More Than

A Kiss

 

 

Saxon Bennett and

Layce Gardner

This is a work of fiction.  Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors’ imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

Published by Square Pegs Ink

Text Copyright © Saxon Bennett and Layce Gardner

All right reserved.  This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without the authors’ permission.

Editor:  Kate Michael Gibson

Katemichaelgibson.com


Jordan Falls Out a Window

 

This story takes place in the lovely state of Oregon in a city of green, politically enlightened hipsters who love coffee, trees, and have the most amazing system of bike trails.  I am describing Portland, of course.  There’s music and museums and a humongous bookstore and the ocean is nearby.  It is April, the star of spring, the season of love. Very little of this has anything to do with the story, but I wanted to let you know that it is a good travel destination especially in the spring.  The people in this story like Portland and liking where you live makes for happy people.  However, the people in this story are not too happy because they are still looking for love and their errant search for love is the point of this tale.

Disclaimer:  No trees were harmed during the making of this book.

Meet Jordan March.  Jordan lived in the Piedmont Historic District in an old Victorian house four stories tall that had belonged to her grandmother.  Jordan was an artist at heart.  Unfortunately, her heart couldn't pay the electric bill or buy groceries, so she labored as a writer and illustrator of children’s books.  She had three children’s books available to buy on Amazon.  These books had mostly good reviews.  However, her sales numbers did not reflect the mostly four and five-star ratings.  Her books kept getting edged-out by her competitors, Jamie Leigh Curtis and John Lithgow.  She had a tendency to get upset over that, so it was best not to mention it.

Jordan was a sapphist.  She was also lonely.  She hadn't had a girlfriend for a year.  And she had talked herself into thinking she liked it that way.  You see, Jordan didn't know she was lonely.  She thought she was in a slump.  Two slumps actually - a creative slump and a sexual slump.  Jordan had a theory that stated that creative juices and sexual juices flowed from the same fount.  If one dried up, so did the other.  She hadn't written or drawn anything decent in 276 days.  She hadn't been laid in 277 days.  You can see how she came up with her theory.

Jordan’s greatest fear was that she wasn’t a great artist.  That the bright flame of artistic passion she felt burning in her breast was actually heartburn from all the coffee she drank.

At the beginning of this story, Jordan was sitting in her attic studio, bent over her drawing easel with chalk smudged across her forehead and oil paint spattered on her arms.  She was surrounded by paint cans, piles of raw lumber and stacks of drywall because her crumbling Victorian house was in the throes of remodeling.

Jordan was drawing and muttering to herself about Jamie Leigh Curtis and Activia commercials when a remote control car careened around a corner, balancing on only two wheels.  It flipped over twice and miraculously ended up on all four wheels.  It sped off again, hitting maximum speed within a few feet and popped a wheelie without slowing down.  It hit a bump, skyrocketed in the air, performed a slow-motion somersault and landed upright in just enough time to crash into a wall.

Mr. Pip jumped to his feet and shrieked.  He arched his back.  His tail went rigid.  He bared his fangs and hissed.  The little remote control car backed up, slowly turned to face Mr. Pip, and accelerated.  The cat screeched and leapt onto the drawing table, knocking over a glass of iced tea.

Jordan jumped to her feet as the tea splashed all over her lap.  "Dammit!"  She grabbed the nearest book, a dog-eared, yellowed paperback copy of Moby Dick, and threw it at the speeding car.  She had not been reading Moby Dick.  But she had tried to read it several times over the years.  She had even gotten so far as the Chapter Ten, A Bosom Friend, but couldn't make it any further.  Not one to give up though, Jordan kept the book on her to-read pile right next to her easel on top of the copy of Catch-22 that she couldn't get through either.

So, Jordan threw Moby Dick at the car but only succeeded in taking out another hunk of crumbling drywall.  In the space of three seconds, the car had attacked the cat and the cat had attacked the tea and the tea had attacked Jordan's lap and now Jordan was attacking the car.

Jordan yelled, "Edison!  I'm trying to work up here!"

