Author Topic: Duty Calls Chapter 31: Vanquishing the Enemy (Completed)  (Read 36020 times)

Louise56

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 18: The Unexpected Gift
« Reply #45 on: December 16, 2012, 04:19:24 AM »
Poor Brandon, he doesn't do well with stress. I'm glad he make peace with his grandfather. :)

Offline Hazelstar

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 18: The Unexpected Gift
« Reply #46 on: December 18, 2012, 11:15:11 PM »
I was wondering if the house was gotten via the exchange or if you had built it.



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Offline Magz from Oz

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 18: The Unexpected Gift
« Reply #47 on: December 19, 2012, 02:38:42 AM »
The Sunset Valley house is Sunny Point Cottage by Judewright and Mrs Flynn and is available on the forum here

For the purposes of the story I bulldozed the house beside Gobias Koffi and placed it there.  I added the Swiftgro Gardening Stations and rearranged the plants under their range.  I added the outdoor shower and some gardens where the supernatural plants were.  I added the beehive boxes.  I added the second basement for the sauna.  I have since recoloured the exterior of the house.  See below.



I love this house.  It's great for my story although some of the smaller rooms are inconveniently positioned and sized for screenshots.  No biggie.  Only negative and it's not really a negative on the house but on my Sims, is the constant drama keeping my high free-will Sims out of that lovely pool.  But I could not recommend this house more highly.  It's superb.

The house you see in the screenshots supposed from Simfield is my house called Casa Blanco.  I have it saved into my edit town choice of house lots but I'm not smart enough to figure out how to upload it for the swap shop.   :-[
Where there is love - there is life. -- Mahatma Gandhi

My Stories:
1. Duty Calls
2. Duty Calls Sequel: Islands of Sunset Valley
3. The Lady of the Lake
4. The Secret Time Traveler

Offline Magz from Oz

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 19: On the Edge
« Reply #48 on: December 19, 2012, 05:37:47 AM »
Duty Calls Chapter 19:  On the Edge

Jamie walked into the room.  “Can you sit up please?” she asked and before I responded she whipped out a stethoscope, thermometer, tongue depressors, blood pressure tester, reflex hammer and sundry medical instruments I couldn’t name.

Jamie gave me as thorough a check up as the situation would allow.    She looked at my eyes, looked the back of my throat, took my temperature and blood pressure, felt my neck, pinched my skin and tested my reflexes.  The she put all her instruments away again.



“Okay,” she smiled taking a seat, “I think you’ll live.  You’re a bit dehydrated and your red blood cell count may be low.  Your blood pressure is a little high for someone your age and weight.  So here’s my advice:  one, increase your fluids to at least four pints of water per day and more if you do strenuous exercise or a lot of gardening.  Two, eat more foods high in iron.  Three, exercise more and four, try to de-stress.  I can help you with that.  If you’re worried about anything, we can run further tests at the hospital.”

“Thanks, but I think that’s unnecessary.  Did Chris call you?” I asked.

“No, your mother did,” she replied.

“I didn’t know you knew my mother,” I said.

“We met this morning,” Jamie answered.

“Did you confirm her pregnancy?” I asked

“Sorry, patient-doctor confidentiality,” she said.

“Really, when I’m the one she cried over half the night while she wolfed down a full tub of ice-cream?” I asked incredulously.



“Then you don’t need me to confirm anything,” she smiled.

“Well thanks for the check up Doc, it’s good to know I’m okay,” I said.

“I didn’t say that Brandon, I said you would live.  Would you prefer we talk here or would you like to come and see me at the hospital?” she asked.

“Why would I need to see you at the hospital?” I asked.

“I’m sure you know why?” Jamie replied.

“I’m okay.  I’ve just been a bit stressed lately.  Things are going to settle down now and return to normal,” I said.

“I know of someone who can help you find your new normal?” she said softly.



“I don’t need a Psychiatrist,” I scowled.

“No, you don’t,” Jamie agreed.  “You need a Clinical Psychologist or perhaps even a Psychoanalyst.  I know of a very good Psychoanalyst, Dr Simgund, who works at the GO Treatment Centre here in Sunset Valley.  I’d like to refer you to him for assessment.  Also I’d like to talk to your previous doctor who prescribed those sleeping pills for you, Dr Arthur St Clair from the Simfield Base Hospital.  Your grandfather, in fact, is that correct?”

“Obviously you know all there is to know,” I replied curtly.

The determined doctor was not put off by my rudeness.  “Oh Brandon, it’s because I don’t know everything, that I need to speak to these people.  So will you give me permission to talk to your previous physician and consult with Dr Simgund?” she asked politely.

“If I say no, will you go away and leave me alone?” I asked.

“Yes I will,” she answered, “But Chris won’t.  Nor will your parents.  Truthfully, who would you rather deal with, them or me?”  Well she had a point there.

“Oh all right then!” I replied petulantly.  “Talk to grandfather if you must, but I fail to see how Dr Simgund can help.  I don’t like talking about myself.”

06

“Oh, don’t you worry about that.” Jamie smiled.  “Sometimes, what you don’t say can be just as enlightening.  Besides when I asked you about Simfield and your interests the other day, you talked at length about your interests... cooking... books... fishing... gardening... all of which are of interest to a therapist because they can develop interventions appropriate for you.”

“Well I’m not answering any personal questions like you asked.” I said.

“Like why you’re afraid of commitment?” she said.



