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Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction, and it was created solely by me as the author. All characters are over the age of 18. Any similarities to characters, real life people, or things are all happenstance, though my appreciation to those who have inspired my works is immense. YSI, my friend.
Author’s Note: This is a standalone piece. I felt inspired recently, once again from a dream, and I went with it since it came together so beautifully.
Questions and comments are welcome. Please take the time to rate this also. I hope everyone will be kind.
A Kitchen Encounter
Jennifer Sanders
One fall day in the early nineties, Chris and I met at our high school. When? What, like the exact moment? Heck, I dunno. It was a small school, and everyone knew everyone… for the most part. It wasn’t until after college that we’d connected again. Just friends, we’d meet up for lunch here and there. A text about family would show up, and one of us would respond with a smile or a few updates on their own life. He was always supportive of my goals, and I was very proud to know him and to witness all he had accomplished as well.
Chris would date here and there, but there was never anything serious. I was so busy trying to move up in my career field that sometimes, I’d not even realize that two months had gone by since my last… um, well, even the thought of was rare. I was pretty happy excelling in the successes of my own business. It was when I turned 35 that I realized I might have let a little too much time go by.
“Jenn,” my mom lamented in her usual way on our weekly call, “when am I gonna have grand babies?”
“Um, Mom? You have six grandchildren,” I reminded her as I thought about my three nephews and three nieces produced by the mix of my three brothers and their amazing wives.
“Oh, Jennifer,” Mom chided, “you know what I mean. You’re my only daughter. No boyfriend, at least that I’ve heard of. No talk of relationships at all. What about Chris? Do you still talk to him? He was always such a sweet boy in high school. You mentioned that you two keep in touch, right?”
“Moooooom,” I argued. “Chris is a friend, a very good one at that. It’s not like that though.”
“Well, just think on it, OK?” she requested as if my answer wasn’t acceptable. “You never know. I mean, remember how I told you that I didn’t realize I was meant to be with your father until…”
“Until he kissed you, I know,” I mocked and shook my head as I had said each word exactly as she had, only my words were dripping with sarcasm. “Mom, I have never been in a position to kiss Chris. He’s a good friend. He dates. We share stories and encourage each other in our work ventures. It’s just not like that.”
“OK, I’m just saying…” she announced as she always did when she finally gave up. “Are you coming for Easter?”
“Of course, Mom,” I answered as I pinched the bridge of my nose. “I’ll bring the pistachio salad as usual, and it’s my turn to bring their basket contents this year.”
“Oh, honey,” Mom noted and signed. “I know you’re the only one without kids, but the boys sure do appreciate that you participate in the ‘taking turns’ idea for the kids.”
I couldn’t help but smile as she called my 31, 32, and 34yearold brothers “the boys.” I think I’d actually have to put more brain power into grasping who they were if she were to refer to them as “my brothers.” She had always grouped them together when speaking with me.
“Oh, believe me,” I corrected of her apology, “it’s not only no bother, but I’m stoked to get to fill their baskets once every four years. I look forward to earning my properly worded title of ‘Best Aunt EVER’ twice in those years. Naturally, I have that honor every Christmas!”
“Yes, well, just don’t show up your brothers with too expensive gifts,” she reminded me as she did all the time. She was unaware that I made sure to reach out to my sistersinlaw each year to not only get great (and appropriate) gifts for the family celebration, but also added a few for under their trees in their own homes which would be marked from “Santa.” It made my heart full to give them a little extra since I had the means to do it.
As I laid in bed that night, I thought about what my mom had suggested. Chris? Really? Had I ever thought about that option? I scoffed and shook my head in the dark. Nah. He was just a friend!
I was about to fall asleep when my phone chirped. It was charging on the table next to my bed, so I reached over blindly and picked it up.
“I’m really sorry if this is waking you, but I need to talk to you.”
I didn’t think twice and called Chris’ sister, Cindy, to see what was going on. We hadn’t talked in a long while, but I had her number saved from a surprise party we had thrown for Chris when he had turned 30.
“Jenn?” Cindy questioned when answering on the second ring.
“Yeah, Cindy, it’s me,” I confirmed. “What’s up?”
“Chris was in a car accident!” she exclaimed and let out a sigh as she took the moment to catch her bearings.
