The Answer - Chapter 3

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The answer

By Lynda Shermer

Chapter 3 - Travels to My Aunt

So I was out of town for all of halloween, which is one of my favorite nights of the year. My aunt Phyllis wasn't any trouble, being an eminently practical person, and didn't object to how we'd have to rearrange things in her house so she could live entirely on the ground floor for awhile.

While I was looking things over to plan this, she brought up the subject of Susan, and I started telling her about the office, how each shift had one man, and two women due to customer preferences, and how Felicity had been invented, and how, later, Susan came to be.

"Oh, so that woman I spoke to on the phone..."

"Was me. Sorry. That time I got stuck overnight."

"My, my. And you came up with the story about the neighbor to avoid the subject."

"Well, it seemed to me that, just telling you the whole thing, cold, would have taken a long time, particularly to convince you I wasn't just playing a really elaborate practical joke. And it was late, I was stressed, and I'd been crying pretty hard."

"Yes, that might be so. You were quite convincing. I had no clue it was you on the phone. And the only thing that has snapped you out of it so far was an absolute requirement to do something that has to be done by Paul. A duty, as it were."

"That seems about right."

"Sounds dangerous. If it happens again, you'll have to come up with a better solution."


On Halloween, she sat on the porch glider, covered with an afghan, and praised the costumes and handed out the candy. She had a wound dressing on her head, and a tall pointy hat, and when people asked, she said she was a witch who'd had a broom accident. She would cackle, and say, "See? Totally ruined my nose," fingering her cute little button nose. It broke everyone up.

Once the rush thinned out, she asked for more details about my coworkers. After I told her some stories, she mused, "June doesn't seem to take things too serious. I'd watch out for her, she might trigger Susan just for fun. I'd like to know more about this Alice, though."

"Everyone would. She's the major office enigma."

"Some sorrow in her past, I wouldn't be surprised. I hope she recovers. Susan... You know, if you had been a girl, you mother always said you would have been named Susan Marie."

"Weird. I wonder if that's how I came up with the name Susan. I might have remembered that, subconsciously."

"It would be dangerous to ask to speak with her again, so we shan't experiment that way. But you say that don't have issues with this Felicity, so..."

Well, as I said, she was my favorite aunt. So I prepared myself, and said "Hello, Phyllis, it is nice to meet you. I am Felicity Martin. Paul has told me so much about you. You know, you are his favorite aunt."

"He's a sweet boy, but I believe I am his sole surviving aunt, as well; still, I worry about him, off in such a big city. It sounds like he is doing alright."

"Well, he has his old college friends."

"As well as some at work, it seems."

She had me talk about work and my co-workers, again, after which we exchanged a few pleasantries, and then I went back to Paul, with great relief. "Well, you don't get stuck as her, at least. I wonder why? Still, did you notice? While you were speaking as Felicity, your posture changed and you moved differently."

"I'm sitting in a chair! How did I move?"

"You sat up straight, extending your neck, partially turned on the seat toward me, placed your feet, closed your legs at the knee, and played with your hair, holding your hands in your lap otherwise. In short, you held yourself as a correct young woman. Bravo, or should I say Brava?"

"This is just getting weird. After this, I'm going to have to go to a football game, belch a lot, and get into a bar fight to re-establish my street cred as a guy."

"I don't think it's quite that bad, but I must say, while you didn't strike me as gloomy before, while you were channeling Felicity, you were smiling more."

"Channeling? It was just acting."

"I'm not sure it's acting if you aren't consciously thinking it through. Also, it’s interesting, there were differences in how you described your co-workers, as Felicity. And I'd swear it was just flowing organically. Somewhere, inside you, you have a considered self image as Felicity, which you were calling upon. I don't think it was too detailed a self image, and you seem to have created it from too much BBC, but it was there. And I think the reason you get stuck as Susan is you have a much more detailed self image of Susan. I think you need to let her out and see what happens, in safe surroundings, and soon. She's leaking."

