BRYN CHANCELLOR
At the Terminal
Francie should have had a suitcase. Something in
understated tweed, perhaps, or maybe one of those old hardsides with
a matching cosmetic case, or a rolling duffel at least. At her age, she
should have worn a better outfit than a T-shirt and baggy denim overalls
and certainly better shoes than her canvas sneakers. Francie fiddled
with a strap on her red backpack, which was faded and warped with age,
rolling the nylon in her fingers the way she used to roll cigarettes
until she'd quit two months earlier. She glanced at herself in the airport
terminal window. Her burgundy modified bob—carefully blow-dried
straight that morning right before Clive said, We need to talk—now
frizzed in the damp Seattle air.
She was three hours early for her flight home to
Phoenix. Since she didn't have to check luggage, she waited on a cement
bench outside the terminal, where city buses hissed and groaned, and
exhaust fumes mingled with the odor of damp soil from potted vincas and
geraniums. A late-summer storm had just blown through, and she shivered
in her short sleeves—in Phoenix, it would be over 100 degrees.
The sky was still mostly dark, the clouds discordant, dropping rain in
light, skittish bursts. Rainwater dripped steadily from the roof onto
the concrete—plop, plop, plop. Francie kept her sunglasses on and
shoved a wilted tissue underneath them from time to time. She looked
up, and a drop of water landed on her forehead—plop.
Francie took out her cellphone and dialed her sister
Jean. Francie had met Clive, indirectly, through Jean: She bought Francie
a DSL connection and Internet dating subscription for Francie's 34th
birthday.
On the night of Francie's birthday, Jean had handed
her the gift certificate and said, "Now, don't freak out."
They were washing birthday-dinner dishes at Jean
and her husband's house in Tempe near the university, where Jean was
an associate professor of anthropology and working on a study of single
women in the 21st century. At 30, Jean was married and up for
tenure. Francie worked as a hair colorist, a now four-year career that
her mother and father, both economics professors, called a delayed
backpacking trip to Europe.
Francie said, "I'm not your guinea pig, Jeanie."
"No, you're my sister. And you need to get out
of the house."
"Hey, I like my house." This wasn't completely
true. Francie rented a one-bedroom guest house, where she stayed in on
weekends, listening to the same CDs for weeks at a time, where she ate
soup with her face too close to the bowl, where she locked the door the
second she was inside and checked it again in the middle of the night.
The part she did like was the dark, grassy backyard, where she could
see stars and planets. She'd been tracking the progress of Mars since
August because she had read that it was closer to Earth than it had been
in centuries. She'd sit out there with some Johnny Cash or Steve Earle
on the stereo, and she felt safe, happy even, just looking up.
Jean said, "Well, I'm telling you now, honey,
it doesn't like you. When was the last time you had a date? Don't make
me ask about sex."
Francie frowned. It had been a year, for both. Bad
first date, bad sex, bad hangover—the trifecta. She bit her lip,
trying to remember the guy's name, and then cleared her throat. "OK,
so you give me a gift where I won't leave my house. I'll sit in a dark
room, chain-smoking, while some guy gets off to my picture."
"It's not like that at all." Jean squeezed
soap onto a sponge. "It's anonymous, yes, which is the paradox of
social interaction in a technological age. And yet, it harkens back to
old courtships in many ways. Letter writing. Except faster."
"Like Jane Austen on speed," Francie said. "Like
Simone de Beauvoir to Sartre, but not."
Jean, a woman with no patience for irony, flipped
soap suds off her hands. She gave Francie a look—which Francie
took to mean, And you wonder why you don't date.
Francie touched her sister's hair. "You need
your roots done. Maybe some highlights too."
Jean knocked her hand away. "Just think about
it for Christ's sake." She picked up a plate of cupcakes and the
coffee pot and headed for the dining room. She stopped and looked back. "I'm worried about
you. You used to be fearless."
Francie listened to the cellphone ring, watching
people unload from a blue shuttle van. Two flight attendants with matching
chignons stepped out with their tidy luggage carts. Francie touched her
frizzing hair as Jean's voice mail picked up. She remembered what her
sister said before this trip, Francie's third to Seattle. Jean loaded
her up with condoms and said, This is it. Six months in, third visit.
This is where you get in or get out. Francie said into the phone, "I'm
getting out. I can't get out of the Pacific Northwest fast enough." Suddenly
she wanted to smoke so badly that she started coughing. She stuck a strap
of her backpack in her mouth and bit down hard.
