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A Million to Two

....By Kathryn Jennings-Hancock

"If I don't leave now, I'll turn into moss. Attach myself to a building and ooze. But thanks for asking me to stay."

"Just giving you an opportunity to spore, kid," Carrie said, cocking her damp head at the sound of more rain pelting the building, rising in crescendo like a million bags of sand opening over its ceiling, each grain louder and harder, their echoes ricocheting off the cold marble floor of the depot. "Last chance to evolve into that green stuff I'm always wiping off the kitchen window sill."

"Viva la Seattle," I said. "Thanks for the turkey. Next time you transfer, consider going some place the sun shines once in a while, will ya?"

"Thanks for coming." She hugged me, a quick Windsong embrace, then pulled back, prodding her glasses up her nose with one thin, unmanicured finger. "Next time though, fly. Or convince this train that four a.m. is not the best time to leave for Boise. I tried not to wake Alan when we left, but I did. He's worried about his wife being out in the rain at this ungodly hour, and when--"

"When I'm rich and famous," I said, settling onto the hard wooden bench beside her and fumbling in my pocket for a cigarette. I didn't want to discuss Alan The Unemployed, ever on the brink of something wonderful. My brother-in-law. But at least he'd stayed with his wife. He hadn't gone running off to greener pastures the first time a little crabgrass sprouted in his own yard.

"When I'm rich and famous, I'll fly," I promised. "But as long as I'm poor and struggling, bewildered and unloved--"

"Maybe not for long, kid. Look at that!"

I followed my sister's gaze to the entry door, swinging open on protesting hinges to reveal a GQ advertisement. A whisper under six feet, shiny chestnut hair, perfect arch of mustache, wide hazel eyes, square chest and trim waist. All wrapped up in olive green Dockers and a white sweatshirt. A pressed white sweatshirt.

Definitely ironed, and recently. He carried a gray denim duffel bag and settled onto the bench adjacent to ours, fumbling with his ticket poking out of the top of the bag.

He would have a beautiful smile, I thought, all white and even teeth. I wanted to see that smile and unfortunately, I did. It jumped out for the heavy set brunette who loped through the door moments later, draped in a pink jogging suit and companionably settling in beside him to brush invisible lint from his sleeve.

"Married," I said, exhaling a sigh of frustration. "Most definitely married."

"Maybe not." Carrie leaned closer and used her free hand to grab my cigarette and crush it into an overflowing ashtray. "It's what, fourteen hours to Boise? Anything could happen. Behold Mr. Right."

"It's Amtrak, not The Love Boat," I reminded her. "Look Sis, I'm twenty-nine years old. According to plan, I should be married by now. I should've stayed married to Ben. I should have two point five kids by now. It's been five years. Unless Mr. Right is legally blind, he'd have found me."

"Ben was a jerk. A rock solid bonehead."

"He was--is--a very successful geologist."

Why defend my ex-husband? Hadn't he left me for his secretary at Bronson Silver Mine, walked out of our marriage because she made him fresh ground coffee and salivated at every opportunity to type his cryptic notes? But I defended him because I'd picked him, just as I'd picked our velour floral print sofa and love seat, which had grown lumpy and sagging in his absence. It was mine, though. My choice. I defended and clung to my furniture and my heartbreak with equal passion.

"He should have studied the rocks in his head, not the ones in the ground," Carrie asserted. "I hope he gets crushed in a landslide."

"Me, too," I said, but just to be polite. My gaze shifted from the scuffed tops of my Reeboks to GQ Man and his jogging suited companion. She was saying something, and the beginnings of another smile tugged the corners of his mouth, finally wrenching his lips apart to reveal those beautiful teeth. Chiclets. Perfect, even, and tempting.

"What are the odds," Carrie mused, folding her arms across her chest and inclining her head like a bewildered parrot, "that he's not married?"

"A million to one."

"That he's not even traveling with her? That he's the one for you?"

"A million to two."

"You could really hit it off. Actually--" She broke off and craned her neck across my shoulder. "I don't see a ring there, Chris. I think he's single."

"And I think you're nuts." I eased her back against the bench, pressing my palms against her shoulders and sticking my face close into hers. Her eyes, behind the thin frames of her glasses, widened. "Look," I said irritably, "I came here to have Thanksgiving with you because I love you, OK? But you've got to quit playing Cupid with me. I had my go around, and it didn't work out. I'm doing fine on my own."

She pressed her lips together and blew a quick breath between them, Windsong and Doublemint gusting over me. "Sure," she said. "A secretary with a stray cat and no hope. A young woman who's given up on love, resigned herself to living alone forever and being a wizard at WordPerfect. Yeah, that sounds about right as a definition of true, lasting happiness."

"Executive secretary," I corrected. "Frizbee isn't stray, either. I picked her out myself, at the pet shop. And," I added, my voice rising, "it's Word, not WordPerfect. Not for a couple of years now."

