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She
had just one wish for the holidays—for her new neighbor to drop dead.
Okay,
so maybe that wasn’t the most charitable, joy-holly sentiment, but the man was
slowly driving her insane. Since Zack Romano moved into the other side of her
duplex, her quiet existence had evaporated. The man was simply too big, too
friendly and too boisterous. If he invited her over for one more of his weekly
family get-togethers, she’d scream. His family, which had to include half the
town, was just as loud as he. She was seriously thinking of having their common
wall soundproofed.
Vanessa
Baker snatched several bags of groceries off the passenger seat of her car, turned
toward the sidewalk leading to the brick duplex and groaned.
Her
wacko neighbor had done it again.
She
rolled her eyes. Where had nutso found the room?
He’d
added another blown-up decoration to his ever-growing menagerie of inflatable
lawn ornaments. His half of their postage-sized front yard was a mish-mash of
cheap holiday embellishments. She eyed his newest addition and gritted her
teeth so hard her jaw ached. Someone
please tell me what an air-filled heart held by a bear has to do with
Christmas.
Weren’t
the half-dozen angels singing the same chorus over and over sufficient for yard decorations? Or the
three deer with their heads bobbing out of beat with said angel music? There was the eight-foot-tall snowman next to the six-foot Santa. Wasn’t
that enough?
Her
gaze slid to the green, blown-up, evil-looking Grinch with eyes that glowed
yellow in the night, and she groaned. Beside it, Santa wore shades and rode a motorcycle.
Animated elves worked at a toy bench and a gaggle of blown-up penguins marched
along the sidewalk. Inflatable candy canes and round ornaments the size of
basketballs hung from his half of the porch roof. Dozens of strands of lights
were strung around every porch pillar, window and across his half of the roof
to highlight Santa in his sleigh pulled by six reindeer.
What an ugly looking mess.
Thank goodness there were only
twenty-seven days remaining in December. Their house had to be the joke of the
neighborhood. Was it any wonder traffic had picked up on her once quiet street?
She
carried her groceries up the wooden steps to her porch and smiled at her simple
and tasteful pine wreath with its red bow decorating her front door. Evidently
Mr. Decorate-Every-Inch had never heard the adage “less is more.”
After
putting away her groceries and changing clothes, Vanessa hurried back outside
to tackle the large box in her trunk. The salesman at the hardware store had
groaned and grunted when he loaded the carton containing five-foot high wooden bookshelves.
Seeing him struggle worried her. Frankly, she hadn’t given any thought to how
heavy the box would be for her to drag inside her home.
In
years past, her ex-husband handled the heavy work, but Dave and his dark moods
moved out last Christmas Eve. With all that followed—learning he moved in with
a woman he met online and taking with him all of their savings—she was more
than happy to see this year limp to a close.
Twenty-twelve
had nearly destroyed her.
Perhaps
it had.
The
giggling Vanessa her friends all loved had been replaced by a crabby, cynical,
complaining woman. At the top of her New Year’s resolution list was “find the
giggling Vanessa again.” Maybe by next October, she would.
She
unlocked her trunk and studied the best way to remove the large carton and get
it inside to her living room. How difficult could it be? She wrapped an arm
around the box and pulled, hoping to hug it to her side. It barely budged.
Shoving
the sleeves of her sweatshirt up to her elbows, she put every ounce of her
strength into the job. By the time she’d tugged and pulled enough of the carton
out of the trunk to allow gravity to upend it onto the street, she was sweating.
Then she bent, putting her shoulder to it, held her breath and lifted the heavy
item on an exhale and a loud grunt. Vanessa staggered under the weight across
her shoulder. Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea. The carton weaved her back
and forth. For a few seconds all she could do was stagger.
She
made it up the step of the curb to the sidewalk, nearly dropping to her knees
with the effort. Her thigh muscles
quivered with the strain of the weight, and she gritted her teeth. “Come on, Vanessa,
you can do this.” Thank goodness the walkway to her steps was only ten feet
long. She tried not to think of the four steps to her porch.
A
loud rumble roared down the street, and her stomach clenched. Her neighbor’s
behemoth truck—big and loud just like its owner—swerved to the curb.
“Nessa!
Don’t. I’ll carry that in for you.”
How many times do I have to tell him my
name is Vanessa.
She turned to inform him she didn’t need or want his help. Her movement threw
her load off balance. Arms clasped around the box as she
fell backwards. Her back slammed on the hard ground. A loud pop sounded as the
box thudded across her face. Pain exploded in her nose and head.
“Nessa!
My God.” Knees pushed into her side. “Here, let me get this off you.” Zack
lifted the box off her as if it were no heavier than a bag of air.
Wet
warmth flowed over her lips.
“Oh,
Sugar, looks like your nose is broken.” Strong fingers moved from the bridge of her nose
to its tip. The pain made her eyes cross. “Hold on, let me get my first-aid
kit.”
His
heat was gone and running footfalls sounded on the concrete. Slowly the
spinning stopped, and she blinked to bring things into focus. Was her face
smashed? She gingerly fingered her forehead, nose and cheeks and grimaced when
she pulled back a blood-covered hand.
