To Michael with Love, Sylvia by Albert Zygier

Submitted into Contest #42 in response to: Write a story that ends with one character waiting for the arrival of another.... view prompt

3 comments

General

“I’ve got it...!” Sylvia cried out, waving a wedding ring she had just had engraved for her fiancée, who was across the street where he had picked up his tuxedo. 

Apparently, he had forgotten something and waved to her to wait as he started back to the store, but Sylvia, in her excitement wouldn’t wait and ran to him.

It was the screech of the taxi’s brakes that made Micheal turn in horror as he saw Judy under the wheels of the cab.

Dropping his bag he ran towards her but there was nothing he could do. She passed away with a smile and her last words which he never forgot. “Don’t worry honey, we’ll meet again soon.”

By the time the ambulance arrived there nothing else to do.

That was a year ago today and he never found the ring which must have slipped from her hand as she fell under the Cab.

In the past year, Michael lived in a coop they had bought together to live in for the rest of their lives. After the tragedy, he thought of selling this place, but he changed his mind for no apparent reason other than remembering her last words that they will meet again and how would she know where to find him if he moved. Silly of course, but he stayed, eventually almost forgetting the why.

The coop consisted of two high rise buildings with a little park and playground between them, and on a pleasant evening, he would take a book and sit on a bench they both set on watching other children play and thinking of their own playing there someday. 

Today, after going to the cemetery to put some flowers on her grave, he had a light supper and went to the park in the back to just sit there and remember the good days they had. It was quiet for a change, no kids and no parents and so he put on his ear-buds and listen to some of their favorite music, with his eyes closed and so he didn’t see a woman come out from the other building and sit close by and start to type on a laptop. 

When he looked up she sort of reminded him of Sylvia as she also used a similar laptop, Sylvia was a copywriter for an ad agency, but of course, the woman looked entirely different and Michael didn’t look at her too closely. He went back to listen to his music.

When he decided to get up the woman was gone but there was a hint of a familiar smell. He looked around but there was no one around. Must be just his imagination, he thought. 

That night Michael had a peculiar dream. He dreamed about Sylvia for the first time since she was gone. In the dream, he was on a train leaving some unfamiliar railroad station. He was leaning out the carriage window as Sylvia ran towards him with an outstretched hand. In her hand, she had a ring which she threw at him as the train speeded up. When he looked at the ring he saw an engraving inside. It said, “To Michael with Love, Sylvia.” When he finished reading it, it fell out of his hand and out the open window.

Michael woke up in a cold sweat. He did occasionally have strange dreams but this one took the cake. Weird dreams like these, always depressed him.

He looked at the clock on his night table and saw it was only six-thirty in the morning but as much as he tried, he couldn’t go back to sleep so he got up, had a small bowl of cereal, and went out in the back. To his surprise, that woman was already there typing away at her keyboard. He wasn’t in the mood to see anyone, so he went back to his apartment and sat on the couch and watched the news.

Later that day he had a date to go to a friend’s house, in a village up the Hudson River for a BBQ. His friend lived just past Sleepy Hollow to the east. It was a small community, a one-horse town, as they used to say. Maybe a block of stores which he had to pass to get there. 

So around eleven, he decided to leave as there was always traffic going up-state on

Route 9, for people who liked antiquing.

For some reason, this Sunday it turned out to be a quick ride. He passed Tarrytown seemingly with no one around, even Sleepy Hollow was quiet, the few red lights showed green all the way till he came to his friend’s village were right on the block with the stores he got a flat tire. He parked the car and got out to check it out.

It was the rear right tire, flat as a pancake. He belonged to Triple-A so he gave them a call. Because it was on a Sunday, it would take them at least 30 to 45 minutes to get there. Meanwhile, he had to stay with the car.

He was early so he wasn’t too concerned about the wait, but still, it was a pain. He looked around if he could get a cup of coffee while he waited, but saw that the coffee shop was closed and so where the other stores, except for the one next to it. An Antique Store, which seemed strange. Maybe the old Blue Laws were back again in this region when all stores were closed on a Sunday. With nothing else to do, he walked to the Antique Store window for a look. Sylvia had a flair for antiques, every they passed one they had to stop. Micheal didn’t especially like it, but he would do anything for Sylvia.

He had never noticed this store before, so maybe it just opened. He looked into the window and saw the usual bric-a-brac these stores carry but on a middle shelf right in the center there was a mock porcelain hand displaying a gold ring that he thought looked just like the one in his dream from last night.

