . . . but forever was too
good to be true. I only chose never because I thought forever
didn’t exist. And I couldn’t live with the disappointment
of ‘not yet’ anymore.”
“What if,”
the words burst forth in a blazing rush, as the offer flowed easily
from his tongue. This art of legal negotiation they both knew well.
The images of a prior deal flitted through his mind.
“What
if?” her eyes followed his, waiting for his terms, daring to
hope.
“What if, I could promise you…forever and a
day?” Arms crossed on his chest, he dared her to demur.
“I’ll
accept your forever and a day, and offer you…eternity,”
she countered with her best lawyer voice. He squinted an eye and
gazed heavenward, considering her last option.
“Deal,”
he nodded in the affirmative, and confirmed it with a wink.
“Don’t
make a promise you can’t keep.” The corners of her mouth
turned up in a teasing smile, but the seriousness of her voice
betrayed her attempts at levity…just as it had all those years
before. This time, there was no room for wiggling, backtracking or
walking away.
“I haven’t yet,” he hitched a
brow and flashed his cockiest grin, perfectly reconstructing the
mood. His eyes however shone suspiciously bright, thoroughly giving
him away.
Extending an open palm to mimic their former deal,
he waited for her response. She shook her head at the absurdity of it
all…sealing their ‘forever deal’ with a handshake.
If anything deserved something more intimate and personal, surely the
promise of ‘forever’ qualified. Nonetheless, she followed
his lead and extended her palm.
He grasped her hand securely
in his, the eternal spark burned bright. Gaze transfixed, eyes melted
into eyes, and the love shone through. Stroking his thumb across the
softness of her wrist, he lifted her hand to his lips. Her eyes never
left his, surrendering to the magnitude of the emotion reflected
there. He raised her hand aloft, and giving a gentle twirl, sent her
dancing away. As her eyes widened in shock, he threw his head back
and cackled with ecstatic glee. Spinning her once more around, he
gathered her in close, snug in the circle of his arms. Agilely, he
waltzed her along the uneven stones lining the narrow path, until
they stepped unrestrained to the wide expanse of the grass.
He
pulled her close, body-to-body, chest-to-chest, hearts perfectly
aligned, and swayed them in the morning breeze to the soft serenade
of fluttering leaves. Leaning in closer still, his breath tickled her
ear. She nuzzled her face in the warm skin of his neck, and inhaled
his wonderful scent. Water, air, strength, he smelled of all of
these, but it was the love that was her favorite. She would forever
remember the scent of this day. The everlasting fragrance of them, a
love nearly abandoned and dead, now reborn for all time.
He
spun her away from his body, and twirled her in the wind. She moved
with grace and beauty, stealing his breath away. And when he finally
found his words, they bubbled forth in joy.
“Twirl
around Piglet,” he laughed in the breeze.
“Step
lightly Pooh,” she giggled back, and willingly returned to
his pull.
“This silly ol’ dance is perfect for
two,” they both sang out the final phrase to the childhood
verse. Together…in perfect unison.
His lips finally
found hers in an all-consuming, exploring caress. Whispered ‘I
love you’s’ filled the autumn air, fluttering amongst the
vibrant leaves, gaining breadth and beauty from their brilliant
colors, before taking wing on the wind and spreading over the
horizon.
As he pulled away for a gasping breath, a momentary
thought skittered through his hapless mind…AJ Roberts was due
a very special gift of thanks. A lazy afternoon in the park cavorting
with his grateful godparents, perhaps, the idea sparked to life, then
flitted away into depths of oblivion, as he lost himself in his Sarah
once more.
The second thought to give birth, before his
love-addled mind quit functioning all together, was that Winnie-the
Pooh was a wonderful theme for a nursery. The image of a beautiful
dancing baby girl, with rosy cheeks and laughing brown eyes, twirled
to the forefront with Piglet and Pooh.
‘Twirl around
Piglet,
Step lightly Pooh,
This silly ol’ dance is
perfect for two.’
*
‘If you live to
be a hundred, I want to live to be a hundred minus one day, so I
never have to live without you.’ -- Winnie-the-Pooh.
The
End…
***
AN: I hope you
enjoyed my indulgence in all things Pooh. I’ve had theses
‘Poohisms’ sitting in a folder on my computer for quite
some time now. They’ve been ‘bugging the bageebers outta
me’ to break loose, for a while. At one point, Pooh even
threatened to send in the bees. I finally had to give-in and find a
forum for their wizened-fun in my writing of Harm and Mac. Isn’t
it amazing how simple things from our childhood are actually quite
profound? Who knew Winnie-the-Pooh, Christopher Robin and the rest of
the gang at Pooh Corner were philosophers?
Anyways, surely I’m
not the only one who thought the introduction to the first book in
the Pooh series was very enlightening, in regards to the whole ‘Harm
and Mac’ relationship ‘thing’? Maybe if TPTB had
spent a little time reading ‘Winnie-the-Pooh’, the
‘dance’ would’ve changed from the Foxtrot to the
Tango a whole lot sooner. I reiterate the beginning excerpt to prove
my point:
‘Here is EDWARD BEAR, coming downstairs now,
bump, bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind Christopher Robin.
It is, as far as he knows, the only way of coming downstairs, but
sometimes he feels that there is another way, if only he could stop
bumping for a moment and think of it.’
What do you
say guys? To much ‘bumping’ of the wrong kind?????
Sorry
this story was so tardy, but real life has been crazy and more than a
bit unsettling of late. Exhaustion has been the order of the day more
often than not. THANKS for reading!!!