He threw his hands up. “How about you give me a chance to explain myself.”
I stopped and looked at him.
“Explaining yourself would’ve been alright a year ago. Not now. I’ve moved on,” I said softly.
We both knew that was a lie, too.
Neither one of us had moved on, nor was I likely to; I didn’t want anybody else. I wanted him.
The sad thing was that he knew it.
“How’s your Nonnie doing?” He asked softly, letting the subject go even though I could tell that he really didn’t want to.
I shrugged. Honestly, I wasn’t sure Nonnie was going to be on this earth very much longer.
Her Alzheimer’s had gotten so bad that she didn’t remember me anymore. She couldn’t figure out where she was, and half the time she had to stay sedated because she tried to walk out to ‘go back home.’
Sadly, the ‘home’ she was talking about was a rundown house an hour and a half away.
“She’s not the same woman you knew a year ago. She’s lost a lot of weight, and she very rarely remembers anything, and when she does, it’s only for a very short time,” I explained softly as I pushed the door to my Nonnie’s room open.
Nonnie was sitting in her chair with her knitting in her lap.
She’d been making a baby blanket for nearly a month now.
At 84, Nonnie’s fingers weren’t what they used to be, but she could still knit with the best of them when she remembered how.
More of her knitting sat in a wicker basket beside her chair, and by the looks of it, she’d gotten a lot done in the last few days.
“Oh, Bonita. You look lovely today. Is my son being good to you?” Nonnie asked in her frail voice.
I looked over at Cleo who was standing towards my back right side and shrugged.
Bonita was my mom, and the son in question was my father.
They’d been dead for nearly a decade now, and I didn’t look a thing like my mother.
Cleo, though, had the dark hair like my father, but that’s where the resemblances ended.
My father was fair skinned, as was my mother. I got my mother’s curly brown hair, and my father’s full lips. Unfortunately, what I did not get, was my mother’s slim hips and accentuating curves.
I got full hips, full thighs, small boobs, and flabby arms. I did have a toned ass, though.
“Mikhail, how good to see you,” Nonnie’s quivering voice said. “Where’s my Rue? I’ve made this baby blanket for the little baby that’s due in the next couple of months. Do you want to feel it? It’s very soft.”
It was amazing how quick she could go from one extreme to the next in only a matter of moments.
Cleo looked at me accusingly, and I held up my hands in surrender, shaking my head violently.
No babies for me. Not now, and probably not ever.
It also upset me that Nonnie hadn’t seen Cleo in well over a year, but she still remembered him each and every time she saw him. I liked to attribute it to his resemblance to my Papa, her first love who’d died during a work related accident on the railroad.
He was the spitting image; so much so that it was on the verge of creepy.
“Tell me, are you still diddling with airplanes?” Nonnie asked him.
I closed my eyes and scrunched them up tight. Diddling with airplanes.