"I don't like to see you give up," Carrie said. "Keep dating, keep trying. You can't quit. You can't just give up."

"I also quit coffee, remember? I don't miss that, either. You get a lift, followed by a crash. Same difference."

"Chris, it's not the same thing and you know it."

"I quit dating, I continued, "for the same reason I quit trying to stand up on water skis. Falling on my face at fifty miles an hour is no fun. Look, I haven't dated in six months and I haven't evaporated. Quit pushing me! If I wanted to start now, would I really go after a married man in a train station at four o'clock in the stupid morning?"

Carrie made no response, her lips a round, silent "O". I hadn't realized I'd been shouting. Not until I glanced over my shoulder and saw GQ Man and his lovely bride staring. Her mouth was an "O" to match my sister's. His Chiclets rested beneath a smirk, but his eyes, burning into my own for just a moment, were ablaze with pent-up laughter.

"Well, I've seen the Space Needle and I've made a total idiot of myself," I said, turning back to Carrie. "I guess it's time to go home."

"When you quit dreaming," Carrie said anxiously, patting my arm as the train approached the depot, "you're just dead."

"Really? I've found I just sleep better." But I draped an arm across her shoulders and hugged her as hard as I could, one handed. It went over better than anything I could think of saying.

Seattle was miles behind when the rain finally quit, the first pale pinks and grays of sunrise washing the coach in warm pastels. I'd settled into my seat, legs propped up on my bag, my eyes riveted to the window since leaving the depot, engrossed in the beginning of a fourteen hour movie called The Pacific Northwest From A Train.

It was glorious, greens and golds and open spaces and mystical fog and scattered houses, thin lights glowing into wakefulness on the Saturday morning following the biggest Indigestion Fest of the year. I watched for over an hour before turning to the second feature, People On A Train Still Digesting The Fest.

A scattering of crocheting women in the rows behind me, a young couple with a sleeping child between them. The opposite side revealed an elderly man bent over a ragged paperback, his glasses lowered against the pages, a woman in a red gingham blouse swaying slightly to the rhythm of the train and whatever music traveled through headphones from her Walkman, and, in the seat across from me, settled companionably beside his gray denim duffel bag, GQ Man.

He smiled, revealing no teeth but smiling nonetheless, and that's when I realized I was staring. And that's when I quickly returned to the movie in the window. His wife was in the restroom. Or in the lounge car, waiting on a cinnamon Danish or some other glucose shot to start her day. She was his wife. She was on the train. I had only to watch my movie long enough, and she would appear. When I looked at him again, the lint flicker would be beside him.

I waited through two tunnels and three quick forests, then cautiously turned, and...

He was alone. Reading a thick paperback called Warrior, a hulking caveman on the cover posed with spear raised before a shining intergalactic vessel.

A few more forests, another tunnel, and a quick stop at a collapsing depot in Podunkville, Oregon. Just this side of Sticksville, bordering The Boonies. If she'd been in the restroom since Seattle, she'd by now met with a dismal end and was splayed across the tracks snaking out behind us. If she was still in the lounge car, she'd by now eaten all consumables on board and would have to be removed at the next stop to have her overloaded stomach pumped clean. If, on the other hand, (the romantic, dreaming hand I mistrusted), a million to two shot was playing out, she didn't even exist.

My Dick Tracy sister was right, there was no ring. I squinted at the hand turning pages, revealing more of Warrior's saga. No ring, no tan mark known to sprout on the ring fingers of dolts and connivers who remove their bands when traveling. If the sweatshirt was truly ironed, and I believed it was, he'd done it himself.

I wrenched my gaze toward the window, but it was tackled in mid breakaway by his. The book lowered, the smile broadened, and the lips parted to make room for, "Can I help you?" I struggled in the Super Glue pull of those hazel eyes for a moment and started to speak myself, but opted for something that made more sense.

As he continued to stare, clearing his throat slightly and inclining his head toward me, I grabbed my purse and bolted for the lounge car, the swaying of the train and my own adrenaline fed frenzy conspiring to knock my shins against three seats before I disappeared through the sliding door separating cinnamon Danish and coffee from the most beautiful hazel eyes I'd ever almost drowned in.

The lounge car. Refuge of a half dozen booths and a low counter of plastic wrapped sandwiches, cookies, and fruit beneath a glass cabinet of beer, wine, and sodas, overseen by a bored bartender of about twenty whose badge announced him as, "Welcome Aboard, I'm Bobby."

I ordered a Coke and fell into an empty booth, which wasn't hard to find because the only other lounger was a plump redhead whom I judged to be about forty, working a crossword puzzle in yesterday's USA Today and sipping a Budweiser.

She looked up as I sat down, then shrugged slightly and returned her attention to the puzzle. I settled into the booth across from her, comfortable in being ignored, preferring it to the blistering contact eyeball game in progress on the other side of that sliding, swaying door.