“Well, oh, gosh,” I reacted as I wasn’t sure what the severity was. “Is he OK?” I asked as most humans would think to ask next.
“Yes, thank God!” Cindy answered and hiccupped. “Oh, I guess I should have led with that. His car is totaled thanks to the jerk who cut him off, but we are at the hospital because he has some injuries.”
“That makes sense,” I replied and shook my head. “Cin, what’s up? I mean, I appreciate the call, and I am happy to check in on him tomorrow, but…”
“Well, that’s just it,” Cindy quickly interrupted. “Um, yeah… so, Dex and I were supposed to be leaving tonight for a week away. Chris is going to need some assistance, so I was wondering, you know, if maybe you could help out?”
“Help out?” I asked, dumbfounded. “Cin, what exactly does ‘need some assistance’ mean?”
“Um, well… he has a concussion, so the doctor mentioned that he shouldn’t be left alone for a while,” she explained. “No more than a week or so, I think. I mean, as his only sibling, it was logical that I was asked to do it, you know? But we have these tickets, and the trip…”
“So, how would it work?” I asked before she rubbed in her little romantic vacation anymore. “He will obviously not be able to work. Would he be able to come to stay at my place, or…?”
“Oh, I asked that too,” Cindy answered. “The doctor said it is best at his place since he knows it the best. You know, corners, walls, and stuff in case he gets dizzy.”
“So, I’d have to move into his place?”
“Yeah,” she answered and got quiet.
I ran over the short list in my head of other people who could possibly take the position of which I was being offered and realized there was no one else who could do it. His mom was too old and didn’t get around very well. His dad was out of the picture. His guy friends were either busy with their married lives or irresponsible enough to not trust in such a position. No, Cindy was right to call me. Now I had to get going. Did I pack? What about my place? Could I leave to check on it throughout the week? Could he come with me? So many questions.
“Jenn, are you still there?”
I nearly dropped the phone when I heard Cindy calling out to me.
“Shoot! Oh, Cindy, I’m sorry. Yes, tell the doctor I’ll be there within the hour. I’ll grab my things and figure out the other stuff tomorrow. Will you be there?”
“Oh, um, we were going to go since he’s asleep. Did you need me to stay…”
“No, go,” I answered and shook my head as I said it. “Go have a blast on your trip. Check in as you can, but don’t worry. I’ll take care of him.”
“Oh, thank you, Jenn! I knew you’d be there for him.”
We continued our niceties as I got dressed again and packed while she told me his room number and promised to text me the information too. We hung up as I zipped my bad shut and headed for the bedroom door. I pointed at the several places my most immediately needed items were usually located and found that I’d packed them all, including my phone charger.
When I entered the hospital, I made my way to the elevator to go straight to Chris’ room. I knew it was after hours for the most part, but if I was going to be his person, I had to get in there to speak with the doctor to find out what was required of me.
“Excuse me? Can I help you?” a nurse asked as I was looking at the wall to find which direction I needed to go to find the room.
“I’m here to see Chris Benbury,” I explained. “My name is Jennifer…”
“Sanders?” She questioned and nodded when I showed surprise. “Sorry. Chris’ sister, Cindy, told us to be expecting you. I’m Marita, and I was here when Chris was brought in, so you can come to me if you have any questions or concerns until 6am when the shift changes. Come with me, hun, and we’ll get you comfortable in his room. When I see the doctor, I’ll send him in to answer your questions.”
“Thank you,” I answered quietly. The severity of Chris’ injuries was still in question, but the fact that I was walking in a hospital being led by a nurse hit me a little. I felt the emotions welling up, so I put up my finger as if to request that we stop so I could collect myself.
“Oh, honey! It’s alright!” Marita sympathized and rubbed my back. “He’s going to be just fine!”
I laughed a little at her need to comfort me and shook my head as I wiped my eyes. “Oh, my gosh. This is so stupid. I can’t believe I’m standing here crying. I don’t know what’s come over me!” I inhaled deeply and accepted the tissue Marita offered. As I wiped my eyes, I let out another laugh. “I’m alright. It’s just that I am standing here in a hospital, and the sudden realization that Chris could have been really hurt badly, or even…”
“Ope! No, no, girl,” Marita chided. “No, we aren’t going down that road. Chris is going to be just fine. He just got banged up a little. We are monitoring him well, but once you take him home, he’ll improve each day. It’s just the concussion that has us worried a little bit.”
