Today I stood at the top of a hill
and watched the snow fall around me
from left to right.
The wind, which blew from all directions
wasn't wind, but a sound effect.
And I felt like Shakespeare's Prospero.
I think writing is like ballroom dancing: the more you do it, the more graceful, effortless, and beautiful it can become. This is my place to come and trip over my own two feet while I learn to foxtrot. Or possibly Latin Hustle. This is a page for my thoughts, ramblings, musings, and imaginings in the meantime. Please - leave a comment- a reaction, a criticism, a suggestion, a review, whatever. I live for that stuff.
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
Friday, January 26, 2018
Walking among the stones and monuments of graves where no one has laid flowers in a hundred years. An urn. A weeping angel. A lamb. A sleeping child.
I do the math in my head. 26 years old. 86. 2 months. My age.
I try to read the stories, distilled to names and dates, chiseled into crumbling granite and slate. The man who remarried, the second wife, the second chance. The spinster daughter. The war.
I try to imagine their world. A world where they had a king. A world where they had slavery. Reading books by kerosene lantern. Cold, cold winters and storms with no warning. Hot summers and long, homespun dresses.
I see a headstone with a beginning and no end, an unfinished account. 1881- . What happened? Where did he go? Lost at sea? Died in prison? Took his last breath somewhere where no one knew that he already had a spot reserved where he could spend eternity. Buried his wife at 40 and then just moved on.
I pause and read the words, the brief lines lifted from Psalms, from poems, from the Book of Common Prayer. Some grieving wife, or son or brother, or mom or dad, through contemplation and tears that I can only speculate about, decided that these were the words which this soul should carry with it forever.
The tiny grave of an infant, on the very furthest edge of the cemetery. Our Baby. Why there, on the edge? No money? No baptism? A little soul in Limbo, even now, after all this time? How absurd.
I consider the memento mori: skulls with wings. Remember, Man, that thou art dust and unto dust thou shalt return.
And it doesn’t make me feel sad or scared. It makes me glad to be there, to read the names and do the math, and remember the people that no one brings flowers for. Because one day, no matter how kind or cruel I am during my lifetime, my own long story will be abridged- a name, some dates, an epitaph. Will anyone hear me as they walk by, calling out from a silent stone?
Speak my name! Remember me! I was here! I lived!
WALKING BETWEEN ARMIES
I often say that people who walk dogs are like the Post Office. Wind, rain, snow or sunshine, we’re out there, no matter what. In fact, there are a number of days in any year when it’s so inhospitable that the only people that are out and about are people who are walking their dogs. We wave and nod to one another behind hoods and scarves, strain to juggle a leash and a useless, upturned umbrella, and struggle to pick up poop in the midst of a blinding snowstorm or a torrential downpour. Like it or not, we realize that with any dog, there is a minimum amount of Dog Energy which must be burned up every single day, and failure to do so can only end in dire circumstances. And believe me, after more than 20 years of dog ownership on Cape Cod, I have been out in just about every kind of weather imaginable, with the possible exceptions of a tornado or a plague of frogs.
And so it was today. Nothing catastrophic, just a cold, wet winter day. The kind of day which, were it not for the dogs, would have been spent entirely indoors, warm and dry, with a bathrobe, hot beverages, and lots of foods containing sugar.
But like every other day, we pulled on the long johns and the blue jeans, the multiple sweatshirts and the gloves and the jacket and everything else, grabbed the leash and went out to walk the dog.
And today, in some small way, I am glad that I sometimes have to do things that I don’t really want to do, because today I not only went for a dog walk, but for a few minutes I was transported.
We walked over to the far side of Route 6, to the woods where I could let the dog off his leash to let him run around like a maniac for a while. (See previous remarks regarding Dog Energy.) We walked along a little-used corner of the bike trails near Bennett Pond, an area which doesn’t see much traffic at the height of Season, much less at this time of year. A thick carpet of fallen pine needles the color of old leather books covered most of the paved path, and that in turn was almost entirely covered by a thin layer of wet, slushy snow. The overall effect was that of a hastily frosted cake. There were no footprints in the snow at all, save mine and the dog’s, not even those of rabbits or squirrels and that was the first thing I noticed.
