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Thursday, May 31, 2012
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Alternate Ending
Tomorrow I'm going to post the same story I did today, but I'm going to put the original ending back on. Please leave a comment and tell me which one you like better. Any and all feedback and criticisms are welcomed and appreciated. Thanks!
Short Fiction Story titled: Coming Home
Coming Home
By: Carrie Watson
Katie walked briskly
through the crowded hallway. Her long chestnut hair swished across her back as
her steps quickened. The airport was so chaotic because of the Christmas
Holiday. She was trying to push her way through all of the people. A man walked
passed her dressed like Santa Clause. There were Salvation Army volunteers
outside of the little souvenir shops and newsstands ringing their bells.
Airport taxis zipped by and people rolled their suitcases behind them as they
ran in the rat race.
She looked down at her watch and saw that it was 9:27.
She had sped down the highway heading towards the airport, but she had felt
like she just couldn’t get there fast enough. She looked at her watch again. She
only had a few minutes to get there. She stepped up her pace, but bumped into a
man who was wearing a disheveled suit. He had obviously been on a business trip
and was now trying to get home. She turned and apologized to him, but managed
not to miss a step. She couldn’t be late.
She reassured herself by thinking that no planes come in
early on Christmas Eve morning. It was the busiest travel day of the year, or
at least she was sure she had read that somewhere.
She looked up at the signs. B4, B3, it was one more gate
down. She was looking for gate B2. She arrived at the gate and hurried over to
the window. She hadn’t seen Danny for six months. They missed their first
anniversary together last month as a married couple.
She had planned to be at the airport early in case the
flight came in ahead of its scheduled time, but now she had just barely made
it. She must have changed her outfit at least seven times while she was getting
ready this morning. Although what she was wearing was hardly going to matter.
People continued to push their way into the growing crowd
in Gate B2 and in the whirling confusion her thoughts traveled to the night of
their engagement party. It was at a country club, and Katie had tried on every
dress she owned and couldn’t find anything that would be just right for the occasion.
The doorbell rang during her eleventh wardrobe change.
“Babe, can you get the door?” She called. “Danny?”
She tried calling for him once more before throwing a
robe on and going to the door. She opened the front door and standing there was
Danny. He was dressed in a black suit, cleanly shaved, blonde hair gelled, and
he looked so handsome. He was holding a box in his hands.
“What
are you doing? What is this?”
“You
have to open it to find out.”
She lifted the lid of the box and pulled back
the tissue paper. Something sparkled underneath. She pulled it out and held it
up. It was gorgeous. It was the most perfect cocktail dress. It was royal blue
and black with just the right amount of rhinestones accenting the trim under
the bust line.
In their first months together as man and wife, they were
so blissfully happy. If someone had sarcastically used the phrase, “The
honeymoon is over,” they would have been talking about some other couple, not
them. With them, the honeymoon never ended. When they were together it was as
exciting as their first date had been; as passionate as their fifth; and as
comfortable as their hundredth, all at the same time.
The mumblings of the crowd around her suddenly grew
louder and Katie was pulled back into reality, right back into the middle of
the airport confusion. A plane turned on the runway and started moving slowly
toward the gate. Her heart pounded and weighed in her chest like a boulder
dangling by a thread.
It would only be another minute before people started to
come off of the plane. Two minutes. Three minutes. Katie checked her watch. Five
minutes. She checked the clock on the wall. Eight minutes. Finally, people
started to come off of the plane. Men and women, tanned from the dessert sun, dressed in
sand colored fatigues, walked out of the door into the gate. As each person
walked off the plane there were elated screams, cheers, and tears. Chaos
exploded in the gate and for a moment, Katie could only see the top of the jet
way door.
She
stared ahead as she began to push her way through all of the people. The crowd
parted and closed several times. The masses of people moving in small crowds of
families gave her short glimpses of a man, tanned from the desert sun and
dressed in fatigues looking tired and worn. His head was almost shaved bald,
but he looked so good. He took the bag he was holding by his side and threw it
over his shoulder. He looked frantically around at all of the people.
He
saw her. They stared at each other for a moment. They started to move forward,
but were blocked by one body after another. Katie couldn’t push her way through
and could no longer see over everyone. She stood on the tips of her toes and looked
to where Danny was standing, but he wasn’t there. Had she imagined him? Where
was he? She tried to push through, but the crowd was too thick.
She
felt something tug at her arm from behind. Danny. She jumped into his arms
making him drop his bag as he caught her. She hugged him so tight. He had been
overseas for six months. Katie thanked God every night for one hundred and
seventy-seven nights that this would be his last tour.
For
a long time, she thought that they would have to spend their first Christmas as
a married couple thousands of miles away from each other. She tried not to let
herself think of the other possibility. Over and over she pushed away the
thought of them never spending anymore Christmases together. But no matter how
hard she tried, that thought clawed its way back into her mind.
Her
nightmares could stop now. He was home. He was safe. She had prayed for this
moment every day since the day she had been at this exact same airport dropping
him off. Since that day, she couldn’t shake the fear of the possibility of
never seeing him again. There were nights when she would have horrible nightmares
of the terrible things that could happen to him. She woke up in the middle of
the night in cold sweats or tears.
She
just wanted him home. She wanted him by her side again or lying next to her in
bed at night. This was all she had wanted for Christmas. This was her perfect
gift. Tears welled up in her eyes and began streaming down her face. He put her
down and held her by the shoulders so he could look at her. He looked like he
could hardly believe she was real.
“I
missed this beautiful face.” He said as he wiped a tear from under her eye.
“I
missed you so much. I love you.”
“I
love you too.”
Then
he held her face in his hands and kissed her. Everything disappeared for those
few precious moments. Her mind went clear and all she focused on was him. She
wasn’t worried anymore about the huge dinner she had to prepare for her family
and in-laws that night. All of the sounds of the busy, bustling airport
quieted. There were no bells, or loud speaker announcements. All of the people
were gone and the faint sounds of jet engines outside silenced. The world stood
still.
He was home. He was safe. She kept telling
herself over and over again because she could hardly believe it herself that he
was now standing right in front of her. Even when all of the chaos around her
would come back into her conscious mind, she would be untouchable to everything
because she had the only one she would ever love this much in her arms again.
She was again complete.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Book In Process
I took a break from writing short stories to work on the book that I was writing, but put to the side temporarily. I'm back to it now and progressing nicely. Sample chapters will be posted once it is finished. In the mean time, I will post a previously written short story to my blog by tomorrow or Thursday.
Debating on reading 50 Shades of Gray By: E. L. James. I downloaded Nicholas Sparks' The Lucky One to my Kindle, read it in a few days, and loved it. Although from what I've heard so far, the 50 Shades of Gray trilogy is much less wholesome. I'm ok with it. I enjoy reading and writing works from all genres.
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