I stopped off in The Dusty Bookshelf. I found Billy Collins
sitting hardbacked on the shelf for $7.95, used. He made me smile at almost
nothing as I stood for free – with an occasional tug in the other direction.
But I was more in the mood for something – or someone – softer. Not overly
animated, but responsive to my pensive looks.
A fragment of Beethoven’s 7th drifted down from a
speaker on the top shelf. I think it might have been called the funeral march.
I turned a chair around from a corner in the nearby Romance section and faced
it towards the door.
I slouched. I think that I have always slouched. I crossed a
shin over a knee and, with a book – balanced - I made a desk. I didn’t have
anything to say. Nothing to compete with the bright May sunshine outdoors and
the breeze there tickling the fresh green leaves filling out winter’s bare
branches. The first hot day of this year, it was – or, at least that’s my
recollection. The outside sounds, a whisper. I could have waited the rest of
the day and into the evening for someone to walk by that door – someone I knew
and could actually talk to - and me, not merely panhandling someone’s reluctant
friendship.
This is where you came in, I suppose. From where I sit, the
letters backwards on the glass, I imagined that you were smiling at me – and
maybe for a moment, I got a little more than I actually deserved. Or perhaps
you thought I was too busy to interrupt, my brow may have been furrowed, my pen
scribbling on a scrap. Ah yes – we were but strangers in a used bookstore.
Rhyme and reason – but not for the two of us. Still, the day through the door
in front of me was bright.
I clicked my Pilot G2 and folded some words into a
rectangle. I slipped paper and pen into my shirt pocket.
**
I’m making up this loneliness stuff – really – it comes and
goes like the shadows of people walking by. I have a smile on my face more
often than not and the downward squint of my left eye I simply got from my father.
It’s mostly because of the bright light that I’m not hurrying towards just yet.
I’ll take some words away from these books – someone has
carefully noted what they had to say in their time. But right now, carelessness
would suit me better – maybe a kid tripping over a crack in the sidewalk and
laughing. So many of these words are some kind of filler. Occasionally, perhaps, a reminder to open your eyes to life
outside yourself.
Still, it’s been quite pleasant chatting with your imaginary
self. But someone else has surely been waiting for someone, too. I think I’ll get out of this chair and go
open somebody else’s door.
1 comment:
I laughed at your Pilot G2 reference. My favorite pen cause I can recline and do my nightly puzzles in an attempt to delay a frontal lobe decline.
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