The weather had chased all the birds away except for the occasional hungry gull, so the only sound was the persistent typewriter rhythm of the rain. The patches of sky which were visible through the sparse, impotent winter canopy were devoid of color, a kind of grey-white which was nearly indistinguishable from the wet snow on the ground.
At times I thought of Sherwood Forest.
At other times I thought of Narnia.
After a while we stopped and turned around, and as we made our way home the mossy side of all the trees was facing us, so that they seemed clad in a flimsy, decaying armor of pale verdigris. At one point, I noticed that on one side of the path were all scrub pines, their skinny trunks bare but still green at the very top. On the other side were all beech and birch and other deciduous varieties, branches gnarled and exposed as they reached toward the sunlight. I imagined for a moment that I was walking between two mighty tree armies frozen in time as they stared one another down, waiting for the trumpet call to begin the battle, wooden swords against wooden shields.
Then I thought that they weren’t even frozen in time, it’s just that trees move so much slower than we do.
The branches of the two warring armies arched harmoniously and touched fingers above the path where I was walking, which made me feel as if I were approaching a grand country house, but the ghostly green-grey of the world around me and the sad silhouettes of the sleeping trees let me know that if there were a house around the bend, it was more likely either a ruin or a mirage.
Following your own footprints can only get you to one place though, so eventually we found ourselves right back where we started. The sound of traffic overtook the absence of birdsong. The wet snow became wet sand that kept getting stuck in the bottom of my shoe.
Sunday, May 14, 2017
MOTHER'S DAY 2017
It’s not easy for someone like me to sit down and write something about Mom. I mean, think about it: “Mother.” That’s the kind of prompt that has writers like Hemingway and Gertrude Stein grabbing bottles of absinthe and penning 400-page volumes stuffed full of words like “remembrance” and “lavender-scented.” I’ve been thinking about it all morning long, always vaguely aware of the thunder of distant hoofbeats, plagued by the Four Horsemen of Literature (which coincidentally also happen to be the Four Horsemen of Madness): Memory, Gratitude, Regret and Love. Before I knew it I had a 400-page volume of my own going inside my head.
So I decided to simplify, to pare it down to just one thing. One memory, one moment.
We were living on Buckingham Road at the time. I’m not sure exactly how old I was, but I was still in grade school so I figure I was about 9 or so. I was asleep, in my room at the top of the stairs. I was dreaming about popcorn. Masses of popcorn being popped all around me, just sort of materializing from thin air. I woke up, and I realized why I had been having such an odd dream: I could still hear that sound, that strange, rapid-fire popping noise. It was coming from downstairs. I got out of bed, opened my bedroom door and went down to see what it was.
And there was Mom. She was sitting at the dining room table, which we normally only used on Easter and Thanksgiving and when Dad was writing out the bills every month. She had a stack of white paper, a Chesterfield burning in the ashtray, and she was pounding away at the old Remington typewriter which Dad must have pulled out from the crawlspace for her. She was writing, and I could tell right away that she was totally in the “zone.”
That’s it. That’s the memory.
So why do you suppose that this particular memory, which isn’t even so much a memory as a moment in time, almost a tableau, stands out in my mind; why has it stayed with me over my entire lifetime; and why, when I think about my mother, do I remember her typing a room full of popcorn when I was 9 years old? Because I knew even then that what I was seeing was my Mom, happy. And not the kind of happiness that depends on another person, not the happiness of a wedding day or a firstborn. It was the happiness that is felt by someone who is doing something that only they can do, someone who is saying something that only they can say, even if it’s only for an hour or two between folding the laundry and another doctor’s appointment.
I don’t even think my mom knew I was standing there that day. But of all the lessons in life that my mother taught me, I learned at least two of them in those few brief moments. One of them was “tell your story.” No matter what it is, no matter even who wants to hear it- make your husband dig out the Remington and then start typing until you’ve reached “The End.”
The other lesson was that sometimes the best present we can give to anyone is actually our own happiness.