"Phyllis, I hate to remind you, but your degree is in nutrition, not psychology. You worked in a hospital dietary department."

"True, but irrelevant. I'm right, you'll see," she said, airily.

"Yes, aunt Phyllis," and with that, the subject was dropped.


A few days later, I drove back to Chicago, and forgot all about it. My first day back at work, June and Alice showed me pictures of the costume group, which had come in second, behind a group of zombie personal injury attorneys, which I had to admit was tough to beat. Phil had been there, but they'd let him off the hook, letting wear an Edwardian suit, complete with straw boater.

"Now, that is what I'd have wanted to do! The costume is exactly what I'd visualized, although I dare to hazard, Phil played it a bit more, um, grabby?"

"Yes, that's right," June admitted.

"That's hardly acting for him. I worked a few shifts with him for training, and he kept wanting to compare notes about conquests. I would have played it gallant and oblivious."

"You'd just have been cribbing from 'Thoroughly Modern Millie', you mean," Alice objected.

"Well, it's a good interpretation of the role."

"Still, you seem to be good at that visualization stuff alright. I mean, between Felicity and Susan...", June hinted.

"Yeah, my aunt said something about how I made up a whole internal self image for each of them, on the fly."

"Well, Felicity, maybe, but I suspect Susan is a bit different."

"I can't imagine how," I said, and changed the subject.


And a week after that, June, working on her nails, engaged me in casual conversation. Without my noticing, she started calling me Susan. Fortunately, before I absentmindedly started to respond, Alice reprimanded her, "Bad June! Naughty girl. Paul is not a toy!"

I spent the rest of the evening glaring at June. Which broke them both up, every time I did it.

After work, in the bar, where I was continuing my new tradition of not drinking by having another Virgin Mary, Alice turned to face me, and grabbed my hands. "Seriously, I never apologized for getting you in this whole mess, or thanked you for coming after me."

"But I'm the one who upset you."

"Only after I attacked you. At any rate, I feel I should make it up to you. How about you come over Friday night, and I'll make you dinner, and you can subject me to one of those games you claim you play with your friends," clearly goading me to get me to accept, but I had always said I wished I knew more about her, so...

"You're on. I'll try to figure out what to bring to beat the pants off you!" Oops! Not quite the note I wanted to hit.

"Hmm, it seems I've triggered your latent vein of competitiveness. How's Italian sound?"

"A lot like Latin, or French spoken rapidly, I find. Oh, you mean, as food. Sure."

"Don't get your hopes up, I'll probably wimp out with spaghetti and frozen meatballs."

"Well, can we at least heat them, first? Just kidding, that sounds fine."


So it was that, come Friday, the early evening found me standing in the hallway in front of her door, carrying a bottle of wine and a potted plant.

"Oh, my," she said when she opened the door, "You really went all out, I see."

"Well, I figured there were amends to make on both sides, and if I brought a peace offering, you might take it easy on me and be more vulnerable when we played."

"Not a chance, buster. Still, the plant might not have been a great idea. I have a bit of a brown thumb."

"Ok, but at least it will give you something to talk to, if I freeze up."

I entered the apartment, and was promptly amazed.

It was compact; no one could afford a lot of space on what we made, the couch was worn but looked comfortable, the coffee table was a trunk with some fabric thrown over it. The tv across from it had the current panoply of video game systems attached (each with only a single controller in evidence, I noted), but it was the bookcases, reaching all the way to the high ceilings and covering the walls, that caught my eye. They were overflowing with books, and game boxes.

I had a copy of fluxx stuck in my coat pocket, figuring than an authority figure like Alice would have been rattled by the extreme mutability of the rules, but there were already three of the variants of fluxx on her shelves, in worn boxes, along with a copy of illuminati. I was going to have to rethink my strategy here, pretty drastically. I put my coat on the couch, and followed her through to the kitchen, where she was opening the wine. She had indeed just made spaghetti and meatballs, although I could see she had put some effort into making her own sauce.