“I don’t have commitment issues,” I retorted, “I’m just not interested in a long term relationship at this point in time.”

“Are you interested in any relationship?” Jamie asked.

“Obviously that would be inadvisable until I sort myself out.  Don’t you think?” I asked.

“Maybe, but a strong healthy relationship is a distinct advantage for a person coping with undue stress,” Jamie replied.

“I have my family,” I replied.  “I have never needed anybody else.”

“A romantic relationship has benefits a family relationship doesn’t,” she responded evenly.

“I knew what you were alluding to, but I have no interest in anybody in particular,” I replied.

“Well, that’s a pity because I know of several young women who would like to get to know you better,” she smiled.

“But not you.” I stated neutrally.

She smiled coyly and looked down at her hands, “No, not me.  Anyway, I’m your doctor.”



“Are you Chris’s doctor too?” I asked lightly.

“No.  Dr Landgraab will be Chris’s doctor if he needs one,” she replied which gave me all the information I needed to know.

“Well, that is good news,” I replied smiling.

“Do you think so?” she asked but before I could respond her beeper went off.

“Sorry, I’ve got to go.  I’d really like to continue this conversation sometime.”  She said as she picked up her bag.  “Later” she called probably unaware that she was using Chris’s own farewell salutation.  Then with a casual wave, she too was gone.  I got up and locked the door to stop the procession of unwanted visitors.

Well I didn’t think I could nap but I did try relaxing instead.  So the doc thinks I’m a little bit stressed.  I can’t say I’m surprised.  There’s been a lot happening in the last week or so.  What with Chris skipping town, dad sending me to try to Sunset Valley to find him, mum and dad splitting up and mum coming to Sunset Valley, dad arriving here like a bolt out of the blue, moving house, being told mum and dad might have been in the Casino when it was hit by a meteor, thinking they were because they were stuck in a tomb and incommunicado, mum and dad getting back together and remarrying and now expecting a baby sister or brother. 

Yep, I’d say I was likely to be stressed.  Okay, make that highly likely to be stressed.  Fine… I’ll admit it.  The reality is that I’m strung out like Christmas lights.  I cry like a baby; which is embarrassing, I’m excitable, jumpy, anxious and irritable.  Chris thinks I’m indecisive and childish.  Even my mother thinks I’m in denial.  The truth is I’m probably one nerve twitch away from a total nervous breakdown.

But I don’t want to go to see any shrink.  I used to read Grandpa Arthur’s medical journals whenever he left them lying around the house.  Since I’m a bookworm, I’ll read anything.  I recall a couple of articles about stress.  I know that excessive stress is the condition a person feels when they think they’ve lost control of events.  Control?  Only a fortnight ago, I was a teen spare in an Immortal Dynasty.  When in the blue blazes did I ever have control over anything!  Except my plants and sometimes I think they control me!

Oh crikey!  I forgot the bees.  I quietly unlocked my door but there were no voices coming up from downstairs.  The house was silent again.  I found the quiet slightly unnerving.  I went downstairs and the first thing I saw was that dratted fridge.  I went right up to it.  There’s a note with a magnet on it! 

The note is from mum to say she, dad and Chris are going to a party and not to wait up.  Emboldened by Mum’s rebellion over the magnet embargo, I opened that fridge and grabbed the first plate of leftovers.  Yay... success...  I can lick this stress thing.  After eating some dinner, I went to the garden to tend to the bees.  I’d just finished the second hive when my cell phone rang.

Agnes Crumplebottom wants a date.  Seriously! At the graveyard at this time of the evening!  It’s too early for deathfish.  Well now I have the opportunity to at least take some control over my life.  I decided to meet with Agnes and sort that impossible woman out once and for all...



Where there is love - there is life. -- Mahatma Gandhi

My Stories:
1. Duty Calls
2. Duty Calls Sequel: Islands of Sunset Valley
3. The Lady of the Lake
4. The Secret Time Traveler

Louise56

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 19: On the Edge
« Reply #49 on: December 19, 2012, 06:00:49 AM »
Poor guy! He didn't sound well at all.
A date at the graveyard? That can't be to romantic lol.

Offline Magz from Oz

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 20: Control?
« Reply #50 on: December 20, 2012, 03:30:47 PM »
Duty Calls Chapter 20:  Control?

I have to admit that it disturbs me somewhat that Agnes asks to meet me in such, shall we say, uninspiring locations, first the fire station and now the graveyard.  It’s almost like she’s taking great pains not to be seen with me yet at the same time, she’s the one asking for the date.  Clandestine is not my style.  Okay... admittedly I don’t yet have a style, but I’m sure if I was going to go to the trouble of asking a girl on a date, you can be sure I’d want the rest of civilisation to know I wanted to be with her.

In line with my new determination to take control of my life, I decided to start as I meant to go on.  “Agnes,” I began. “Why are we meeting at the graveyard at this time of night?  It’s not exactly the most idyllic of places.”



“Oh Brandon,” she smiled, “I just got off work and I sometimes come here for the solitude.  It’s actually a private and pleasant place to be before the ghosts appear.”

“Well Agnes, for me it’s just plain creepy.” I said, “I come here to fish for the deathfish and nothing else.  Can we go somewhere less scary?”

“Um... I’d... I’d... rather not,” she stammered.

“May I ask why?” I asked, slightly exasperated but nonetheless, intrigued.

