Read Unbroken Connection Online

Authors: Angela Morrison

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary

Unbroken Connection (5 page)

Leesie327 says:
   
I want you forever, though.
liv2div says:
   
me, too, babe…I’m down with that
Leesie327 says:
   
I believe we can only do that in a Mormon temple. We can be sealed to each other and our children—you can be sealed to your parents and grandparents—forever.
liv2div says:
   
you’re just bluffing…making excuses…I know what you really want…that mercy geek of yours in his white shirt and tie
Leesie327 says:
   
Get a clue, hon. I want YOU in that white shirt and tie.
liv2div says:
   
not my scene
Leesie327 says:
   
Why are you so stubborn? You felt the power of God at your parents memorial dive. Aren’t you a tiny bit interested in finding out more?
liv2div says:
   
that was my parents…maybe I’ll get into Shinto…the Buddhist gig seems a bit odd to me, but I could get into ancestor worship
Leesie327 says:
   
Now you’re making fun of me. It’s real Michael. What I’m telling you is real.
liv2div says:
   
ancestor worship could be real
Leesie327 says:
   
We believe our ancestors are there, in heaven, just beyond the veil, waiting to help us, cheering for us to do what we need to for them. That’s kind of like Shinto. I wish you’d just try—if you love me at all.
liv2div says:
   
maybe when I get back you can tell me about the ancestor stuff
Leesie327 says:
   
Really? That would be so cool.
liv2div says:
   
and you have to chain up your dorm door…no guys allowed…no mercy extended…I don’t want you dating anybody…nerd or not
Leesie327 says:
   
Guess it’s good you’re 15K miles away. The jealous act is irresistible.
liv2div says:
   
freak, I wish you were here

Chapter 7

 

THE PLAN

 

MICHAEL’S DIVE LOG—VOLUME #10

 

D
IVE
B
UDDY
: honeymooners again

D
ATE
: 10/17

D
IVE
#: 1,223

L
OCATION
: Phuket

D
IVE
S
ITE
: Shark Point

W
EATHER
C
ONDITION
: sunny

W
ATER
C
ONDITION
: flat

D
EPTH
: 60’

V
ISIBILITY
: 50’

W
ATER
T
EMP
.: 78 F

B
OTTOM
T
IME
: 34 minutes

C
OMMENTS
:

Last dive with my newlyweds. This AM he aced the written test. She barely passed. But in the water, he struggled—she swam circles around him. I signed off their certs, and she pulled him away to celebrate—wrapped around him, chewing on his ear. Miracle the guy can still walk.

I pack up, try to get Leesie online before I have to leave. Freak. She’s not there. Come on, Leese. Figure it out. I’m here waiting. I’m early, girl. Wake up, sign on. Again.

She surprised me the other night. Voracious. Who knew? I should have. I’ve tasted her appetite. She’s amazing when she melts. Married we’d be free of all those hang-ups, playing by the rules. She can melt in my arms whenever she wants.

Who cares if we’re both still eighteen. We’re legal. That’s what counts. She’ll be nineteen in two months. Maybe we can get married at Christmas. Wonder if I can get off? If I have to, I’ll quit. No way will she resist me asking her in person. If I can get her hot, it’ll be easy. Why didn’t I think of this back in Florida? It would have been so much better than breaking up. That was right, though. Hurt like hell, but I needed to give her up—let her go before I destroyed everything that made me love her. It was the only thing to do. Then.

I can’t help it if she came back.

I can’t help it if she still loves me.

I can’t help loving her.

She’ll marry me. Not even the Mormon stuff scares me. She can raise our kids like she was raised. That’s cool with me. I’ll respect it all our lives together. Support her, help her.

I promised I’d listen. I think I can do that now without getting livid. Before I was so freaked. My parents’ loss was fresh and raw. Every time she tried to reassure me with her holy act, it felt like she was raking through my oozing wounds. I hated that.

I can listen to her now, fake nice, let her pray all she wants, if it means keeping her—really making her mine after all.

She’ll say ‘yes.’ Sooner or later, she’ll say ‘yes.’

Freak, I got to go, babe. Where are you?

 

LEESIE’S MOST PRIVATE CHAPBOOK
POEM # 52, HOMECOMING

 

I bake a mob of chocolate chip cookies,

chewy with oatmeal, expensive

when you have to buy all the stuff,

and wonder where Michael was last night

while I pack the cookies with the last

of the Washington Delicious Apples

Dad mail-ordered me. How did he know?

I never said.

 

I check my face, add concealer.

I fell asleep waiting for Michael,

but the alarm went off at 4 AM.

I waited until 6. Nothing.

Nowhere. I fight not to imagine

the somewhere he could be.

 

Noah’s on time, and we walk to the stadium,

milling with all the guys who made him ask me

and their giggling dates,

enjoying a crisp touch of fall,

trees golden and scarlet,

beds of fall flowers and soft green lawns

perfectly tended by an army of students

early this morning.

The whole place glows.

Why don’t I?

 

Noah smiles. “Can I carry that?”

I swallow away my dry mouth and nerves.

“You’ve got the blankets.”

“I’ll manage both.” He touches my arm when he takes

the picnic basket I borrowed off Roxi,

my California roommate,

who’s prepared for everything.

 

I have a boyfriend in Thailand.

I have a boyfriend in Thailand.

I want to shout, turn and bolt.

We’re back together—sort of.

Either that or we’re engaged.

Need to change my online status:

Complicated. That’s us.

 

Then boys like Noah won’t call.

They want pure, simple.

He spreads the blankets

on the bleacher.

I reward him with cookies.

