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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Travelling Home - 4. Chapter 4: New York

The headquarters of my company are in New York City, and every September the accounting directors of all the subsidiaries and international operations meet for a week-long conference that would bore most normal people into a coma, but which we eagerly anticipate, and not only because of the venue. Hell, even the guys based in New York look forward to it.

Benny Siegel also looks forward to it, not because he works for our company or is an accountant, but because he lives and works in Manhattan, and I always extend my stay so that we can spend some time together. Which is a problem, at least this year, because the boundaries between best friends and fuck buddies are pretty much non-existent for Benny and me, and I'm not sure how I feel about that any more, given my thing with David. On the other hand, I'm not quite ready to talk to Benny about David yet; I'm not proud of it, but I don't want to ruin my thing with Benny, if my thing with David doesn't work out. And in terms of hours logged with me, Benny definitely has seniority.

So I try to compromise.

"Whaddaya mean, you're not staying with me? You always stay with me!"

At 47, Benny has long given up talking like an escapee from a Francis Ford Coppola movie. He dropped the act when he got hired by one of larger legal firms in New York and realized he wasn't good enough to want to stand out. Besides, there were too many American-Italians from the boroughs in the firm, and they threatened to beat the shit out of him if he kept the fake accent up. He sometimes pulls it out and dusts it off for me though.

"It's this project, Benny," I answer vaguely. "There's a few of us working on it, and the others thought that since we're all getting together for the conference anyway, we should put in three or four days on the project, move it forward. They've booked us all in the hotel for the extended period. I had nothing to do with it."

"Well, that sucks," he says slowly. "So you're not even going to have much time for us to hang out?"

"We can definitely spend some time together. Fuck 'em, the brownnosers, they're not going to tie my entire weekend up. We just need to work the schedules out."

He sounds happier when we hang up. I don't know if I am. I don’t mind the occasional white lie, but this feels too close to cheating on both of them, even though I’m positive neither expects or has even thought of an exclusive relationship with me.

I put my phone down, but it immediately beeps indicating an incoming message, so I pick it up again, smiling when I see it's from David.

Guess who one of the speakers at your NYC conference is? :)

I stare at the message, my heart sinking into my shoes. Speakers are one of the closely-guarded secrets of the annual conference, and they're arranged months, sometimes more than a year, in advance. This isn't possible. Unless he's known for a while, but then why wait until now to tell me? I jab at speed-dial.

"Hey!" he answers happily, but I'm no longer in the mood for happy.

"How long have you known?"

"About five minutes."

"What? Come on, they don't arrange these things two weeks beforehand. Are you sure you're speaking at this year's conference?"

"I'm a pinch hitter. Apparently one of your keynote speakers has been subpoenaed. They got in touch with our PR department, our PR department got in touch with me, I said yes."

"But . . . can you do this? I mean, at a moment's notice? Don't you need to prepare?"

He sighs gustily. "Jordan, this is what I do. I travel around, I make speeches, I press some flesh, hopefully people are impressed and they put our product on their to-be-considered list. I could make any one of several speeches in my sleep."

"Yeah, but . . . but, I mean, don't you have something else planned? I mean, your schedule is mapped out weeks in advance, isn't it?" I babble.

"You're being weird. Again." He waits for me to say something, but I'm out of words. "My speech is on Thursday and from what I understand, the conference ends Thursday night. I though we could spend Friday and Saturday together. I have to fly out Saturday night." He waits again. "I thought you'd be pleased."

I squeeze my eyes shut and try to swallow. Oh, god. I need to tell him, to somehow explain.

"I lived in New York."

"I know. You can show me your favorite spots." There's a faintly pleading tone to his voice and he clears his throat. "Or we can just stay in and order room service."

"The thing is, David . . . well, the thing is, I've planned to spend time with some friends." Fuck, man up, Petersen. "With a friend."

"Oh." His reaction is flat, emotionless.

"And, uhm, I haven't told him about you."

I can hear his breathing, and, more faintly in the background, a man speaking Italian.

"Where are you?"

"Ferihegy. Budapest."

"Yeah, I know." He knows I know, the shortest trip from Stockholm to Athens is with Malev via Ferihegy Airport, and it's some kind of sign of something that he's forgotten and thinks he has to explain.

