I asked my friends to look after my house while I was away. I left a forwarding address and nothing else. A few asked how long I would be gone, and I said I wasn't sure. I don't know much more than my middle name.
My mother called, breaking the silent drive I was enjoying. She asked if I was still with Schyler. I told her I didn't know, and that she would have to call him after his date. I've heard she is a respectable woman.
I checked into the Chinatown motel and tipped the bell hop after he retrieved my mail. Not that I appreciated his services; I hoped he would save his earnings and leave. No one deserves to grow up here.
One letter was from my neighbor asking for a postcard. I sent my bill, hoping that was enough.
The second was from my brother, his letter of resignation and a simple request with a time constraint: You have two weeks to make everything right.
While looking for a black pen I found a green answer, and the returning question of why blue and red make white, and not the beautiful purple hue Schyler talked about so often. I wondered if he had forgotten the color of my eyes.
I ran out of time and spent all my money with no souvenirs to showcase back home. Schyler seemed hesitant when I gave him a date of my return, and I lied when I said I missed his embrace. I left a note on my pillow appologizing for the mess and said that I would be back next year.