Thanks, Mom. I hope in some way that I am returning the gift.
Friday, April 21, 2017
Friday, February 17, 2017
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
ACTION de GRÂCE
PROMPTS: a color - blue
a city - Paris
a holiday - Thanksgiving
a pet - cat
a woman's name - Maria
It was a little disorienting at first, waking up on the plane. It took
me a second just to figure out where the hell I was. Most of the other
passengers were still sleeping; it was pretty dark and the only sounds were the
constant hum of the engines and the soft murmur of the flight attendants in the
galley, drinking coffee and talking about the passengers in hushed French. It
had been dark outside when I’d fallen asleep, so it was a bit of a shock when
the daylight started flooding in as I raised the window shade. The light was so
out of place that it almost seemed to have a sound as it bullied and shouted its
way into the darkened cabin. I quickly closed the window shade and looked
around me to see if anyone had been woken by this cacophony of light, but no
one had.
The video monitor in the front of the cabin showed a map. There was a
dotted line to show the miles we had already covered, the virtual vapor trail
of an animated airplane icon, which was currently flying due east somewhere
over the Atlantic. It was hard to tell exactly where in the Atlantic though,
because the animated airplane icon was so out of scale with the rest of the map
that it appeared to be about three times the size of Bermuda. The distance
remaining for our journey was listed. It was in the thousands, but it was in
kilometers so I had absolutely no idea, really, of how far we had to go. I gave
up wondering about it. It looked like the nose of our gargantuan airship was
closer to Paris than the tail was to New York, and that seemed good enough for
me.
I found myself thinking about the last time I had been to Paris. Pushing
my seat back a little and staring up at the ceiling, I noticed other passengers
stirring one by one, their window shades being raised, the light inside the
airplane slowly getting lighter and lighter, our own little artificial dawn. I
thought about the small two-star hotel I had stayed at in the Marais, L'hôtel
du Chat Blanc. The room was suffocatingly small. There was practically no view,
hardly any air, and the mattress was lumpy and uncomfortable. And I had been
the happiest there that I had ever been in my life. The smell of croissants and
fruit tarts being baked every morning from the pâtisserie on the ground floor,
or of crêpes and Nutella from the kiosk on the corner. The look on the old
man’s face who sat for hours every morning, regardless of the weather, smoking
cigarettes and nursing a single café au lait at the restaurant across the
street. The music of Paris. The traffic, the sirens, the almost sing-song way
people greet one another Bonjour! And Maria.
I was jolted from my reverie as the lights in the cabin were suddenly
turned on, and I could smell the aroma of strong French coffee as the flight
attendants began to make their way up the aisles. Apparently it was Air
France’s opinion that it was time to wake up. The man in the seat next to mine raised
his head with a snort, turned and looked at me with bleary, unfocused eyes and
gave me a weak smile.
I took this as permission to raise the window shade. Even though I knew
that the sun had come up, it was still a little disorienting when I looked out,
like walking out of a darkened movie theater in the middle of the day. The sky,
which had been endless, inky black the last time I’d looked out, was now bright
and unblemished, the healthy, prosperous, somewhat friendly blue of a Tiffany’s
box. We were flying above the clouds, so the blue seemed limitless at first,
without a ceiling, until I looked down and saw the clouds beneath us. For a
while I imagined us as a ship, sailing across a frothy cumulus ocean, all alone
and surrounded by nothing but Tiffany-blue skies.
I still couldn’t quite believe I was doing this. I had just returned to
America a few weeks earlier after a four-month trip through Europe which had
culminated with those two blissful weeks in Paris. I figured I’d get back to
school, get a job somewhere, maybe get a girlfriend. But none of that seemed to
be happening. I just found myself laying around the house, thinking about how
much I wanted to be just about anywhere else, and of course thinking about
Maria. The smell of crêpes and Nutella had been replaced by the smell of the
neighbor’s kids smoking cheap homegrown weed under my bedroom window at night,
and to be honest, I wasn’t very happy about it. But, I told myself, a lot of
life is dealing with things that we’re not very happy about, and I was pretty
close to just accepting my fate, a fate which had very little to do with Paris
or crêpes or anything much beyond car payments and, if I’m lucky, a house in
the ‘burbs.