"What's his name? This friend of yours?"

"Benjamin Siegel. Benny."

"I don't even know why I asked that. What the fuck difference does it make?"

His laugh is bitter, ugly, not the one I love. Then again, what right do I have to expect anything from him that would please me at this moment?

"David—"

"Well, I've accepted the invitation to speak," he interrupts me. "I'm going to be in New York. I'd like to see you. I guess the rest is up to you."

"David," I try again, but I realize I'm talking to dead air.

So, these are my options:

One, the first man I ever fell in love with almost thirty years ago, the man who stood by me at my absolute worst and who helped pull me through, the man I sort of ran away from, because in the long term we were toxic together, and we both knew it, but the man that for five days a year I can love with all my heart and with whom I don't have to pretend to be something I'm not.

Or, two, the man I met three months ago, with whom I've spent exactly nine days and nine nights, most of these in bed, whom I have a crush on and maybe am even in love with, and who knows almost nothing about me, because I've tried to only show him the best bits of me and told him nothing about who I really am or was.

 

Then

Dr. Bob, otherwise known as Dr. Robert Holbrook Smith, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, graduated from Dartmouth College in 1902. It's one of the things people always said to me afterwards, when they heard that I'd attended Dartmouth. I never cared enough to find out more about Dr. Bob, and whether the roots of his alcoholism were to be found in the basement of a fraternity, like mine were. I don't think I cared much about anything those days.

When Benny introduced me to running, he also introduced me to the fraternity most of the track team rushed, and Freshman Spring I rushed as well. I knew I was a shoo-in; I'd been partying there since my second week on campus. We weren't Animal House, far from it, but, like all fraternities, drinking formed a large part of many things we did. Most of the brothers could handle it. Benny could. I thought I could, too; I'd been ordering drinks in dance clubs in Athens since I was fifteen, and I'd never had a problem. Maybe what had saved me until that point was the fact that I didn't like the taste of beer and that I could rarely afford to order more than one cocktail.

That all changed at Dartmouth. You couldn't not like beer, even when it tasted like horse piss. It was always on tap, and if your fraternity had run out, well, Frat Row offered plenty of other choices. Pretty soon, once I started drinking, I couldn't stop, not that I particularly tried to after losing the second game of quarters or the third of beer pong. I drank until I passed out. Benny could sometimes convince me not to even start, but there had to be a damn good reason, like a track meet the next day, or one of the harder days of training, or a test that my whole grade might hang on. There are complete chunks of time missing, lost to me forever, even during my sophomore spring, when Benny and I were falling in love, and when I was the happiest I'd ever been in my whole life. By my junior winter, we'd broken up; Benny couldn't handle a relationship with somebody so self-destructive, especially since he also liked to party and baby-sitting cramped his style, and I was sick of him constantly being on my case. Oddly enough, once we thought we'd pulled our hearts out of the equation, we went back to being good friends, though I was still drinking heavily.

Benny was accepted to Columbia Law, and when he left, he made me vow that I wouldn't drink during the week, or on any weekend I had a meet. "This is important, Jordie. You have to graduate," he told me over and over again, and I'd nod, alternating between feeling grateful that he cared so much and resentful that he was going and leaving me behind. I'd long given up on my dream of pre-med, and had switched to accounting and math, and I was fighting for a grade average that would keep me from flunking out.

The real hell, though, started the day I graduated and hitched a ride with a brother to New York. I had no idea what I wanted to do, or how to even start looking for a job, but I didn't want to go back to Athens, so I figured I'd crash out at Benny's for a while; his parents had rented a large two-bedroom in the Upper West Side for him, and it's not like he needed a paying roommate.

Things might have turned out differently if Benny had turned me away, but he didn't. I suppose we were still in love, though to this day I can never figure out why he stuck with me. Only this time around, Benny didn't really try to rein me in. For one thing, he was studying too hard. And when he wasn't studying, he wanted to party. I partied right along with him and, since I had nowhere to be or anything to do, I was partying the rest of the time, as well.

