Timewarp: Las Mañanitas! (Mike)
Aug 30, 2014 14:27:54 GMT -5
Post by Nora Marie "Nory" Gwinn on Aug 30, 2014 14:27:54 GMT -5
March 31, 2017
Nory was determined to make this a surprise. She parked her car a block away from Mr. Batista's house and selected the best approach for stealth. This began with sneaking into his front lawn via the next door neighbor's shrubs to avoid being spotted from inside. Thankfully she was practiced in covertly exploring property (Adam called it trespassing), and she knew Mike's house extremely well. She approached the front door from the bedroom side, which was farthest from the kitchen and had the fewest number of windows. Once she rounded the corner of the square bedroom, she dodged underneath the windows and clambered up the side of the front porch. Having gained the door, she paused for a moment to catch her breath. Her bright red bellhop costume and large acoustic guitar had made the process more difficult than she expected.
Nory had been attending Greenview Community College for a full semester now. The plan was to get her AA and then decide if she wanted to continue at a four-year university after that. By that point Adam's teaching contract at Hammel would be finished, and either or both of them could relocate as they saw fit. Presently Nory was enrolled full-time (General Anthropology, Intro to Theater, and Inorganic Chemistry) and lived in a house with five other girls, two cats and a hedgehog. She loved the freedom of college life, and just when she thought it couldn't get any better Adam and her dad bought her a car as a joint graduation gift.
But with her new found independence came responsibilities, responsibilities that required money, and so Nory began job hunting. By Christmas she still hadn't found anything and was starting to get desperate, and then she spotted an ad for Pink Confetti Singing Telegrams in the back of a local paper. Did it have any benefits, health insurance or discounts? No. Did it pay enough to fill up her car once a month? Barely. But it left plenty of time for school and she was getting paid to do something she was good at and would have happily done for free.
Today's visit was on her own time. It was Mr. Batista's birthday, and she would not let the occasion pass without celebration. So she straightened her droopy sombrero, checked her face paint in the shiny bronze letterbox, and adjusted the guitar. Then she readied her fingers on the G chord she had learned last week and rang the doorbell.