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Book online «Orlando, My Hero by Rebekah Jennings (ink book reader .TXT) 📕». Author Rebekah Jennings



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Jen sat at their kitchen table early Sunday morning, drinking coffee and smoking; a ceaseless habit of late. She ran her finger across the glossy page of her ‘Cosmo’ magazine. Not the whole page, and not indiscriminately. It was the face of Orlando Bloom that drew her attention. She remembered him fondly as the brave elf, Legolas Greenleaf with his sharp, blue eyes. His long, white hair so similar to the tail of the striking Palomino horse. At first, when Jen found out that Orlando possessed naturally dark features, in direct opposition to the face she’d come to love, there had been immense disappointment, but now she preferred him that way. Orlando was her hero and her true love. In fact, over the recent weeks it would be fair to say, he became her everything.

“What’s wrong with you, Jen?” Gabriella asked, emerging from their dark, quiet hallway.

“Hey.” Jen turned toward Gab with a smile.

“Have you been up all night?” Gabriella waved at the smoky kitchen air, a sour look on her face; then purposefully and sternly, opened the kitchen window and the back door attached to the kitchen.

“You know I haven’t been able to sleep lately. It’s these long summer nights, too hot.”

Jen’s attention went back to her magazine. Gab switched on the kettle.

“Hmm, it’s not normal, Jen. First, you spend months in bed, and now you don’t sleep at all. When was the last time you slept?”

“About a week.”

“That’s what I thought.” Gab shook her head.

Preparing herself tea she studied Jen. “What are you looking at, anyway?”

Jen lifted the magazine, making the cover visible.

“I didn’t think you had money to buy magazines? You certainly haven’t any for the rent.”

“I know. I felt bad about it, but then I knew you’d understand.”

“Understand what?”

Jen lifted the Cosmo again but this time turned it round to show Gabriella a picture of Orlando.

“I don’t get it.”

“Orlando,” Jen pointed at him.

“Still don’t get it.”

“When I’ve watched ‘Lord of the Rings’, recently...”

“Obsessively,” Gabriella said pointedly.

“Well, I’ve realised...” Jen looked up at the ceiling, “it just occurred to me, really.”

“What did?”

“Orlando’s been leaving messages for me. He wants me to meet him in California.”

“What’s wrong with you, Jen?”

“Nothing,” Jen’s smile disappeared, “you’re so out of touch with things, Gaby. You really shit me, sometimes.”

“It’s you who’s changed, recently, Jen. All winter you’re comatose. Then bang, just like that you’re a walking piece of sunshine, all ‘no sleep for me, I’m superhuman. Watch me while I wear may knickers on the outside and use my cape to fly to another country.’ Gab emphasised her diatribe with silence. Not too much, just thirty seconds, then, “Can you hear yourself? You’re blaming your sleeplessness on the summer nights, yet last summer you were fine. You’re talking about meeting Orlando Bloom in another country. I think you need help. You’re not well.”

“I don’t need anything. I feel great now; fantastic even. I’ve spent the past few nights thinking about starting a business when I get there.”

“Where, California? How will you

get to California?”

“Orlando’s arranged a ticket for me. He’s so wonderful.” Jen’s brown eyes sparkled incongruent to her angled annoyance. “I told you, I knew my day would come. I dreamed of a hero who would save me from my life and now it’s happening.”

“You don’t even have a passport.”

Gabriella squinted at Jen as if to extract a deeper insight from her appearance or words. “I’m ringing Mum.”

Jen moved quickly from the table, her cigarette pressed tightly between her fingers.

“Please don’t, Gabriella. Come one, I’m fine.”

Stepping back, Gabriella coughed, “I thought we agreed no smoking in the house,” she fanned her face. “It’s not normal to not

be able to sleep, Jen.”

“You’ve already made things hard between me and Mum. God, it took ages to get her off my back last time when you rang her about my ‘so called’ depression, as you put it. Why do you always have to ruin everything? You love making me look bad to her.” Jen stubbed out her cigarette and immediately lit another. She sat back at the table and ran her finger over Orlando’s face; the squareness of his jaw, the curl in his hair. “Don’t worry about me, I’ll be fine.”

Gabriella took her tea from the kitchen and headed with purpose to her bedroom, portable phone in hand; her stomach heavy with anxiety and sorrow.

“What’s happening to you, Jen?” She whispered to the air-conditioned room. Gab didn’t want to phone their mother. She sat on the edge of her bed, head bowed, phone pointing to her forehead; pressing into the skin.


Jen finished her coffee and cigarette, and snatched her magazine from the table. The atmosphere spoke to her this morning. She felt the messages from all around. Orlando’s voice was all about her. Not audibly but inside her. Hard to explain to anybody else, but he was there nonetheless. Right now she felt him warning her, “Get out now”. It was urgent, she knew that as surely as she knew, this very moment, Gabriella would be on the phone to Mum. Jen wasted no time. She made her way to her own room, not to change or shower; there was no time for that. Her thrice-worn tracksuit pants and ever-yellowing fingers weren’t given a thought as she located Orlando’s candle and left the house.