A man in a wheelchair stopped at a bench a few feet
from her. He was an older man, maybe in his fifties, with silvery hair
down to his shoulders and a Fu-Manchu style mustache. His left leg was
missing from the midthigh down, and his blue sweatpants were folded under
the stump. He held his left arm close to his body, maneuvering the chair
with his right. He carried a duffel bag in his lap and wore a Teva sandal
on his good foot. Francie could see his yellow, overgrown toenails and
this made her morning coffee rise in her throat. He did not look in her
direction. He repositioned the wheelchair in awkward jerks next to the
bench and set the brake. Then he pulled a cigarette from his shirt pocket
and lit it.
Francie rubbed at the goosebumps on her arms and
watched the man smoke. She had long noted how people smoked, believing
you could tell a lot about personalities, even how a person made love.
The man exhaled quietly, blowing the smoke downward. Flicked the ash
rather than tapped it. She would say he was thoughtful, calm, occasionally
aggressive. She was trying to picture him making love—lying back
against the pillows, holding a waist, a breast with one hand, could he
be on top? could he feel his missing leg?—when an image of her
and Clive came unbidden into her head. He had woken her up at dawn, moving
hard inside her, a morning of whispers and gentle sweat and blue light.
"Rat fucker," she said loudly, pushing
her sunglasses up her nose. "Aldous Huxley meets Atticus Finch my
ass." The man in the wheelchair did not look at her, but a
woman coming through the doors jumped slightly then walked a wide circle
around her.
She took a deep breath, and then hunted in her backpack
for nicotine gum. All she found was a restaurant mint at the bottom of
the pocket. She picked off the fuzz and popped it in her mouth, crunching
down hard. She had started smoking when she was 14, sneaking Marlboros
at the bus stop with her friends, the smoke blending with the puffs of
their winter-white breath. That was part of the reason she had quit—after
20 years, her voice was sounding as deep and dry as an old well in the
mornings. Aside from the nicotine kick, she missed the physicality of
it, the hot smoke in her lungs, the loose, moist tobacco in the packet.
She had picked up rolling to save money, but it also gave her a strange
sense of achievement—a tight, neat cigarette, no bulges—and
she was tough and wizened and slightly glamorous when she held one loose
between her fingers—Greta Garbo meets Madeleine Albright. Without
it, she was more of a foul-mouth, aging woman in a tight tube dress,
showing all of her dimpled flesh to the world, tugging at the ill-fitting
elastic of her life.
The other reason she had quit was because of the
non-smoking Clive. She looked at her hands. She had started picking her
cuticles, and her red-rimmed fingernails were slightly blue with cold.
She walked over to the man in the wheelchair. "Excuse
me," she said. He looked up at her then. His eyes were large and
bright blue, his mustache darker than his hair, and she realized that
he was younger than she thought, somewhere in his forties.
She said, "I was wondering, do you think I
could bum a cigarette from you?"
He studied her for a moment, or maybe he was just
looking at his own reflection in her sunglasses. He looked back to the
street.
"No," he said.
Francie stood still, her mouth slightly open. In
all her years as a smoker, no one had ever said no. I'm out,
maybe, or It's my last one, but never, No.
"Well, do you think I could buy one then?" She
felt in her pocket for change. She had stuck some dollar bills in there
for tips.
"No."
"A dollar." She held it up. "For one
smoke."
"Go buy a pack."
"I don't want a pack. I just want one." She
could hear her voice, wobbly as a toddler. "Look, I'm kind of having
a bad day."
"That's your problem."
Her mouth dropped open all the way. Her throat seized
up on her, and she walked back toward her bench. She picked up her old
red backpack and started down the stretch of sidewalk, casing the ashtrays
for butts, but the sand on each was raked and clean as a church driveway.
A bus from a hotel pulled up. People poured out, arms full of windbreakers
and purses and carry-ons. They bustled past, some of them frowning slightly
at Francie, who had sat back down on her bench and begun to sob. Big,
breaking, shoulder-jerking crying.
The man in the wheelchair said, "Jesus, lady.
Is this what you do when you don't get your way?"
"You know, I am a nice person. I am not mean," she
said, plugged-nosed. "I always gave people smokes. Always."
"Good for you."
She shook her head, searching for the words, and
all that came out was, "Go to hell."
"Already there." He nodded a couple of
times.
"You know, I am this close here." She held
up her thumb and index finger. "I'm hanging on by this much."
"Welcome to my world." He took a last drag
and flipped his cigarette butt into the street. He popped his jaw for
a perfect smoke ring. He said, "Life's a bitch, ain't it?" and
he lifted his hand in salute.