"I'm sorry about the store bought meatballs, but this is spur of the moment."

"They're fine; I normally just use those myself."

"Now go back to the living room, I have a little left to do here."

I went back, and browsed the shelves. In one book, I noted a stamp from a familiar used bookstore.

"Hey, did you go to the University of Illinois in Champaign," I asked her.

"No, I went in Urbana. Sorry, bad joke. Yeah, why?"

"How did you end up answering phones?"

"I could ask the same of you."

She was dodging again; I was standing in her living room, and she was still hiding. Hmmm.

"I had to come back and take care of my parents for a bit, before I was finished at school."

"In my case, it turns out there are fewer jobs for aerospace engineers than I'd assumed when I declared my major."

Wait a second; went to U of I, reads, games, aerospace engineering, name of Alice...

"Were you married?"

"Yeah, very briefly. It didn't work out, and turned out to be a very emotionally painful detour."

That explained why the last name had been unfamiliar; and the hair would not have naturally been that purple...

"Wait, I'm seeing something on the astral plane. I'm seeing blue, pale blue... Alice blue. And now, a green field, a field of alfalfa? Soybeans? No, Grass, no, more yellow, straw, hay. A block of hay. Alice...Hay, Alice...bale; Alice Bailey?"

"Wow, that's some trick! No, wait a second, did someone scribble my name in one of my books when I wasn't looking?"

"No, they're still ok, Mike said you always hated people writing in books."

"Yeah. Wait, how did you know that? You knew Mike?". She ran out of the kitchen, stirring spoon clenched like a weapon, glaring at me like she was about to attack.

"Relax! Mike Wells was my dorm roommate. You changed your hair color. It used to be purple."

Her body went slack, as she looked incredulous.

"Oh, god. Paul. You're THAT Paul. Mike always called you Edgar, making fun of how your last name sounded like Burroughs. How embarrassing..."

"I tried returning the compliment by calling him H. G., but it never caught on. Don't worry about it."

"Actually, I changed a lot of things. Now I owe you a whole bunch of apologies, suddenly. First, for not remembering you, and second, do I recall correctly that you ended up reading ALL of Lord of the Rings on the couch in the floor lounge while Mike and I were, er, using your room?"

"No, really just The Two Towers, although it did take me two tries to get through it. And I happen to know, YOU only started reading Pratchett when you stole my copy of Men at Arms."

"Borrowed. Yeah. It's in the bookcase there, if you want it back."

"No, I've replaced it. Consider it a gift."

"Good, I wasn't serious; it would have made a hole in my collection. I prefer the British covers."

"But, wow, you really Have been hiding. I only dimly remember you back then, because you and Mike always snuck in and out of the dorm, but you've been totally different."

"My wild child phase. I've settled down."

"Even that wouldn't account for it. Even allowing for it being at work, you've been concentrated, reserved, while I've known you. You were a lot more outgoing back then."

"Yeah, well, it really wasn't a good marriage. He called me childish, told me to grow up. That rant I threw at you was practically a direct quote of things he said to me. I haven't been the same since. I'm not sure I'll ever be the way I was, again. In part, I asked you here to see if I can, at least for a little while." She looked shaken at all this openness. I went to the table, sat, and reached out to touch her hand.

"I'm still going to beat you," I said, tenderly.

"In your dreams," she smiled, her eyes flashing.

The food was good. After we ate, I cleared the table, putting the dishes in to soak with the sauce pot. We went back to the living room, sitting on the floor on either side of the coffee table/trunk. Despite her home court advantage, now that I saw she had more than Monopoly, I gave her the choice of weapons, er, games; she took her original fluxx off the shelf, and I listened to her explanation of the rules, suppressing a smile, nodding when appropriate, and looking studious. Fortunately for both of our fragile egos, we came to a close fought draw, which she ascribed to beginners luck. We went back to finish the dishes.

