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Eliza Lynn Taylor

Eliza Lynn Taylor
Eliza Lynn Taylor Freelance Writer

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Celia



The cellphone vibrated on Celia's desk. She stopped clacking away at her computer keyboard and picked it up. She tapped the text message icon to read the message. 'Got her itinerary. I'll take her down after work.'

Celia looked confused at the message. "What?" She turned the phone over and realized she had her husband's phone which was identical to hers except that he had engraved his initials into the back plate of his. She checked his past text messages and saw where he had sent messages to this number before, all equally as cryptic. She checked his email and saw where he had mailed out her itinerary. With shaking hands she texted back for a verification of the location where she would be 'taken down' and then deleted it from the sent folder and marked the original as unread.

Celia cried when the reply came within minutes. It was indeed the parking garage at her office. She replied 'k' as her husband Conner liked to do and then erased it from the received and sent file as well. She almost jumped when minutes later Conner tapped her on the shoulder.

"Hello, my dear. I think we got our phones mixed up this morning. I thought I'd come see if you had mine," he told her. He dropped a single red rose on her desk and a single Dove chocolate.

"Oh, how beautiful, and my favorite chocolate." She clasped her hands together. "Thank you, honey. I have the phone in my purse. I haven't had it out all day, so I didn't even realize it was the wrong one," she lied. She opened a desk drawer and pulled it out of her purse. "There you go." She handed it over to him.

"Thanks." He kissed her on the forehead. "See you later for dinner."

"Sure," she said hesitantly.

"Are you alright?" he asked her.

"Oh, I've just been really busy. I guess I'm a little distracted." She smiled and squeezed his hand. "I'll see you later." She watched as he got back on the elevator and the lights showed he was going down. It stopped on the fourth floor instead of going all the way down. Probably just someone getting on, she thought, but then it came back up and when the doors opened someone got off and he wasn't there.

On break Celia went down to the fourth floor to see what was there. She found their accounting department, staffed entirely by women. She shook her head and went back up to her office. A tear slid down her face.

After work, Celia asked a security guard to walk her to her car. Her eyes shifted back and forth, alert to anyone she didn't know walking up to her. She sighed with relief when she got to her car and the guard stood by as she opened the door. She turned to thank him and saw that he held a gun on her.

"Get in," he told her. "We're going to take a little drive."
Her heart sank. Of all people to walk her to her car it had to be the one she didn't want. She climbed in behind the wheel and he walked around to the other side with her keys in his hand so she couldn't lock him out. "Where are we going?"

"Do you remember where you met your husband?"

"It was at a disco on the lake, but it's closed now; has been for years."

"That is sort of the point. No one will find you there." He waived the gun at her. "Now!"

She cried softly as she started the car and made her way out of the parking structure.

They arrived at the old building and he told her to turn off the engine and get out.

Her foot still on the brake, engine running, she asked him why he was doing this. He told her Conner didn't want to go to the trouble of getting a divorce and having to split the assets. She sighed resignedly and then hit the gas as hard as she could. He already had taken off his seat belt, but hers was still intact.

"What the hell?" he yelled just as the car slammed into a concrete pylon. In her old car the airbag had to be manually turned on and the passenger side was off. He hit the windshield.

Celia took a second to shake off the impact with the airbag. She glanced over at her assailant whom she assumed was dead and then she ran from the car. Hearing a noise, she looked back just as he pulled his head back momentarily and then raised his arm and shot. The last thing she saw was him slump forward again before she felt the sting of the bullet in her back. Her world went black minutes later.

Conner was in the apartment sipping champagne with his girlfriend. Candles glowed on the table and soft clarinet music played over the stereo. Celia took in the scene with rage. The curtains rustled in spite of the windows being closed and Conner looked up. The candle flames went out one by one as she blew on them.

"What is going on?" the woman asked him.

"I don't know," Conner said. "There's bound to be a window opened somewhere."

She looked down at her watch. "I need to get going anyhow. I don't need your wife walking in on us. She almost caught us the last time."

"Trust me; that won't happen again," he assured her.

"I wouldn't be sure about that," Celia said.

"Celia?" Conner said looking around the room.

Realizing her could hear her, just not see her, Celia laughed an ironic laugh that she knew would send chills through them both. The woman got up and ran from the apartment.

"Celia?" Conner said again. "I can explain."

"Explain what, Conner?" she asked him. "That you had me killed so you wouldn't have to go through a divorce and split the assets. Or the bimbo from accounting? What exactly do you want to explain?"

Conner's eyes widened. "You know about that?"

"Yes, and the cops have your killer's phone. He's dead too, by the way. So, my unfaithful lover, it won't be long until they link you to him. I told my boss about the odd texts on your phone and he told me to get a security guard to escort me to my car. He had no way of knowing it would be the man you hired to kill me, of course, but he can put the nail in your coffin, so to speak."

