She changed her mind and pulled up his number again, hesitating for only a second before deleting his number from her phone altogether.
Chapter Nineteen
Homer clicked on the category of Females seeking Males, and began browsing through the ads, clicking only on the ones that included pictures. He let a few minutes pass before he called Tia again. He’d put her number on speed dial and continually hung up and pressed the same number pad each time her phone went directly to her voice mail.
The creaking of the hardwood floor startled Homer. He closed his laptop and turned to see his wife Sandra standing behind him.
“Who was that on the phone?” She stood rigidly with her arms hanging loosely by her side.
“No one,” he snapped.
“Was that also no one’s pictures you were looking at on the computer?”
He got up from his desk. “What do you want, Sandra?”
She stared at him for a long time before she spoke. “I want out, Homer.”
“You want out?” He stood dumbfounded, waiting for her to answer.
“Yes,” she said.
“What is it now?” he hollered. “You said I was unemotional so I tried to be more open. You said you didn’t feel loved so I tried that!”
She held up her hand to stop him. “You tried that? What is that?”
“You know what I’m talking about,” he glared at her. “All the things you keep telling me you need,” he said mockingly.
She looked at him sadly. “You can’t even say the word, can you?”
“I don’t have to!” he yelled. “I go to work. I pay the bills. You don’t have to do nothing but sit on your—”
“That’s not enough,” she yelled. “Don’t you get it? It’s not just about you working and paying the bills, Homer!”
“It’s never enough!” he said breathing rapidly. “You said I need to lighten up. Okay. I tried that.” But he was lying. How could he tell her that he did not know how to lighten up? How could he tell her that when he tried to laugh freely like other people did, it only made him feel awkward and out of place?
“When?” she asked. “When in the two years of our marriage have you ever tried to lighten up?”
“It doesn’t matter,” he said wiping away the buildup of saliva that had begun to form in the corners of his mouth. “It’s never enough for you, and I’m not going to stand here and try to defend myself.”
“Of course, it doesn’t matter,” she said. “And that’s part of the problem,” she pointed to his laptop, “along with that.”
“You know what?” Homer said, his excitement escalating. “I can’t keep up with all your requests!” He waved his arms in the air. “There’s too many of them. And if you want to know the truth about it, I’m getting pretty tired of trying to!” He swallowed hard. “You’re just like my mother!” he screamed. “And I couldn’t please her either!”
“What are you talking about?” She frowned. She knew Homer had been raised by his grandmother, but how did that make her just like his mother?
She was exhausted. “I’m out of here,” she finally said.
“Yes,” he agreed, “you are.”
He followed her to the front hallway where two suitcases sat already packed. He searched her eyes for the finality of her words. She looked back at him with eyes that were cold and empty.
“I’ll be back for the rest of my things,” she said, and then she opened the door and walked out.
Homer grit his teeth as he felt the pain rising from the pit of his stomach. He pushed and shoved until he had forced it back into its internal hiding place, a burial ground for his other emotional pains that he’d never found a cure for.
He leaned against the door. He didn’t know what Sandra was talking about. So what if he wasn’t able to tell her that he loved her. And never mind if he wasn’t as emotional as she wanted him to be. None of that was going to pay the mortgage on their ranch-style home. It wouldn’t put food on the table or clothes on their backs. He’d paid all the bills, and she had not had to work in the two years that they’d been married. Hadn’t that been enough?
To Homer, love was overrated. The only exception he made was for his grandmother who had loved him unconditionally. Even during his high school and college years, there had been no love relationships for Homer. There had been the useless visits from his mother when he’d been younger, and she’d always ended them by saying she loved him. But he’d never felt or seen her love. She’d never demonstrated it.
It had only been after his grandmother had died that Homer had met Sandra. She had been fifteen years younger than he was, and had been one of the very few women at his job that he’d found himself attracted to. She’d been working as a cashier in the employee cafeteria, and after his grandmother’s death, Homer had begun to frequent the cafeteria more often just to see her. It had been her youthfulness that had allowed him to initiate a friendship with her that, after three years, led to marriage.
After they were married, he insisted she stop working, telling her his income was enough for both of them. At first, Sandra seemed quite complacent, but as time went on, he noticed that even she, who had claimed to love him, had begun to want or need something from him that he couldn’t give.
She was just like his mother in the sense that he had never been able to please her either. Not since the day he was born. Homer had always felt that his mother had left him because of his foot. Why else would she have abandoned him? And now his wife had left him too. The reasons Sandra had given him for leaving had nothing to do with his foot, and she’d never made an issue of it throughout their marriage . . . still, Homer wondered. A sharp spasm of pain rippled across his stomach as he decided in his heart this would be his first—and last—marriage. He bent over and waited for the pain to pass.
The cold air lingered in the hallway. But there was a greater chill growing inside of Homer as he added his wife to the long list of women who had never loved him. His sad affirmation only made him feel colder. And the spasm of pain spread across his stomach again.