As I was leaving, I pulled out my own copy of fluxx.

"Ohhh, next time, the fight is ON, buster. You tried to hustle me, pretending not to know the game."

"I never said that. You just assumed it. Ok, next time, something simple, familiar to both of us again. It shall remain your pick," I offered.

"Ok. And until next week, consider this: even though neither of us remembered we'd met before, you knew just how to take me apart with five sentences."

I started to reply, but she laid a finger against my lips, and kissed me on my forehead.

And with that I smiled and left. Fortunately, I could take the el; I was not used to that much wine.


At one point in the next week, when Alice was down the hall, June turned to me, and asked, "What did you guys do? I've never seen Alice so relaxed. Is this what she is like, happy?"

"I didn't do anything to cheer her up THAT much; It turns out we went to the same university, and hadn't realized we'd run into each other back then."

"Oh?"

"Yeah, she used to go out with my roommate."

"And you guys didn't realize it? What was wrong with both of you! Oh wait, he wasn't the idiot she married, was he?"

"No, evidently he came later, but I can't help but think that she repressed the whole period of her life, and that explains why she didn't realize."

"Still, it's pretty weird. What did you guys do?"

"Well, she cooked, we played a game, and then we did dishes."

"Ohhh, dishes. I usually don't even show my date the dishes until the fourth date. You guys are moving fast."

"And then, as any gentleman would do, I left."

"Yeah, I figured, that must be why I don't date gentlemen. My bed is too big for that much waiting." I blushed, and turned my head. Why was she being so open?


Next weekend, the game was called on account of movie. There was a new science Fiction movie opening, which we went to see, and afterward, I got to hold forth my opinion on why it was so hard to do a good Mars movie, in discussion as I walked her home. I left her at her apartment door, although I did accept a hug and a peck on the cheek. As I left, I ran into one of her neighbors, a motherly figure, in the hall, and it seemed that function followed form, as she gave me a thumbs up, and I heard her say, under her breath, "About time..."


The next week, June continued to look at us with suspicion, but nothing much new happened, until Friday. I went to Alice's place, and brought along a pizza from my favorite pizzeria, which she'd never tried. We'd agreed on toppings ahead of time, an arduous negotiation that resulted in pepperoni and red peppers, and then, she prepared the game, laying out...
Monopoly.

I looked at her, quizzically. She said, "Ok, finish your wine first."

Obediently, I complied. She finished hers, and poured full glasses for both of us again. She looked a little flushed.

"Now, are we in agreement that this constitutes our third date?", she started.

"Ok, for the sake of argument, I accept that, although I am hazy on the social constructs attached to that," I said.

"We need to explore our comfort zones here, I feel. So with a little research, I found the rules, online, for the game I propose...Strip Monopoly."

"I see. Well, I accept your challenge, good knight! As you had choice of games, I get first choice of tokens. I choose...the race car."

"No fair, I wanted the race car," she objected.

"Tough," I replied.

By these rules, you start out with less money, but every item of clothing has a monetary value. You could pay the bank with clothes or money, and if you were paid in clothing from another player you had to wear it. We both managed to get pretty solid positions on the board. We both got bad chance cards, and lost our shirts and pants to the bank (besides, what's the fun of a mixed strip game while you still have your shirts on?) Before she could rebuild her savings enough, she hit illinois, which I'd developed with a hotel. Looking things over, she had to pay me money, and her bra.

"You have to wear it," she said.

We'd made solid inroads into a second bottle of wine while we played, so I said, "I should be proud to wear your token into battle, milady."' and clipped it around my chest. It was lacy, and had something in the cups. I was out of shape enough that I had some chest flab that it pushed around, although I barely noticed it at the time. I was too busy planning how to consolidate my empire. She lost boardwalk to the bank, I mortgaged it, developed it, and she hit it, losing everything. I'd won.