I suppose not many people can say that being raped changed their lives for the better. I don't remember all the details, and I can't say for sure that I ever said the word no, or that the guys, who ganged up on me, were any more sober or capable of making decisions than I was, but I know that my near panic at having my head held when I'm giving someone a blow job stems from that day. What stopped me drinking after that wasn't the fear of getting hurt again. Rightly or wrongly, that was something I believed I could easily survive. It was the terror of AIDS; by that time, we all had too many friends we'd lost, and we'd seen up close and personal what the disease could do. I no longer considered myself invincible and I needed to stay sober in order to avoid putting myself in harm's way.

I relapsed twice, both times while I was still with Benny, though not because of him. I'd always enjoyed wine and cocktails, and after a year of being sober, I figured I could control things. Benny was encouraging; I'd been sick and now I was okay, and it was time to get on with life and have some fun. And as long as I was with Benny, I was okay. But he was still studying, and I'd started temping at an accounting firm, and going out with the guys for drinks after work to kill a few hours. I “controlled” things for about three months, then ended back in rehab.

The second time was when I was admitted to NYU for my graduate degree in accounting. Benny wanted us to celebrate and he couldn't understand why I wouldn't have even one drink. As far as he was concerned, it all came down to willpower, and willpower required practice, just like running did. This time I managed to stop on my own, but DTs are not pretty and I hated Benny seeing me when I couldn't stand to be in my own skin.

Once I felt semi-human again, I took a long, hard look at myself through his eyes. For him, total abstinence did not equal self-discipline, but cowardice. He loved me, but he saw me as weak and self-indulgent and I wasn't too sure I disagreed with his assessment of me. Escaping myself wasn't really an option; escaping him was.

We slowly drifted apart, still living together but nothing more, and after grad school, I found a job and moved out. I worked in New York for a further two years, then I got myself assigned to our company's internal audit team, travelling all over the world, and the rest, as they say, is history. I heard through a mutual friend, an old team mate and brother of ours, that Benny had a partner, and a few years later, I heard through the same friend that Benny's partner had been killed in an accident. I contacted Benny to offer my condolences, even though by this time we hadn't spoken in over ten years. I was flying through New York on my way from London, where I was then based, to San Francisco, and arranged a 24-hour stopover, so that I could visit him.

Seeing Benny again gave me the same feeling like that first time all those years ago, on the third floor of McLane Hall: Benny felt like home, only by this time I knew that, once you've left, you can only go back home for short visits.

 

Now

I arrange to meet Benny at Columbus Circle. I suggest a run, because running is when he and I are most at ease with each other, but he tells me he's recovering from flu, so the best he's up for is a mosey.

It's a cool, crisp day, and the leaves in Central Park are just starting to turn. There's been more gray in Benny's hair every time I see him, so the fact that he's almost completely gray now doesn't surprise me. What shocks me is how thin he is; even the sweatshirt and windbreaker can't hide his gaunt frame. I'm not sure whether I should comment or not, but he sees my face and grimaces.

"Yeah, I know."

"Jesus, Benny, that must have been some flu."

He shrugs and nods his head towards the park entrance. Benny's not very demonstrative in public, but we always hug when we meet, and the fact that he avoids it makes my gut clench. At least he's walking firmly, though not very quickly.

"Are you okay now?" I ask hesitantly.

"Yeah."

"You sure?"

He flips an impatient hand. "Stop. I'm fine. I just need to put on a few pounds again. So how are you?"

"Good."

"Still sober?"

He always fucking asks me this, and in the same condescending tone. What he means is, still depriving myself of the occasional cocktail or flute of champagne, still pretending I'm drinking alcohol rather than water at company functions, so as not to stand out or have to explain, still too weak to stop myself from drinking myself blind if I start. I generally just say yes, and move on, but today I don't want to move on. I'm through apologizing to Benny for doing what I know is right for me.

"You know what, Benny? You, more than anybody, know what alcohol does to me. I have a job that I'm good at, and I hold down a responsible and demanding position. I'm in good shape. I'm in a relationship. So fuck you, if you look down on me, because I don't want to risk all of that for a fucking shot of tequila."

"You're in a relationship?"

"What?"

He stops and turns to look at me, his hands in his pockets.

"You said you're in a relationship."

"Uh, I did?"

