The Unexpected Affair. Monica Richardson
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“Okay, I will. As soon as we hang up.”
“Cavs up by two!” Melvin yelled from the other room. “Lane, get your ass in here!”
Whitney giggled. “Sounds like you need to go.”
“Sounds like I do.”
“Thank you again,” said Whitney.
“No problem. Have a good night,” said Lane. “And I’ll text the information right away.”
“Great.”
She hung up.
He sat there on the edge of the bed for a moment, a subtle smile in the corner of his mouth. He typed the address to Melvin’s shop into a text message, hit the send key and then made his way back to the game.
Whitney glanced at the text message. She was grateful for the gesture, Lane arranging to have her car repaired. She shut her phone case and walked over to the baby grand piano that rested in her living room. She loved her piano, though it crowded her space, which was another reason she was having a house built. She needed the extra space for her baby.
She’d played the piano since the age of twelve and had mastered it. Music was her lifeline. She was from a musical family—her grandfather and father were both musicians. So her love for music made sense. In addition to playing, she wrote songs. She’d written a few pieces and sold them. Songwriting had brought about a nice supplement to her teaching income. She’d even entertained the thought that if she wrote full-time, she could probably make her current teaching salary or more. But the fear of not having a secure income always trumped her love for writing.
Whitney started a bubble bath and lit a candle. She’d gone to the gym, and a bath after a workout always soothed her aching muscles. She sipped on a glass of red wine to wash down the chicken breast and brown rice that she’d prepared for dinner. She peeled sweaty clothes from her body, pulled her hair up into a bun and stepped into the bathtub. She needed to steal a few moments to pamper herself before settling in for the night.
When she slipped into bed, sleep came quickly. She’d fallen asleep long before nine thirty and with the television blaring with Don Lemon’s commentary on CNN. It seemed that morning always came abruptly.
* * *
Whitney moseyed over to the door, opened it. The bell rang and fifteen kindergartners rushed from their chairs and headed toward the door.
“Excuse me!” exclaimed Whitney. “I don’t remember dismissing anyone.”
The children slowly made their way back to their respective seats, waited patiently for their teacher to give them permission to move.
“Now you may form a single-file line in front of me. Bus riders first.”
The children formed a line in front of the door, and Whitney escorted them out of the classroom, through the hallway of their elementary school, past the office and out the side door where the buses waited for them to get on board. She ushered all of the children to the correct school buses or to their parents’ cars. After seeing that all the children made it to their modes of transportation, Whitney made her way back to her classroom.
She sat at her desk and graded a few papers, turned on her laptop and checked her email. This was her quiet time. She loved her children but looked forward to those quiet moments when they all went home. After responding to emails from parents and shutting down her computer, she tidied the classroom a bit. Placed crayons and bottles of glue into cubbyholes and threw trash away.
She checked her watch. She had just enough time to make her appointment at the body shop. Lane’s friend Melvin had promised to make her car look like new. She looked forward to it and appreciated Lane for even suggesting it. She grabbed her purse from the locked bottom drawer of her desk, pulled her keys out. She shut off the lights in her classroom on her way out the door. Her cell phone buzzed. Kenya.
“Hey, girl,” she answered.
“I need a drink,” said Kenya. “Meet me at Duffy’s.”
“Can’t. I have an appointment.”
“Oh, Whit! Are you going to make me drink alone?” Kenya whined.
“Why do you need a drink so badly?”
“Will’s mother is in town. You know she gives me hives. I can’t do anything right with her!” said Kenya.
“Oh, no! Not his mama.”
“She’s already started. Now she’s trying to plan the wedding. I don’t mind her input, but damn, this is my wedding,” said Kenya. “She’s added like twenty extra people to the guest list.”
“No!”
“Twenty extra mouths to feed!”
“What does Will say?”
“That’s just my mom, babe.” Kenya’s voice was in a baritone as she mocked her fiancé. “You know how she is.”
Whitney laughed. “Sorry.”
“This is so not funny, Whit. I’m going crazy!” Kenya exhaled. “She wants to look for alternate choices for the rehearsal dinner, and now she’s asking why the bridesmaids’ dresses have to be so provocative.”
“Did she specifically say bridesmaids’ dresses, or did she mention my maid-of-honor dress, too?” Whitney laughed.
“Whit!”
“You do need a drink,” said Whitney. “Meet me at the body shop and we can find somewhere to go from there.”
“Thank you. Damn, girl.”
“I’ll text you the address.”
Whitney bid the custodian a good night with a nod. He gave her a wide grin, and had she not been on the phone, he’d have struck up a long conversation about his ailing mother. Once Whitney revealed to him that she was from the Bahamas islands, he always went on and on about his Caribbean roots. She walked out the door quickly and to her car.
* * *
She waited for Melvin to appear in the customer waiting area after the receptionist called for him. He was not at all what she’d expected, actually the opposite of the image she had in her head—he was clean shaven, tall and handsome. Not at all a body-shop type of guy. She shook his hand.
“Good to meet you,” she said.
“Pleasure’s mine.” His smile was handsome. “Let’s take a look at that dent.”
He followed her outside to her car.
“Here it is.” She pointed at her vehicle.
“Ouch,” he said. “But