Visiting family in Portland.
In the kitchen my eyes are drawn continually to the clock, the place
where a clock would logically be. But it’s
not a clock, it’s a round bowl-shaped, screen-thing decorated with
dragonflies. Many glances before my brain
is convinced my eyes will not find a clock there.
On the beach there has been an enormous die-off of little crabs,
about a nickel or quarter-sized diameter.
Their bodies mark the long uneven lines of high tide.
For Mother’s Day the community has hid glass balls–floats–on
the beach for people to find, not unlike an Easter egg hunt. These are decorative newly-made glass balls,
not the old ones designed to keep fishing nets managed.
Groups of people are searching for the glass floats,
randomly, combing through the grass and log-strewn dunes where we typically
enjoy solitude.
My wife Aisha and I believe that certain small found objects
are tokens of good luck.
Historically, I have been good at finding beach glass, water
and sand erosion rounded shards and scraps.
Over these seven days I am finding almost none, but Aisha is finding
much.
But, oddly, I am finding many agates. I am thinking of an old Jesse Colin Young
song:
And my front pathway markers
Are
pieces of granite and chert.
Note to self: research the difference between chert and agate.
Note to self: hold on the vinyl LPs (which I haven’t played
for years).
The Green Flash. I
have always wanted to see this near mythical phenomenon which occurs over the
horizon as the sun sets in the Pacific.
Is that a real thing,
Aisha asks, the Green Flash?
I tell her I believe it.
The cloud-dancing coast of Oregon in late spring will probably not be
the best place to see it.
“The Blue Men,” my favorite story by Joy Williams. The line:
The blue men! We
wanted so much to see them but we never did.
Written on
postcard from the main character’s now-dead son.
We visit Mo’s for dinner, an indulgence, a ritual. There’s a touristy junky toy shop alongside
the line to be seated and I remember Macklin finding this bottle opener with a pirate’s
head as the handle. The pirate looked
exactly like him.
Outside of Mo’s is where the Siletz River meets the ocean
and the water roils with the meeting of the fresh water emptying out and the
salt water rolling in. Seals are out in
the water by the dozens rearing their head above the surface randomly, sleek
water dogs, a couple dozen of them. Above,
an equal number of seagulls squawk and wheel and dive also seemingly at random.
In the sky above all this the sun is radiating through spectacular dark
clouds. There won’t be green flash
tonight but it truly is grand.
We’ve been meeting with a real estate agent here at the
coast. We trust her, and like her. She reveals a surprising amount of personal
information about herself, unbidden.
Which seems somehow unlike her.
She tells us about the time when she and her twin sister were attacked
by an intruder at their home in Ketchikan.
Their father arrived in time to prevent disaster.
Did
they catch him? We wanted to know.
No, his footprints went through the snow in
the backyard, over the fence and into the woods.
None of the houses we look at inspire us to imagine we could
love them more than the house we live in now.
How
many kids do you have? The real
estate agent asked.
One,
we half-lie. It’s easier.
A few days before he died Macklin and I had a long
conversation. He was thinking, he said,
of moving to Lincoln City. This
surprised me because when we took him to Lincoln City he sulked the whole time
and barely left the hotel room. He also
asked if I had a spare crucifix. I did. He asked if he could borrow a shirt for a job
interview. That blue striped one. Of
course. Could you iron it for me?
I wish I could remember all the details of that long
conversation. I mainly remember he was
calm and wise, as opposed to his more frequently presented self: agitated and
smart.
Beach reading. For a
piece I’m writing: David Roberts, Dee Molenaar, Jim Whittaker. For pleasure: Valerie Luiselli, Jenny Offill,
Laura Van den Berg. From Van den Berg:
Behind
every death lay asset of questions. To move on was to agree not to disturb the questions, to let them settle with the
body under the earth. Yet some questions so thoroughly dismantled the terms of
your own life, turning away was gravitationally impossible.
Because my friend did it, I enter some bits of information
into The Death Clock. According to the
Death Clock I will live to be 69 years, 11 months and 2 days. My last day will be Wednesday May, 10, 2023.
At the shortest life cycle a dragonfly from egg to the death of the adult is about six months.
Which is why I have almost always avoided fortune-tellers, psychics,
tarot, and even shamans and lamas. Don’t
ask about what you don’t wish to know.
For Mother’s Day my wife asked me to accompany her to Sunday
mass. The priest was dreadful, a second-language speaker who paused a full
breath between each word.
Through these mysteries
may grace
be given,
O Lord, that
understanding our earthly
desires we may learn
to love the
things of heaven.
My wife demanded a refund from me.
At the shopping center.
My wife points to a penny on the ground.
I pick it up.
I
put it there, she says, for you to
find.
What?
Yes, my shirt was $9.99 and they gave me penny. I felt sorry for you because you haven’t found any beach glass.
Yes, my shirt was $9.99 and they gave me penny. I felt sorry for you because you haven’t found any beach glass.
On our next-to-last morning we find a dead baby seal on the
beach. We had seen them riding on their
mother’s backs. This one shows no sign
of trauma and I wonder if it has somehow drowned. Its lips are curled upward as if in a smile.
The room we are staying in is right on the edge of a bluff
looking over the beach. We have stayed
in this exact room, by request, many times. The windows look west and
north. Because we are so close to the
edge, the birds swoop past the windows as if we’re in tree house. We look down at the beach with a bird’s eye
view. People, whose actions are
mysterious from this height. Dogs,
running with joyful abandon.
In the last photograph of Macklin, the one the trooper
showed me on his cell phone to identify him, he has just been pulled from the
water. He is not smiling. No, he is not smiling at all.
At the memorial service I am sitting next to his girl
friend. She reaches over to hold my
hand, I think, but instead she passes to me the pirate bottle opener. He
continued his spiritual journey dressed in the shirt I ironed for him with the
crucifix he asked for. I hold on to the
bottle opener.
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