“Because people talk about me, and I’d rather not put you through the rumour mill just yet.” She said looking at her feet.



“What do people say about you?” I asked, now really intrigued.

“Um... are you sure you want to hear all this now?” she whispered, her words faltering.

“Yeah sure why not?” I replied. “After all, we have tons of privacy.”

She stood in front of me silently struggling with her words for the longest time and then cleared her throat.  “Um... well you’ve probably heard that my family, the Crumplebottoms, have been here in Sunset Valley for a long time.  Before the Landgraabs and before the Altos, the Goths and Crumplebottoms had been the preeminent families here.  Almost everything we do is news.  Did you know my older sister Cornelia is married to Gunther Goth?” She looked up at me and I nodded in response.



“Well to cut a long story short, everyone expected me to marry very well.  But instead, I married a new townie.  He had no money and no breeding but he was sweet and fun to be with.  The private wedding was a total spur of the moment thing and some people were just plain nasty.  Some said he was a gold digger and others watched my waistline almost as if they expected me to pop out a nooboo any second."

Agnes looked around as if the memories were too painful and I speculated whether his gravestone was nearby or at the Goth house.  Then she continued with a voice barely above a whisper.  “We’d planned this super life together but Erik drowned on our honeymoon.”  I knew Agnes was a widow but I hadn’t heard that bit.



Agnes signed deeply and continued, “As if the hasty wedding wasn’t enough grist for the rumour mill, it went into overdrive with Erik’s untimely death.  The coroner ruled an accidental drowning so nobody accused me outright of foul play, but I was subjected to the worst public backlash this town has ever seen.  The metaphorical drawing aside of skirts when the ladies of town saw me coming.  The young men in the town, who previously tried regularly to date me actually ran away if I approached.”  I was so enthralled by her story, I became angry on her behalf for all the mean things people did and said to her.  She held her hand up to stop me interrupting her story.

“Please let me finish.” She said putting her fingertips to my lips and I felt this odd frisson of tingles down my spine which so startled me, I nearly missed her next words.  “It was embarrassing and dreadful.  The very friends I expected to rally around me in my time of need almost accused me of murder.  Only my sister and her husband stood by me.  The power wielded by the Goths was still strong enough in those days, that the town gossips stopped short of outright slander.”



“I thought about leaving town.  I have some cousins in another town and they asked me to go there, but Cornelia was pregnant and I wanted to be involved in my new niece or nephew’s life.  I thought I would never marry again and my dream of motherhood seemed to be a pipe dream.” The wistfulness in her voice as she spoke about motherhood should have had me running for the hills, but I was fascinated by her story.

“Gradually over time, when I didn’t leave town and didn’t date, people stopped treating me like a leper.  There’s always some new item for the town’s busybodies, like poor Clair Ursine.  But even to this day, any time I so much as talk to a young man the whispers return.  When I first met your brother, people began pairing us together and I know for a fact, that at least three people warned him to learn to swim.”

“Oh that is dreadful!  How dare they!”  I was so indignant, I forgot she asked me not to speak.



“Oh you do understand!  You’re so nice.” she said relieved.  “This is why I asked you to meet me at unusual locations.  I guess you’ve heard I’m a bit of a loner and a tad grumpy?” I nodded a response.  “The truth is I’m not, it’s a persona I developed to cope with the situation and encourage people to leave me alone.”

“So why are you making an exception in my case?  You’ve rung asking for a date more than half a dozen times,” I asked.



“Because there’s something about you, I can’t explain it, and I know this sounds silly, but it’s like some invisible force has control of me.  I hear a voice inside my head that tells me it’s time for me to stick my neck out and take a chance on you,” her eyes pleading with me to understand.

“Okay, I do understand why we’re meeting here.  And Agnes, please accept my condolences for your loss, and believe me, you didn’t deserve that sort of treatment by your friends and neighbours.  But before you go pinning any hopes of a relationship on me, let me tell you I’m not the man you think I am.”



It was my turn to look at my feet. “I’m about as flawed as any man can be.  I’m erratic and indecisive.  I’m not sweet or fun to be around.  Chris thinks I’m childish and irrational.  I’m all that and worse.  So I’m certainly no knight in shiny armour to sweep away all your worries.”



“So why did you accept my request for a date?” she asked clearly puzzled.

“I came primarily to take some sort of control over my life.  To make a stand and become proactive instead of reactive.  Since you have been so open about everything, I should tell you that my doctor recommends psychological counselling to help me get a grip on my life.  I’m reliably informed that I don’t take stress very well and the last few weeks have been incredibly stressful for me.”

“Yes I heard all about your parents being stuck in a tomb in France when everyone believed that they had been killed by a meteor.  Then they came home and remarried at a private ceremony at the Serenity Retreat and are now expecting a nooboo,” she said softly.

“Where did you hear all that?” I asked concerned.

“The whole town has been talking about it since yesterday.  I got a call from Cornelia earlier this evening.  She’s at the Landgraab’s party with Chris and your parents and she told me about your mother expecting.  I wondered why you weren’t at the party celebrating with your parents,” she said.  I was so astounded I couldn’t say anything.

“Please understand that I know what it’s like to be the prime subject for the town gossips and I wanted to offer you my help,” she replied touching my arm.  While I was incensed that the whole town seemed to know all about my family’s most personal business, I was equally annoyed that once again, I felt those little tingles where her fingers touched my arm.

