”I’m cooking, so now I’m your favorite, right?” She gave the patiently waiting Chino a droll look. ”Don’t you look at me like that. Go find your friend, the cookie monster.”
”Yawp.” Chino yawned, then poked her small tongue out and panted.
Kerry laughed, and turned her attention back to her task. She checked the steamer full of brown rice, and started a fire under the wok, pouring in a little peanut oil and waiting for it to heat. ”Shh... You keep quiet now, Chino. Don’t tell Dar I put all these nice vegetables in here, okay? After I finish making the sauce, she’ll never know.”
Chino sniffed her ankle, then she curled up on Kerry’s foot and closed her eyes.
”Oh, great. What am I, a puppy bed?” Kerry sighed. ”You’re just hoping I drop something.”
One brown eye opened and peeked at her.
Kerry smiled, as she tossed thinly sliced red, green and yellow bell peppers into the oil, and listened to the sizzling. She stirred them around, then added bamboo shoots, peanuts, and Szechwan peppers.
”Oo, that smells good, huh?” She got the vegetables nice and crisp, then she slid the two pounds of chicken breast into the vegetables, and quickly stir fried it.
”Almost ready,” she murmured, adding the sauce, which coated the contents of the wok a nice, honey brown. She added a handful of sesame seeds, then she turned the fire off. She scooped mounds of fragrant brown rice into each of two comfortably sized bowls, and topped it with the stir fry. ”Hey, Dar?”
”Mmm?”
The nearby voice nearly scared the bejesus out of her. ”Yeeow!” She almost dropped the bowls. ”Dar, don’t do that!”
”You called me,” Dar protested, taking both bowls.
”Well, yeah, but I didn’t realize you were standing in my back pocket.” Kerry laughed, as she grabbed two glasses and a bottle of plum wine. She followed Dar into the living room, and joined her as she settled onto the loveseat, putting the bowls down on the end table.
”So.” Kerry curled up with her legs tucked under her and accepted the bowl Dar handed over. ”That’s some chest.” She indicated the trunk which had been delivered. It was a curious item, bound in leather that 332
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was carved with intricate, interlocking squares. ”It’s gorgeous.”
”Mm,” Dar agreed around a mouthful of rice and chicken. She’d changed into a pair of cutoff sweatpants and a t-shirt, and was wearing a thick pair of very white socks which were intriguing Chino immensely. ”Good stuff, Ker.” She indicated the bowl.
”Thank you.” Kerry’s nose wrinkled up as she smiled happily. ”It’s a new recipe.”
Dar’s eyes twinkled. ”I can feel the healthy vibes coming off of it.”
She used her chopsticks to retrieve a sneakily hidden vegetable and waved it at her lover. ”But you could put this sauce on shoelaces and I’d eat them.”
Kerry laughed. ”I was counting on that.” She took a mouthful and chewed it. ”Do you really mind the veggies?”
Dar made her wait for an answer for a moment, then she smiled.
”Nah.” She took a cheerful bite. ”Besides, what right do I have to complain? You’re cooking.”
”Well...” Kerry nibbled a bamboo shoot. ”It makes me feel better about having chocolate chip ice cream for dessert.” She paused, almost laughing at the way Dar’s ears perked up. ”Double chocolate chip, in fact.” She scooped up a bit of rice. ”Which reminds me, we’re going to have to take separate cars tomorrow. I have my annual checkup scheduled. I almost forgot about it.”
”Mm.” Dar took a few mouthfuls and chewed them. ”Kerry, can I ask you a personal question?”
Kerry stopped eating, and stared. ”Uh...sure.”
One dark brow lifted, then dropped. ”Why does chocolate chip ice cream remind you of your doctor?”
”Oh,” Kerry laughed, blushing a little. ”Yeah, I guess that came out a little weird, huh? No, it’s because she gave me such a hard time last year. Apparently I was too skinny for her tastes. She started giving me lectures and pamphlets on eating disorders.” She gave Dar a wry look.
