A Stand-Alone Piece
Based on true-ish events.
The long days of summer are nearly behind us. I watch as the sun breaks through the cracks in tree branches high above Annie’s window, forming a pattern like lace, on the sidewalk. I look up into her window, wanting to throw a small rock at it.
Just enough of that quiet rat-a-tat-tat of the stone against glass to get her attention. But more than that, I want to be inside her home. In her basement where we had set up the vintage record player we brought for only ten bucks at a garage sale. Annie always bought the cool records too. Simon & Garfunkel. Credence Clearwater Revival. The Who.
Stuff I’d never heard of, but when I told her that, she had laughed and said it was all her daddy listened to.
I want to be in the basement, listening to the old records and drinking honey lemonade like we did last summer. But Annie’s window looks dusty. The whole place has been abandoned for about three months now.
I still remember it – the souring of my stomach when the operator told me that the Klein’s number had been disconnected.
I had asked my mom what it meant, but all she told me was that Annie and I wouldn’t be going roller skating this summer.
And I haven’t seen her since.
One day, she writes me a note. It has a return address of Wyoming. She says she’s sorry, but when her daddy has to move, she has to go with him. It’s what it’s like being the daughter of a man who works for the telephone company. I tell my mama this, and she laughs, but her laugh sounds sad. She says, “Annie sounds wise beyond her years.”
So, I write Annie back. I tell her it’s okay, just that summer is almost over, and that I miss her, and that I miss the beat-up, old record player we bought. But a few days later, the letter comes back to me.
“Return to sender” is stamped on the outside.
“She must have moved again,” my mama says, “maybe one day, you’ll find Annie.”
Isabelle Palerma
This short story is entirely my own content – no A.I. used to create this.