Meditation

The clomp of Victoria’s heels on the stone floor filled the church. Her back burned with the glares of the gossipy hens in the pews, but for once, she paid the tittle-tattlers no mind. True, ladies weren’t supposed to walk like men. But young wives weren’t supposed to lose their husbands, either.

She stepped into the church garden and hesitated, her fingers groping for the reticule at her waist. Assured of its presence, she straightened and smoothed her skirts. She took a calming breath and approached the labyrinth with forced deliberation. This had been their special place. She and Roger courted here, its twists and turns giving them opportunities for private conversations and stolen kisses. Three years ago that was, but it felt a decade. Maybe more. If only the war had ended by Christmas like they’d promised . . .

Victoria took another deep breath and stepped into the hedge-lined maze. She heard nothing but the click of her boots on the paving stones. Only hers, though, and for that she was grateful.

Photo by Wolfgang Kaiser/iStock / Getty Images
Photo by Wolfgang Kaiser/iStock / Getty Images

The path turned right. If the war had been over by that first Christmas, Roger would never have enlisted. He wouldn’t be hurt or missing or dead or whatever he was now, wherever he was. He would be here with her, setting up housekeeping, starting a family. Now she was alone. At 21, a widow. How could that be?

“Stop, young lady.” The left turn introduced Victoria’s mother’s voice, loudly enough that Victoria turned to make sure she was still alone. “You don’t know you’re a widow. One mustn’t jump to conclusions.”

Right turn. “You’re strong, Tori,” Roger told her the night before his deployment. “It’s one of the things I love about you. It’s how I know you’ll be fine while I’m gone.”

While I’m gone. Roger had every intention of coming back. So where was he? His Pals Battalion were trickling home, most missing a limb or an eye or their wits. But they were alive, and they were here. Not one could tell her what happened to Roger.

They’d gone over the top together, Jasper finally admitted, and then lost each other in the chaos that followed. He wouldn’t give her details, said they weren’t fit for man nor beast and especially not a woman. He thought he saw Roger carried away on a litter.

Jasper had been on a litter too. It’s how he got to the field hospital. Same for the boys Victoria read to here in the relief hospital. But none of the hospitals Victoria contacted could find any record of Roger. Which left only one logical conclusion.

Victoria stopped and turned circles. How far had she gone? Why did all the hedges and turns have to look the same? Why did it feel like she was stuck in the same place?

She scanned the rooflines beyond the church walls. They were all so flat. Then she pinpointed the lettered crenellations of the Wharton’s Tobacconist building. Almost there. Two more turns.

She laid her hand on her reticule and moved forward, fingering the edges of Roger’s letters through the silk. So many letters, one for every week he’d been away, until . . .

Until last July, when the fighting at the Somme began. For months, that battle raged. Every day, names of the dead and wounded and missing filled the newspapers. Every day, Victoria studied those lists with her magnifying glass, even after Roger’s name appeared on the roll of the missing. She kept up the practice for more than a year, both hoping for and dreading Roger’s reassignment to one of the other lists.

She stopped at the hedge that marked the middle of the labyrinth and pulled open her bag. Sorting through the envelopes, she found Roger’s last missive.

Victoria unfolded the page, scanning it until she found the words that brought her here. I left something for you, Tori, in our usual place.

Now she was here—where Roger kissed her the first time, where he proposed, where he told her of his enlistment. What had he left her, other than alone?

The topiary held nothing but leaves and branches. She brushed the dirt with the toe of her boot. Nothing but soil. But wait. The corner of the paver looked less weathered than the rest of the square. Her fingers made out shallow grooves in the stone. On her knees, she peered closer but couldn’t decipher the shape.

She slid out her magnifying glass. The intertwined letters V and R were scratched into the slab. To any other citizen of the realm, it would look like a memorial to the beloved Victoria Regina. Clever Roger.

Victoria fell back, landing hard on her skirts. She felt the pain in her heart, not her behind, and for the first time since she’d heard the word Somme, she gave in to it. The sobs came slowly at first, her quiet sniffs gathering speed and intensity until her whole body shook.

Minutes later she was spent, little more than a bag of bones collapsed on the ground. She crawled to the path’s edge and leaned against a hedge for support.

Her mother’s voice returned to her. “You were named for Britain’s greatest queen. She lost her husband, too, and she carried on. You will do the same.”

What other choice did she have?

Taking a few unsteady breaths, Victoria blinked away the last of her tears. She found the letter and the magnifying glass and slid them back into her bag. She pushed herself to her feet. Brushing her skirts, she recited, “I will carry on, just like the queen.” She repeated the refrain as she continued through the second half of the labyrinth.

She stopped short of the final turn in the maze. A new life awaited her outside the labyrinth. A life without Roger. A life of carrying on.

She stepped back.

No, there was no going backward in a labyrinth. Or life.

She made the final turn.

 

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Running on Empty

The small car snaked along the country road, its headlights the only relief from the inky dark of the cloudy autumn night. Molly squinted through the side window. “Where are we? There’s nothing out there.”

“That’s the point,” Denise answered from behind the wheel. “Back roads. Green therapy.”

“Green? All I see is black,” Molly grumbled, balling up a sweatshirt.

Denise poked her drowsy friend. “Hey! Keep an eye out for a gas station, will ya? We’re gonna have to fill up soon.” 

Molly muttered something about the ease of finding a gas station along the interstate, an argument Denise won before the trip ever started, and snuggled into her sweatshirt-pillow.

