ForevaXena's FanFic . . .
Crying In The Rain,
Dancing In The Sun
by Leigh McEoghan
Disclaimer:
They look like ‘em, they sound like ‘em, but they ain’t them. Got it? I
own these here ladies so y’all cin just shove and bug sumone else, y’hear?
The Hamlet quote was used without permission. It belongs to William ‘ Could
this play be more tragic and depressing?’ Shakespeare. Don’t sue or
else.
Violence
and Naughty Words: There’s no violence but you can expect some cussin’.
Naughty
behaviour: nothing graphic but what does happen happens between two women so
if that kind of thing isn’t your cup of tea, or it is illegal where you live,
go no further.
Authors
note: It’s been a while since I’ve written anything and posted it. I got
really busy all of a sudden a while ago and I’ve only just come out on top of
things. I’m still a bit in shock, I haven’t worked so hard so fast since I
did my Leaving Cert. (I started studying two years of work in seven subjects
about ten days before the exams started. I know, some times I amaze even me!)
Anyway. This story is a sequel/companion piece to another of my stories ‘Thank
You’. Thank You was a really short piece and I got a lot of requests for
something more with those two rather mysterious gals so here it is. I would
recommended that you read Thank You before you read this, trust me, it won’t
take you longer than two minutes. Please email me and let me know what you
think, I always write back! Cheers, Leigh: youngirishbard@hotmail.com
Prologue.
Ever
had one of those days? You know the type. Nothing goes right from the moment you
open your eyes to be blinded by the (much too) early morning sun to the time you
tumble (often literally) into bed very late at night falling straight into a
fitful sleep, fully clothed.
Ever
had a week filled with that type of day, or a month, or five years?! That was my
life once upon a not-too-distant in the past time. Day after crappy day of
wall-to-wall Murphy’s Law.
(Ironic,
some might say, because my name is Murphy.)
It
was my job. It suffocated me. It had me trapped. It nearly had me broken. But
two months ago my contract ended and in a fit of reckless abandon, I decided not
to renew it.
And
then suddenly I was free. The effect was immediate. The sword of
Dama-whats-his-name no longer dangled precariously over my head. The equivalent
weight of several good-sized elephants was lifted from my shoulders. When I left
that building for the last time, the stress that had been hanging out in me for
the last half decade simply vanished. I felt lighter, so light that I ate a
whole tub of Ben & Jerry’s that night in celebration.
Why
the hell had I become a stockbroker in the first place? I don’t think I’ll
ever really know. Was it destiny? A stupid college dare more like. Whatever the
reason, it no longer mattered. I was no longer Murphy Keogh the stressed out
workaholic. I was Murphy Keogh the young-ish, quite comfortably off, single
girl. My life began again that day. I was thirty-three years and three hundred
and fifty days old.
I’m
sure you have questions like; “What did she do then?” and “Why is she
telling me this?” and most probably “Do I really care?” If you weren’t
actually asking any questions and were just kinda skimming along, well then skim
away. For those of you who need answers and a reason to read on, this is for
you. What I’m doing here is telling a story. It’s simple. It’s sappy in
places and it’s true. You don’t have to believe it; you don’t have to
enjoy it. You don’t even have to read on. But if you do read on, know this:
for every thank you, there must be a ‘you’re welcome’ and every story has
two sides. This is my version of the truth.
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“There’s
a divinity that shapes our ends,
Rough-hew
them how we will.”
- Hamlet, Act 5 scene II.
I
was loving my new life as a lady of leisure. I got up when I wanted, ate where I
wanted, saw who I wanted, it was great. I had a new rule, a new motto in life.
It was simple: Live like there’s no tomorrow, dance like no one is watching
and never, ever say die. In only two weeks I had done three things on ‘the
list’. I had made this list on my eighteenth birthday. It was full of things I
wanted to accomplish or experience before I was too old. (Of course, back then,
I would of considered thirty-three to be way past it.) Some of the things on the
list were crazy, some were simple.
I
did a 120ft bungee jump and loved so much that I did it again. I bought a dog. I
had always wanted a dog when I was little but my mom was allergic so I could
never have one. I was allowed fish. Fish! Whoever thought the up the idea
of keeping fish as pets really needed to get out more.
On
my second week out of ‘captivity’ I trooped down to the City Pound and
brought home the cutest little golden Labrador pup. I called her Mac. I bought
houseplants. They’re still alive today. In about two months, I had done just
about everything on my list. All that was left to do was visit the ancient Mayan
ruins in Mexico and one other thing.
The
Very last thing on my list was scribbled hastily as an afterthought. I remember
I blushed when I wrote it down, it seemed so girly and I was anything but girly.
It simply said ‘true love’.