“I appreciate it,” I responded and nodded. “Thank you. Thanks for letting me get this out before we go in there.”
“Honey, I gotchu,” Marita offered and patted my back again. “Ready? He’s right in here.”
I nodded, so the nurse gave a gentle knock on the door and then pushed it open. It would appear that she did the knocking thing as a habit, but she also seemed to know he was going to be asleep when we walked in.
“He has a concussion from the collision. From what I heard, he was turning right onto the street when an impatient son of a b,” she began to say but stopped herself and cleared her throat. “Excuse me, I mean… when the other driver came along on the shoulder to pass him. I don’t know for sure, but the police indicated that the man was being impatient and tried to go around illegally. Because the other driver wasn’t paying attention, Chris’ continued proper turn into his lane caused a sudden need for the other guy to have to swerve and slammed directly into Chris’ car.”
“Yeah,” I replied as I bent over to look at the face of the man who held the honor of one of my longest running friendships, “Cindy mentioned that his car was totaled. It’s a shame,” I noted as I pushed some hair from Chris’ forehead, “because he loved that car. He had it ordered exactly the way he had wanted it only about nine months ago.”
“That is a shame,” Marita echoed. “Well, he’s going to have some bruises and aches and pains for a good few days, but other than that, it’s the dizziness which might be an issue.” Marita continued to check stats and document them since she was in the room. “Well, I’ll leave you to visit with him. You can pull out the bed, and the remote is next to his bed if you want to watch something. When I see the doctor, I’ll let him know you’re here and waiting for instructions.”
“Thank you, Marita,” I responded and nodded.
***
Christopher Benbury
“Jenn?”
My best friend, Jenn Sanders, awoke and looked around as if to try figuring out where she was and who was calling her name.
“Jenn? What are you doing here?” I repeated.
“Mmm, Chris,” she answered and raised her arms to stretch. The chair must have been comfortable, but I don’t think she had expected to fall asleep quite so deeply. “Cindy called me after your accident,” she explained. “Since she’s got her trip with Dax, I came to be your aide for the next week as you heal.”
“She called you?” I asked and reached up to touch my head. “Ow, stupid headache. Oh, crap! Cin’s trip. Wasn’t there anyone else she could have called?”
“Wow,” she answered sarcastically. “Thanks.”
“Oh, shit, Jenn,” I responded suddenly. I wanted to smack my forehead for acting the way I was. It wasn’t her fault I was in an accident, my car had been totaled, and I was waking up in a hospital. “Oh, crap, that’s not what I meant. I just… why did she have to bother you?”
“Well, I did the math as I pondered my ability to help out, and it comes down to the fact that I’m the only logical person since she’s not available. Your mom isn’t capable. Andy, Doug, and Erik are either married or, let’s face it… not entirely responsible enough to hardly care for themselves… Doug,” she muttered, though audibly.
I couldn’t blame her. Last she’d heard, Doug had locked himself out of his house in a drunken stupor and just slept on the concrete porch one late night. It turned out that he’d also opened his garage door and could have just gone into the house through there. Idiot. Had the weather been ten degrees colder, he could have died. When telling the , though, he laughed all the way through it and proudly showed off his frozen burnt skin on his arm. I had to reach for Jenn’s hand while he told his to remind her that beating the crap out of the moron wasn’t going to change anything.
“OK, I suppose you have a point,” I realized and laid my head back on the pillow. “Has the doctor been in?”
“If he came in while I was sleeping, he didn’t wake me up,” she answered and stood up to stretch. “Would you want me to call Marita?”
“Who?” I asked. Was I supposed to know who that was? Was she already trying to get out of helping me? Was Marita an aide who helped my mom? Why would Jenn know Mom’s aides’ names?
“The nurse,” she answered. “I can push the call button and have her come here to check on you, and maybe we could…”
“Knock, knock!” Marita announced as she opened the door. “I thought I heard voices! Well, hello there, handsome! And good morning, Jennifer. Last time I was in here, you were hovering over him like a concerned lovebird.”