“Look, I’m sorry that you’re going through a rough patch and I’m distressed that your family has fallen victim to the town’s insatiable gossip mill.  I’ve more experience with this type of thing than you, and the Goth influence still carries some sway in the important matters in this town.  Will you believe me that I’d like to help?"

I felt as if my knees were buckling and grabbed Agnes’s hand to steady myself.  Maybe I held her hand too tight, I don’t know, but before I was conscious of what was happening, she had her arms around me.  I was trying to formulate words but I couldn’t and I held onto Agnes like she was my personal lifeline to reality.



Slowly I became aware that her face was wet with tears.  Then reality began disappearing.  I was sure I simply intended to raise my hand to brush those tears away but kissed them away instead. 



Tasting the saltiness of her tears was the most personal connection I’d ever had with a woman.  But just like Agnes who said she felt manipulated like a puppet, I knew I had to kiss her.



Then she kissed me back.  Her kisses were electrifying and the hairs on the back of my neck stood up.  I was drawn into more of her intoxicating kisses and soon we were making out.

Those kisses became hot and heavy and who knows where this would have ended up if it weren’t for the ghosts interrupting us with cat calls.



We sprang apart but before I could muster the words to ask her to go somewhere else with me, she said she had to go.  As she ran away, in the lamplight, I saw a new flood of tears course down her flushed face...



Oh Brandon, I chastised myself, you moron!  That’s not how you take control of anything!
Where there is love - there is life. -- Mahatma Gandhi

My Stories:
1. Duty Calls
2. Duty Calls Sequel: Islands of Sunset Valley
3. The Lady of the Lake
4. The Secret Time Traveler

Offline JudesSims

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Duty Calls Chapter 20: Control?
« Reply #51 on: December 20, 2012, 03:39:14 PM »
Excellent! Can't wait for the next chapter!



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Offline RaiaDraconis

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 20: Control?
« Reply #52 on: December 20, 2012, 06:06:23 PM »
That was excellent! Beautiful, yet sad. I love the way that you have described Agnes's plight, as well as Brandon's reaction.

Louise56

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 20: Control?
« Reply #53 on: December 21, 2012, 05:16:37 AM »
I love the update! Can't wait too see what happen between those two. :)

Offline Magz from Oz

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 21: The Assessment
« Reply #54 on: December 21, 2012, 07:06:07 AM »
Duty Calls Chapter 21:  The Assessment



I called a cab to take me home.  In the cab I was mentally kicking myself for all the stupid moves I’d made and yet at the same time, bewildered by my still tingling lips and wonderful feeling and taste of Agnes’s lips against mine.  I just had to close my eyes and the heady scent of her hair filled my nostrils and exciting feel of her body pressed up against mine was back with sledgehammer force.  I’d been kissed before.  But never like that! 

I needed to talk to someone but the only one up when I arrived home was Chris, who seemed to be waiting up.  “Where have you been?” he asked clearly annoyed.



“I went to the graveyard” I replied truthfully.

“Did you catch any more deathfish?” he asked.

“No, the ghosts were too distracting,” I responded which was not untrue.  Trying to divert attention from my activities, I said, “I had a visit from Jamie earlier.”

“I noticed”, was all he said in response.

“Well, you might be interested to know that she’s not the least bit interested in me romantically, as she considers herself to be my doctor.  However she specifically said she is not your doctor,” I said evenly.

“Really?” he exclaimed.  “You two talked about me?”

“No you drongo, we talked about me!  But just when the conversation turned to you, she had an emergency at the hospital.  So I think if she’s the lady you’re interested in, your feelings are not as unrequited as you think.” I responded.



“Since when have you been an expert on love?” he retorted.

“Just like you, I’m finding out the hard way.” I replied.  “I need a shower.  Goodnight.”  I headed to the ground floor bathroom/ laundry so my shower wouldn’t wake mum and dad.

“Yeah, later!” he responded which had me smiling as I left him standing in the kitchen.  But when I finished my shower and put the laundry on, I noticed Chris was sitting at the dining table writing a letter.



“Don’t you have a 5:00 a.m. wake up call for work in a couple of hours?” I asked.

“Yep” he replied not looking up.  I didn’t know how to respond to that.  He’s a grown man and if he falls asleep on the job, I’m sure Jack Bunch will sort him out well and truly.

“Okay, night,” I said.

“Yep” he replied again not looking up.  I went to bed and slept well, dreaming lots of dreams about absurd things and not one of Agnes or the searing kisses we’d exchanged.



When I went downstairs to breakfast, there was another note appended to the fridge with a strawberry shaped magnet.  My mother was having a field day, doing exactly as she wanted with that fridge now it was in her house!  “Shopping.  Back for lunch.” mum wrote.

I grabbed a plate of leftovers and ate a solitary breakfast.  I had obviously licked that conflict with the refrigerator.  Maybe mum’s capricious use of the magnets made it seem more her fridge and not Dynasty Founder Anthony’s. 



I planned to spend the day at the library, studying to improve my cooking skill, but while I was washing up my plate, my phone rang.  It was Doctor Jamie.  If I could come now, Dr Simgund agreed to see me but at the hospital and not the GO Treatment Centre.  I told her I was on my way. 

While I had expressed a reluctance to go through with this process, after last night, I felt I owed it to Agnes to sort myself out and stop being such a jerk.  I appended a message on mum’s note that I would be out for lunch, and went to the hospital to meet with Dr Simgund. 



