It was that time of the month again, and John was as nervous as he always was. He never knew how things would go with Amelia when they met up, and it always left him achey for a few days afterwards. He tried really hard to keep it together, but sometimes seeing her was just too much for him. He missed her. He really did, and it
hurt. He hoped to some degree that this time she would tell him she found someone new, someone who could take care of her and Carina and help her run the shop. Someone with a good job and a good sense of morality, who would honor and cherish her the way John never did, who loved her and wanted to build a life with her. Of course, if he did ever hear that, he didn’t know how he would react.
was what Amelia deserved. She deserved a husband who would do right by her, not someone like him, but he missed her. Sometimes, late at night, he thought he could be that man for her again. He thought that he could be with just her. He loved her, still, more than he had ever loved anyone. He certainly had never replaced her with his partners. They never held a candle to the spirit that Amelia had, in her subtle way. He would never ask her, though. Almost never. He didn’t deserve forgiveness, even if she was ready to give it, which he doubted. If he was her, he would never forgive himself. He was lucky she talked to him at all.
He walked into the coffeeshop sheepishly, ordering two coffees and two fresh cheese danishes. Perhaps in the old times, they would have split one, but it wasn’t those times anymore. They could just take their leftovers home, and John would reheat his half-danish in the morning, with stale coffee, and go to work for a double-shift. His life used to be so grand, full of life and experiences, and as the times passed by and he grew older, the girls came less and less, and he spent more and more time alone with a bottle of Jamison than he did going out on new adventures. He was becoming his father, he knew, and it hurt him to think of it that way.
Between work, work, and more work, there was little time for fun anymore, and he had grown so depressed that he hadn’t been seeking it out like he used to. He was getting old now. He was thirty-eight. He wanted to settle down, but he had ruined that chance, and there was no one he would settle down with but her. Perhaps he needed a dog to keep him company, but with all the work he did now, it probably wouldn’t be fair to the dog.
He sat down at a table in the back, far from the hustle and bustle of the shop counter, and watched the door for a flicker of brown hair and warm eyes. He sighed, gripping the envelope with her money inside with a chill going down his back. He hoped she took it. Sometimes she did, sometimes she didn’t. He liked being there to help her, though, in the little way that he could. He wanted to see Carina. He missed his daughter more than words could ever make, and he thought that leaving Amelia was quite possibly the worst mistake of his life. They deserved better than what he could give them, though, and he had to remind himself of that. They deserved better, and he deserved whatever scorn Carina had for him. Had he been her, and he had, once, he would hate himself too.
@Amelia Lennox