Conner blanched at her message and a lump rose in his throat. He took a drink of champagne and swallowed hard as the door bell rang. He heard them call out 'Police' before he opened it.


Sunday, October 27, 2013

Approaching Fifty-But We're Still Young- Right?



I remember not long ago seeing a picture of myself and my classmates from when we were in sixth grade shop class. Our teacher had taken the photograph. Then we could not have imagined beyond the next school year when we would start junior high, much less careers or having our own families. Children were far from our young minds as we concentrated on what we would be playing (or trying to get out of playing) in physical education class, or what we were going to play after school, what we could do with our friends, or how much homework we would have. Grandchildren never even came up. Now, we can't imagine not being parents and being grandparents is the greatest joy in our lives. Man, it's hard to believe we are no longer twelve, but approaching fifty, or already there. We are old enough to be members of senior citizens organizations such as AARP. I remember being excited to be in 4-H. Where did the time go?

We have lived through a lot
My friends and I lived through man's first walk on the moon, the Vietnam War era, the Watergate scandal, the taking of political prisoners from the U.S. Embassy in Iran and even wrote letters pleading for their release to their leaders. We have lived though being able to pray in school to being told we weren't allowed to any more. I remember when Elvis Presley died and some of my friends thought it was the greatest tragedy ever.

We survived the disco era, parachute pants, loud hair and even louder makeup. We were already beginning to become parents by the time the first space shuttle exploded on takeoff and then when another exploded coming home.

We've lived through numerous national financial crises, dishonest companies taking advantage of everyone they possibly could; Enron being a prime example. We have so far survived extreme disagreements within our own government and those who support them.

We were young, but remember the assassination of Robert Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. We remember when John Lennon was murdered, President Regan was shot by a would-be assassin, the tragedy at Jonestown with the cult of Jim Jones, Ruby Ridge, Columbine High School (and many schools since), the bombing of the Morrow Building in Oklahoma City,  and Waco. We were around for the fall of the Berlin Wall subsequently reunifying Germany, and the official breakup of the Soviet Union, and the renaming of so many countries I have lost count. We have seen tragic human rights abuses by people's own governments and rival factions vying for control over their countries.

We lived through September 11, 2001, our generation's December 7, 1941.

We were there when the home computer explosion started and helped it happen and created the Internet Generation. We have social media which both hurts (think cyber bullying and cyber crimes), and connects (old friends on Facebook, fans on Twitter, pictures on Instagram).

Now
After graduation those children in that old photograph have gone their separate ways; some not so far from home, some still there, and some of us, like me, across the country. Thanks to those same social media sites, that so many are using to cause pain to others, a good many of us are getting back together, even if only for a few minutes a day or a week. We show how we've grown from the kids who teased (good naturedly) each other, to adults who still know how to have a good time, or at least appreciate those good times a little more, because while were young and invincible and never going to die, we know now that we all will eventually and intend to do the most living the best way we can now. We treasure our parents more, our greatest gifts- children and grandchildren, and our spouses and friends. We worry now, as adults, what will happen to us in our 'old' age, because we sure didn't then, but we don't spend every waking moment doing so, because we have so much to be thankful for and enjoy.

I saw a story on CBS Sunday Morning where a group of friends from high school had a running game until they graduated of Tag. The story was hilarious. They began again during their college years whenever they got together again even though they had gone to different schools, careers, and lives. They decided that during one month a year (February) they would resume the game and travel all over the country just to say, "Tag," to an old friend (even as far as going in disguise to surprise the other person). The last one tagged before midnight on the last day of the month is 'it' for the year. I must admit I'm a little jealous. What a great idea! I wish we'd thought of that.


Like those people I saw on television, we're aging but we're still young! Right?
 



Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Government Shutdown Needs Solutions



The government has shut down, which hasn't happened since the Clinton Administration. They are, of course, in complete disagreement about pretty much everything so they are choosing not to work at all. Amazing how alike the two presidencies are- both determined to turn our democratic (not to be confused with Democrat) society into a socialist government where the government runs the people and everything they do. We are not socialist or communist. The government works FOR US. We hired them by virtue of the vote- all of them. It's bad enough that the average working American is seeing less and less of their pay because the government takes it in taxes every paycheck, but the very people who campaigned on not raising their own pay did just that, and raised it and you can bet they are being paid for this debacle of non-cooperation . You know, I don't recall that when I work for someone I get to tell them I AM getting paid more whether you like it or not. So now, our employees (senators and congressmen) are telling those who work for the government to go home and others to work without pay. Now if I were to tell my boss what I will and won't do and that they are going pay me more even if I am not doing the job they assigned me, they would tell me to hit the bricks or get to work. If our senators and congressman cannot get their collective butts back to work and resolve the issues we hired them to, then they too should go without pay (only seems fair since they are doing it to other workers) or they should get the hell out so we can get someone who is willing to do the job. Don't you think so?