Until Thanksgiving.
The holidays usually aren’t too bad with my family. Over the years,
everyone has accepted a role, a set of responsibilities and a sort of loose
script as to how things are going to play out and what everyone is going to
talk about. It was easy and we all seemed content to play along, either because
it was simpler that way or because none of us was imaginative enough to do
anything differently. The usual list of people was there, Mom and Dad and me,
my older sister Teresa and her current boyfriend (or did she use the word
fiancé?), and my younger brother Tod, who is gay. Tod’s boyfriend was supposed
to be joining us but so far he was a no-show. I couldn’t tell exactly what was
going on because Tod hadn’t looked up from his phone for the past twenty
minutes.
“How was Paris?” Brandon 5 was looking at me, one eyebrow raised, his
fork frozen midway between his plate and his mouth. He was actually called Butler
or Cooper or some other occupationally-inspired millennial name, but my
sister’s first two boyfriends had both been named Brandon, and it was easier in
my mind to just think of them all as a series after that. They were practically
indistinguishable anyway, from their black European sedans to their Brooks
Brothers suits and their ambitious and ultimately meaningless careers. Brandon
5 was an “actuarial consultant”, whatever the hell that was, and annoyingly
referred to his job as “the Firm.”
I stared at him blankly. “Paris?”
“Paris, France? Europe? Weren’t you just there?”
“Oh! Paris France!” I stalled
for a moment by pretending to impale a pea on my fork. How do I tell Brandon 5
that Paris was amazing, magical, transcendent, the last place I had felt
alive…?
“It was good.”
I was spared having to find any more words as Mom wafted into the
dining room at that very moment, bearing a Corningware baking dish piled high
with mashed potatoes, despite the fact that nobody had touched the mashed
potatoes that were already on their plates. Mom had never been that fond of
cooking, and it showed. The bulk of her efforts on Thanksgiving were put into
the fine art of camouflage, making a variety of store-bought, frozen, canned or
powdered ingredients appear to actually be homemade. The mashed potatoes she
now placed with great ceremony in the center of the table had undoubtedly just
come out of the microwave; and I suspected that the real reason she had gone in
to the kitchen in the first place was to have some of the cream sherry which I
knew she kept hidden in the cupboard behind the Karo Syrup.
“You’ve outdone yourself, Margaret,” said Dad, without looking up. He
said this every year. “The butternut squash is delicious.”
“I didn’t make butternut squash, Earl.”
Dad finally looked up from his plate. “You what? Well then, what the hell is that?” He pointed his fork towards one of the serving dishes. A glob of gravy landed onto the tablecloth with a thud.
“I didn’t make butternut squash, Earl.”
Dad finally looked up from his plate. “You what? Well then, what the hell is that?” He pointed his fork towards one of the serving dishes. A glob of gravy landed onto the tablecloth with a thud.
“It’s sweet potatoes, Earl.”
“Well, whatever it is, Margaret, it’s delicious.” He was already looking down at his plate again. “Helluva meal.”
“Well, whatever it is, Margaret, it’s delicious.” He was already looking down at his plate again. “Helluva meal.”
“He’s not coming!” Tod chimed in out of nowhere. For the first time all
morning, he put his phone face down on the table.
“Who’s not coming?” said Teresa.
“Alejandro.” We all looked at the
empty place setting next to Tod and acted surprised and dismayed, as if we were
just noticing that there was nobody there. “He just texted me and said he can’t
get away from his family,” he whined,
pronouncing the word ‘family’ as if it tasted like spoiled milk. He was just
about to take a bite of Mom’s Stove Top stuffing and turkey from the ovens at
Price Chopper when something buzzed or beeped on his phone, and Tod was gone
again.
“That’s too bad,” my sister chirped, shooting a look at Brandon 5 which
clearly said oh thank God. “We were so looking forward to meeting him!” Brandon
5 snorted as he slathered a dinner roll with Country Crock.