Chapter Twenty
It was a Saturday afternoon, and Lorenzo was still sprawled out on the couch when Tia and Serenity returned from the grocery store. He raised his head from the armrest when he heard the front door open.
Serenity stopped to give the dog a quick rub on the back, and then headed to the kitchen to make a sandwich.
“Hurry up,” Tia said to Serenity. The two of them were going to visit Tia’s mother, Ida, and her grandmother, Mavis. “It’s already after one o’clock, and I’ll be ready after I change my clothes.”
“Hey,” Lorenzo said. “Y’all can’t speak?”
“Hi,” Serenity said as she continued to the kitchen.
“Hey,” Tia said dryly.
Tia went upstairs and exchanged the sweatpants and tee shirt she had on for a pair of bootleg jeans and a cowl-neck cable sweater. She came back downstairs and looked in the kitchen. Serenity was sitting at the round glass table eating the last half of a sandwich. “You ready?” Tia asked.
“Yep,” Serenity said. She picked up her glass still partially filled with milk and her empty plate. She put the plate in the sink and poured the half glass of milk down the drain.
“Serenity!” Tia yelled. “Why did you waste all that milk?”
Serenity looked at her mother with a blank expression on her face. “I didn’t want it.”
“Well then, you shouldn’t have poured it. We don’t have food to waste like that.”
Lorenzo came shuffling into the kitchen. “No sense crying over spilled milk,” he said sarcastically.
“That’s not funny,” Tia said.
“I didn’t mean for it to be,” he said as he brushed past her arm.
“You know what?” Tia stared at his back for a few seconds before she continued. “It’d be nice if you came with me and Serenity to visit my family for a change.”
“Oh no,” he waved his hand in the air as he stood in front
of the open refrigerator door. “I’ll pass on that.”
Serenity walked out of the kitchen as Tia tried to maintain a calm demeanor. “Why, Lorenzo?”
“Don’t start, Tia,” he warned her. “You know why.”
“I know what you say,” she continued, ignoring the tone in his voice. “And I know you used to always come with us.”
“And you also know why I don’t anymore, don’t you?” he insinuated.
She looked at him hunched over in front of the refrigerator. He still hadn’t turned around to face her.
“Don’t you?” he repeated himself. The tone of his voice grew harsh.
“Your back?” she said putting her hands on her hips. “For two years?” She shook her head and walked out of the kitchen. “Same old excuse,” she mumbled.
“What did you say?” he asked loudly as he followed behind her.
“I said it’s the same old excuse!”
“How many times do I have to tell you?” he said. His agitation was escalating. “It’s too uncomfortable to sit in one spot for an hour and a half!”
“But you can sit in front of the TV for hours at a time, right?” Tia’s voice was laced with hostility.
“Yeah, but I’m in a recliner,” he yelled. “That’s a big difference!”
“You weren’t in a recliner a few minutes ago when we came in!”
“Stop yelling!” Serenity intervened.
“Serenity,” Lorenzo said, breathing heavily, “this is between grown folks.”
“Okay, but can you stop yelling at Mama?”
“What about me?” His sleepy eyes suddenly grew wide. “You didn’t hear her yelling at me?”
Serenity stared at him coldly.
“Oh, I guess not,” he said. “You too busy talking to boys on the computer. You don’t know what you talking about, little girl. You need to stay in your place.”
She kept her gaze fixed on his pinpoint pupils. “I might not know what I’m talking about,” she said as he turned and shuffled back to the living room, “but I know an addict when I see one.”
Lorenzo turned around quickly.
“Serenity, be quiet!” Tia said.
“Is that what you’re telling her?” Lorenzo asked.
“Go get in the car,” Tia said to Serenity.
Serenity walked defiantly past both of them to the garage.
“I didn’t tell her anything,” Tia said to Lorenzo.
“Then what made her say that, Tia?”
“She’s not stupid. Half the time you’re gone. And even when you’re here . . . you’re gone,” she said pointing to her forehead. “All you do is lie on that couch. Then you get up and stagger to the kitchen or the bathroom, and you think she can’t put two and two together?”
He dropped down on the couch with a thud. “Y’all have a good trip,” he said without looking at her.
She slammed the door behind her without responding.
Tia was still fuming as she merged onto I-94 West toward Milwaukee. Serenity sat beside her preoccupied with her iPod. Although her daughter had placed both earplugs in her ears, the distorted sound of music still filtered through.
Tia tapped Serenity firmly on her thigh. “Turn that down,” she said.
Even though it took approximately an hour and a half to get to Milwaukee, Tia was thankful that she was still able to visit her mother and grandmother once a month.
When they’d first started taking the drive, Tia would point out to Serenity the cows and occasional horses they passed. The animals stood grazing in the various fields off the highway without a care in the world.
In two years, things had changed. The endless miles of land had been eradicated by new developers eager to make their presence known, and new subdivisions had been constructed one or two miles apart from each other. The few farmhouses that remained looked out of place among the upscale houses for sale, and the visibility of cows and horses had decreased significantly.