They continued over the rise and fall of hills, Molly sleeping against the window, Denise worrying over the gas gauge, the rural landscape hidden by the night. When the gas gauge slid to E, Denise checked her phone. No bars. She shook the phone, cursing under her breath. Still no reception. “Please, God,” she prayed. “All I need is one bar.”

The car rounded a bend, its headlights illuminating a sign that read “Dunce Hill, Pop. 320.” Moments later, with the fuel light glowing an angry red and the engine sputtering, Denise spotted something bright on the horizon.

“Oh, thank God,” Denise whispered when that brightness proved to be a gas station. She guided her chugging car into the station and gave her companion a shove. “Molly, break time.”

The girls didn’t have the car doors open before a young man popped up next to the station’s single pump. He greeted them with a tip of his baseball cap.

Photo by Kris-10/iStock / Getty Images
Photo by Kris-10/iStock / Getty Images

Denise did a double-take. The attendant’s button-down shirt and brown slacks seemed overly dressy for a gas station but underdressed for the bite in the autumn air.

“Evenin’, ladies,” he said. “I’m Frank. Can I fill ‘er up?”

“Um, yes, please.” Denise popped open the door to the gas cap.

Molly rounded the front of the car and studied the attendant. “You gotta bathroom I can use?” she asked.

“Yes, ma’am. Through that porch door, all the way in the back..” Frank pointed toward the only building on the lot, with a single service bay and small porch. Next to it sat a boxy black Buick in seemingly pristine condition. “It’s on the right side of the cigarette machine. Just look for Joe Camel.”

“Do I need a key?” she asked.

“No, ma’am. No point in having a public bathroom if you’re gonna lock out the public.”

“Hmmm. Wish city gas stations felt the same way.” With that, Molly jogged off.

Denise, meanwhile, watched Frank fiddle with the gas nozzle.  When the nozzle was finally secure and gas flowing into the car’s tank, Frank wiped his forehead with his sleeve. Turning to Denise, he asked, “Can I check your oil?”

Denise blinked, as much from the fumes as surprise. “Um, no, thanks.” She paused. “Why? Is something wrong?”

“No, no, nothing like that,” he said quickly. “We’re full service here at the Dunce Hill Service Station, so I have to ask.”

“Full service? Don’t see that around much anymore.”

Frank shrugged and began washing the front windshield. “So where you gals headed?”

“A friend’s wedding. We decided to take the scenic route.”

Molly returned as Denise finished her answer. She leaned over and whispered, “Should you be telling him that? We don’t even know him.”

“I didn’t tell him where the wedding is.,” Denise whispered back. “Besides, not everyone is a serial killer. You watch too many crime shows.” Feeling a chill, she pulled her hands into her sleeves and folded her arms under her chest.

Still seemingly unaffected by the cold, Frank finished the windshields and moved on to checking tire pressure. When the gas nozzle clicked, he replaced it on the pump and closed the gas cap. He turned to Denise. “That’ll be thirteen fifty six.”

Denise’s voice sharpened. “I thought you said you were going to fill the tank?”

“Yes, ma’am. I did. Twelve gallons at a dollar thirteen a gallon comes to thirteen dollars and fifty-six cents.”

Denise stared. A dollar thirteen a gallon? In the city, three dollars was considered a bargain. “Are you sure?”

Molly knocked her shoulder against Denise’s. “Don’t ask. Just pay. Then run like hell.”

Denise slid into the car. She grabbed fifteen dollars from her wallet and shoved them at Frank. “Here, keep the change.”

Molly dove into the passenger seat and slammed the door.

Starting the engine, Denise turned to Frank one more time. “Say, do you know a place around here where we can get some breakfast?”

 “Yes, ma’am. No place better than Tony’s. It’s just down the road, right in the middle of town.”

“Thanks!” Denise waved to Frank as she drove away. When she looked in the rearview mirror, though, she couldn’t find any sign of him.

“Are you nuts?” Molly hissed.

“Think about it. If gas in this town is a dollar a gallon, what’s a cup of coffee gonna be?”

“Good point.”

 

The horizon glowed yellow and orange when the girls reached the scattering of buildings that made up the town of Dunce Hill. Finding Tony’s Diner was a no-brainer. It was the only building with its interior lights on.

Photo by William Howell/iStock / Getty Images
Photo by William Howell/iStock / Getty Images

The girls settled into one of Tony’s red vinyl-upholstered booths. A waitress sidled over and set two mugs and a pair of place settings on the table. “Don’t think I’ve seen you girls before. What brings you to Tony’s?”

“Just passing through,” Denise answered. “Frank recommended it.”

The waitress turned toward the counter. “Hey, Joe! We know anyone named Frank?”

“Nah,” a voice answered from behind the cut-out kitchen window. “Don’t think so.”

“At the service station,” Molly explained. “Young guy, wears a Dunce cap—”

The waitress raised an eyebrow.

“A baseball cap. It has the word Dunce across it.”

 “And which service station did you say that was?”

 Denise pointed her thumb at the window. “The Dunce Hill Service Station up the road. Saved our butts, too, ‘cause we were riding on fumes.”

The waitress put her hand on her hip. “Honey, I hate to say this, but that station’s been closed for decades. Ain’t nobody up there now but the wildlife.”

Denise turned to her friend, feeling as pale as Molly looked. She turned back to the waitress. “How do we get to the interstate from here?”

 

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