Best he’s ever tasted.

(Gram gave me her secret recipe

when I was part of the family.)

I gaze off into sky as blue as Michael’s ocean.

“You should try my apple pie.”

“Is that an invitation?”

Noah’s mouth is full of cookie.

The crowd roars kick-off so he misses

the no way, that’s Michael’s, plain

on my face.

 

We score a lot and win,

pass the cookies around.

I’m the only one who eats the apples.

 

Later, riding the Creeper steaming for Heber,

the train cars chugging through the night to a Top 40s beat,

we salsa and waltz.

He talks about brothers on missions

in hot, steamy places.

I grab his shoulder. “Did you say Thailand?”

“No, South Korea.”

I relax my grip. “Know anyone serving in Thailand?”

He shakes his head, watching me,

getting it. “Do you?”

 

“I have a friend working there. He needs

some missionaries.”

Noah’s hand slips in mine—

suddenly slicker than it was before.

“Maybe more than a friend?”

Heat rises to my face—and I stare

out the window at the lights speeding

away from me. “Used to be.”

 

We both know I’m lying.

He eases away from me, swallows. “My dad

joined for my mom.”

“My mom, too. Is he still active—your dad?”

Noah’s head shakes. “He stuck it out

for awhile—five kids—then it fell apart.

A mom on her own isn’t the plan.”

The pain of Noah’s past, the loss and ache,

tinged with rejection—from his father

to the girls he liked who always

wanted someone else—

like me, tonight—

oozes up around his golf shirt collar

and bleeds into his words.

“You don’t want that.”

 

“I know.” I pull my eyes away from the black night

outside. “That’s why he’s in Thailand.

And I’m going to have a great time

at this dance

with you.”

LEESIE HUNT / CHATSPOT LOG / 10/18 11:28 PM

 

 

Kimbo69 says:
   
Charitable work done for the week?
Leesie327 says:
   
Noah is a nice boy, and man, can he salsa.
Kimbo69 says:
   
He can dance after all?
Leesie327 says:
   
High school ballroom team reject—couldn’t get a partner.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Ballroom team?
Leesie327 says:
   
He’s from Utah. And he’s a great dancer.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Don’t start your pity act…you’ll never get rid of him.
Leesie327 says:
   
We talked about Michael.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Poor Noah…you are cruel with that one.
Leesie327 says:
   
Wasn’t like that. He’s easy to talk to. Probably be a bishop some day. I’m going to set him up with my roommate.
Kimbo69 says:
   
The wild girl? You are sadistic.
Leesie327 says:
   
Tawni? No way. Dayla. The girl from Idaho Falls. She’s perfect for him.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Right. I keep forgetting you live in a flock.
Leesie327 says:
   
It’s not like we’re chickens.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Biddies?
Leesie327 says:
   
Shut up.
Kimbo69 says:
   
So there’s Tawni, the bad one; Dayla the perfect one, Cadence the singing one…have you mentioned the others?
Leesie327 says:
   
Lily, nice but socially about nine. We stayed up late last night and taught her make-up basics.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Is that really why you stayed up late?
Leesie327 says:
   
I missed Michael Friday morning. I got up at 4 AM to chat with him and he was nowhere. I thought maybe he’d try again.
Kimbo69 says:
   
You know what you need?
Leesie327 says:
   
Yeah. To keep telling you about my roommates. Next is Roxi, our California girl. Did you know there are more Mormons in California than in Utah? She’s waiting for a missionary. He just left.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Okay, Miss Matchmaker. I’ll play along. Why stick Dayla with Noah? Sounds like Lily would be his speed.
Leesie327 says:
   
I’ve got a feeling about him and Dayla. Noah is the boy we should all want for a husband. I’m going to give him to Dayla.
Kimbo69 says:
   
And where does that leave you?
Leesie327 says:
   
Where I’ve always been. Hopeless. Staring at my screen wondering what Michael is doing right now.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Speaking of hopeless, whatever happened to your mission boy?
Leesie327 says:
   
Jaron? You know he was never mine.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Right, big brother.
Leesie327 says:
   
He’s still serving in Brazil. He’ll be home this coming spring and get married to one of the six girlfriends he left behind in Spokane.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Kind of young to get married.
Leesie327 says:
   
He’ll be twenty-two. Mormons tend to marry young.
Kimbo69 says:
   
What about getting an education and starting a career first?
Leesie327 says:
   
Why not do that together?
Kimbo69 says:
   
Why rush it?
Leesie327 says:
   
Because we have hormones like everyone else. It’s either sin or get married. So we marry young.
Kimbo69 says:
   
You have to twist the way everything is to make those rules of yours work.
Leesie327 says:
   
No. The world has twisted the way everything used to be. The rules don’t change. The Ten Commandments are pretty old.
Kimbo69 says:
   
So what do you hear from Michael?
Leesie327 says:
   
Now he’s talking about getting married.
Kimbo69 says:
   
You’ve got him brainwashed, too.
Leesie327 says:
   
He met some newlyweds that got him thinking. He’s the one who brought it up. Not me.
Kimbo69 says:
   
Serious? When’s the big day?
Leesie327 says:
   
I told him to get baptized and ask me again.
Kimbo69 says:
   
One of these days you’ll push him too far, and he’ll give up on you…he’s willing to marry you, and you give him that crap?
Leesie327 says:
   
We have to do it right or it will be a disaster.
Kimbo69 says:
   
The guy is hotness cubed. I’d sleep with him in a second. You’re going to lose him to somebody like me who’ll treat him right.
Leesie327 says:
   
You’re just thinking about his body. I want his soul.

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