I somehow expected a gruff facsimile of Grandfather Arthur who would ask me a barrage of questions.  But instead found a gentle, softly spoken, unassuming man who asked me my opinion about everyday things like books, paintings, houses, cars, school, work and people.  We talked until his stomach started to grumble and I looked around for a clock.  His office didn’t have one so I surreptitiously looked at my watch.  We’d been talking for hours.  He must have noticed me looking at my watch and said, he was hungry, how about we do lunch at the hospital cafeteria.

We went downstairs to the cafeteria and ate a tasteless autumn salad which had seen better days.  We talked about how bland hospital food generally is and he told me how much he missed Austrian cuisine.  We talked about his days in Vienna and when we began attracting strange looks from others in the cafeteria, we returned to the office he had been using.  We talked late into the afternoon when an alarm went off on his pocket watch.  He stood and said how much he enjoyed out little chat and that he looked forward to seeing me again.



I left the hospital and thought how very civilized it all had been.  I didn’t feel like I’d been assessed or analysed and especially didn’t feel like I’d been psychoanalysed.  I went home to find Chris already home from work and pacing the floor with his cell phone pressed to his ear.  He looked up at me as I entered and held up his hand in acknowledgement but didn’t hang up.  “Garden,” I said to which he nodded and gave me a thumbs-up signal and continued with his phone call.

Tending the garden, I remembered something Dr Simgund said, that plants were restful as they had neither emotions nor conflicts.  While that’s true they have needs and demand a lot of attention.  The bees also demand a lot of my time and effort.  Nevertheless, I enjoy the silent demands placed on me by plants and bees because their needs are so easily understood.



As I tended the garden I felt a certain triumph about the events of today.  If this was all there was to psychoanalyses then I was going to be comfortable with the process.  Dr Simgund’s counselling, if indeed that’s what it was, came in the manner of observations, rather than advice on courses of action.  He told me that a man should not strive to eliminate his complexes but to understand them, since they serve as the basis for our conduct and desires.  The mere mention of desires had me thinking about last night and flushing bright red which that ever observant man, duly noted.

We did talk about love and women.  However, I felt reassured that my total lack of understanding of women was not a flaw reserved for myself alone.  Dr Simgund assured me that even after decades of research into the feminie soul, he was yet to answer the universal question, “What does a woman want?”  When we talked about love and relationships, he said he believed love was one of the cornerstones of humanity but that people were rarely crazier or so vulnerable than when they were in love. 

Well that certainly explained a lot about dad but I sincerely doubted that my craziness the evening before had anything to do with love as the root cause, more likely stupidity, anxiety and just plain old hormones.  Not to mention my first experience with kisses that are so addictive, I couldn’t get enough.  I was so distracted by that thought, I wasn’t paying attention to what I was doing and disturbed a bee pollinating a plant and was stung.  Ouch!



Dr Simgund said man should not waste his intellect and energies on problems that had no answers.  He said man would unravel the mysteries of the universe before he moved one inch closer to understanding women.  My familiarity with women was too limited to make a valid judgement.  However, based on my experience of great-great-grandmother Annette, mum and now Agnes, it did seem to be true.

Dr Simgund talked about his theory of psychic energy and how he believed that, like the energy of our bodies, the energy of the mind expended to solve problems and regulate our actions was not limitless.  He said that unless I let go of some issues, I would overwhelm my mind’s ability to rationally process information and situations.  Now that made a whole lot more sense than his talk about women.  Sometimes I just felt so overwhelmed with everything and one more problem has been like the proverbial straw breaking the camel’s back.

Dr Simgund said I had to learn which problems were within my control and which ones weren’t.  He gave me lots of pointers in solving problems by picking them apart to find the root issue and then working forward by asking myself “what if” as I considered each issue to solve the problem.

I asked him what to do about problems outside my control.  He said to understand I had no control over them specifically but I could control their effect on me.  He asked me if I was angry when it rained.  I told him no, it might mess up my plans for the day but I had an umbrella and that ultimately rain was good for the plants.  He said the weather was out of my control but I hoped for the best, planned for the worst and saw that some good can come from adverse situations.  It was an interesting metaphor but he obviously didn’t know about the new lifetime reward for a Climatron Control Unit.

Then he enigmatically said that time spent with cats is never wasted.  I didn’t know if he was alluding to yet another uncontrollable situation or the general use of pets as therapy.  Perhaps he meant uncontrollable in that most of my friends attest to the fact, that cats have staff while dogs have masters.  Maybe I should get a cat.  We’ve never had a pet and there are enough strays that turn up at the gate almost every day.  On second thoughts, perhaps not or at least, not yet, cats have emotions and conflicts and are far more demanding than mere plants.