”I was imagining her reaction this year.”
”Ah. I see.” Dar nodded in understanding. ”Do you think she was right?”
Kerry slowly chewed a mouthful. ”I think I’m a lot happier now than I was then, but there’s a lot that goes into that.” Her eyes searched Dar’s face. ”I think the biggest influence in getting me to change my mind was the opinion of someone I really respected.”
”Mm.” Dar didn’t quite know how to respond to that, so she merely murmured an agreement, scooping the last of her rice up. ”Well, let’s see what we have here, huh?” She put the bowl down and eased herself down onto the floor, where Chino immediately tried to crawl into her lap. ”Hey!”
Kerry laughed, as she put her own bowl aside, and joined her lover on the floor, taking the puppy out of her way. ”Oo...look at that hasp.”
”Yeah.” Dar took the key that had come with the trunk and fitted it Hurricane Watch
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to the old fashioned lock, then turned it. The metal protested, but released, and she removed the rusted object and set it on the floor.
”Okay,” she murmured, then she carefully unlatched the two catches, and released them, tugging the top of the trunk open and tipping it back.The scent that came out was the oddest mixture of dust, age, and mystery, and Kerry squirmed closer, so she could peek inside. ”Ohhh.”
”Wow.” Dar leaned on her crossed knees, and just looked. ”What a mess.”
Inside the truck was a tangled conglomeration of...stuff. There didn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason to the contents, just a random assortment of odd items, ranging from small wooden boxes, to pieces of metal, to very old clothing. ”What in the hell is all this stuff. Looks like the leftovers from a bad touring theatre troupe.”
”Or a hard up for cash Girl Scout troop,” Kerry murmured, lifting out a metal pan, resembling a camping cup. ”Wow.” She turned it over, peering at a set of scratches in the bottom. ”Initials.”
”Uh huh.” Dar reached in and pulled out a small wooden box, flat and smooth as satin with age. She gently opened it, revealing an old fashioned writing pen, its tip stained with purpled ink.
”Oh.” Kerry took it from Dar’s proffered hands and examined it.
”Wow, that’s really old.” She ran a fingertip down the brass surface.
”Was she a writer?”
”I...” Dar thought about it. ”I don’t think so, but I didn’t know her really well, Kerry. We were... It was strange. I wasn’t really ever sure why she left me all this. We weren’t close.” She paused. ”Why? Do you think she was?”
”Mm... This pen meant something to her. Usually you keep the things you use the most, Dar.” Kerry lifted the pen out carefully, and curled her fingers around it, It...fit...comfortably, in the oddest way.
”Oh, what a nice feeling,” she murmured, flexing her hand.
Dar watched her curiously. ”Are you into calligraphy?”
”A little,” Kerry responded. ”I used to write my poetry longhand, until I figured out it was a lot safer to put them in my computer.” She sighed. ”They always seemed more intense when I wrote them out, but I knew my parents, or Kyle couldn’t find their way through my hard drive.”
Dar closed her hand over Kerry’s. ”Why don’t you keep hold of that, then, because if you’ve ever seen my handwriting, you’ll know I will never, ever have use for it.” A wry grin edged her face. ”There’s a reason I type everything, and I have, since grade school.”
Kerry gazed at the pen, then up at her. ”Oh, yeah. I heard Mariana moaning about some evaluations you wrote out. She said she was going to have to call in a Greek scholar to translate,” she teased gently.
”Thank you. I don’t know if I could bear to try and use it, but I like just holding this.”
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Blue eyes glinted suddenly, with an inner light. ”Write me a poem with it.” The low voice took on a momentarily deeper tone.
A warmth traveled up her spine, and Kerry smiled in reflex. ”All right.” She carefully put the antique pen down on the table. ”What’s next?” She reached a hand in, and collided with a large, heavy metal piece. ”Ouch, what the heck is that? A machete? Did she wander the Amazon jungle or something?” Kerry carefully tugged her find free.
