by Sarah Leavesley
bitter lemon
Trish feels the sun on her bare shoulders as she steps out of the
front door and gets onto the cycle she’s not ridden for months. Why? Just as
she’s questioning her own intent, she realizes she’s forgotten her helmet.
Returning with her helmet, she remembers that it’s almost as uncomfortable as
being squashed in the marriage counselor’s pokey office with her husband Raoul,
both nodding sagely in agreement with each other even though they still know
each other well enough to sense the lies in every statement.
She tries to remember the sun on the Las Vegas strip seven months ago,
the music and fountains, the flashy neon and glitz nothing to the sparkling in
their eyes and their long afternoon siestas. What she actually re-lives is
blinding sunlight, her day-long migraine and the fatigue of the unrelenting
heat. She knows she should accept that some things are best forgotten; that
things do happen without a reason, and no reason not to stay together isn’t
enough to smooth over the lackluster nature of their love now where once there
was fizz and wonder. She knows this but she cannot quite feel it.
Freewheeling downhill now, Trish finds the pedals spinning happily
without her. But she’ll have to stop at some point. Or start pedaling fast
again. She wonders what it would have been like if she’d met Raoul at Niagara
Falls instead of Vegas…it’s all about what they’re used to, their expectations
from the start. If they’d taken things slower, not married so soon. She’s been
here before though. Or if not exactly here, similar. With Mark it was a year
after Vegas. With Craig, she managed 4 months. The worst was Pete, three weeks.
Love has always been a head-rush; she doesn’t need a counselor to tell her
she’s addicted to the thrill and risk of both Vegas and marriage, though she
feels her chances should have improved with practice, the odds tipped in her
favor. In their favor. Now it’s looking too late, she tastes lust on her tongue
as she recalls an image of Raoul in his tuxedo, a hint of muscle rippling
beneath his shirt. If she could just get him to drink less, to talk about more
than his mates, and enjoy binge-watching Dexter.
This hill is steeper than most, though the slope should be evening
out. Instead of letting muscle memory take up the slack, Trish forces her feet
off the pedals. She needs to brake before she reaches the bottom, hold her arms
braced ready, legs out to the side, almost like wings. Then her front tire hits
the inevitable pothole and she finds herself flying,
until suddenly it feels like
falling.
About the author
Sarah
Leavesley is a poet, fiction writer and journalist, who loves people-watching
and daydreaming. Flash publications include pieces
in Ellipsis, Jellyfish Review, The Fiction Pool, Fictive
Dream, Spelk and Litro Online. She’s also author of two companion
pocket novellas: Kaleidoscope and Always
Another Twist (Mantle Lane Press).
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