Another minute tackling the pupils of those incredible hazel eyes would've meant real trouble. I'd have started believing Carrie's theories. A dangerous thing to do. Plucking my heart out and having Welcome Aboard, I'm Bobby run it through the blender on Liquefy made more sense, and would ultimately, I guessed from experience, be less painful.

Another short forest and we clacked and rattled into the Columbia Gorge. Crossword Woman raised her head and smiled, requesting a seven letter word for "Hutch's sidekick."

"Starsky," I said, launching a two hour friendship. We talked, she spewing details of her life as a clothing store manager in Provo, Utah, me regaling her with my misadventures as an executive secretary in Boise. I'd just finished the best part, my flawless coordination of an office Christmas dinner for one hundred and fifty, seventy-two of whom were vegetarians, when a very warm blast of Old Spice wafted in and asked if it could join us. We seemed to be having such a good time, caught up in the camaraderie that comes to strangers bored out of their minds and trapped within the swaying mass of metal that is a moving train.

"Love to have you." Crossword Woman slid over.

GQ Man. Only that wasn't his name, because his name was David Searles, and he was on his way home to Salt Lake City, where his job as an electrical engineer awaited him. He'd only taken the train as a whim, after spending Thanksgiving with his sister and figuring the train was cheaper, and much more relaxing, than flying. "I just had a feeling," he said, not realizing the line belonged in one of my sister's goofy dreams, "that it was time to take a train trip."

And so did I, even as whole sections of my brain cocked their rifles, prepared to fire at will on any thought of fate, romance, or kismet my sister had planted in my head over yams and too much white meat. But the sharpshooters wearied as the train clacked on, the forests fading to the rolling, open hills outside LaGrande, Oregon. Fell asleep at their posts completely as we talked into Idaho, sharing blissful similarities in our twin love of our jobs, our solitary positions in life (which we chose to dub 'independence'), and gently touching on quickly passed over, muffled mentions of loves gone bad and the hopes that one might someday go right.

Electricity between us? Enough to fire up New York City with a glow visible all the way to Kansas.

By Caldwell, Idaho, I believed. In romance. In dreaming. Probably even in God, who had slipped when he'd failed to deliver Sunshine Barbie on my tenth birthday and completely fallen when no earthquake disrupted by brief appearance in divorce court. Where had fourteen hours gone? Morning had evaporated into afternoon and melted into dusk, and through it all I'd floated in those hazel eyes and that starched white sweatshirt, blissful until the conductor's announcement that we were approaching Boise forced me to my feet, adrenaline again pumping, my shin banging against the table.

"I'm off next," I said. "I've got to get my bag."

"Let me give you my number," David said, nodding at Crossword Woman as he stood, as unsteadily as me. "And I want to get yours..."

But Amtrak waits for no woman. If I didn't get off, I'd be stuck in Twin Falls or worse. Frizbee would run out of food, water, and human affection. Responsibilities beckoned, yanking me out of my dream and plunking me face down in my gray but predictable reality.

I stumbled to my seat, grabbed my bag, and, turning quickly to cast one furtive look behind in hopes that David might actually be behind me, number in hand, stepped off the train into the cold marble and musty wood that was the Boise depot.

My feet were leaden as I stared hopefully into the open doors, standing aside as the woman under the Walkman stepped down with hips swaying, then reluctantly followed her toward the station. The doors closed, and he was nowhere.

I walked slowly through the depot and out the wide doors to the parking lot, my eyes searching the dim light of evening for my little red Spectrum, mentally flogging myself with Should Haves. I Should Have realized how close we were to my stop. I Should Have just called out my number to him. I Should Not Have lost him, missed out on a huge opportunity to test drive love at first sight, people destined to be together, gut feelings that scream, "YES!".

The echoing blast of the train's whistle punctuated my defeat as I jammed my key into the driver's side door and twisted. Regret landed in my stomach with a cold thud and stayed there, a dull, flat brick getting soggier with each breath I took.

"Hey...hey, wait a minute, will you?"

I whirled, keys jutting between my fingers, a poised weapon ready to attack whoever was shouting at me in a dark parking lot a few days after Thanksgiving. Ready to gouge, to rip, to...

"This is crazy."

David dropped his duffel bag and jammed his hands into his pants pockets.

"You were gone," he said. "So I thought, 'what the heck', and came after you. I guess I missed my train, huh?"

My lips moved, but my brain failed to deploy the word troops and I could only stand dumbfounded as he fumbled in his pocket and pulled out a narrow strip of paper.

"My number," he said. "Look, I know this sounds nuts, but if you could take me to a hotel, and maybe give me a lift to the airport tomorrow, well...I'd really like to take you to dinner or something in between. I just really felt...back on the train..."

"I know," I said, and that's all my brain gave out.

Unlocking the hatchback, I tossed my bag in, leaving room for his. OK, so it was a million to two shot. But somebody had to be those two, I thought, unlocking the passenger door. And maybe a million wasn't really so many, if you hadn't forgotten how to dream.


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