She stood up.

"Game over!" I exclaimed.

"Yeah," she said, stripping off her panties.

"Um, game's over." I hinted.

"Who said anything about the game," she said, launching herself at me, nude, "Fuck chivalry," she muttered.

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Comments

More fun in store?

This is getting quite interesting. Looking forward to more chapters.

Things Are Warming Up, Quite A Bit!

And now, under the circumstances, it seems actual chivalry demands the lady be properly satisfied.

More Interesting

joannebarbarella's picture

Than Spin The Bottle!

this was awesome!

it reminded me a bit of SamanthaUK and Maddie Bell, both of whose writing I really love.

I loved a lot of the turns of phrase, but especially the form follows function one.

I was happy with that too, as

Lynda shermer's picture

I was happy with that too, as well as the soto voce comment. I perhaps indulge my linguistic senses too liberally; Someday, if I'm not careful, The Fit will hit the Shan, and Zelazny already owns that one...

Just as earlier I created an expectation of a Halloween party scene, and then subverted by the Aunt, occasionally I like to throw a curve, like Paul fearing Alice would pick something mundane like "Monopoly", only later to find she has picked "Monopoly" (with a twist). And considering how much I like the tales of SamanthaUK and Maddie Bell, I'll take that reference as a good sign; I have a ways to go in plying my craft to rate it, but thank you..

Latest_me.jpgLynda Shermer

Maddie Bell...

Janice34B's picture

...is one of my favorites. I’ve read the entire Gabby series, a couple of times. I’m a bike rider and really like the way she describes all the bike racing.

Janice

Pizza

crash's picture

I do love a good pizza. Though I'm a fan for the "kitchen sink" variety. Even better with anchovies.
Still, strip monopoly is good too.

I'm still anxious to discover more about Susan. Thanks again for posting. I love the hooks you are setting at the end of each one.

Your friend
Crash

Anchovies!

erin's picture

I can't get anchovies on my pizza anymore. Most places don't even have it in stock and other places tell me they don't want to cook it because it will smell up their oven! It won't f you have an oven that gets hot enough to cook pizza!

But anchovies, Italian sausage, hamburger meat and red bell peppers make the best pizza topping ever. You can add mushrooms if you like.

Love the story.

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Anchovies?!?!?

Janice34B's picture

Erin, if we ever go out for pizza, you may have ALL of my anchovies.

Janice

I wonder what anchovies taste like

laika's picture

Sorry to comment on just the comment thread but for the past year I've been wondering what anchovies would taste like without 5 grams of salt per fillet. I went looking on for plain cooked anchovies in water but apparently they don't make them that way. I can't imagine I wouldn't like them, at worst they'd be a little meh, like sardines. I like the salty ones on pizza but now even Round Table has eliminated them from their options. Yep, time to invest in a $25 toaster oven and some take n' bakes I can go nuts on with pineapple, anchovie, oysters, cashews, asparagus, avocado, pickled kelp pods, bok choi and lychee nuts. You know, your basic California pizza...
~hugs, Ronni

.
What borders on stupidity?
Canada and Mexico.
.

Good stuff Lynda

Podracer's picture

Added to my list of preferred authors :)
Nice to see Alice and Paul finding each other's play preferences.

Teri Ann
"Reach for the sun."

Thank you. The stories so

Lynda shermer's picture

Thank you. The stories so far have "brewed" over a long period, but I don't think that is an impediment to producing more. The rate might slow a bit, so I have time to pursue my day job, though...

Latest_me.jpgLynda Shermer

Thanks Lynda!

Janice34B's picture

REALLY liked the little bit with Aunt Phyllis. “Witch with a broom accident” is great! After reading part 2 I was afraid we were going to have to wait until next Halloween to see Paul dressed up, but now I can see it coming a little sooner. Really like all the dialog between Paul and Alice,too. Good fun. Also, really like your picture! Cute smile and sexy red lipstick :-). Thanks for another fun chapter.
BTW - what IS your favorite Chicago pizza? I like Giordano’s best.