Francie's hands started to shake. She pushed herself
off of the bench and stood over him, shoving her sunglasses on top of
her head. Her face and neck felt hot, and she knew her eyes were red
and puffy. He squinted, folding his good arm across his stomach. His
cigarette pack poked out from the top of his shirt pocket. Before he
knew what she was doing, she grabbed the pack and stepped backward.
"Why, thank you for your generosity," she
said. "Sure, I would love a cigarette. How kind of you
to ask." She put one in the corner of her mouth. She patted her
pockets automatically.
She looked toward the street where he'd tossed his
butt, but it had burnt out. She looked up and down the stretch of benches
and not one other person was smoking.
"Where are all the goddamn smokers?" she
said, the unlit cigarette dangling out of her mouth.
"This is Seattle," the man said. He held
up his lighter. He pushed it under the waistband of his sweatpants and
snapped the elastic. Then, he smiled.
Francie screamed. It was loud enough that it echoed
off the concrete terminal and a cabbie driving past flinched and swerved,
loud enough that her vocal chords burned, loud enough that a security
guard was headed in their direction.
The guard looked at the man, then at Francie. "Everything
all right?"
Francie nodded. "I was just startled. The wind
blew, and something hit me."
The guard frowned.
She said, "I thought it was a bat."
"Bats in the belfry," the man in the wheelchair
said.
Francie jerked her thumb at the man. "Painkillers," she
whispered loudly to the guard.
The guard gave a slow nod, still frowning, and walked
back toward his post.
Francie touched her throat, shivering. She looked
at the man in the wheelchair, and he looked back. She crumpled the cigarette
in her hand and then tore open the top of his pack, dumping the remaining
cigarettes onto the sidewalk. She stepped on them, twisting her sneaker
on each one. Her sunglasses fell off her head, cracking on the cement,
so she stepped on those too, until she created a rather large pile of
paper and tobacco and plastic in the middle of the sidewalk.
The man pushed out his cheek with his tongue, and
then sniffed. "You owe me a pack."
"Yeah?" She pointed at his leg. "Make
me."
He shook his head, and then looked back toward the
street.
Francie crossed her arms. She said, "Does nothing
faze you? Anything at all?"
"Not much. Definitely not temper tantrums or
a pint-sized lunatic with hair the color of turnips."
"Wow." She touched her hair, smoothed down
the sides. "You are a wretched little man."
"So I'm told."
Francie checked her watch. It had only been 15 minutes
since the shuttle had dropped her off. Out of the corner of her eye,
she saw the guard headed in their direction again. She scooped up the
mess on the sidewalk and dumped it in the garbage. She grabbed her backpack
and hurried through the automatic doors into the terminal, thinking of
a stop-smoking commercial: a craving only lasts 90 seconds—take
a walk!
"Ha!" she said. She weaved through the
foot traffic, which was growing thicker, people getting out of town early
on Friday. She dodged a family that was lumbering past with two strollers,
and she ducked into a newsstand. She picked up two chocolate bars, a
pack of gum, a lighter, a long-sleeve Mariners T-shirt, a tiger-striped
scarf, and a "Sleepless in Seattle" sleep mask, dumping it
all at the checkout counter.
"I need a pack of Winstons," she told the
clerk. "Actually, two packs."
The clerk started ringing her up. Francie added
another candy bar and a cheap pair of sunglasses to the pile. She told
the clerk, "I was dumped today. By a man I met on the Internet."
The clerk glanced at her quickly, then back at the
register. "$97.53," she said.
Francie handed over her credit card, undid her overalls
and pulled the long-sleeve shirt on. The radio was on in the shop, and
it was then that Francie learned that Johnny Cash had died that day,
after a long bout with illness, mere months after his beloved June Carter
also went to glory. This news made Francie's throat tighten up again,
and she tucked her chin inside her new shirt. She unwrapped one of the
packs and put a cigarette in the corner of her mouth.
The clerk handed her the credit slip. "Oh," she
said. "You can't smoke in here."
"Does it look like I'm smoking in here?" Francie
said.
The girl blinked, averting her eyes, her neck splotchy
with red. Francie put on the sunglasses, the tag still dangling from
the side, and wrapped the scarf around her neck, then stuffed the rest
of her purchases inside the pockets of her overalls until she bulged
like a scarecrow. She stopped halfway to the exit and turned back. She
took out one of the chocolate bars and handed it to the bewildered girl.