Tia tapped Serenity’s thigh again and pointed to her ears. She waited while her daughter removed the earplugs from her ears.
“Why did you say that?” Tia asked her.
“Say what?”
“That your daddy is an addict.”
“Because.”
“Because what?”
Serenity looked down into her lap. “Because he acts like one,” she said.
“And how would you know how an addict acts, Serenity?”
“Well, let’s see.” She raised her head and looked up toward the car ceiling. “He’s always sleeping on the couch, and sometimes when he talks it’s all mumbled.”
Tia sighed. “Just don’t call him that again, understand?”
Serenity turned to look at her. “Why do you stay with him?”
“I’m trying to give him time, Serenity.”
“Time for what?”
“I don’t want to talk about that now.” Tia exhaled deeply. “And what did he mean about you talking to boys on the computer?”
Serenity looked away then. “I don’t know,” she said.
“Oh, he just made that up?” Tia cut her eyes sideways at Serenity.
“Yeah,” she said. “I was just talking to my friend. I wasn’t talking to no boys.”
“Well, you make sure you keep it that way,” Tia said.
Serenity put the earplugs back in her ears. She thought about how her father had told her to stay in her place. What place was that? She turned the volume up on her iPod and began nodding her head back and forth as the music played loudly.
Tia passed a highway marker that showed eighteen miles before they would be in Milwaukee. They rode in silence for a few more miles before Serenity turned off her iPod and turned to face her mother.
“Don’t you ever feel funny being around Grandma and Great-grandma?” she asked.
Tia kept her eyes on the road. “Why would I feel funny?”
“You know, because of everything that happened when you were younger.”
Tia had only recently told Serenity about her past, leaving nothing out except for her promiscuous ways. She’d told Serenity about Ida, and how she’d been sent to prison for the death of her son, Tia’s brother. Then, she’d told her about the short time she’d spent in foster care, and how she eventually ended up being raised by her grandmother.
Tia glanced over at Serenity. “The past is the past,” she said. “Everything bad doesn’t have to stay bad, and we certainly don’t need to carry those memories around with us. We can try to learn from them, but then we need to let them go.” She adjusted the cruise control on the steering wheel. “If we don’t, it makes a heavy load,” she said.
“So you never feel funny?”
“Not anymore because the key is to be willing and able to forgive somebody who’s done you wrong.” She stared straight-ahead. “If you can’t forgive,” she said, “you’re gonna have a hard time.”
“Are we almost there?” Serenity asked.
“Serenity, we’ve made this trip a hundred times. You should know by now when we’re almost there.”
“I don’t be paying attention,” she said and turned her iPod back on, this time lowering the volume so the music wasn’t quite as loud as it had been.
Tia passed another highway marker. “A few more miles and we’ll be pulling up in front of Grandma’s flower shop,” she said to Serenity whose only response was the continued nodding of her head.
Tia thought about how Ida had initially encouraged her to go into the floral business years ago when Ida had still been in prison. Although Tia had completed all of the online floral design coursework required at the Milwaukee School of Floral Design, when she’d given birth to Serenity everything had changed.
The night she became a mother was also the night she’d decided to leave Lorenzo. He’d almost missed the birth of their child, and his controlling and abusive ways had taken a toll on her. But then he’d begun to cry and had asked God to forgive him. And right there in her hospital room, he’d gotten
down on his knees and repented. Not only had he renewed his relationship with Jesus, but he’d asked for her forgiveness as well so she’d made the decision to stay.
After Serenity’s first birthday, Tia had decided to enroll in a traditional college and study nursing. Ironically, it was her mother who ended up enrolling and successfully completing the eight-week course at the School of Floral Design, and after working for a florist for several years, Ida had opened her own small flower shop, naming it Flowers To Go. Tia could still remember how elated Ida had been on opening day.
“Ain’t God good?” Ida had proclaimed.
“Yes, He is,” Tia agreed. She had been so proud of her mother. She had come a long way.
“You know when I started going to those Bible studies in prison,” Ida had said to Tia, “I learned that God’s plan for me didn’t include a life of misery, hatred, and unforgiveness.”
Tia had quietly listened to her mother’s testimony.
“God opened my eyes,” Ida had said. “He made me realize that I was a sinner in need of His forgiveness. I learned that through His grace and mercy, I could actually be set free from all my emotional pain. Everything,” she said, and she’d placed her hand on the left side of her chest, “that was holding me down and keeping me a hostage.
“You know, Tia, I came to Jesus just as I was,” she’d continued. “I answered His call of salvation. I accepted Jesus Christ as my Savior, and I was baptized in His name.”
Tia remembered her mother’s eyes growing misty as she’d continued her testimony.
“I asked God to forgive me,” she’d said, “and He did. And then He turned around and gave me the strength to forgive others!”
Tia smiled.
“No, honey, that broken spirit of mine wasn’t healed by my own strength.” Ida had shaken her head feverishly. “Uh-uh. I been healed by the power of God. And you know what’s funny?” she had asked Tia.
Tia remembered answering no.
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