We’ve
been lounging on the porch since three. My best guess says it's as early as four or as late as
five. My drink is sweating but I am not. An amorphously shaped puddle
accumulates around it on the crackled glass tabletop. I heard from a fellow guest the high should
be 73° today.
“Something
on your mind?” She’s looking up from her magazine, which is now tilted in her
lap. The lighting is such that I can see one eye tinted behind a sunglasses lens
and the other is opaquely hidden.
Yes.
Where did that finch go? “No. Nothing.”
She
angles the borrowed magazine back to a reading position. Her legs are crossed
at the ankle atop a wicker ottoman with a maroon cushion. The tops of her bare
feet glow in the early autumn light as if lit from within. Her toenails glisten red with chipped
edges. Little white nets of dried skin frost the side of her big toe.
The
blue jay has taken flight, too. The feeder sways gently from its departure.
Faintly
on the air is the sound of children. One of them is either excited or upset.
Genders can’t be established from the pitch, so they must be little. A family lives up the street judging from the
toys strewn about the front lawn. They don’t fret about theft. These people are openly vulnerable. Who would do
such a thing? We remarked on the oddity as we passed the house I'm imagining on an earlier stroll. She said she wished we could do such a thing back. I said we'd have to procure a tricycle first. Perhaps that one would do. We shared a brief laugh.
I
rub the outside of my ear by the canal opening. The surface feels oily. I can afford to take another
bath tonight. I will submerge into the captured warmth and melt. I will leave my nose
exposed, pinch my ears shut, and hear the stethoscopic sounds of respiration. The pads of my fingers will become wrinkled like they would during long gone bath times. To finish, I will feel the eerie heft of my body return as the water recedes down the drain. The air is always has a foreign chill to it after exiting the tub.
Watchless,
I pat my pocket in search of my phone. There’s nothing to retrieve. I remember
my phone is dead on the walnut chifforobe in our room. How am I to know when to get moving? Hunger or
boredom will have to lead the charge. So be it. We have no reservations. We are going to
try the seafood place tonight. She will order a shrimp dish. We will dress up and
walk holding hands. It’s not too far.
This
town is not so much sleepy as it is antique. Design is neither showy nor
neglected. Ornamentation does not announce itself loud colors but patiently awaits its
audience. Lights do not flash at night; the iron street lamps shine steadily.
Billboards do not obstruct; sandwich boards splay below eye level. The
architecture whispers. The constitutive buildings of the square are mostly made of now-weathered brick. They present assertively. They will stand tomorrow, monumental and undiminished. They are like a grandfather to a toddler to passersby, tall but not imposing. Corbels coil like fiddleheads underneath ledges trimmed with repeating patterns. Each
storefront abuts the next with its own tone and texture, unity out of
diversity. Skinny plate glass windows reveal high ceilings edged with molding
and lined with tin. Doors are topped with frosted transoms. The palate of the
surrounding houses contains unabashed pastels. Wood shingles armor the roofs.
The sidewalks are rumpled by the girth of sweet gum and sugar maple roots. The lawns are
supple and edged to perpendicular perfection. Weeds are not allowed.
Everything gives the impression of wholesomeness here. People are more courteous. The church bells keep time. The
drug store serves ice cream by the scoop. Take your seat on a chromed bar
stool. It’s a tourist attraction, but I don’t mind. Locals patronize it, too. I
imagine semi-annual parades down Main Street with lazily flapping American flags. How can you be
nostalgic for an era you never knew?
The
children have departed or found muted activities. We are alone once more. I shift my weight. This is
nice, not doing anything. I feel empty but am fully here. It is so quiet now I
can hear the ginger ale fizzing as I pour more over the ice. The translucent
cluster rises and bobs near the surface. The carbonation makes an ephemeral fountain above
the rim. I haven’t had ginger ale in ages. It was complimentary. The innkeepers
know what they’re doing.
The
thought of this, our vacation, ending makes me complexly sad. A fluttering heart and a dingy
lifeless inner hue are where the sentiment starts. It stops in paralysis. Checkout time is
a looming storm over the lake. There is no stopping it. I long for times like
these and can never maintain them as I wish. Even memories will be forgotten. We have one
more full day, though. Don’t ruin what's left. Do not think about work. Stop
thinking altogether.
The
spice tickles my nose, and I try to suppress a cough unsuccessfully.