Francie walked back through the terminal, the unlit
cigarette in her mouth, lighter in her hand. She passed a coffee stand
and realized it was the same one where she had met Clive in person for
the first time. They had been phoning and e-mailing like mad. Once she
had gotten past the initial horror of writing to a stranger who had a
digital picture of her head, she found that it suited her. She wrote
about things she never voiced, like why she had left academia, how it
felt like existing in a vacuum—the push-around-the-floor, suck-up-the-hairballs
kind. Francie's unfinished dissertation was on hairstyles in the 20th
century, which was how she got into the hair business: field research.
At the salon, she got to listen to people talk about their lives—births,
deaths, work, houses, music, recipes, baseball games, breakups, first
dates, weddings, lifetime loves. It was a powerful position, too—people
don't mess with you when you're wielding scissors and bleach. Her cyber
self was bolder, wittier, sexier—Ani DiFranco meets Clara Bow—than
the self who had started to chastise teenage drivers, who talked to herself
in public, who woke up alone each morning with ever-lingering creases
in her cheeks.
Clive was a Web designer who had majored in art
history. He read books, played the trumpet, could hold conversations
on postmodern criticism and "The Simpsons," and he made Francie
laugh hard enough that she tripped over curbs. She had flown to him each
time, letting him pay for a hotel. When they first met at the coffee
stand, they had stood a couple of feet apart, smiling and staring at
each other. He was thinner and slightly taller than Francie had imagined,
his dark brown hair longer than in his pictures, shaggy on his pale forehead
and neck. Then he had stepped forward, put his hand on her face and said, Look
at you. It's you. Later, he had put his hands up in her then-blonde
hair, kissing her neck and everywhere else he had promised, and she had
felt old and new things, naked and trembling.
She thought about that morning, when Clive had sat
across from her on the hotel bed, after they had made love for two days,
saying things that she'd heard in other places, at other times, in different
terms, from different mouths—It's not you. It's complicated.
I love you, but not in the way you want me to. She'd looked at his
face—a stranger's face still, though she'd tried to convince herself
otherwise—and the cold pain of past failures had swelled inside
of her, rising too fast, cutting through muscle and tendons, until she
had found it hard to breathe.
Flicking the lighter until the metal was hot, she
walked fast through the terminal, and she thought of all of the other
things going on in the world at that time: a war in Iraq, soldiers dying
every day; Mars glowing orange in the southern sky each night; Johnny
Cash, gone; the Cubs and the Red Sox with shots at making the
playoffs. There it all was, moments of the world and her world colliding,
carved into her like an old public park bench.
As soon as she was outside the terminal, Francie
cupped her hand and lit the cigarette. Her nostrils flared and she inhaled
deeply. The smoke tasted slightly stale and flat, harsh in the back of
her throat. She flinched and blew out hard. She took another drag, sucking
until the cotton filter was hot, until her cheeks sucked in. She looked
up, and saw that the man in the wheelchair was still sitting there. Francie
walked over and sat on the bench next to him.
He looked at her, and she blew a stream of smoke
in his face.
"So," she said. "How 'bout those Cubs?"
He glared at her. "I'm a White Sox fan."
"Of course you are." She flicked the cigarette
too hard, and the whole cherry fell off. She relit it, wincing at the
smoke in her eyes. She pushed her new sunglasses on top of her head. "You
know, I don't get you."
"You don't know me. Go tell it to someone
else."
"A person needs a little help, a little compassion,
but not your problem."
"I'm serious, lady." He flipped his wrist
at her. "Get the hell away from me."
She crushed the cigarette under her shoe. She walked
behind him. Calmly, she took off her new scarf, bent down and weaved
it through the slats of the wheels and the metal frame under the seat,
knotting it tight. Then she sat back down.
He reached down, grunting slightly, and pulled at
the scarf. "Undo it. Now."
"Nope. Not until you say something nice. Tell
me something good."
He glanced at the security guard, who was pacing
about a hundred feet from them.
Francie said, "You could ask that guy for help."
She lit another cigarette, and they stared at each
other, smoke curling between them. Francie looked at the man's gray hair.
"OK. I'll start. You have very nice hair. It's
in really good condition." She studied his head, thinking of her
dissertation. "You know, hair has serious roots in social perceptions
of sexuality. And power. And politics. And race, of course. It's complex
stuff." She reached out to touch it, but he swatted at her hand.
She tapped her ash and blew smoke slowly out of
her nose. It tasted terrible, and she was still tense, her stomach hollow
and acidy.
"I just found out Johnny Cash died," she
said. "I mean, I knew it wouldn't be long. When June died, I knew
it. He loved her too much."
"Or because he spent most of his life as an
alcoholic speed freak," the man said.
"You can mess with me, but come on. The man
is a legend, and he's dead."
"Cry me a river. I don't owe you anything."