"Stop playing stupid, Jordan." His eyes narrow in sudden realization. "You were lying to me, you fucking asshole," he roars suddenly, pointing an accusing finger at me. "Accounting project, my ass. Go fuck yourself."

He starts walking again, and I fall in beside him. I can't believe I told him I'm in a relationship. This is the problem with my temper. Most times I try not to take things too personally, but then my brain short circuits at the worst possible moment, and I say a lot of stuff I don't really mean or even think, however much I might wish them.

"Is he a colleague? Is he here with you?"

"No, I met him at a conference a few months ago, and we've seen each other a couple of times since. He'll be here next weekend, but I didn't know that, when I was talking to you on the phone. That just sort of—"

"Stop explaining, Jordie," he says, not unkindly. "Do you want a pretzel?"

"Yeah. Thanks."

He buys two pretzels, a bottle of water for him and a Coke for me, and we sit on a bench.

"I'm sorry, Benny. I should have been honest with you."

"So why weren't you?"

"It's not really a relationship yet. I'm not sure it will ever be. And you and me . . . well, I didn't want to ruin what we have."

"What we have? Jordie, we fuck once a year. That's about it."

"That's not true," I protest, my heart suddenly racing at his assessment of what I've considered so important in my life, of my one anchor. "You're my best friend, Benny. I love you."

"I love you too, Jordie, but you know what I never figured out? Why you're willing to settle for so little, why you're afraid of wanting more. Why is that?"

I shake my head. I'm not afraid of wanting more; I've just rarely gotten it, and I don't want to waste my life anymore by dreaming too big. I think that's the main mistake people make in their lives, wanting too much.

After finishing our pretzels, we meander through the park, heading up towards Umpire Rock and from there to the Carousel.

"If I ask you something, will you promise to answer me honestly?"

"Okay."

"Would you rather spend next weekend with him or with me?"

For three years in college, and then again for two years after I came to New York, Benny and I ran alongside each other, sometimes joking, sometimes arguing, often silent, our breathing and steps in perfect cadence. Some reckon friendship in terms of time; with Benny, I also reckon it in distance, in miles of asphalt and dirt track, of crisp autumn afternoons when our feet crunched on leaves aflame with color, of freezing mornings when each breath seared our lungs. We’ve been friends for close to thirty years and more miles than I can even count, and he's the closest thing I've had to one true love. Over the past couple of years, the idea of asking to be reassigned to headquarters, of maybe trying again now that we're both older and wiser, has seemed increasingly attractive, even comforting, and despite Benny's description of our relationship earlier, I know he's been thinking along the same lines. It would be nice, and nice is not something to scoff at.

I look at my long-time friend with a surge of affection. I don't want to have to choose between Benny and David. I hate doing so.

"Him," I say miserably, aware of what I'm throwing away, but the choice is suddenly so blindingly obvious.

For a moment I think he's going to be protest, but instead he smiles, and flings an arm around my shoulders, hugging me to him.

"Then go for it, Jordie. For once in your life, go for it."

---o-O-o---

David picks up on the second ring.

"Can you talk?"

"Hold on." I hear him apologizing to somebody, then a door closing. "Okay, I'm with you."

"I'm done being weird," I try to joke.

"Okay."

His voice is neutral. Unlike the other times, he's not meeting me half-way.

"I'd like to spend next weekend with you. If you still want to."

"I want to."

I sink onto the foot of the bed. I don't think I knew until now that it it's possible to feel both relieved and extremely anxious at one and the same time.

"David? Do you see this, us, going further?"

He sighs. "I don't think that depends on me, Jordan."

"Yeah, but what do you want?"

"I'm too old for this shit. And so are you," he says harshly.

"What shit?" I bristle.

"This. The back and forth. The way you retreat and then try to pretend that it's because of something I might be wanting or thinking. The way you make the simplest things more complicated than they are or need to be, and how every time we see each other or even speak to each other on the phone, I need to break through this fucking wall you put up."

I lie back, covering my eyes with my forearm. He's right. Other than the part about things being simple, he's right.

"You don't know me."

"I'm trying to. God knows I'm trying to."

"If you knew—"

"Don't go there. Don't you fucking go there! If I knew what? That there are things in your past you don't want to talk about? That you've made mistakes? That you're far from perfect?"