Zack
settled on his knees next to her again. “Some people bleed more than others
when their nose breaks. Don’t be alarmed.” His voice was calm and authoritative as he snapped on latex gloves.
Cool alcohol wipes were gently pressed across her face.
“Ith
my noth broken?” My God, was that her voice?
Why was she speaking with a lisp?
He
was shining a light in her eyes. “Good retina response.” Chocolate
eyes lowered to within inches of hers, minty breath swept across her face and a lock of dark, wavy hair fell across
his forehead. The corners of his mouth twitched as if he were trying not to
smile. “And, yes, Sugar, your noth is broken. I’ll do my best to set it so it’s
still pretty and straight.”
“Thet
it? No!”
Zack gave a nonchalant shrug. “Set might be an extreme word. I’m just going to make
sure it’s straight.”
Fingers
slowly pressed into her nose. More stars exploded behind her eyes. “Don’t touch
my broken noth.” She batted away his hands.
“Do
you want to be called ‘witch’s beak’ the rest of your life?”
“Witheth
beak? Ith it that bad?” What would her students think? She could just hear her eighth
grade math students calling her names and laughing at her. Still, did this yay-hoo
know what he was doing? “If my noth needth thet, I want a profethenal to thet
it.”
He
tore open a paper packet and removed two gauze cylinders. “I’m an EMT. Believe
me, I’ve handled worse than a broken nose.”
EMT?
Was that why he charged out of his house at all hours? Not that she was one to
notice or watch his broad shoulders move with an easy grace when he ran.
He
shoved the gauze up her nose.
More
fireworks exploded in her head.
“Ow!
You big thithead. You hurt me on purpoth.” Her one hand tightened in a fist. If he hurt her again, she was going to belt him.
Those
brown eyes of his held humor. “Thithead? Sugar, we don’t know each other well
enough for such intimacies.”
“Thop
calling me ‘thugar.’”
“Can't." His fingers were more gentle now. "It's part of my plan. Maybe if I keep calling you Sugar, you'll start getting sweet on me."
"Yeah, right."
"Do you have pain anywhere?”
"Yeah, right."
"Do you have pain anywhere?”
“I
think my back might be broken. I heard thomething pop when I fell.”
Zack’s
hands stilled. “Are you in pain?” His dark eyebrows furrowed. “Move your
fingers for me. Good, that’s good.” He shifted to her feet and wrapped his hands around
her sneakers. “Push your toes into my hands. Excellent. Now your heels. Good, good.” His fingers slowly
worked their way up her legs, probing, exploring.
“Thop
feeling my legth.”
“I’m
checking for broken bones.”
His
hands squeezed her thighs and she shot him a dirty look. “You’re coping a feel,
you thex fiend.”
“Are
you enjoying this?” His gaze swept to hers.
“Thertainly
not.” Well, maybe a just a teeny-tiny bit.
“Then
I’m not copping a feel. When I do, you’ll enjoy it. Believe me.” His hands
swept over her ribs in an expert manner.
“You
pompouth jerk. You are tho full of yourthelf.”
"And your're so cute when you're miffed about something. Which I gotta admit is most of the time." Evidently
satisfied she had no broken bones, he rolled her slightly and peered under her
back. “I found the source of the popping noise.”
“Oh?”
He
heaved a sigh. “Yeah, you killed one of my penguins.”
21 comments:
Vonnie, this story is WONDERFUL! So entertaining. I love it.
Poor penguin.
This is so much fun, Vonnie! Thank you for starting my weekend off with a big smile.
Awesome! You put a big old smile on my face this morning!
Not that's a keeper. I've not heard 'miffed' for a long time.
I don't blame her for wanting to kill a few penguins. LOL This is so entertaining, Vonnie!
Great job, Vonnie!
Thanks, Margo. There's a house about a mile from us that resemble's Zack's front yard, and I always wonder how the neighbors feel about such excess of holiday decotating.
Oh, Alison, I love making people smile. Thanks!
Now that puts a smile on MY face, Dixie. Thanks for stopping by.
Oh, Maddy, hang around me long enough and you'll hear all kinds of "older" words. Thanks for commenting.
Jannine, can't you just see her grit her teeth everytime she comes home to that mess? Thanks! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks, Lisa. I'm thrilled you liked it.
Vonnie, I'm with Zack. He got me with "the air-filled heart held by a bear." Great read.
Thanks, Angela. He's a teddy bear, you know--big, cuddly, dependable. Too bad she doesn't know that's just what she needs. ;-)
Oh Vonnie, thanks you so much for the laugh. I love this.
i'm still laughing. It's hard to type that way! Loved the discreet wreath with a bow. Brought the heroine's character into sharp relief in one sentence.
Thanks Barbara. Any day I can make someone laugh is a good day.
Oh yes, Ashantay, she's folded in on herself and for good reason. Thanks for stopping at Roses of Prose. Come back often!
I love it!
Loving this, Vonnie. Now on to Chapter 2.
Oh- I can't read more! I can't, I can't...nonono. But I must!
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