I looked over at my mother. She was spinning an ice cube around in the
bottom of her empty glass. She gave me a weak smile. “I’ll be right back! I
have to get… something. In the kitchen.” She grabbed her glass and stood up.
My father looked up at my mother. His plate was empty, except for one
piece of turkey bone and an uneaten pile of sweet potatoes pushed to one side.
I watched my father as he watched his wife, impassive, his expression
impossible to decipher. How did he see her on that day? At what point did life
with my mother go from perfume and the feeling of silk stockings wrapping
around his back to a future of falling asleep with the TV on? He watched her as
she turned away and disappeared into the kitchen. I saw his eyes. They searched
the empty space for a lingering shadow of her, the way an eager lover might
sniff the air, searching for a trace of her scent. He reached for the
Corningware dish of mashed potatoes and proceeded to fill his plate up once
again.
“Did you see the Taj Mahal?” Brandon 5 blurted out.
“What?” I regarded him with my head tilted slightly, like a confused
puppy.
“While you were in Paris? Did you see the Taj Mahal?”
So I had heard him correctly.
I’m not sure if I actually rolled my eyes in real life or if I only thought
about it. “Well, no…”
“That’s in India,” Tod interjected without looking up from his phone.
“India – Paris… What’s the difference? All those little European
countries are the same anyway.”
I looked over at Tod. He still hadn’t looked up from his phone, but I
could see that he had his eyes closed and he appeared to be counting to ten,
very slowly. I looked at Brandon 5. He had a tiny glob of Country Crock stuck
in the corner of his mouth and at that moment all I wanted to do was smash him
in the face with something, anything. I stood up fast, and the chair made a
scraping noise against the floor as I pushed it back. It was the same noise the
chair made in school when you were called on to solve a problem on the
blackboard, or the sound your defense lawyer makes as he stands to deliver his
closing argument and a plea for clemency. It was the sound of drawing unwanted
attention.
“I need some air,” I said, and I made my way toward the back door.
Everyone at the table, even my father and Tod, froze and watched me as I walked
out, in flagrant violation of the accepted Script. I heard my mother as she
drifted back in from the kitchen, her voice thick with holiday benevolence and
Harvey’s Bristol Cream.
“Well now,” she was saying, “who wants more carrots?”
I heard the screen door slam behind me as I stepped out into the crisp
November air. I took a few steps away from the house and reached into my pocket
to retrieve the lighter and the joint that I had stashed away earlier. I stood
there for a while, but after about the twelfth futile attempt to light the
joint in the Long Island breeze, I gave up and decided to go into the garage
through the side door.
Once inside, I finally got it lit and took a long, grateful drag. I
leaned up against an old piece of furniture. It was the chest of drawers that
had been in my room when I was growing up. It had been so big when I was a kid,
big enough to hold all my clothes plus some toys and pieces of the world around
me, like the skull of an opossum, some rocks and a piece of charred wood from
the house around the corner that I had watched burn down to the ground. But now
it just looked small and flimsy. I took another hit off the joint and felt
myself start to relax as I looked around the garage, the sweet smell of
cannabis slowly overtaking the lingering scents of motor oil, cigarette smoke
and Old Spice, the pervasive aroma of my father. Most of the space in the
garage was taken up by my old man’s 1968 Mustang. He had bought it new, a
two-door beauty in Royal Maroon. He loved that car and the way he looked when
he was inside it. He loved the way it made him feel, young and cool and ready
to hit almost any road. But it wasn’t long before Tod was born and by then
Teresa and I were already too big for the back seat. Dad decided it was time to
trade in the Mustang for a station wagon, but he couldn’t bring himself to
actually get rid of the Mustang, so he moved it into the garage, figuring that
he’d take it back out again after the kids had all grown, when he no longer
needed a station wagon and two doors would once again be enough. I took another
hit from the joint, breathing in deep and struggling to keep myself from
coughing. It occurred to me that the Mustang was kind of like my dad’s life:
shelved, put aside while he attended to other things, to other people, always
meaning to get back to it but somehow never quite getting there, until it wound
up forgotten, blanketed in dust, corroded, mildewed and going nowhere.
