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Scene 1 Honey finished her make-up surveying
herself in the mirror. Not too much lipstick or eye shadow to
look incompetent. In all her waitressing jobs, Honey had always
found the girls who wore too much make-up more interested in
chatting up the customers than working. On her first day of
work, the last thing she wanted to be was one of those girls.
Satisfied with her appearance, she left the bathroom and headed
downstairs to the kitchen where Josh sat sullenly drinking a cup
of coffee. She smiled and leaved over him, kissing the top of
his head.
"Well good morning Sunshine," she said with a grin. Josh made
a throaty noise in response. He was in a bad mood, she decided.
She had learned long ago to leave him alone if he was like this.
It usually ended by the end of the night if left alone. If she
couldn't leave him be, it ended in an argument or with Josh
leaving for a time to come back with apologies. Not wanting to
argue, she poured herself a thermos of coffee and left for
Connie's.
She walked to work not wanting to ask for a ride and not
wanting to bother Josh in his mood. The day was beautiful with
fall colors and cool breezes. The townhouse Josh had bought for
them was several blocks from the diner allowing her a chance to
look at the town. She liked Conlan's Glen. It was a far cry from
the dirty streets of New Orleans. There was more of a feeling of
home and family here. Her own family was scattered across the
country but she could build a new one. She wanted to with Josh
Manning but he remained stubborn about children. Still, he had
agreed to marriage at last. Perhaps children wouldn't be too far
behind.
Connie's loomed after a bit and she dropped all thoughts of
the family she wanted in favor of what her day would be like.
She stepped inside the restaurant and looked around. It was
inbetween breakfast and lunch. The dining room wasn't crowded at
all but the bar was filled with coffee drinkers and people who
seemed to know the owner quite well. She approached the bar but
was intercepted by Gina Corelli, the woman who had hired her.
"Hello Honey! My but you're prompt," she said glancing at the
clock on the wall. "That's always good to see on the first day.
How are you today? Nervous?"
"Oh not at all," Honey replied smiling.
"Really? Well that's good then. Come on, I'll show you where
you can put your things." Gina led her to the breakroom and
pointed to the lockers. "If you want a padlock, I can get you
one." Honey hung her coat and purse on the hook inside the
locker obediently before following Gina on a guided tour of the
restaurant. At the end, she handed her an apron and leather
folder for her receipts. "So, would you like to shadow another
waitress?" Gina asked.
"I don't need to. Unless you think I should," Honey replied
honestly. She'd been waiting tables since high school. This was
just another restaurant as far as Honey was concerned. Her body
knew what to do.
Gina offered her a genuine smile and shook her head. "No, I
don't think you do need one. Well, you can take tables 12
through 20 today. How does that sound?"
"Sounds fine," Honey smiled back. She headed out to the
dining area surveying the room. She introduced herself to the
hostess, a sour looking girl named Joanie, who promptly seated a
young man in work overalls at one of her tables. With a deep
breath, Honey plunged herself into her first day at Connie's.
Scene 2
Piper wrapped Lucy Reynolds in her hot pink cashmere scarf
and matching mittens, before the small girl burst from her
hands, and hurried to the playground to join her fellow
playmates in celebrating the first snow of the winter season. A
smile tugged at her lips. The kids bounded and squealed in a
state of sheer delight. The first couple snows always brought a
smile to even the most dull faces.
“Ya know, I was born in Corpus Christi, Texas, I never saw
snow till I moved to Virginia and I still never tire of it,”
Jordan, one of Piper’s co-workers at HopeFull Days Daycare,
where Conlan Glen’s richest and finest attended, remarked.
“Surprisingly, nor have I, and I’ve lived here all my life.
Seen it every winter,” Piper responded.
Welcome to Piper Conlan's new life. The fall semester had
begun for her housemates, but not for Piper. After her first
semester at Hope University, Piper began slowly taking fewer and
fewer classes as her finances dwindled, her grades failed to
meet scholarship requirements, and her mental state become more
effulged in paranoia. By the second fall semester, Piper had
quit college in order to make a living. Born with a
stubborn-streak and hard head, Piper refused to turn back to her
father for emotional and financial comfort. He dug his grave,
and as far as she was concerned, he could now lie in it. Sure,
she had changed her major to teaching, which he would certainly
approve of, but that did not matter to her. It was the principal
of the matter that she could not forget. He had refused to
support her ambitions. So now Piper’s days were filled with
trying to get by on a day care worker’s salary. She managed, if
just barely. No one had to know what else her days were filled
with: bitterness, loneliness, and constant doubt as to if she
would ever make it over this mountain.
“Miss Piper!” someone cried. “Will you help us build a
snowman?”
Piper smiled and joined the children in their play, “sure
will. Lucy why don’t you see if Miss Jordan can find us a carrot
and some other things for a snowman, okay?” Lucy nodded and ran
off in the direction of Jordan who topped off the snowman with a
carrot nose.
“Look everyone, he’s finished!” Jordan cried to their group
of second graders. The children cheered in delight.
“Okay, guys, story time, let’s go inside,” Piper said as Mrs.
Cantini rang the bell. The children began to run back towards
the school building, some falling in the snow, but quickly
leaping back to their feet, smiling with glee on their rosy
cheeks. Piper smiled at the idyllic scene.
“Miss Piper!” someone cried. Piper looked over her shoulder
to find a single-mittened Lucy Reynolds. “I lost one of my pink
mittens!” Her voice trembled on the verge of tears.
Piper smiled and cupped the little blonde‘s cherub face.
“Don’t you worry, Luce, I will find it, why don’t you go inside
with everyone else and I will look for it, kay?”
