90. Filled Stockings, Part One By MASTER WADE It wasn't a short skirt. Had she been standing on the floor rather than on the fourth rung of the library ladder I probably wouldn't have noticed her legs at all; certainly not as easily. She was reaching for a book high on the top shelf of the bookstore wall when I turned the corner, and her nylon covered calves were the first thing I saw. I stood quietly and watched her retrieve the book and come down the ladder. While the skirt wasn't short it was rather tight fitting, and as she moved the material hugged and caressed her well-shaped bottom and upper thighs, confirming in a subtle but unmistakable way my suspicions and hopes about the undergarments she wore. I smiled inwardly as in my own mind I gave her garter- belt a life and personality of its own and pictured it winking at me and saying, "Yes, you're right, I'm under here, just like you wanted me to be... and I'm glad you noticed!" I picked a book at random from the shelf nearest me, opening it and watching her as I turned the pages idly. Still unaware that I was observing her, she looked back over her shoulder as she stuck one foot slightly out to the side, checking to see if her seams were still straight. When she turned her head the other way to check the other stocking she caught me watching her and smiled with just a touch of embarrassment. Before I could even return her smile she had turned away again and had begun walking around the corner of the aisle we were in. Not wanting to appear too obvious, I waited for a moment and then followed. By the time I found her again she was at the checkout counter paying for her purchase. I also had purchases to make, but before I could work my way to the counter she had left the store and was walking away down the sidewalk. Eager to find some way to introduce myself to the attractive young woman and finding the prospect of not seeing her again totally unacceptable, it seemed to me as if the clerk moved in slow motion as she rang up my purchase. Finally the transaction was completed and I left the store, disappointed to see an empty sidewalk in front of me as I turned in the direction she had headed. I searched the stores to my left as I walked along the sidewalk, hoping to find her in one of them. I wasn't sure yet what to say to her when I did find her, but I knew for sure I didn't want to miss an opportunity to meet her. I was so caught up in my search for her that it came as a total surprise when I walked full speed into the brick divider that had somehow materialized in front of me. The impact knocked the bag of books from my hand and I stepped back in surprise, staring at the waist high divider as if I could hardly believe it was really there. I glanced around quickly, hoping that no one had seen my awkward accident. To my chagrin, not only had someone seen the whole thing, but it was the girl from the bookstore, standing behind me, her hand covering her mouth as she supressed her laughter. "Are you okay?", she asked, trying in vain not to show her amusement. "Yes, I'm alright... I think," I responded, rubbing my right leg and dusting off my slacks. "They just built that divider this morning, its never been there before." "Uh huh, sure they did. And they built all these others just like it this morning too, didn't they?", she teased, kneeling to pick up my spilled purchases. "Yes, its a very new shopping center. In fact none of these stores were here before today. Isn't it amazing how quickly they can just throw a shopping center like this together?", I said with mock seriousness, kneeling along with her to pick up the books. Her legs were slightly parted, and I tried rather half-heartedly to avoid staring between them, my friend the garter belt winking at me again and waving. "I think you must stay home with your nose in a book too much," she said, rising gracefully, "this shopping center has been here for nearly five years now, and so has this divider." "Well, I'm sure a nice lady like you wouldn't lie about a thing like that. I don't suppose there is a restuarant nearby where we could have lunch together is there?" "I don't usually have lunch with strangers. But, since your caretaker is obviously on vacation, I suppose I could stick around for a while to see if you recover from this attack of senility you seem to be having. Or did you leave your white cane and guide dog at home by mistake?" "Your voice is a bit high, but you still seem like a nice man," I said, deadpan, taking her elbow as if I were in fact blind. "Lead the way!" Lunch was very pleasant. By the time we got to the restaurant we had stopped our little word game and were busy getting to really know each other. By the time lunch was over I think we both felt as if we had known each other for a long time, at least I felt that way. Her name was Kerri, and she had a management position with the marketing department of a hosiery manufacturing company that was headquartered in the city in which we had met. It turned out that both of us were divorced, and while we had dated some, neither of us was really involved with anyone special at the moment. In fact, we were both rather dreading the coming Christmas holiday, wishing we had someone to share it with other than family. We made a date for the following Sunday, planning on spending most of the day putting up Christmas decorations in the old farm house I had recently purchased. The first snowfall of the year arrived Saturday evening just after dark, and continued throughout the night. By the time I got up Sunday morning the once productive farm had been turned into a scene out of a Currier and Ives painting. The white pines to the left of the old tobacco barn sagged under their burden of clinging snow, the bottom branches of the nearest one almost touching the sides of the sled which had at one time brimmed over with loads of freshly primed tobacco on its way to the barn for curing. The rusty tin roofs of the outbuildings on the other side of the winding driveway bore their caps of white proudly, the buildings themselves magicly transformed from relics of another time into decorated sentinels guarding the approach to the house. Slipping on old jeans and wrapping myself in a red and black mackinaw cruiser, I slid my feet into the rubber bottomed boots and brought in several armloads of fragrant, freshly-split hardwood for the fire we would enjoy the rest of the day. Touching a match to balled up sheets of newspaper, I stood back and watched absent-mindedly as the flames ignited resinous slivers of pine, lingering there momentarily before spreading to small maple branches and larger pieces of oak and ash above them. Satisfied that the fire had been built properly and would continue to burn without any assistance, I poured a cup of hot morning coffee and sat down to call my new friend. "Mornin'," I said cheerfully into the reciever. "Any snow where you live?" "Snow?", she asked sleepily. "I don't see any." "Well, perhaps not, but you're still in bed, aren't you?" "Um huh," she breathed, on the verge of drifting back into her dreams once more. "Get up sleepyhead! We have things to do today. We've got nearly eight inches of snow outside, and I'll have to come get you. You'll never make it out here in that thing you drive." "Did it really snow?", she asked, finally beginning to awaken a bit. "Yes, it really snowed. Now get out of bed and get ready. I'll be there in about an hour. Wear lots of warm clothes, 'cause its cold outside and my old truck doesn't have much of a heater." It took much longer to make the drive to Kerri's apartment than I had thought it would. I had loaded the back of the old Chevy with firewood, but still had to stop half-way up the driveway to put on chains. The main road had been scraped once, but that first trip by the snowplow had only served to make the road more slippery and I had to drive very slowly, the chains clink-clanging steadily against the back fenders along the way. Stopping in the middle of the street in front of her building, I had just begun to get out of the truck when she came through the doorway cheerfully, her long legs sheathed in tight denim, a puffy down coat hiding her shapely torso, woolen scarf casually cascading from her throat, bright red ear-muffs making her appear even more youthful than her 29 years. She spun around, her arms held out widely, dancing in the snow, obviously thrilled by the gift nature had given us. With a suddeness that one has to experience to truly understand, Kerri's dancing feet left the snow covered sidewalk simultaneously, hanging in mid-air as if waiting for her insufficiently padded bottom to land before them. It did. She sat stunned, her legs splayed out before her, the heat generated by her forceful landing competing with the cold of the snow for the attention of her abrubtly awakened nerve endings. Trying very hard not to laugh, and genuinely concerned, I hurried to her side. "Are you alright?", I asked. "Yes, I think so," she replied, reaching for her hip and rubbing it with her gloved hand. Then smiling mischeiviously and remembering my encounter with the divider at the shopping center she continued good-naturedly, "This snow wasn't here yesterday. Come to think of it, neither was this sidewalk or any of these buildings!"