”Oh.”It was a rusted, rotting, half disintegrated sword. ”Good grief.”
Kerry got her other hand under the rotted leather of what once might have been a scabbard and lifted it clear. ”Would you look at that?”
Dar had stilled, and now she exhaled a long breath. ”Let me see that,” she asked softly, holding out her hands as Kerry gently placed the ancient artifact in them.
The first thing she felt was a slow, faint wash of sadness, gentle, but profound enough to prick the back of her eyes with tears. ”Bet there’s a story behind this old thing,” she commented to Kerry quietly. ”You can almost feel the history in it.” She gazed down at the ruined sword, noting the plain, worn brass hilt, its surface encrusted in green, and the unraveling tatters of rotted leather that fell away from her fingers as she touched it.
Dar wrapped her fingers around the hilt, and pulled the crumbling leather away from it, revealing a scarred, pitted steel blade, broken halfway down, its remaining length gouged with deep, asymmetrical grooves. She twisted her wrist, closing her eyes and feeling a faint, clear bell of familiarity ring deep down, as the weight of it hit her forearm muscles. ”Damn, this brings back memories,” she murmured, opening her eyes and regarding Kerry thoughtfully.
”It does?” Kerry had been watching her in mild fascination.
”Yeah, we used to study a couple different types of sword handling when I was really into the martial arts.” There are several forms that focus on allowing the artist to become proficient at a lot of different weapons, Dar mused, turning her hand around and letting a faint smile touch her lips. ”I gave it up, mostly because it doesn’t have a lot of practical application in today’s world.”
”Mm, bet you were good at it,” Kerry observed, cupping her chin in one hand.
A shrug. ”I was all right.” Dar gently put the broken sword down.
”I’ll clean that up. It’s a nice conversation piece.”
”Right.” Kerry reached in, and pulled out another small wooden box, this one a heavier, almost petrified looking wood with a brass band around it fastening it shut. ”Care to give a guess? Let’s see...a centuries old brass faucet.”
Dar leaned on the edge of the trunk. ”Okay...um...a petrified dog biscuit,” she hazarded, the word biscuit immediately getting Chino’s attention.
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Green eyes rolled, then Kerry carefully undid the clever latch, and worked the box open, the wooden edges having warped tightly shut.
”Ugh. This is kinda...whoops.” The box fell out of her hands as it popped open, and onto the tile floor, spilling its contents. ”Oh, damn.
Did it break? God, Dar...I...”
”Shh...no.” Slowly, Dar put down her hand, and touched the grayish black stones gingerly. Each was attached to the remains of a silver chain, and she picked one up and examined it. ”What in the hell is that?” She picked up the other stone and looked at it, then she rotated it and gingerly put both stones together. ”Hey, they match.”
Kerry leaned close. ”They fit together.” Her throat felt funny when she said it. ”How unusual.”
Dar’s finger pushed the two stones around in her palm, their edges fitting snugly together. ”They sure do,” she mused thoughtfully. ”Too bad they’re so beat up. It might be kinda fun to...um...”
Kerry gently picked the stones up and separated them. ”Let me see if I can clean them up. I’ve got some jewelry cleaner upstairs.” She glanced up at Dar’s face, which was painted in tones of interest and curiosity. ”Would you wear half if I can?”
A strange, almost dreamy smile crossed Dar’s face. ”Yeah. Would you?”
A laugh bubbled up from deep inside her, and Kerry released it into the air. ”Sure.”
In her palm, the stones nestled together, in obscure, gray contentment.
KERRY TOOK THE small bowl out onto the patio with her, seating herself in the early morning sun and propping her bare feet up against the railing. Dar had left a little while ago, and she’d found herself with some time before her nine a.m. appointment.
So she’d decided to clean the rocks they’d found, before she got dressed and took the short drive over to her doctor’s office. She shifted a little and flexed her thighs, a little heavy feeling still from her running that morning, but she’d made eight laps for the first time, keeping up with Dar in a small piece of personal triumph.
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