The first Moon Prize goes to Jen Knox's story
"After the Gazebo"—backdating to the full moon of September 16, 2016.
Congratulations on a magnificent story, Jen Knox.
After the Gazebo
by Jen Knox
She felt it in her toes that morning, dread that she would shove into
ivory heels and dance on beneath heavy clouds. He felt a surge of adrenaline he
thought must accompany every man on his wedding day.
Everything had been set in motion four months ago, when they adopted a
pug that was abandoned in a nearby apartment complex. They were unsure they’d
have the proper amount of time to devote to the puppy, but his bunched face and
square body seemed perfect. It would be a responsibility test, a sort of trial
run before they had children.
The pug had dermatitis between his folds, which cost money to correct,
as did his shots and medications. It was enough to tear a small hole in their
new car fund, so they had to reevaluate the year and model they’d go for. The
lesser car they selected had good reviews, and the salesman even said—when he
realized they weren’t the best negotiators and had told him their actual budget—that
it was more durable than the newer models.
The couple’s fate was sealed when she drove the car off the lot, when he
inserted the CD he’d brought along, just in case. “Ocean Breathes Salty” began
the soundtrack. They drove all day, speeding along the peripheral of the city,
and stopped for Jamaican jerk chicken at a restaurant they agreed they would
return to regularly.
They took the pug to the dog park Saturday mornings. He enjoyed eating
and watching Animal Planet, so they babied and indulged him. They learned
everything they could about the breed and how best to care for him, finally
putting him on a diet. They decided on his name after reading that the strange
little forehead wrinkle that pugs share resembles the Chinese symbol for
prince.
Together, they took Prince on lazy walks after work. They often ate out
and met up with friends on weekends. She got a corporate job that replaced her
occasional gigs as a yoga instructor. She hated the work but made a lot of
friends, fast, and thought it an okay trade for the time being. He got a
corporate job; he rather enjoyed it. She gained five pounds. He gained ten.
They joined a gym a few months before the wedding. They made resolutions often.
They both wanted to be somewhere else, but were unsure exactly where.
They lived near his family but far from hers, so they often spoke of
moving somewhere in the middle. Her sister would often call, upset about her
husband being out late. She wanted to be close enough to visit, watch bad
movies and make orange cinnamon rolls.
They’d all be closer soon, the couple decided. This union was an
inevitable step toward their ideal future. The details would work themselves
out.
The day of the wedding, they awoke five hours and twenty minutes before
they had to be at the meeting center by the gazebo. Their wedding would be
outside, in a park where they first met. Both had been joggers. It would be a
small ceremony.
She would wear her mother’s ivory dress, still a touch tight around the
hips. He would wear his OSU pin on his slant striped gray tie. They would have
a total of eighteen family members there; two would attend via Skype, and
approximately twenty friends and acquaintances had RSVP’d. She would pick up
her mother and sister from the hotel they insisted on staying at because the
couple’s apartment was still quite small. Just fewer than forty people would
surround them as they took their vows at Abaline Park at 2PM. It was the perfect
wedding size, everyone agreed.
Prince had a habit of jumping up and down before treat time, after walk
time, and this always made her giggle. Her giggling always made him want her.
It was wedding day morning. She laughed at his pitched pants and serious
stare when she walked out of the kitchen. He didn’t laugh. Instead, with only
hours remaining, he rushed her, moved his fingers along her belly beneath her
shirt, lifted her sideways and took her to their bedroom where they would
forget the world for almost an hour. Last time as a single man, he said. She
pushed him off and over, hugged his waist with her knees.
When they remembered the world, they were frantic. They kissed goodbye.
She took the car and thought about how lucky she was. She had heard horror
stories about friends’ weddings but knew hers would be perfect. There wasn’t a
fake or a placeholder in the bunch.
Her mother, an artist, presented her with a black and white painting of
Prince when she arrived at the hotel. She laughed and loved it. Her sister
worked hard to laugh with them, then explained that her husband couldn’t attend
due to work. It had been last minute. The sisters embraced.
Prince refused to wear the doggie tux. She understood his apprehension
and clipped a bowtie to his collar. She hoped her fiancé would remember to pack
the treats and the collapsible water dish. His father was picking him up. His
mother was in a wheelchair after having reconstructive foot surgery a few weeks
back. They lived close by, would arrive right before the ceremony. She was a
loud, beautiful woman. Her three grown children, the husband-to-be included,
had blinged out her chair while she was in surgery so that she now called it
her throne.
The gazebo was perfect. His cousin, who had taken on the role of wedding
planner, had done everything right. Nothing was overdone. The couple didn’t see
each other until the vows. The sky was overcast but with no threat of rain.
The clouds framed them in pictures. The couple kissed. Prince jumped up
and down at the dance after. His mother danced in her chair. Her mother
sketched the children’s faces. Her father smoked cigars with his father as they
talked about drone strikes and then football and then the quality of their
cigars.
The recall notice hadn’t reached them because they’d forgotten to write
the apartment number on the paperwork, and his email had filtered the e-copy to
junk. This would strike the parents as ridiculous after, seeing as how all the
bills had reached them just fine. The recall notice concerned hyper
acceleration and asked that all owners of the make and model and year bring the
car in for a free check.
The parents would become angry and file suit. It would be a large suit.
They would become quite rich, and they would become angrier that they had to
become rich in this way.
His mother’s foot would heal perfectly, and she would walk with only a
slight limp to the two graves that sat alongside the back of the yard by an
old, abandoned house that the city was unsure what to do with. The family would
gather here on the anniversary of the couple’s wedding, and they would sob and
laugh and smoke cigars. They would talk about the circumstance of death and
fate, what lined up in order for it to happen on their wedding day. The family
would come to know that it was not the dealer’s or manufacturer’s fault alone.
The car had surged when he hit the brakes; the driver of an SUV had been taking
over the lane at the wrong time.
The family became rich, so incredibly rich, but it didn’t matter. The
money did not reconcile the odd chain of events, that slight hit that sent
their small car spinning into the median strip. It was instantaneous for him.
It was drawn out for her. She had that brief window, a chance to say goodbye.
She’d told her sister that she knew, somehow, that she had thought it was just
cold feet, but she knew.
The family was smaller now. The sister was alone. Her mother fell ill
and no longer painted. The nieces and nephews were teenagers, unreachable. Her
sister became pregnant after a fling.
Prince would live with the sister and would rest his wrinkly head on her
belly as she daydreamed about finding love. He would comfort her when she came
home with child, when she spent hours staring at the floor, unable to sleep. He
would mind the child and growl at men she would bring home.
Until his final days, Prince would continue to comfort her sister, but
he would never jump up and down. Instead, he would conserve his energy and
spend his every night at the door, waiting, unable to believe in fate.
* * * * *
"After the Gazebo" is the title story of Jen Knox's collection
of stories published by Rain Mountain Press in 2015 and was first posted on
Writing In A Woman's Voice on September 9, 2016.
* * * * *
The Moon Prize ($91) will be awarded once a month on the full moon for a
story or poem posted in Writing In A Woman's Voice for the moon cycle period
preceding the full moon. For a little while only there will be two awards each
month, as I need to catch up with past postings.
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