I breathed deep, the harsh marijuana smoke filling my lungs as my mind
began to race. Is my own life going to play out any differently? Am I going to
find myself on the other side, after the Career and the Wife and Kids, the
pediatricians and the graduations, the skinned knees and “Dad can I borrow the
car?”, wondering what the hell ever happened to my life, to my dreams, to
my Royal Maroon two-door dream
machine?
No, I answered myself. That is not how things are going to play out for
me.
I finished the rest of the joint quickly, inhaling deep and holding each
drag in as long as I could. My mind was spinning, now that I knew what I had to
do. I had to finish this joint. Then I had to go back inside and kiss my mom,
and possibly have a slice of pumpkin pie. I had to say goodbye to my family and
I had to go back to Paris. And I had to find Maria.
When I walked back into the dining room, everyone suddenly stopped
talking, trying to act natural, the awkward silence broken only by the sound of
silverware clanging against the good china. Mom finally broke in with one of
her famous the-weight-of-the-world-is-upon-me sighs.
“Where did you go?” Tod asked me.
“For a walk.”
“You smell like a bong,” said Brandon 5.
“You smell like a bong,” said Brandon 5.
“Fuck you, Cooper,” I said. Mom let out a little shriek like she had
just stepped on a sharp piece of glass, but when I looked over at her I could
see she was attempting to hide a little grin behind her napkin. “Great supper,
Mom,” I said. “Is there any pie?”
It wasn’t much later that I was getting ready to head out the door. “I
just don’t understand why you have to leave so early,” Mom was saying as she
handed me my jacket.
“Things to do, Mom. I just realized that I have a lot to do.” I looked
at her square in the eye and said, “I’ve got to go.” She just smiled weakly and
picked an invisible piece of lint off of my jacket. I turned one more time to
face my family, who were now gathered in the den, warmed by the numbing glow of
the television set. “I’ve got to go,” I said one more time. “Goodbye.”
“Bye,” said Tod. He had apparently gotten over Alejandro because he was
now texting someone named Kevin and was arranging an Über to one of the clubs
downtown. Brandon 5 flipped me the bird without looking away from the TV set.
My sister looked at me and rolled her eyes conspiratorially. “Knock it off,”
she said to Brandon 5 and she called him as asshole under her breath, but at
the same time she was draping her arm around him and pulling him in
closer. Mom had already gone back into
the kitchen and her bottle in the cupboard. I turned and made my way out of my
family’s house, into the brisk and windy world outside.
As the door closed behind me, I heard my father. “Goodbye, Tod.”
He never realized his mistake.
As I drove home that evening, I allowed my mind to fill with thoughts of
Maria. I had been fighting that since I had gotten home. Up until then, the
merest image of her flashing through my mind, the random memory of her smell,
the icy blueness of her eyes, was always accompanied by the feeling of a dull
ache in my stomach, or was it my heart. But now, now that I had decided to
return to Paris, to find her again, I could run through the memories of her
with feelings of anticipation instead of despair.
I allowed myself to remember
long afternoons, spent sleeping on the lumpy mattress in my stifling hotel
room, Maria wrapped up in my arms, her breathing soft and comforting. I let my
skin remember her softness. I remembered how I loved to watch her eat, how she
seemed to relish and enjoy every meal with abandon, like everyone in Paris, I
guess. And that night, on the drive to my apartment, those thoughts made me
happy instead of inexpressibly sad.
I once asked the proprietors of the hotel why she was named Maria,
instead of the more common Marie in Paris. My French is pretty weak, so the
best that I could get from their response was that she was de Perse, from Persia. So, she was Persian. No matter. Even though
she didn’t speak English and I certainly don’t speak her language, we said more
to one another with our eyes and with our soft breath than volumes of lyrical
Persian poetry.
The plane landed in Paris and I made my way to French immigration, my
heart beating a little fast and ready to find my way to the Marais. The
official behind the counter was straight out of central casting: the archetypal
Snooty French Waiter. His obsidian-colored hair was slicked down with a severe
part just to the left of center. His face was long and narrow, with a pointed
chin and an Errol Flynn mustache. His long, aquiline nose looked as if it could
only be happy sniffing an impertinent Bordeaux. He eyed me suspiciously, one
eyebrow arched almost comically. “What brings you to Paris, monsieur?” he said.