Finished in the garden, I was thinking about a swim rather than the shower when my cell phone rang.  Agnes wants to meet me at the Bistro, could I please meet her there?  Yes I could.  A meeting at a very public place, I wondered whether that meant that I’ve been forgiven for being such a schmuck last night.  Time for a quick shower, shave and shampoo and to find out…



Where there is love - there is life. -- Mahatma Gandhi

My Stories:
1. Duty Calls
2. Duty Calls Sequel: Islands of Sunset Valley
3. The Lady of the Lake
4. The Secret Time Traveler

Offline RaiaDraconis

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 20: Control?
« Reply #55 on: December 21, 2012, 04:51:24 PM »
Bees and plants are much easier to understand than people. :P

Offline Magz from Oz

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 22: Agnes - Bold and Beautiful
« Reply #56 on: December 22, 2012, 07:28:11 AM »
Duty Calls Chapter 22:  Agnes – Bold and Beautiful

I worried about what to wear and decided it was getting too cool for my usual clothes so I wore jeans instead.  I arrived only a few minutes later than I said I’d be, but thankfully Agnes was not in sight.  Then I saw my very pregnant mum seated with dad and a woman I didn’t know.  I had momentarily forgotten all about mum being pregnant.  She looked amazing and glowing with pride over her burgeoning tummy.  Mum saw me and stood up.  She waved to me to sit down beside her and I did, kissing mum’s cheek in greeting first before turning to their guest to introduce myself.



The mystery woman was none other than Agnes and she looked... smashing!  She’s changed her clothes and her hair and her makeup!  No wonder I didn’t recognise her.  Suddenly I felt very nervous.  I didn’t know mum and dad knew Agnes.  Oh God, did Agnes tell them I’d been such an idiot last night.  I looked at Agnes for clues but shouldn’t have.  Agnes was wearing, or should I say almost wearing, the skimpiest of dresses.  I didn’t know where to look!  Hooray for Hollywood tape.  Eye contact! Brandon, I kept telling myself... eye contact!



I looked intently at mum and dad but they didn’t show any disapproval in their faces.  In fact they were beaming.  I thought, that can’t be good!  Dad made small talk about the weather and I just couldn’t look anywhere but at my hands which were starting to sweat.  Mum tried to include me in their chatter but I responded in monosyllables.  Agnes wasn’t helping,  She didn’t say anything,  I was tongue tied and I rubbed my sweaty palms on my jeans.

After all the chitchat about the weather dried up, in a tight voice I asked if they were joining us for dinner.  Dad said they were just heading home, as the evening chill was not good for mum.  I smothered an obvious sigh of relief.



I waved them goodbye and then looked at Agnes for clues.  Eye contact!  Brandon I reminded myself.  She’s going to catch a chill in that dress!  “Do you want to eat alfresco or go indoors?” I asked Agnes stumbling over my words.  I wasn’t sure I could swallow a bite I was that nervous.

“Inside.  It’s getting awfully crowded out here,” she replied.  I went to hold her chair but she already stood up.  Oh good, I thought, we’d change into formal wear to go inside but to my dismay Agnes was already dressed in formal wear.  Not good!  Eye contact Brandon!  We went inside.  Agnes was obviously well known to the maitre‘d as we were seated at one of the nicer tables with a view out over the bay.  Agnes ordered the Aloo Masala Curry but I played it safe and ordered the fish and chips. 

While we waited for our meals, I tried to think of some small talk but my mind was a blank.  “Nice view isn’t it” I said covertly rubbing my sweaty hands along my trousers.  Then I began fiddling with the table centrepiece.  Agnes leaned across the table and took my hand and held it.  Eye contact Brandon!  “Do I make you that nervous?” she asked concern deepening her voice.

“No!” I choked, that dress sure does!  “Yes!  No!”  sigh “Yes!” heavy sigh...  “I wanted to see you and apologise for being such a jerk last night but seeing mum and dad threw me.  I’m sorry Agnes, I didn’t mean to frighten you last night.  I don’t know how all that happened.”  I looked at the uncertainty on her face.  “Please say you forgive me.” I pleaded.

“Do you regret kissing me? Me kissing you back? Or that you wanted me to?” she asked her voice barely a whisper through trembling lips.

“No, no and no,” I replied searching her face and hoping my answer didn’t upset her more.  “I regret that I got so carried away.  As I said last night, I’m something of a mental basket case and I had no right to start something like that just now.  And after you took such pains to maintain your privacy, I acted so inappropriately and in front of ghosts who are terrible gossips too, you know.  Do you forgive me?”

“You weren’t the only one kissing in that graveyard last night, you know.  You put yourself down a lot, don’t you Brandon?” she asked, her voice had a harder edge to it.

I looked down at my hand still captured firmly by hers on the table and shrugged, “Sometimes it’s hard to buck the trend.” I responded ambiguously.

She gripped my hand hard and her nails bit into my palms.  “That part of your life is over, Brandon… new town… new life.  There’s nobody here to whom you’re a burden or a nuisance.” She said with a firm voice.

“There’s Chris,” I said neutrally.

“Brother’s don’t count.” She admonished.  “Siblings are always there to keep you grounded but I’m sure he’s more concerned for your welfare than you give him credit for.  Your mum and dad seem lovely.  I can’t believe Audrey’s your mother, she looks like a sister.”

“Um… well she used her lifetime reward points to get a Young Again potion,” I replied not sure where this was going but Agnes still hadn’t answered my question.  I decided I had to stop looking at my hand because then whenever I lifted my gaze to her face, I got an eyeful of that oh so revealing dress. 

Our waiter came and my belief that this Bistro couldn’t actually ruin a simple recipe like fish and chips was ill-founded.  The fish was overdone and the chips were almost crisps.  I could never work here, I decided.  My pride in my cooking wouldn’t allow it.  Judging my Agnes’s cough, the curry wasn’t much better.

Over dinner, Agnes asked me about books I’d read.  I learned we both had a fondness for whodunits with relatively low body counts.  Blood and gore was not to either of our liking.  Horror, no.  Science Fiction, yes.  Drama, yes.  Historical, yes.  She liked romance and biographies and I liked fantasy.