Ah
yes, true love. Was this one of things I’d never have, like an honorary degree
from Harvard or an expensive Caribbean summerhouse? I really hoped it wasn’t.
I had felt better than I’d felt in five years but there was something still
missing. Something big. It was a niggling feeling that I wasn’t a whole
person. Like I was incomplete. One halve of a whole. I didn’t really have many
friends; my family lived a few thousand miles away. Except for Mac, I had
nobody.
I
was alone.
Good
God! when had that happened? The more I thought about it, the more I
realised that I had always been alone. I left Ireland when I was eighteen to
come to college here in grand old Americay. I had had a single room in the dorm.
To keep my scholarship I had to work and study hard which ruled out having a
social life. When I graduated, I went straight to work for C/C&D and moved
into an apartment on my own. I was able to count, on two hands, the amount of
dates I’d ever been on, ever! I was able to count on one hand, the
number of true friends I had. That grand number was three, and one of them was
dead.
I
began to have morbid thoughts on an hourly basis. My mind was constantly filled
with questions like “if I died tomorrow, would anyone actually notice? Would
anyone come to the funeral? Who would look after Mac?” and so on and so forth.
I was having an almost mid-life crisis.
Things
went downhill from here. My zest for my new life petered out and finally
disappeared. What was the point of living free if I had no one to share it with?
Would I be waking up alone for the rest of my life? I suppose I might have been
a tad melodramatic about the whole thing. I started wearing an awful lot of
black; I even bought one of those long, gothic-looking black leather trench
coats to wear when I was feeling especially melancholy. I also took to writing
bad poetry and ‘experimental’ cookery but that’s best left for another
day. My life was beginning to mirror that of a tragic artist’s. I started to
feel stifled again, not by an unrelenting workload but by emptiness, loneliness
and even a wee bit of homesickness. I remember the day that it all changed like
it happened yesterday.
It
was raining and I was characteristically miserable. I was wearing my old jeans
with all the rips in them and the water was getting in and trickling down my
leg, soaking my socks and feet. My hair was plastered to my head, face and neck
and I regretted, not for the first time, letting it get so long. Then again, the
long dark locks did add to my mysterious/moody/strange-lady image of late. I was
supposed to be shopping for a birthday present to send home to my brother,
Tricky, but the crowds and weather were giving me a headache so I decided to cut
my visit to urban hell short and head home. It was on the way back to my Jeep
that I saw her.
She
was sitting on the edge of the sidewalk on the opposite side of the street to
me. She was obviously crying her heart out and yet, people were just walking
around and past her like she wasn’t even there. It took me less than a minute
to make up my mind. Putting up the umbrella that I had been carrying, (I had
left it down so far because I was enjoying the way the weather was complimenting
my mood) I checked both ways and jogged across the street. For a while, I just
stood to her side and watched her. She was younger than me, possibly in her
mid-twenties. She was wearing an expensive looking pair of designer jeans and a
green hooded sweatshirt. She was soaked from her sneakers to her stylishly cut
short blonde hair. Her eyes were red-rimmed and puffy from crying. She was
gorgeous.
It
was beginning to get dark but it seemed, to me at least, that a soft light
surrounded her. I stepped in front of her and when she looked up to see who I
was, my heart broke. Her eyes were filled with the worst kind of pain and all I
wanted to do was take her into my arms and make it all go away. Before I knew I
was doing it, I offered her my hand. She was still crying but she took it and
when her skin touched mine I could’ve sworn that sparks flew. I pulled her up
under the umbrella. Her head only came to my chin so I looked down into her
eyes, which reminded me of the colour of the sea near where I grew up. “Take
me home.” She whispered, her voice hoarse with emotion. Our eyes remained
locked and she gave me a pleading look. This woman was alone, afraid and
extremely upset. I would do whatever she asked.
I
put an arm around her and we walked the three blocks to where I was parked.
Safely inside, I cranked up the heat as far as it would go and turned in my seat
to look at her. Her head was bowed and she was staring at her hands, which were
fidgeting, with the end of her jumper. “Hey.” I said softly to get her
attention but she still wouldn’t look at me. I reached over and lifted her
chin with my fingers. She turned her head to look at me and I gave her what I
hoped was a reassuring and warm smile. “Hey yourself.” She whispered back.
We got caught in each other’s gazes for what seemed like hours, jumping when a
car backfired somewhere nearby. There was something so familiar about the woman.
Did I know her? I’m sure I didn’t but then again, I didn’t know her name
or anything about her.
“I’m
Murphy by the way, Murphy Keogh.” I offered her my hand. She took it and we
shook gently.
“Hi
Murphy, I’m Kelly Masters.”