Janice

I was an Edwardo's sliced

Lynda shermer's picture

I was an Edwardo's sliced garlic and canadian bacon girl, but I fear when I wasn't looking, the chain has died almost completely. One advantage to sliced garlic on a pizza: you can check the ingredients without opening the box...

Latest_me.jpgLynda Shermer

Sausage & Mushroom for me

Janice34B's picture

Garlic is good, too, especially on a white pizza.

Janice

big chain pizza

Maddy Bell's picture

is okay but whilst I've dabbled with home made (my oven was neither big enough or hot enough to do it well), the best for me are from a little known takeaway in old Sheffield town - well out in the burbs where I was living. And trust me, I've had pizza across the UK (literally from Orkney to Cornwall, Ireland, Wales and across England), Sweden, Denmark, Austria, Holland, France, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium, Andorra, Italy of course, on ferries, campsites, the top of mountains, from street vendors, big chains, fancy restaurants and in pretty much any guise you can imagine from the cardboard based German to stuffed crust deep pan and even the unsatisfactory calzone. And yet that one shop consistently gets it right and doesn't need to resort to weird toppings to get business.

And keep it simple, you can have too many different tastes on top, just like Gaby (one b!) my go to topping is just a boring pepperoni. Doesn't mean I don't enjoy a Pollo, hot, meat feast or Quattro Stagioni as much as the next gal. Personally not an anchovie fan and why would you put brassicas or other veg on there? its not supposed to be healthy! Otherwise i'll give anything a go - chicken and mango is quite good.

As a by the by, the classic Pratchett covers have been replaced by quite boring 'collectors' editions in the UK - glad I've got an almost full set with original artwork - mostly first edition paper backs with the last few in hard back. To be frank, well Maddy doesn't fit, he wasn't a great writer but he could tell a good tale. My daughter met him a couple of years before he passed at a Discworld con and won one of his signature hats - jealous much!

Strip Monopoly sounds interesting - maybe they could try BDSM Cluedo next time - lol.


image7.1.jpg    

Madeline Anafrid Bell

I was making a comment that I

Lynda shermer's picture

I was making a comment that I loved Discworld but sort of wished Pratchett would write more stand alone like "Strata" or "The Dark Side of the Sun" again, and turned around, and discovered that the person I'd made that comment to was Sir Terry (wearing a hat that I seem to remember had the the aussie addition of corks on strings, although I could be misremembering that. (It was at a Worldcon); I think he said "It pays the bills", but the embarrassment temporarily disabled my ears with a roar of blood...

I'm familiar with Douglas Addams discourse on the state of Pizza in England from "Dirk Gently, Holistic Detective", although I DO understand that things have improved a lot since then...

Latest_me.jpgLynda Shermer

Loving this story

Robertlouis's picture

With its twists and turns and terrific humour.

Incidentally, if you’re visiting the UK and are faced with chain pizza, the best tends to be Pizza Express. Don’t know if Mandy agrees with me. Most cities have reasonable independent pizzerias too.

☠️

Paul the wrench

Jamie Lee's picture

Paul seems to have gotten himself into a bit of a problem since he answered the call as Felicity. It is strange that Paul returns after talking as Felicity but gets locked up talking as Susan when that voice comes out. Maybe it's true he has a better image in his mind of Susan and that keeps him talking using his Susan voice. And maybe something else is going on.

Alice hasn't said, but it's obvious she's been hurt in the past, and being hurt has caused her to keep to herself at work. Because Paul was able to recall her from school, and she realized who he was at school, he has helped loosen her up. Loosened her up enough that she was able to play a game which exposed them both to bare moments. And to cause Alice to jump Paul's bones.

BTW. A person could put a spoon full of salt in their mouth and get the same taste as eating anchovies.

Others have feelings too.