We could have talked all night about books.  It’s a nice safe topic.  But as the restaurant started to fill up, Agnes became edgy.  I wondered if it was because of her loner trait or that she was being seen in public with a man.  But this was her choice, I reminded myself.  We were getting quite a lot of people staring but I’m certain that dress had to bear some of the blame.

To ease her discomfiture a little, I asked Agnes, “Where did you meet my mother and father?”

“At Barney’s Salon and Tattoo.” She said flushing, “Your mother was selecting a new wardrobe for your father and my sister works there.  We started chatting and your mother remarked on my unusual lipstick colour and how men didn’t know how to launder clothes with lipstick stains.”  I think I groaned aloud at that.

“When I knew that your mother knew whose lipstick was on your shirt, I was terrified, but she was so sweet.  She didn’t talk about it again, but she did spill the beans on everything about you.” Agnes said coyly.  I know I groaned out loud because heads turned from everywhere.

“Have you finished?” I asked.

“Yes, well as much as I care to.”  I signalled for the waiter and asked for the bill.  He asked if we’d care to see the desert trolley but we declined, my stomach was having second thoughts about the fish. 

“Just one more question.” I said, “Did my mother pick out that dress for you?

“No,” she said ruefully, “My sister.  Don’t you like it?”

“I love it but I’m not sure it’s you.” I replied carefully selecting my words.

“Oh, me too.” Agnes responded.  “But sisters, you know.  Sometimes you have to humour them.  It’s from the Date Night range.  My sister said it was great dress for a date.  Your mother said she was sorry she couldn’t fit into it.”  Yeah right, I thought, then dear old dad would be the candidate for a heart attack instead of me.

When I paid the bill I added a sizable tip that was no indication of the quality of the service or the food, but just my haste to get out of the restaurant.

As we walked out of the restaurant, there were a lot of people outside and I wanted to take off my jacket to cover Agnes but she stunned me by pulling me into an amorous hug in front of everybody! 



I was just about to ask if she was cold when she asked if I would like to go dancing.  I thought that’s a great idea.  The Grind is a nice dark albeit crowded place but instead she drove us to the Recurve Strand.  There wasn’t anyone there but the bartender. 

“Can I get you a drink?” I asked.

“No I just want to dance and she grabbed my hand and pulled me out to the centre of the dance floor.  We started a slow dance and for a few moments everything was perfect. 



Then she nestled closer into my body and I lost concentration and stood on her foot.



I was mortified but she brushed aside my apologies.



We began dancing again and it was wonderful.  I could have danced all night just holding her in my arms. 



I wondered if she’d be getting cold but I could feel the heat of her body against my hand.  All too soon the music stopped and the bartender called last drinks. 

I didn’t want to let this magic of the evening end but it was really late.  Agnes slowly pulled away from my arms and held my hands for the longest time.



“Um I think I’ll walk home, Agnes.  I had the best evening.  Goodnight.”

“Wait! Brandon, don’t I get a kiss goodnight?” she asked.



I leaned in for a chaste kiss but she wrapped her arms around me and kissed me with a long slow burning kiss that was just as treacherous as the searing kisses of last evening.  Then she held my head and looked into my eyes.



When she asked me to go steady, I was incapable of speech but I nodded. 



Or at least, I think I nodded because she kissed me again and again and again. 



Just when my resolve was crumbling, she pulled away.  Gulping air into my aching lungs, I was totally unprepared for what she did next...



Where there is love - there is life. -- Mahatma Gandhi

My Stories:
1. Duty Calls
2. Duty Calls Sequel: Islands of Sunset Valley
3. The Lady of the Lake
4. The Secret Time Traveler

Louise56

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 22: Agnes - Bold and Beautiful
« Reply #57 on: December 22, 2012, 11:34:50 AM »
Poor Brandon, he did have a hard time with Agnes's dress. It was so adorable. I hope he said yes and don't chicken out.

Offline RaiaDraconis

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 22: Agnes - Bold and Beautiful
« Reply #58 on: December 22, 2012, 12:09:34 PM »
Talk about grabbing the bull by the horns. Way to go Agnes!

Something about Brandon's character, though, seems to tell me that he won't accept right away...

Offline Magz from Oz

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Re: Duty Calls Chapter 23: Confusion Reigns
« Reply #59 on: December 23, 2012, 09:15:11 PM »
Duty Calls Chapter 23:  Confusion Reigns



I walked home in a daze.  How I managed not to fall over and break an ankle astounded me.  Just then I remembered Agnes in those dainty strappy shoes and hoped she fared okay.  I should have walked her to her car at least.  What was I thinking?  Where were my manners?  Probably as absent as my grey matter!

Only away from the mesmerising sight and smell and the incredible feel of Agnes and her oh so intoxicating kisses, did my mind begin functioning again.  I’m sure I clearly recall Agnes down on one knee in front of me with a ring in her hand.  Or do I?  What is more disturbing is that my next memory was stumbling over a tuft of grass in the sand dunes.  The time in between was a total blank.  Did what I think just happened... actually happen?

Did Agnes really propose or was that just an illusion, or worse, a delusion?  But more importantly, if she did propose, did I accept?  I don’t know.  I... just... don’t... know!  I felt that awful panic rising in me.  I tried to remember Dr Simgund’s advice.  Break a problem down into little pieces.   But for the life of me I couldn’t.  I didn’t know where to start!