“Are
you okay?”
“Yes.”
The
soda gently sloshes in the glass as I set it down with a soft clank. I look at
her. She is staring serenely into the magazine. The stillness is photographic. What is on her mind? She never seems as bothered as me, even as I am in these moments. She is
simpler.
I
wipe my fingers on my pants and leave a damp trail of three fat, merging lines.
A turning page is all that interrupts the breezeless afternoon. The ginger’s
heat lingers in my mouth.
My
book lies split open on the table out of the spreading puddle’s range. I am not halfway to
halfway. It is a lost cause. A lone and spartan black ant is wandering futilely
nearby the novel. Its antennae twitch in syncopation. There’s nothing of interest for it
there, no crumb to cart away. How will it get back down? Maybe a bird will
snatch it.
Something
small and hard under my shoe scrapes the ground as I readjust. The patio is
made of irregular white stone peppered with dirt or maybe mold. Emerald tufts
of stubbly moss frame a few pieces. Everything is newer back home but not
nicer. Everything here is used but no worse for the wear. Age is not to be
feared. Preservation is a virtue. These people are investors who don't seek
profit. They are a part of their town. They repair instead of
replace.
I
slouch, clasp my hands on my stomach, and close my eyes. I should be reading,
but I can’t bring myself to try. I’d rather idle. I planned on finishing two books.
That would be something to convey, a clear answer to post-trip inquiries. I know I should be taking full advantage of my temporary freedom. This was what I had been
anticipating for months. It’s what we worked for, scrimping four hours off for
every eighty worked, and it’s almost over. What have I done? I have not done
enough. My inactivity is shameful. Wasting time feels felonious. I am a time
killer. I plead guilty. Lock me up.
A
part of me is uncomfortable with happiness. This part comes into stark relief before the backdrop of time off. There is no earning happiness, no taming
it. It just comes and goes on its own. I would rather strive. You can always
strive. Striving is practical, actionable.
Why
am I classifying this as a waste? The rules do not apply here. We are beyond all jurisdictions. We are unknown and unknowing. We have immunity. It is permissible to rest.
We
are different now, children again. Alarms go unset. We walk without clear
destinations. There are no dishes to clean and bath towels are left wadded on the floor. Meals are the only requisite items on the list of things to do. We drift, floating
on our backs to nowhere in particular. We are disconnected. There are no
headlines to process. E-mails are left unread and accruing in neglected inboxes. I cannot remember
being so uninformed and out of touch. We are out of touch, though. So much of our
relationships have no tactile element. At home, physical distance has been
traded for digital proximity. These people shake hands, hold doors, and slap
shoulders. I'd rather be one of them, incorporated.
Like
a child, I don’t want to go. I want to stay here and now forever.
I
warn myself against listening to the Sirens. This place is unreal. It is not
your home. Your home is with her. This trip is make-believe. There is more to accomplish than
leisure and loafing. We must toil. The lived truth of here is buried a foot
deep in snow. The smiling citizens with their cable-knit sweaters, topsiders,
and half-moon reading glasses must fight the long cold season. The freeze and thaw cycle,
the road salt, and the tire chains disintegrate this place annually. Transience
is inescapable. Remember the grass does not stay greener. My back aches at the
thought of hefting a shovel.
“Hey,
I’m gonna go get ready for dinner, okay?” She closes her magazine and puts her
feet down.
“Yeah
okay. I’ll be in in a minute.”
She
rises from her seat and smooths the wrinkles in her shirt. As she passes, she
strokes my shoulder. I follow her with my eyes. A ballpoint pen poked through
her hair keeps her bun together. The spiral of brunette arcs is galactic. As
she walks away, I notice her neck. Her vertebrae slightly protrude, making a
peapod shape. I feel the back of mine. My fingers rise and fall over the
bumps.
The
feeder remains unoccupied and will increasingly be so. What can migrate is or soon will.
The leaves are starting to turn. Yellow and orange are seeping into the green.
The edges are going dormant despite its lively appearance. The trees will
be stripped bare shortly. Emaciated winter with its skeletal limbs is closing fast. His frigid grip will clutch those who remain.
I sigh emphatically. I
can and cannot move. Moving is dreadful. Sloth is hypnotic. I hate temporality.
An
oak leaf flutters downward. In its twirling, it is balletic. It falls with
dignity but lands without hope.
Get
up. It is time to go.