“I am here to find happiness,” I grinned back.
The official stood there, motionless for a few seconds, regarding me. He
opened his mouth just a little, as if he were about to ask me something, but
then he seemed to think better of it before he grabbed his stamp and imprinted
my passport without even looking at it. He waved me through. “Welcome to Paris,
monsieur,” he said.
I wonder if anyone can ever really get used to the taxi ride from the
deGaulle airport into Paris, particularly during the morning rush hour. For me
it’s a hair-raising, white-knuckled 30-minute dance with Death, full of
too-tight turns, too-tight spaces and angry drivers shaking their fists and
shouting unheard behind rolled-up windows. I found myself staring at the back
of the driver’s head. He seemed nearly unperturbed by the chaos and peril all
around him, occasionally muttering under his breath as his unlit cigarette
nodded in agreement from between his thin lips. I thought about my future here
in Paris. Would I one day reach the point where a drive like this becomes
unremarkable, everyday, just another morning stuck in traffic? At what point
does Paris itself stop being the City of Light, the Eiffel Tower and the Palace
of Versailles, and just become Paris, that city that you have to get through
every night on your way home from work?
Eventually and despite all the odds, we made it into the city, and to
the Fourth Arrondissement. I began to
recognize the narrow streets, the modest yet gracious buildings. Now that it
was December, the acrid smell of roasting chestnuts filled the air. Then I
recognized him, the old man at the café across the street, with his café au
lait and his pained Parisian expression.
“Chat Blanc,” said the driver, turning to face me, one hand extended
towards me as I fumbled with the fare, his other hand already lighting the
cigarette on his lips.
The next thing I knew I was standing in front of the hotel, everything I
had in the world stuffed into two suitcases and a knapsack at my feet. I
pressed the button on the outer door for entry, and within a few moments I was
being buzzed in. I stepped inside the old hotel. Like many buildings in the
Marais, its austere façade pushed right up to the sidewalk, and as I stepped
inside at first it seemed cool and dark compared to the morning glare of the
street. The air inside smelled of tarragon and Gauloises, and the sound of
water dripping somewhere at first made me think of a vast, underground cave. A
single shaft of nearly-tangible light shone down from the skylight above to the
central courtyard below, tiny flecks of dust tumbling and glinting in its light
as they resisted gravity’s inexorable pull downward.
Out of the shadows emerged the diminutive frame of Madame Michaud, the
proprietress, easily as wide as she was tall. She was wiping her hands on her
apron, and her eyes lit up with recognition when she saw me. “Oh, notre ami!” she said, opening her arms
for a hug. “Bonjour! Welcome back to Paris.”
I returned her embrace, kissing her on both cheeks in the French
fashion. I instantly remembered her smell, a curious blend of perfume, fresh
baked bread and disinfectant. I breathed it in deep. “Bonjour, Madame Michaud,”
I said.
She stood back and regarded me at arm’s length. “Maria?” she said.
My breathing stopped for a moment. I was smiling but my eyes still felt
as if they were about to cry. “Maria…” was the only response I could muster.
Madame Michaud turned, and her gaze indicated a small table, off in the
far corner of the courtyard. On it sat a folded newspaper and a coffee cup,
empty, smudged with lipstick the color of a Cardinal’s robes. Next to it a
small chair had been pushed back, and on it I saw a beautiful white Persian
cat, fast asleep, the tip of one paw still basking in the shifting beam of sun
from the skylight above.
Maria.
I ran over to her and scooped her up into my arms, throwing her over my
shoulder and holding her as tightly as I dared. My sweet Maria, my beloved,
beautiful cat. She purred and dug her claws into my shoulder as she recognized
me; and I breathed her in and reveled in her softness. Her long white fur
tickled my nose and I began to laugh.
I was laughing because I was here. I was laughing because I was home.
And I was laughing because against all the odds I had found my way to a place
where I might, finally, be happy.
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