Think logically Brandon, I chastised myself.  My memory was a blank but my senses weren’t.  I felt my face and while my cheeks were hot and flushed, they didn’t sting.  Obviously Agnes didn’t slap me.  But would she have slapped me if I’d said no.  Probably not, she would have just run away crying.  Did she run away crying?  Is that why I didn’t walk her to her car?  I don’t know. 

I felt my lips but they were useless at providing clues.  They were still tingling from Agnes’s onslaught of kisses so all that touching my lips did, was bring back memories of Agnes’s passionate kisses that burned their way into my very soul. 



I felt my hands and while my palms were no longer sweaty, my fingertips were like ice.  Interestingly, I couldn’t feel my hands freezing.  It’s not quite autumn so this is not symptomatic of frostbite.  Then I remembered Grandfather Arthur telling me those symptoms could be stress induced.  My brain was shutting down extraneous bodily functions to activate the fight or flight response.

Is that what I did?  Flight?  Would I have just cut and run?  Possibly.  But before or after I answered her proposal.  Again either is possible.  How do I find out?  I can’t just ring her and say, “Hey Agnes, did you just propose and what was my answer?”



Reaching my house I was reluctant to go in.  Was anybody up?  I looked up and the ground floor was ablaze with lights.  Yep, someone’s up.  Knowing my luck they’re all up. 



Right now would be a good time to get out Great-Grandfather Andrew’s miner and dig a hole, climb in and hope someone fills it in after me.

I think I need to see Dr Simgund again.  I entered the quiet house and called out if anybody was home.



“Hey night owl,” Chris called, “I’m in here.  What’s up?”

I walked into the lounge room and he was reading a book which he put it down on my approach.  I scanned the cover, “Baby Incoming: Preparing with a Vigilance”.  Odd choice for a single man.  I raised my eyebrows in question.



“Don’t look at me like that, it was on the coffee table when I came in here to think.  Dad’s in the basement creating a racket sculpting and mum’s asleep upstairs.” Chris said with a shrug.

“So twins again huh?” I said.

“Looks like,” he agreed.



“So is that why you needed space to think?” I asked.

He looked at me for ages noting my still flushed face, then sighed heavily.  “No lame brain, I came in here to think and saw that.  What’s got you hot under the collar?”

“Date with Agnes.” I replied which wasn’t untrue.

“Why are you dating her?  I thought you didn’t want to date any of the horde of townies who send you love letters by the dozen,” Chris asked.



“I didn’t want to, but you and Jamie encouraged me to get out more.  I thought I’d ask her to leave me alone, but, you know, Agnes is actually very sweet once you get to know her?” I said.

“I already told you that.  But I also told you that she has the Hopeless Romantic trait.  She wants to be in love and you could wind up married to her before you know what you’re doing and you’ll be wanting this” he said picking up that book and flinging it at me.  I blushed scarlet. 



“Oh... my... God!  You... didn’t!” he said with his voice rising half an octave and a full decibel with each word.

I couldn’t look at him, “I don’t think so,” I mumbled.



“What!  You don’t think so!  Don’t you know?” he shouted.

I shook my head.  “I don’t remember, Chris,” my voice trembled with tears.  I looked up into his shocked face.  I ran my finger through my hair.  “It’s all a blank.” I replied glumly.



“You want to tell me what you do remember?  Let’s start from the top.  When did you start dating Agnes again?” he inquired.

I told him everything about the previous evening at the graveyard and this evening.  When I finished I felt hollow, absolutely gutted and Chris looked stunned. 



He sat and thought for a moment.  “Okay, first thing you do is establish whether you’re engaged.  So ring Agnes, it’s late, sure, but say you’re just checking that she got home alright.  Put your cell phone on speaker and I’ll try to pick up cues.”  I fumbled with the phone so much that Chris grabbed it out of my shaking hands and searching the phone list, dialled the number.  Then he put it on the coffee table in front of me.  It began ringing and ringing.  She answered just before the message bank kicked in.

“Hello darling,” she said. “Sorry I just ran a bath when I heard the phone ringing.  I wasn’t going to answer it until I saw your caller ID.” My mind froze at the mental image but every sweat gland in my body went into overdrive.  If I’d been holding that wretched phone, I’d have dropped it for sure. 



“Hi Agnes,” I gulped, “I was just calling to check that you got home okay.”

“Oh you’re so sweet,” she cooed.  “I promise I’ll wear a different dress for our date tomorrow night.  How about we make it a picnic instead?  I don’t think my stomach can take a Bistro meal two nights in a row.  Can you meet me after work and we can go to Performance Park from there?”

“Yeah sure,” I said with images of that dress floating past my eyes, images of Agnes taking it off for a bath had me hot and flushed all over again.

“Goodnight darling.  I love you,” she whispered making kissing sounds.

“Ditto.  Goodnight sweetheart,” I replied momentarily forgetting Chris and just lost in her seductive voice until Chris reached across to end the phone call.

“Congratulations, Brandon, you’re engaged,” Chris said handing me back my phone.



I groaned.

Where there is love - there is life. -- Mahatma Gandhi

My Stories:
1. Duty Calls
2. Duty Calls Sequel: Islands of Sunset Valley
3. The Lady of the Lake
4. The Secret Time Traveler

 

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