“You are sick, very sick,†the
femme announced as she walked in the door.
I was sitting on the side of the couch, paying attention to nothing in particular, and so it took a bit for me to see she was here.
The
femme had spent Christmas in Omaha with her sister and her family, and was on her way back home in the big city. We’ve never spent a holiday together, as her sister doesn’t care for me, and she finds my notions of ways to spend holidays somewhat, uh, unconventional, not to her tastes.
It works out.
“You are really sick; you look lousy,†she repeated.
I admitted I was, and chastised her for showing up. “You know I don’t like people around when I’m down. They tend to get all aggravated and bent out of shape, which makes it worse. Best to stay away, so I can give it time to pass.â€
She said she’d dropped by because she wanted to know what kind of Christmas I’d had.
I told her, and then added that beginning sometime Sunday afternoon, I started going downhill, and well, here I was, at the bottom. “I’ve been even too tired to cook, other than coffee.â€
And I remembered, “I’m almost out of orange juice. In a pinch, there’s all that fresh and frozen fruit that can be juiced up for Vitamin C, but at the moment, even pushing a button on the blender is beyond me, much less going to town to get orange juice.â€
I didn’t need to mention the weather; there was a blinding blizzard going on outside, which was another reason I’d wished she’d just continued on to the big city, without stopping here first. It was forecast to get worse.
She said not to worry about the weather, and asked me what I’d like to eat.
“Broccoli and cheese, with a side dish of sour cream,†I said.
She went into the kitchen to cook, and I took the opportunity to rise from the couch. I didn’t want to do it in front of her, because it took some effort, and she might insist upon helping.
The
femme is a solid woman, 5’8†and 117 pounds, and of course healthy and vigorous, but still, I have 57 pounds and five inches on her, and being a man, I don’t need to lean on a woman.
- - - - - - - - - -
She brought the last--about a quart--of the orange juice to the table, and then dinner. There wasn't much space on the dining-room table because of all the presents, but she cleared out a usable corner. She partook of the broccoli and cheese, but not of the sour cream, and so I dined on her portion of that too.
“You know, this just isn’t good,†she began…..
Uh huh. The Argument Again.
“You’re way out here in the middle of nowhere, nobody else around within reach, and if something were to happen--â€
“I’ve been out here since September 4, 2005,†I interrupted, “and nothing’s happened.â€
“I worry. Everybody worries,†she replied.
“Well, I don’t ask anybody to worry,†I retorted. “There’s no need for anybody to worry.â€
“But you can’t hear, and things are always going on around you that you don’t know about. People even come inside this house, and you don’t know they’re there.
“Some day the wrong person’s going to come inside, and you won’t even have time to know it.â€
I groaned.
“The woman who lived in this place before I did, lived here all alone, until she was carried away to the nursing home in town at the age of 102 years, where she died six months later.
“She’d been blind the last twenty years of her life, and nothing ever happened to her.â€
“But you forget,†the
femme inconveniently pointed out, “she’d lived here for seventy years or more, and knew every square inch of ground. She could hear things, and could use a telephone. She kept three dogs inside this house, and four outside. And despite that she was blind, she could aim and shoot a rifle as good as any marksman.
"And besides, that was during a kinder and gentler age, twenty-five, thirty, years ago, when there weren't homeless people, jobless people, malicious people, weird people, predators and freeloaders, running around."
- - - - - - - - - -
“Look,†I said wearily, “I know it’s an illusion or delusion or whatever; I know no man is an island, wholly independent of others and wholly self-reliant.
“And myself, well…..I work for a living and pay my own way through life; I’m not pickpocketing other people’s wallets to support me. But the sad sordid fact is--and I’ve always admitted it--that I’m more dependent, more reliant upon others, than even a six-year-old child with ears.
“It’s a bitch, being a strong healthy male, and having to lean on people because I can’t hear, having to have others watch out for me, watch my back.
“But that’s my fate in life, and I long ago accepted, adapted, and moved on.
“For the meantime however, even though it’s a fantasy, that I don’t need other people, I rather enjoy having that fantasy. And I’d just as soon keep that fantasy until something happens, or I die, preferably the latter.â€
- - - - - - - - - -
We finished lunch, and after putting the dishes away, she got ready to leave.
The blizzard outdoors had worsened, visibility near zero, but the
femme’s a woman of the Sandhills of Nebraska; she knows how to handle such things. If she’d been a woman from one of the effete blue states, or even from Omaha, I would’ve insisted she stay until the storm was over.
She kissed me and left.
- - - - - - - - -
The neighbor came by a couple of hours later, bringing four gallons of orange juice.
She’d known he was coming out here anyway, and so had telephoned him about it, and so he’d stopped off at the grocery store in town before coming here.