What Lovers Do(93)
“That was my first guess.” My tight-lipped smile accompanied a resolute nod.
His eyes shifted to my chest.
Please don’t squint.
With a subtle arch of my back, I attempted to look confident, because nothing said confidence like a good push-up bra. My boobs weren’t the ripest mangoes on the tree, but they were a step above fleshy acorns. It seemed unlikely that Apollo was the kind of guy to be impressed by barely average-sized ta-tas, but a girl could hope.
A subtle smirk pulled at his lips. I knew they hid a beautiful set of white teeth … I just knew. However, he didn’t indulge me with as much as a glimpse. Too bad.
His gaze moved to my legs—my real one and my prosthetic one on full display beneath my green running shorts.
“You lost your leg.”
“Genius. You’re two for two today.” I winked.
He stared and stared, cocking his head from one side to the other like it was a puzzle to solve. I wasn’t a puzzle, just a below-the-knee amputee with a kick-ass robotic leg.
“Hmm …” He pushed a quick breath out of his nose while shaking his head. “Bummer.”
I narrowed my eyes, tracking his path past me to his door as the two moving guys squeezed by him. “Bummer?”
“Yup.” He turned, taking in my leg once more. “Never seen any leg quite like that.”
“It’s a prototype. By the way, I’m Lake Jones.”
“Okay,” he called, his back already to me. Two seconds later his door shut.
Biting my lips together, I tapped them with my finger then huffed out a laugh. “That went well.”
After returning to the sanctity of my apartment, nestled in a quaint neighborhood just outside of downtown Minneapolis, I typed out a message to my BFF, Lindsay.
Lake: Hot guy alert.
I pitched my phone on my alabaster and Spanish yellow striped ottoman and walked to the window. Opening my peacock blue curtains—because it was the best shade of blue ever—I frowned at the dismal clouds shadowing the city, confirming the April afternoon rain shower prediction. My phone chimed. I smiled while retrieving it. There was a lot to be said for independence, spreading one’s wings, and moving to a new place with no family and friends.
Words like daring, adventurous, and driven described my frame of mind when I decided to leave behind everything that was familiar. Two months later … bored out of my fucking mind was the accurate description of how my newfound freedom felt.
What person, with an ounce of sanity, moves to Minnesota in the middle of February? Stubborn twenty-four-year-old girls who want to exert their independence at the worst possible time, that’s who. I shrugged off all offers to help me move. The need to overcompensate in everything was a tragic side effect of living with a disability. People without disabilities would accept help; it was the normal thing to do. Me? Not so much.
My brother, psychiatrist extraordinaire, called me contumacious—stubbornly disobedient. Whatever. I made it with the help of a moving company, who arrived three days late. That minor detail was omitted when I told my parents the move went off without a hitch.
Lindsay: Sex?
Lake: No. I think there are security cameras in the hall. But I love that you believe after a year of not having sex that I’d jump my new neighbor in the hall upon our first meeting.
Lindsay: That’s exactly why. You have to be so desperate.
Lake: Thx for keeping it real.
Lindsay: Always. I need details!
Lake: I’ve given up on my vibrator. It makes me feel like a complete loser. I still question the existence of God. If he exists, then that means there is a Heaven and Ben is there, watching me shove vibrating plastic into myself with one hand while I stimulate my nipples with the other. I know he’s thinking “WTF” but it means something more spiritual like “Why This, Father?”
Lindsay: LMAO – I meant details about the hot guy, but thx for the visual.
Lake: Awkward
Lindsay: A bit. The guy. Tell me about the guy!
“The guy.” I wished there were a guy. All-encompassing statements like “the worst” were reserved for drama queens. I didn’t use them much, but when it came to guys, I reserved the right to say, “I have the worst luck with men.” It was safe to say I’d never find “the one,” because I’d met two “the ones,” which went against all mathematical laws of nature. Two perfect guys and I lost them both.
Ben …
This was what I learned from him. Life was a peculiar journey—a marathon for some, a sprint for others. One day I woke up and discovered the shitty part was nobody knew which one. A marathon required a different frame of mind than a sprint.
Live for the moment. What did that mean? Which one? How many? With whom?
Ben died and I lived.
Three months later I awoke from a coma, with an infinity of blank space below my left knee. The shitty part? The pinky toe on my right foot suffered two different breaks years earlier, and it was painful to wear pretty, yet completely impractical, shoes because it never healed properly. But no … I had to lose the foot with the good pinky toe. It was an embarrassing yet completely human thought that went through my head, because the thought that wanted to take up residency in my brain was just too unbearable: Ben died and I lived.
A second chance at life deserved a profound purpose, a commitment to changing the world. Don’t waste a single minute. Don’t take anything for granted. Don’t ever forget …