With a little sniffle, Lucy nodded and hurried to catch up
with the other children. It didn’t take Piper long to find the
bright pink mitten, looking lonely by itself on the white snow.
Piper snatched it up and trotted back towards the school
building, but something caused her to slow. A lone figure stood
off in the distance. Shadowed and fairly indistinguishable, but
Piper felt it in her gut. A raw instinct that transcended to the
time of cavemen seized her sense. She ran, she did not look
back, until she was in the safety of the school building,
surrounded by the sweet angelic faces that so joyed her and
panged her at the same time. Chase was back.
Scene 3
Ian McCormick paced nervously around the waiting room of the
Executive Floor of St. Joe's hospital. Across the room, Josh
Manning leaned comfortably in a chair watching him with a look
of disdain. He hated that guy, Ian thought throwing him a cross
look. Almost as much as he hated Jamie Mason, his brand new
brother-in-law. Together they had tormented him in college,
ruining his chances of getting into the right fraternity and
spreading vicious lies about him.
He'd had his revenge though. When Ellen Mason had joined them
in college, he had seen a way to get back at Jamie for all the
damage he had caused. He swept Ellen off her feet, not realizing
that she could be just as conniving as Jamie. Learning his
lesson, Ian had simply given up and left them behind for Medical
school never thinking that his past would come back to haunt him
as it was doing now.
He wanted the job of Chief of Staff at St. Joe's. It was his
to lose. He had done everything expected of him as far as the
board was concerned and even given himself some insurance by
marrying Ellen. Jamie had to ruin it all by bringing his frat
boy buddy in to make a play for the job. Well, he wasn't going
to let Josh have it. Nor would he let the Masons win this one.
He stopped his pacing and glared at Josh. "This is my
position, Josh," he said his voice tense with anger. "I don't
intend to let you have it."
Josh's eyebrow raised in amusement. "I don't see how it's
your call, Ian. But you go right ahead with your threats. I
always did think they were funny."
Ian gave him a narrow look. "I'm still a joke to you am I?
Well let's look at ourselves for a minute, shall we? You've been
fired from two hospitals in the past five years, haven't you?
Once for physical violence and the other for drunkenness. Isn't
that right?" The amusement faded from Josh's eyes. "Hit a nerve,
haven't I? Shall I go on?"
"Whatever makes you happy," Josh muttered.
"Oh counting back your faults does make me happy," Ian
replied with a wry smile. "You're married now, I hear. What's
her name? Its' something sweet...oh that's right. Honey. How old
is she, Josh? Nineteen?" Josh's hands curled into fists at his
side. Oh, so he was hitting a nerve. Apparently, his drinking
problem wasn't embarrassing but the little wifey was. "What's
the matter, Josh? Something wrong with your wife?"
"Don't you ever talk about my wife," Josh said through
clenched teeth.
"Does she know you're embarrassed of her? I'll bet she
doesn't. I wonder how she would feel if she knew that..."
Josh leapt from his chair and crossed the room to where Ian
stood, looking like he would hit Ian if another word was said.
"Don't you talk about my wife again, Ian," Josh warned in a low
voice.
"Have it your way," Ian said casually. "But really Josh, you
should learn to control yourself. You look like you could do
some damage right now." He took a step backwards and found
himself against the wall. "I suppose we'll just have to agree to
leave our personal lives at home when we backstab each other.
What do you say?"
"Fair enough. I won't say a word about how you married Ellen
Mason just for her money and her influence," Josh replied
relaxing slightly. Ian smiled despite himself. Josh always did
have a way of coming back right when you least expected it.
He offered his hand to Josh to seal the deal. "I agree. But
professional life is fair game?"
Josh hesitated slightly knowing he was on shakier ground
there but finally slipped his hand into Ian's and gave it a
quick pump. "Agreed."
Scene 4
Noah missed Connie's. Life was simpler when he worked here
with Maura and Piper. Now though, everything seemed wrong. His
job at the hospital was fine, but it wasn't medicine. All he did
was file things. What kind of job was that for a young man who
only wanted to help people? Not much of one, he answered himself
bitterly. He was of course, thankful to Maura and Jude for
helping him get the job. It was good to be in at the hospital.
Knowing the administrators would help him once he began his
residency. That, however, was still a ways off into the
distance.
His life wasn't bad though. He had a good job that paid well.
Tyler was planning on staying with him now that his time in jail
was over. He and Dinah had managed to heal old wounds from their
short relationship and breakup. The only fly in the ointment was
his girlfriend who, at the moment, wasn't behaving like much of
a girlfriend.
Piper was sullen and moody most of the time, preferring to
stay at home and watch movies. He didn't see her when he wanted,
only when she was in the mood. It was almost as if the last six
months since the fire at Mason Enterprises and Chase Garrett's
unhinged attempt to kidnap her had broken her somehow. Chase had
definitely changed her and not for the better, either.
Noah wanted to talk to her, try to get her to open up to him
about her feelings. But she would have none of it. She had even
quit going to her therapist. Not that she had admitted as much
to him. He had found out simply by waiting for her one afternoon
outside Tavish McCormick's office until Dr. McCormick had come
out and told him that Piper no longer came for their weekly
sessions. That had been three months ago. Noah didn't say
anything for fear of upsetting Piper.
In retrospect, he should have said something right away.
Instead, he stood by pretending she was all right while she went
ahead and tore herself apart. He let her distance herself from
him and build a wall between them. As things stood now, he
wasn't sure if they were still together, let alone in love. He
loved her, that much he knew. But as to Piper's feelings for
him... He couldn't say.
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