A Ticket to the Past by Elizabeth Towles (best novels in english TXT) ๐
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A Ticket to the Past tells of an ordinary family, their daily lives, events, and growing pains...but who's to say what exactly defines...ordinary?
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- Author: Elizabeth Towles
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in the bed, muttering our sonโs name and enough expletives to last a lifetimeโand me, getting a headache from holding in the giggles rocking inside my head. I did a lot of throat clearing, pressing my lips against my teethโฆ and sighing.
The cuffs finally came off the next morning when our neighbor came to the rescue with a hand saw, and all the while having a good laugh at the churlish look on my husbandโs face. The story ran rampant throughout the neighborhood in a matter of hours. For weeks, John was greeted asโhowโs the prisoner holding up these days? Laughter soon followed.
Another call for me went out; I stepped near the ladder.
With the package of rolled straw mats filling my arms, memories of warm days, the aroma of coconut tanning oil and giggling teenage girls sunning on the upper deck, walked across my mind.
Then, a large paper bag, holding four green rubber horseshoes, was dropped into my hands. My thoughts soared to yard games, boyish laughter and voices, both husky and high, dependent on stage of growth. I hugged the memories close.
On the bottom step, John placed my cosmetology case, scarred at the corners; its contents used for styling hair on those special prom dates, sometimes taming curlsโbut then again, sometimes not.
Years chronicled milestones as a bingo game, a favored Chinese checkers set, and several scrabble boards, all bearing signs of much-used handling, landed in my grip.
The roots of our marriage lay in the vast collection filling half the room. The items however, could be disposed of, but their intrinsic value of daily happenings bonded my husband and me in ways that only the two of us could share.
Overhead, the rustling noise stopped. I saw Johnโs head pop out.
โHereโs one more thing,โ he said, passing me a very large, black garbage bag, the sides bulging out in all angles. Grappling with the bag, I felt the skeletal edges of empty clothes hangers, dozens perhapsโa final testament that life had spread out in other directions.
Dark vacant closets now held only the whispers of hurried searching hands and along the walls inside, the scent of energetic beings no longer warmed the air.
I slipped that thought to a safe-keeping place in my mind, knowing full well that the living goes on. It simply takes a different path.
Elizabeth Towles
December, 2009
Imprint
The cuffs finally came off the next morning when our neighbor came to the rescue with a hand saw, and all the while having a good laugh at the churlish look on my husbandโs face. The story ran rampant throughout the neighborhood in a matter of hours. For weeks, John was greeted asโhowโs the prisoner holding up these days? Laughter soon followed.
Another call for me went out; I stepped near the ladder.
With the package of rolled straw mats filling my arms, memories of warm days, the aroma of coconut tanning oil and giggling teenage girls sunning on the upper deck, walked across my mind.
Then, a large paper bag, holding four green rubber horseshoes, was dropped into my hands. My thoughts soared to yard games, boyish laughter and voices, both husky and high, dependent on stage of growth. I hugged the memories close.
On the bottom step, John placed my cosmetology case, scarred at the corners; its contents used for styling hair on those special prom dates, sometimes taming curlsโbut then again, sometimes not.
Years chronicled milestones as a bingo game, a favored Chinese checkers set, and several scrabble boards, all bearing signs of much-used handling, landed in my grip.
The roots of our marriage lay in the vast collection filling half the room. The items however, could be disposed of, but their intrinsic value of daily happenings bonded my husband and me in ways that only the two of us could share.
Overhead, the rustling noise stopped. I saw Johnโs head pop out.
โHereโs one more thing,โ he said, passing me a very large, black garbage bag, the sides bulging out in all angles. Grappling with the bag, I felt the skeletal edges of empty clothes hangers, dozens perhapsโa final testament that life had spread out in other directions.
Dark vacant closets now held only the whispers of hurried searching hands and along the walls inside, the scent of energetic beings no longer warmed the air.
I slipped that thought to a safe-keeping place in my mind, knowing full well that the living goes on. It simply takes a different path.
Elizabeth Towles
December, 2009
Imprint
Publication Date: 12-24-2009
All Rights Reserved
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