Of course, it can’t be the same ring but it certainly looked similar, he thought. He looked at his watch and saw he still had plenty of time so he tried the door and surprisingly it was open.

Before he entered he looked left and right on the street and saw no one around which he thought was rather strange for a Sunday Morning. Usually, this block was always busy when he drove by. 

As he opened the door hesitantly, a bell rang and an old, really old, woman, came out from the back so suddenly that Michael thought she was just waiting for him to enter. The store itself was filled with what he always laughingly called junk at which Sylvia always gave him an elbow. There was a musky smell about and yet it carried something familiar but he couldn’t recognize it.

 “Good day,” the woman said, “may I help you?” The woman seemed ageless wearing something that would have been in fashion during the late eighteen-hundreds. Perhaps she just wore it to match her antiques, he thought.

“You must be interested in the ring I have in the window.” She said in a voice that seemed a century old.

“How did you know?” Asked Michael a bit unsettled. 

“Oh, it’s nothing mysterious, I saw you through the window looking at it.” She said smiling. 

“Oh,” said Michael, a bit relieved. “Actually I was. Is it gold? May I see it?”

“Yes, of course, it's eighteen carats, but it has an inscription on the inside. It must have belonged to someone and they lost it.”

The old lady went to the window and brought the ring out and handed it to him. “It's a beautiful ring, isn’t it?” She said. “I know it looks a little scratched but that can be polished off, I’m sure.”

Michael took it and put it on his ring finger. I was a perfect fit but he took it off and looked inside

at the engraving. 

When he saw it, he felt as if something cold had just grabbed his heart or maybe he’s still in a long dream or nightmare. He couldn’t quite fathom what was happening or why? The engraving read

To Michael with Love, Sylvia.”

His face turned white.

“Are you alright?” The woman asked him. “Would you like a glass of water...?”

After a moment he shook his head, “uh, no, thanks...” 

How is that possible? And then suddenly he remembered that Sylvia obviously dropped the ring as she was hit and he couldn’t find it then and later someone must have, and pawned it here. A true conundrum, what with his getting a flat right in front of this store and him dreaming about Sylvia last night.

“Do you like it?” The old woman asked as she saw Michael turn it in his hands. “Look right here, it says 18 carats in the hallmark.” She pointed it out to him.

Michael turned the ring back and forth and didn’t know what to do. He looked through the window to see if the repair guy had come, then back at the lady. It's obvious this must be the ring Sylvia bought for him which got lost last year, what else could it be.

Should he buy it?’ He asked himself.

“How much is it?” He asked.

“Because it has that engraving, I can’t just sell it to anybody so I’ll give you a good deal.”

“Yes...?”

“Cash, fifty dollars.”

Michael heard a beep outside and saw the triple-A guy pull up.

“OK, fifty dollars. Let me go out and talk to the repair guy and I’ll be right back.”

He told this story when he got to his friend’s house later on. His friend seemed skeptical. “Where did you say the antique shop was?” He asked.

Michael told him. “It’s right next to the coffee shop. You know, Al’s coffee shop, we stopped there

a few times...”

“Strange...” His friend said. I was just there yesterday, I don’t remember seeing an antique shop. I know there’s a small hardware store there...”

Nothing Michael could say convinced his friend that he just bought a ring at an antique shop right there next to Al’s, even after he showed them the ring. 

Well, there were many other people at the BBQ and so the topic changed but Michael still felt the ring on his finger.

They tried to fix him up with a divorcee but he wasn’t in the mood. She seemed nice but Michael kept thinking of Sylvia. Why is he dreaming about her now just a year to the day after the accident?

“Are you OK, buddy?” His friend asked him later when they were alone. “Still can’t get over the imaginary antique shop?”

Michael was beginning to get irked by his friend’s disbelief. He knew he had a flat right there by the store, how could he have imagined it. Tomorrow he’ll call Triple-A and ask for the guy who fixed his tire. Certainly, he’d be a witness.

He left early. “I don’t want to get caught in traffic going over the Triborough Bridge,” he told his friend as an excuse.

By now it was getting dark and when he passed where he got the flat, he slowed down but didn’t see the antique shop, instead, there was that hardware store his friend had mentioned. He wanted to stop but a car in the back beeped and he had to go on because there was no place to park either. The street was full of cars probably for the restaurant in the corner building. 

