Simone and I moved downtown a month ago. After some very
intense wrangling
with US Bank, I was finally able to cut loose from the Big Blue House and find
a place in downtown
He gave me the keys, then gave me the tour. His wife is
doing very well for them, so the house was rife with displays of their budding
wealth: a high-def TV the size of a football field, the new furniture, the
fixtures. He showed me everything, even his new workshop, situated in the
second garage. I could see how happy his new home made him. But I was irritated
and harried, so I said all of the nice things, then got into the car and took
off.
There was a time in my life when a place like that, with all of its domestic suburban luxuries, was what I dreamed of — a yard with a garden, my own studio, a sprawling home with all of the latest modern miracles. But as I hit the highway and started driving west, I realized how very different my outlook had become. My best friend’s chosen way of life no longer appealed to me at all.
The movers came the next day, and packed the truck full. I packed my car, and we sped to the new apartment. It’s a cute place, in an amazing part of the city — downtown, with all of its restaurants and bars and culture, is a short walk over a bridge, through a park, and over another bridge. But right on our street is one of the best sushi places in the city, several good watering holes, and a half-dozen places to grab a bite. The aquarium and the amusement park are right down the street.
“I need your help. Please come to the house at
I never ask for help. It’s an issue. If Alison hadn’t
insisted on spending hours helping me pack, I would have said something about
being able to do it all myself, and would have suffered for it. Nate responded
with, “I’m in.” I didn’t hear from my suburban friend until that Saturday, when
Alison and Nate and I were packing boxes like fiends, trying to make headway.
He called at
I was so angry and so disappointed. And between his total lack of consideration (not even offering to help on Sunday if I needed it), and my sense of detachment when visiting his new house, I began to seriously consider that our friendship had run its course. But I didn’t have time to be hurt; there was still so much left to be done.
It took us all day Saturday to move, and I still had to rent a truck on Sunday, which Nate and I filled completely, to get just about everything out of that house. The apartment was all boxes and plastic trash bags and Rubbermaid tubs by Sunday afternoon, when I headed back, alone, for a final trip to the house.
It was almost sunset by the time I’d dragged the rest of the
trash from the Blue House. The curb looked like a yard sale on crack. I was
vacuuming when the new owner of the house, a charming grandmother who’d bought
the place for herself and her son and his twin boys, showed up to see how things
were going. She told me not to bother with the carpets, helped me gather the
last of my stuff, and waved as I got into my car.
It was one of those dusks that are so crystal clear because the summer breeze and afternoon storm clouds have removed all of the haze. The sky was dark and roiling as I pulled away from the Blue House, and I had to stop the car across the street and look back. The trees were a vibrant green, their leaves whipping around in the emerging thunderstorm. The Blue House had never looked more beautiful, more vivid, there, in the moments before the tempest hit. This wasn’t how I was supposed to leave her. This wasn’t how it was supposed to end. I was abandoning a lost cause in ignominy, not triumph. I felt more than a little twinge of regret as I took a last look at my big Blue House, and drove away.
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