"Yeah."

"Welcome to the club, Jordan." He laughs shortly. "I guess you're going to have to pick another excuse to bow out of this."

"I don't want to bow out of this."

We're both silent for a while. I don't want to hang up, and the fact that he doesn't seem to want to either gives me hope.

"You don't know me either," he says quietly. "Do you think I got to where I am today always making the moral or the ethical choice? Do you think I've always played by the rules?" He pauses. "Do you think I was faithful to Nora until we got our divorce, that for sixteen years I honored the vows I made to her?"

"I guess," I say automatically, then more honestly, "No, not really."

The truth is, I hadn't thought about these things, but I'm not shocked, either. I'm not blind to David's hard realism, cynicism, or sense of entitlement. But his confessions don't make a difference. It's not that I condone the choices he may have made. It's just that his flaws are part of him, just like his sweet smile, and the way he reads food labels and then makes the unhealthy choice anyway, and the fact that he wants to retire from a job that makes him travel so that he can travel, and that he likes rubbing my back.

"I'm an alcoholic," I blurt out.

"Yeah, I thought you might be. That's okay."

"You don't care?"

"I care. But it doesn't change how I see you."

I want to ask how he feels about me. I want to tell him that I'm crazy about him. "I should let you go," I say instead.

"Okay."

But he doesn't say goodbye or hang up, and neither can I.

"Hey, Jordie?" he purrs, and I know we're on our way to being okay again. For the time being, he's still patient with me, and it strikes me that it was always like this between us, even as children. I counted on David not getting too mad, on taking everything I could throw at him, over and over again.

"Yeah?"

"Is your hotel room on the city or the harbor side?"

"What do you think?"

"Mine's on the harbor side. I checked out the room on the internet. It has a telescope, for a better viewing of the harbor."

"Is that right?"

"Would you like to see the harbor view, Jordie? Lady Liberty standing proudly over symbolic Ellis Island?"

I laugh, recognizing the hotel marketing blurb.

"I'm not that kind of girl," I tell him primly.

---o-O-o---

I slip into the conference room a few minutes before the session is due to start, hoping to at least say hello to him, but our CFO is monopolizing him. David stands with his hands in his pockets, his head lowered as he listens, nodding every so often. Every year we worry that during our conference it will be announced that we're changing accounting systems, and it suddenly occurs to me that David might be here as a supplier, as well as a speaker. Converting systems isn't fun; I'm still traumatized by the last time, a mere ten years ago, and then we were only adding a couple of modules to the existing infrastructure.

"Shit, that's not David Hamvas, is it?" Connie Ceballos hisses at me. I'm surprised that she instantly recognizes him.

"I'm pretty sure it is," I respond truthfully.

"I thought so. I just read an article on him, although the photo didn't do him justice. Oh, no! They're not going to announce that we're installing a new system, are they?" she moans in a sudden panic, proving that I'm not only one scarred for life by the previous experience.

"I don't know," I mutter back, glaring at David, as if the fact that my company seems to flounder at the simplest projects is his fault. He picks that exact minute to raise his head and notice me; he looks surprised at first, probably at my scowl, and then he smiles broadly, tilting his head a little and staring at me.

"Hey, he's cute! For an old guy."

"Gee, thanks, Connie. He's my age, you know."

"Why is he smiling at you? Have you met him?"

"Yeah, a couple of times, at conventions around Europe," I respond vaguely, thankful that the session is being called to order and I don't have to answer more of Connie's questions.

It's the first time I've heard David speak in public. He's intelligent, charming and polished, his faint accent less noticeable in the practiced delivery. I prop my chin on my fist and let his voice wash over me, and I try to stay in the present rather than daydreaming about what we're going to do when we're finally alone. He meets my eyes twice; the second time he has to clear his throat and start his sentence from the beginning, and after that he avoids looking my way.

---o-O-o---

"So, what do you think?" David asks me, slipping his arms around my waist and pulling me back to lean against him, nuzzling my ear. The view alone was worth coming to his room for, though the other perks, like his warm naked body wrapped around mine, are certainly welcome.

"It's beautiful. Why the hell are we spending so much money on you? You should be wooing us, not the other way around."