Something weird is happening and he felt pretty dejected and just wanted to get home as soon as possible and get into bed. Tomorrow was Monday and there was a lot of work waiting for him at the office.

He got up early and not being used to wearing a ring he put it on his nightstand and showered, had some cereal, got dressed, and went to work forgetting about the ring.

At the office, he couldn’t concentrate. He subconsciously rubbed the ring finger with his right hand. He should have remembered to put it on. The day lingered at a snail's pace. By the end of the day, he couldn’t get out fast enough to get home and put that ring on his finger again never to take it off. He felt an emptiness in his heart, he misses Sylvia so much. 

But when he came home and went straight to the nightstand, the ring was not there. How is that possible? He asked himself. He left it right there next to the bronze frame with Sylvia’s picture in it.

He turned all the drawers upside down and looked through everything with a fine-tooth comb but no ring. Maybe he had put it in the freezer? Some people do that to keep things safe. But all he found was ice.

Now he began to doubt whether he actually had the ring in the first place. Maybe it was all a dream, a figment of his imagination. Maybe he overdosed on one of his pills he was taking, it happened once before and at that time he actually thought he was dying.

He laid down on the sofa with a cold compress on his head and laid there thinking about the events these past few days.

It had to start with that woman he saw in the park on Friday night. He compared her to Sylvia though he really didn’t think she looked like her, just her actions were a bit familiar. Then that night he had that dream about the ring. He got up early, had some cereal, and went out back but came right in because he wasn’t in the mood to start a conversation with that woman that did or didn’t resemble Sylvia.

Sunday, that’s the day when he went to the BBQ and had that flat tire and saw the ring in the window and bought it from the old lady that things started to really get bizarre.

It was too much to think about it. He got up, picked up a book, and went to the back to read, hoping this will get his mind off the subject.

The little park was empty again. No one there. He sat in his usual place and opened his book but couldn’t concentrate.

He sat there quietly closing his eyes just wondering what was happening to him when, on a gentle breeze he smelled something familiar again, something he remembered since he bought a perfume for Sylvia. Something he hadn’t smelled since Sylvia died. It was called ‘Midnight’.

Suddenly he remembered that odd smell at the antique store too.

And now it was just a whiff settling on his olfactory glands. Where could it be coming from, he wondered? Is he hallucinating again?

He looked up and saw that woman with the laptop coming out of the other building, again. He wondered how it is that he keeps seeing her here. Could she be wearing Sylvia’s perfume by some chance? It's certainly possible. 

This time he looked at her more closely as she approached him. He couldn’t just get up and leave without seeming to be a boor and besides, he wanted to know if it was her with that perfume scent. She seemed about what Sylvia’s age would have been but she had dark hair and dark eyes though Sylvia was blond with blue eyes. In a way, she could have been a relative of Sylvia’s. She had her walk too...

She put her laptop down on the table and extended her hand with a smile that sent a shiver up Michael’s spine. It was the last thing he remembered about Sylvia as she looked up at him. That smile. 

We’ve Got to Stop Meeting Like This.” She said lightheartedly. “I just arrived a few days ago and I saw you a few times sitting here but I didn’t have a chance to meet you, you seemed to always be somewhere else.” Then she handed him a small black box. “By the way, I wanted to give you this before but it was lost till yesterday when I found it again.” She said looking him straight in the eyes.. 

As he opened it with shaking hands, he saw a gleaming gold ring, then he looked back up at her, he noticed her hair had turned blond and her eyes blue. In a daze, he took out the ring and looked at the engraving. To Michael with Love, Sylvia. He looked back up again and now her face had changed as well, and it was Sylvia.

“I told you we’ll meet again…” She said softly as she took his hand in hers. “… my darling.”


May 15, 2020 17:32

You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.

3 comments

Albert Zygier
15:14 Feb 03, 2022

Thank you! I really appreciate you reading my story!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Nily Katriel
23:22 May 27, 2020

Even though this story reminds me of a fairy tale, I still like it very much. The reader can feel the string of love all over this short story.

Reply

Show 0 replies
Nily Katriel
23:22 May 27, 2020

Even though this story reminds me of a fairy tale, I still like it very much. The reader can feel the string of love all over this short story.

Reply

Show 0 replies

Bring your short stories to life

Fuse character, story, and conflict with tools in the Reedsy Book Editor. 100% free.