Gabriella had their mum on the phone.

“Something’s wrong with Jen, Mum. I can’t explain it exactly but she’s lost her mind. She thinks Orlando Bloom’s sending her a message through the TV, telling her to go to California to be with him. It’s bizarre.”

“Is that her new boyfriend? She always liked those Spanish types.”

“No, he’s not her boyfriend. He’s a Hollywood actor, Mum. She thinks he’s sending her messages through ‘The Lord of the Rings’, one of his movies.”

Then, a sound caught Gabriella’s ears. Was that her car?

“Wait a second, Mum.”

Gabriella called out to Jen but there was no reply.

“I think she’s left the house, Mum,’ Gabriella moved through the house, the portable phone still to her ear. When in the lounge, she opened the drapes. The summer sunlight strained her eyes and the hot air from behind the curtains pressed against her face. Gab noticed immediately, Jen had taken her car.


Jen drove with the window down so her cigarette smoke would be caught by the wind. Catching a glimpse of herself in the rear-view mirror, at her unkempt hair, Jen decided Orlando would understand, after all it was him urging her to leave so suddenly. What hero wouldn’t understand? Jen headed toward Melbourne, on her way to the Tullamarine Airport. Her eyes darted about, her fingers tapped on the steering wheel to the beat of the radio.

She noticed a cop car and her heart beat a speedy cadence as she slowed a little. Fingers twitching, she turned her face away from the road feigning interest in the Yarra River, until the copper’s car passed. A tic in her eyelid returned; it had come and gone over the past day or so. Things will work out. She knew this; knew it like you know when you’re in love. It couldn’t be described in any other way. She just knew.

On the Monash Freeway, Jen drove confidently. Soon she’d see Orlando. He’d hold her in his arms. They’d laugh and talk and sit together at cafés. She’d ask him if he still had his ‘Legolas’ wig. Maybe he’d wear it for her along with Legolas’ blue contact lenses.

Jen quickly tilted left to grab her handbag from the passenger seat. She might not have had time to shower and change, to eat or apply makeup, but she did have time to prepare the ritual for her voyage. She needed to light Orlando’s candle. The flame would bring the essence of him to her; he’d help her through the congested roads of Melbourne. He’d help her at the airport; through customs and onto the plane. He’d help her when she had to explain to the airport ticketing counter that he’d arranged her flight. He’d help the staff find the ticket number needed to assure her trip.

Jen’s eyes flicked from the road to her bag as she searched it. Locating the candle, she transferred it to her right hand, with a cigarette still firmly in her grip and then tossed her handbag on the passenger seat. She still sucked on her cigarette. Smoke trailed up her cheek and into her right eye. Blinking hard Jen pressed her eyelid closed with one of her hands.

“Ow, ow, ow.” Her eye throbbed. Tears blurred the right-eyes vision. Her left hand, candle ensconced within, still rested against the steering wheel.

“Shit.”

She needed her lighter. The whole thing became a juggling act with her candle in the same hand she was driving with, her cigarette in her mouth; eye squinted and her other hand searching her pockets. Front and back.

“Yes,” she said and extracted the lighter, but as she did this, pain erupted in her lips. Her cigarette had almost burned down and the heat was now too close to her lips. Intentionally dropping the lighter, her hand came up to her mouth but pain forced her lips to open prematurely, dropping the cigarette. Jen took quick stock of the road and then frantically looked about the floor and seat for the smouldering cigarette. It sat between her legs burning a hole into her thin tracksuit pants.

The sound of screeching tires invaded her ears but there was no time to respond, not even a millisecond to lift her eyes to the road. The car jolted fiercely, her head thrown back. Holding the steering wheel tightly with both hands, Jen felt the dimensions of her car, the space around her shifted, as though the steering wheel moved closer, back, closer like wobbling jelly. It seemed her ears had stopped working. Silence fell around her like fog.


Stunned, Jen sat staring out at the traffic, the other cars, and the people as she realised her location in the middle of the intersection. An unknown person knocked on her window. She tried to unwind it but it wouldn’t budge. The door was stuck, too. A siren could be heard in the distance. Jen looked to her lap; the cigarette had gone out now. Picking it up, revealed two burn holes; one in each leg of her tracksuit pants. She felt pain from the burns, but otherwise was fine. Jen retrieved her handbag, lighter and Orlando’s candle. She needed him now more than ever? Hurriedly she lit his candle, focussing her thought on him as she did so. Moments later the ambulance and several police cars arrived.

“I’m fine, I’m okay,” Jen reassured the medic, “I have to hurry, I need to get to the airport.” She couldn’t stand still; shifting her weight from one foot to the other, cigarette between her hand.

“No, you must let us do our job. We need to make sure you’re okay.” The medic eyed her lit candle and frowned.

Jen refused treatment. The driver of the other vehicle was transported to hospital in a serious condition. The police wanted a statement from Jen. According to

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