"Oh, I am. One of you, at any rate."

"Well, after all, I am one of the influencers in the buying decisions," I boast modestly. Hey, I get to fill out a systems user satisfaction questionnaire every year.

He slides his palms down my belly, his fingers tickling a little, and my cock starts to grow. I flex my butt back against him, and his hand wraps around my dick, stroking lazily a couple of times, then stilling, just holding me.

"Jordie? Is it working?"

"Hmmm? Not quite yet, but give me a couple of seconds."

He laughs gruffly. "Not that, you idiot. My wooing you."

I lean my head backwards and to the side, trying to see his face.

"Yeah, it's working," I say and he nods and kisses me on the corner of my mouth, where he can reach.

"What you asked me on the phone? About whether I see this going further? Is that what you want?"

My first instinct is to make him answer the question first, so that I can follow his lead. If he says that this is enough, I'll be able to pretend that it's enough for me, as well. And it is. Hell, it's more than a lot of people have, it's more than I had just two months ago. I don't want to rock the boat, make premature demands. I've always tried to fit in with others and I don't suppose that's going to change about me.

"We travel a lot for our jobs. You especially," I say, trying to gauge his thoughts, but he just gives a non-committal grunt, his body still loose against mine.

"Maybe we could arrange to meet more often."

"We could," he agrees, no inflection in his voice.

Shit, it's like trying to decipher the fucking Sphinx. I take a deep breath.

"Maybe . . . maybe we could figure out sort of a joint home base. Figure on spending free time there, rather than trying to coordinate travel schedules across the world."

He doesn't answer immediately, and I have time to run through all the arguments in my head, all the doubts that have plagued me, all the things that I should be considering rather than how much I want to be with him. It's way too soon to be suggesting something like this. We don't know each other well enough. We're too old to be leaping into something. Even in my late forties, I could be mistaking sexual attraction for something more.

"You have a home in Athens," he says finally.

"Yes."

I can feel his breath on my shoulder, his heartbeat against my back. His arms tighten around me.

"Yes," he repeats on a sigh. "Yes."

Copyright © 2012 podga; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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I barely finished chapter 3 and already there's a chapter 4. Hurrah!

 

This chapter feels like a turning point. Jordan is forced to to confess to himself and to his friend and David what he really wants. Living alone (that is carrying on as he has9 is the safer, but also lonelier choice.

 

Maybe it's different if you have lived alone all or most of your adult life, but if I look around among my friends and colleagues it seems to me as if the older you are the more prone you are to just leap into something. They have barely moved out from their old relationships until they move in with the next one or even get married after just a couple of months together (whereas in the former very long term relationship they never got married). As if they are afraid time will ran out on them.

 

Is there more?

On 07/13/2012 12:30 AM, sorgbarn said:
I barely finished chapter 3 and already there's a chapter 4. Hurrah!

 

This chapter feels like a turning point. Jordan is forced to to confess to himself and to his friend and David what he really wants. Living alone (that is carrying on as he has9 is the safer, but also lonelier choice.

 

Maybe it's different if you have lived alone all or most of your adult life, but if I look around among my friends and colleagues it seems to me as if the older you are the more prone you are to just leap into something. They have barely moved out from their old relationships until they move in with the next one or even get married after just a couple of months together (whereas in the former very long term relationship they never got married). As if they are afraid time will ran out on them.

 

Is there more?

I'd say people do realize that they'd rather have somebody around than not.

 

And interestingly enough, in my experience at least, it's the people that have been in really good relationships that quickly find someone new (when you'd think they'd be the ones to pine for their past loves). I think it's maybe because they understand the rewards of sharing a life and find it harder to adapt to being alone again.

On 07/15/2012 05:12 PM, Foster said:
Do great chances happen to you when you are middle aged or are they the myths of the young. Jordan and David seem very fortunate to me. I don't know if life will be this generous to them always. They should recognize this... will they ?
I think it's like the joke with the guy that's fallen overboard, and keeps on refusing offers of help from passing ships, because his god will save him. I'm not a pie-eyed romantic by any stretch, but I truly believe that life gives you many chances to be happy; the problem is that they sometimes don't take the form you expect, so you miss them.

 

Thanks for your feedback, Sam!

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