And
so the ice was broken. I asked where she lived so I could take her home but she
got very pale all of a sudden and looked as if she would cry again so I offered
to go to my place instead. Whatever happened to this woman had left her an
emotional wreck and I was itching to find out who or what had hurt her and made
her so sad but she never said anything on the subject and I didn’t ask. I knew
that when she wanted to tell me, she would. When we got to my apartment, I
offered her some dry clothes and a shower, which she was reluctant to accept
until I pointed out that I had two bathrooms and I wouldn’t have to wait
around in my wet clothes. She finally allowed herself to be ushered to the guest
bathroom. I left her there and went to have my own shower. I was finished and
dressed first so I decided to get dinner in order. Five minutes later, two
pizzas with ‘the works’ were on their way.
While
Kelly was in the shower I took the time to evaluate my situation. I had gone out
to pick up a birthday present and had come back with a very distressed damsel.
The absurdity of the situation washed over me like a tidal wave and I began to
laugh a little. The sound of a throat being cleared made me look up. My mouth
went dry. Kelly was standing there in nothing but my old high school soccer
jersey. The green and white material had never looked so good. I was so taken by
how gorgeous she was that I didn’t hear a word she said. “Huh?” I snapped
out of my reverie and attempted to take control of the situation. “I said the
sweat pants wouldn’t stay up, they were way to big.” Kelly repeated and gave
me a shy smile. I can’t remember but I think I might have melted. I asked her
if pizza was ok and offered her a beer but she mumbled something about not being
able to drink and asked for a coke instead. We sat in the living room waiting
for the pizza. Every so often I’d open my mouth to ask her if she wanted to
talk but she’d beat me to it and ask me questions about my family, Ireland and
Mac.
The
pizza finally came and as we sat there munching (I noticed that hers disappeared
at an alarming rate and wondered when the last time she ate was) I decided to
ask a few questions of my own.
“Kelly,
if there’s something bothering you, and clearly there is, I want you to know
that…well…. I know you don’t really know me and visa versa and that we
just met today and …… well, I’m a good listener and if you want to talk,
that’s ok.” I stammered out. She looked at me, there were tears in her eyes
again and I mentally kicked myself for upsetting her. She took a deep breath and
put down the slice of pizza she had been chewing on.
“First
of all Murphy, thank you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. You saved
me.” I sat there with what could only have been a stupid and very confused
look on my face. She continued; “Out there on the street, people must have
thought I was crazy but you stopped and helped me. Thank you.” She gave me one of the most dazzling smiles I’ve ever had
the pleasure of receiving.
“You’re
very welcome. Are you feeling any better?” I asked her. Her brow furrowed as
she thought out her answer and her nose crinkled in a way that I found adorable.
“Yes,
I feel like a person again, like life is worth living. I suppose you’re
wondering what happened to me, why I was crying in the rain?” I nodded and let
her continue. “Up until about two hours ago, today had been the worst day of
my life and believe me, that’s saying something. You see….” And she went
on to tell me her whole horrid story. Someone she thought she loved and loved
her back had used her. After that person broke her heart she went to her parents
for love and support only to have them disown her when they discovered that she
has been seeing another woman. I sat there and listened to her tell her tale,
wondering how anyone could intentionally hurt such a beautiful soul. By the time
she Kelly finished speaking, we both had tears running down our faces. Not
knowing what else to do, I opened my arms and she fell into them, sobbing her
heart out. We stayed like that for a short eternity until there were no more
tears left to shed. Sniffling, Kelly slowly lifted her eyes to meet mine. It
felt like she was looking straight into my soul and I fidgeted slightly at the
scrutiny. She finally seemed to come to some sort of a decision. I was about to
ask her if she wanted some ice cream when, in one sudden motion, her lips
covered mine in a searing union. Shocked, I could only revel in the softness of
her mouth on mine. I felt her tongue press against my mouth so I opened it. It
was the most passionate moment. of my life. The kiss seemed to last forever,
finally ending when we could no longer breathe. I tried to speak but she had
left me speechless. Damn that was hot! Kelly smiled slightly at my goofy
expression and I grinned back.
“Do
you believe in fate Murphy?” She asked me in a small voice. I thought about
it. At any other time, in any other place, I would have said no, absolutely not,
I make my own fate and so on and so forth but now I wasn’t so sure. Was it a
coincidence that I had seen Kelly on the sidewalk or was I supposed to find her?
I looked at her again, taking in every inch of her face, searching for an
answer. When I looked into her eyes, I found it; I knew that this was meant to
be. “You make me believe Kelly.” I said and was rewarded by another searing
kiss.
That
night, we began building our new lives by washing away the pain of our old ones.
We explored each other’s hearts, bodies and souls and melded them into one
strong being. The next morning, the rain had stopped and the sun was shining
brightly. My life began again.
Was
it worth writing? Let me know! youngirishbard@hotmail.com
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