She chatters easily, incessantly, nonstop. The words fall
endlessly from the tip of her tongue into the receiver pressed against my ear.
I lay the phone upon the counter and the chatter continues, mindless chatter
falling on deaf ears.
Her pitch changes and I quickly reach for the phone and
press it once again to my ear.
I’m sorry, what was
that?
I can hear her heavy sign. Her failed attempt at repressed frustration.
I saaaid, how can you
stand all that rain?
There it is. The change in pitch I thought I heard before. A
slight raise in the octave singling that a response is in order. A small adjustment,
but big enough to bring me out of my reverie, to set off warming singles in my
mind, to remind me that a phone conversation is an exchange between two people.
I don’t mind the rain,
I simply answer.
I gently, soundlessly place the phone back on the counter
and the ceaseless chatter begins again.
She doesn’t know that it hasn’t rained for weeks in Seattle;
that the ground is in desperate need of a downpour, that there is a burn ban
and a brush pile in my backyard. She doesn’t know how the lake water is
receding. Nor does she know how I have seamlessly adapted into my new home
3,000 miles away. How I too am in a fragile season, a drought. With only one careless
spark away from bursting into uncontrollable, raging flames.
She never asked.
I don’t mind the rain.
The rain would be relief.
I wait by the counter a little longer, listening for the
change in pitch to once again occur.
One. Two. Three minutes pass. The words fall off her lips into the open
space around me. I hit the red button on the receiver, push away from the
counter, and wait for the rain.
8 comments:
WOW, That was AMAZING!!!!! So much detail i could actually see it.
got to love people that don't realize that a conversation requires two people. it drives me nuts!
and i would love some rain too! fire season scares me. it is supposed to rain here tomorrow, but who knows, it might end up being 80 again.
if you need a friend, i am just down the coast about 1,200 miles. :)
Beautiful! I am praying for the rain too!
Beautifully written!
So, you should write a book.
seriously! are you a poet?? such a pretty little post!
www.pillowthought.com
Beautiful post, Danielle! You're a wonderful writer, so eloquent :)
beyond beautiful! i don't mind the rain either. ;)
i'm back! http://bywayofney.blogspot.com
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