I looked over at Jenn, but she was watching Marita, and I couldn’t see her face. Was she looking at me with concern? Lovebird? In all the time we’d be hanging out and talking, it had only ever been friendly. Lunches, a rare trip to the movies and shared popcorn, and texts almost every day. But more than friends? Why had Marita said it like that?
“The doctor got called away to do surgery in the big city,” Marita explained as she messed with the computer and attachments hooked up to my body, “so he left your case, Chris, with Dr. Chesney Ryan. She’s due to come in at around 7am this morning. It’s 5:30am now. Do either of you need anything? Chris, what is your pain level? Anything other than your head hurting, hun?”
“Ask me again once I get out of bed,” I requested and sighed. I pulled over the covers and realized I was in a gown. Well, crap. Nice way for my friend to see me for the first time in something other than normal clothes. Maybe I could hold the back together…
“How about you, Jenn?” Marita asked. Fortunately, she was keeping Jenn’s attention. Or maybe Jenn was just being kind and sparing me the humiliation. I held both sides of my gown together as I hurried to the bathroom to do my business.
My friend. Jennifer Sanders and I met during our freshman year of high school. She was always kind to me. We hung out in large groups on occasion, and we laughed a lot when we sat next to one another in homeroom two years in a row. That was a lucky thing for me when many of the other parts of my life sucked so badly. I won’t get into it, but let’s just say, going to school was a blessing, especially when I got to see Jenn.
I chickened out when dances came around, so she was never the wiser that I had a huge crush on her. All throughout high school, I had the pleasure of her company, so why ruin that? I decided during our junior year when I had heard that she’d accepted yet another request for her companionship as the quarterback’s date for the next dance of the year to just let go of the dream that one day, she’d want me. And so it went.
We graduated from high school in May. We went our separate ways, crossed paths at a restaurant and exchanged cell phone numbers, and reconnected. I have heard from her at least once a week, though recently, if I go two days without hearing from her, I check in. She has always given me the indication that she enjoys my company when we go out to lunch together, and laughter and endless chatting is a given.
After countless times of having my mother and sister asking me why Jenn wasn’t more to me, I threw up my hands and told them it just wasn’t meant to be. Friendship is important to me, and the idea of scaring her away with my declaration of love just wasn’t one to deal with.
Waking up this morning and finding her there in the room with me was a shock, and I wasn’t in the right mindset to acknowledge that my sister had asked Jenn to stay with me. It still wasn’t sinking in. I think once the doctor came into the room to discuss the upcoming week of healing, we’d both begin to understand just what was expected of her. I just hoped she wouldn’t abandon ship. OK, yes, she’d never do that, but would it cross her mind?
When I walked into the room again, Jenn was going through her bag. “Oh, hey,” she greeted me again. “I’m supposed to remind you to let Marita know before she leaves if you have any other concerns or pains. She’s off at 6am.” With her arm full of clothes, she pointed with her other hand. “Are you done in the bathroom? I was hoping to freshen up.”
“What for?” I asked as I covered myself with the sheet. “You’re beautiful as always.”
“Oh, Chris,” she chided and shook her head. “You’re both biased and obligated to say so. We old people need to stick together,” she claimed, to which I shook my head while rolling my eyes because she was always teasing that we were getting old, “and you have to say that because you know if you’re mean to me, you’ll be left all alone in that big house of yours when I storm out leaving you without anyone to pick you up when you faint.”
“Doesn’t mean it’s not true,” I argued as she closed the bathroom door. If I was going too far, because I’d never said much of anything before indicating that I saw her as more than a friend, I could claim the concussion as an excuse.
***
Jenn
Dr. Ryan came in just as Marita had indicated at around 7am. She was pleased with the tests she ran on Chris, but she was extremely glad to know that I had planned to spend the week with him at his place.
“In the first few days, you should not spend much time on your feet. A shower is fine; but leave the door open so she can hear you. Try not to stand at the stove, for instance.”
“Oh, I’ve got meals covered all week,” I interjected. “But what about walking?”
“OK, good to know about the meals,” Dr. Ryan responded. “No strenuous exercise, obviously, but walking is good. Jenn, perhaps plan to hold his arm so that you can feel his speed and stability. Fresh air is definitely helpful.”
“His bedroom is on the second floor,” I informed the doctor.
“Oh, I’ll be taking the couch,” Chris noted.
ero