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Dating : Cara

h2>Dating : Cara

Joe Luca

Short Fiction

Photo by Gabriel on Unsplash

He lifted the last box into the back of his pickup, pulled the blue tarp over the load and tied it all down. He was done. The house was empty. The For Sale sign buried deep into the front lawn where the winds from the coming storm couldn’t rip it out.

He walked around the perimeter one last time, checking the doors and windows. The gate to the pool fence was padlocked. The pool was covered, though he had emptied it weeks before. And the tree house he had built years ago for his daughter was still there. Maybe the new owners would like it, or tear it down. He didn’t care.

Across the street, Mrs. Cullins saw him, hesitated, then slowly raised her hand and waved. He smiled. She hadn’t said hello, good-bye or anything in between for years. She wasn’t mean, just lonely he guessed. So used to being the only company to herself that others, well, they just weren’t there most of the time. He waved back, turned the corner and walked toward his truck.

On the walk, where it turned and headed towards the front door was a one foot-square piece of concrete with Cara’s hand prints embedded in it. She had written her name and the date and then told her dad about it, after he had spent the better part of three days putting in the walk.

He was mad at first. He was always proud of his work; it spoke for him and who he was and he didn’t want anything getting in the way. He had looked down at her, hands on hips and did his best John Wayne imitation, but didn’t pull it off. She laughed at him. And he didn’t blame her. He was bad at mad. He kissed her instead and told her she had done a good job,

Getting into the cab of his truck, he stuck the keys in the ignition, pushed the seat back a little and just sat there for a while.

The house was watching him, he could feel it. Pushing memories into his head; telling him, Hey, there had been lots of good times. Fun, laughter. You still have those, right?

He looked out the window, at the small square of concrete, then turned off his truck.

It took him about 30 minutes to chisel out that bit of concrete — he wanted the whole thing intact. He lifted it out, took a long look, then wrapped it in a blanket and slid it into the back of the cab.

He looked at the hole in the walk and shrugged. Wasn’t his problem.

Five minutes later he was on the freeway heading south. A new job, a new house waiting for him. He reached his hand behind the seat and felt for the blanket. Finding it, he smiled and turned on the radio.

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