Sorry!" Edison yelled to Jordan.  "I’m trying to fix it!"

Meet Edison Burnett.  Edison was short and rather plain looking, but not without her charms.  As the French are wont to say, she had a certain je ne sais quoi.  Edison tried to overshadow her plainness by dressing and behaving oddly.  She was under the mistaken impression that the stranger she was, the more people would love her – like how people with lousy comic timing think that the louder they say the punch line the funnier it is.

Edison was Jordan's ex-lover and still-roommate.  Actually, classifying her as an ex-lover would be overstating the case.  Edison and Jordan had only had sex once and Jordan didn't remember much about it as they had spent the evening sampling what was left in her grandmother’s abundant wine cellar.  Despite the wine and the drunken sex, Jordan and Edison remained best friends.

At this point in the story, Edison was sitting in her bedroom/laboratory, two floors below Jordan's attic studio.  She sat in a rolling office chair in the middle of the room wearing a pair of sunglasses that weren't really sunglasses.  They only looked like the type of mirrored sunglasses that cops always wore in the movies.  They were actually monitor screens.  Edison held a remote control in her hands and was moving the little joystick in tiny circles with her thumb.  Edison had invented a remote control that you could control from a distance of up to one mile.  By installing a teeny tiny camera on the front of the remote control car, she could see from the car's point of view on the monitor in her sunglasses.

Edison had invented dozens of things.  All of which were abject failures with the exception of sex toys.  Edison was quite well known in lesbian circles as the mother of sex toys.  She thought this invention might be her best one to date.  And if she could just fix the glitch that made the camera see things in reverse – left was right, right was left, and sometimes up was down and vice versa – then she could patent her invention.  Edison was ironing out the bugs on the long-distance remote on the car.  If she could master the car, then she was going to up the ante and use it on a vibrator by connecting the glasses to the fiber optic network to the gadget itself.  She could then market the item to long-distance couples.  That way a lesbian could sit in her hotel in Paris and make love to her partner in Omaha.

Though, as Jordan so eloquently pointed out, "Why the hell would a lesbian in Paris want to hole up in a hotel room to have weird long-distance sex through a camera when there's all those sexy French girls who are notoriously bisexual?"

Edison believed in her idea, though.  She thought it was a breakthrough in the adult toys market and one that would put her on the map right next to Steve Jobs.  That is, if Steve Jobs didn't work with computers and instead worked with women's personal massagers shaped like the male organ.

While Jordan was upstairs with a tea-sodden lap, Edison was frantically working the remote control and seeing things on the sunglasses monitor upside down.  She didn't know if the car was upside down or if something had happened to the camera in the car and it was upside down.  Then again it could be another glitch in the glasses. She pushed the little joystick on the remote control to the forward position.  Nothing happened.  Maybe the car's wheels were stuck.

Edison jumped when she saw the face of Mr. Pip in a gigantic close-up in her glasses.  She yelped.  His face appeared gargantuan this close-up.  It was like sitting in the front row of a 3-D movie.  Mr. Pip bared his teeth and hissed, spraying feline spittle all over the camera.  A giant cat paw swiped at her.  Edison screamed, toppled over backwards in her chair and the remote control skidded across the wooden floor and under the bed.  The force of the throw wedged it between the bedpost and the wall with the joystick stuck in the 'Go' position.

Meanwhile, upstairs in the studio attic, Jordan was mopping up the tea spill with a crusty paint rag when she heard a loud crash from downstairs that rattled the paint cans and shook the already crumbling plaster.

"I'm okay!" Edison yelled.

The little car was turned upside down on the carpet, its wheels spinning crazily.  Mr. Pip crouched in his attack position, eyeing the car from the safety of beneath the drawing table.

Jordan was angry enough to kick Edison in the butt.  But since she couldn't kick her friend, she did the next best thing.  She threw down the rag, marched across the room and kicked the little car.  It flew across the room, smashed into the wall, bounced, rolled over twice and landed on all four wheels.  The wheels spun for a second, then dug into the carpet and the car popped a wheelie and took off.