He reached down again, flailing, breathing hard.
Francie saw his armpits were damp.
She said, "I'll help you if you ask me. Sometimes
we all need a little help."
"Don't you have a plane to catch?"
She checked her watch. She still had two hours.
He tipped his head back. Francie unwrapped a candy
bar and took a bite. They sat for a few moments like that, the man looking
up, Francie chewing.
"I have trouble relating to people," Francie
said, her mouth full.
"Really. I wouldn't have guessed that."
"I don't generally run around tormenting old
men."
He narrowed his eyes. "I'm 48."
"Really. I wouldn't have guessed that." She
folded the foil over her chocolate, then bent at the waist and looked
out at the sky. The clouds were moving fast. She wondered where Mars
was now. It was even larger here in the thin northern sky. Two nights
ago, she and Clive had sat on the hotel balcony, staring up at it. Everything
had seemed calm and right and luminous underneath that orange glow. She'd
looked at Clive's shadowed profile and thought, Maybe.
She told the man, "Maybe it's some kind of
strange energy from Mars throwing things off. You know, it's as close
as ever to Earth right now."
"Mars would explain a lot about you."
"You should talk. Fu Manchu meets, um." She
waved her hand, smiling slightly. "Bartleby the Scrivener."
He didn't smile back. "What do you want from
me? I can't fix anything. I'm just a guy at the airport. I'm just waiting
for a ride."
"I don't want anything. Well, that's not entirely
true. A little compassion. Maybe a little interest in a fellow human
being."
"That's rich, considering you haven't asked
one thing about me." He patted his empty pocket then ran his hand
over his head. "Not even, 'What happened to your leg?' Everyone
asks that, even if they don't give a goddamn."
Francie looked at his stump, then at the good leg,
the yellow toenails. "What happened to your leg?"
He snorted.
She leaned over and held out her half-smoked cigarette.
He hesitated a moment but took it.
"What happened?"
"None of your business." He took a couple
of deep drags, exhaling slowly. Then he said, "Vietnam."
"I'm sorry."
He nodded. He lifted his hand and looked at the
cigarette. He said, "June wrote 'Ring of Fire.'" He glanced
at her. "June Carter wrote 'Ring of Fire,' not Johnny."
"I know."
"So, that's something good, right?"
"That's just stating a fact. If you would've
said, 'June and Johnny were an honest-to-God love story,' you'd be a
free man. Just like that."
"Just like that." He let out a disgusted
sigh. He narrowed his eyes at her. "What's that hair color?"
"It's Black Cherry."
"And you did that on purpose?"
"Hey. I like it."
"It doesn't suit you." He looked at her
head, her face, and then down her body. Her stomach gave a slight jump,
and she thought again of him lying on his back and what it would feel
like on top of him. Her cheeks grew hot.
He said, "You should think about growing it
out."
"God, men. Don't be so predictable. I look terrible
in long hair. My face is too long and oval for it."
"Your face is fine."
"Clive liked my short hair." She shivered,
remembering his hands and breath on her neck. "Although, he did
say, 'Whoa,' when he saw the color."
He shook his head slightly and raised an eyebrow.
She shrugged. "He's a guy I was dating. Someone
who won't be writing me a love song." She touched the tip of her
cold nose, and the smell of cigarettes on her fingers made her wince. "Things
haven't been going very well."
"You can't always make people behave the way
you want them to."
"I didn't mean him. I meant me. But that's quite
an assumption. I didn't try to make him 'behave' in any way." She
thought of the things Clive had said to her that morning, and she pushed
her cold hands between her knees. "It's really not about him. It's
more like an amalgamation of things. But it's true that he doesn't love
me."
"I hope you're not asking me to feel sorry for
you."
"God, no. Not empathy. Never that." Francie
exhaled hard. "You're not a woman, that's for sure. A woman would
have said, 'It's not you, honey.' Even if it wasn't true."
"Clearly, I am not a damn woman."
Francie felt a tightness in her lungs, her mouth
dry and tinny. That pain was rising again, glass shards in her veins.
She looked at her hands, at the inflamed cuticles, the wrinkles and dry
skin, the dirt and chocolate under the fingernails. She stood and walked
behind the man. She leaned down and untied the scarf then put her face
next to his. His mustache brushed her cheek, and his long hair was soft
on her ear. She smelled laundry soap and cigarettes and sweat.
She said, "I want you to tell me something
good. Something kind. Lie if you have to. Or you are going off that curb,
I swear to fucking God." And at that moment, she meant it. A shaking,
blind anger radiated off her skin and got trapped in her clothes, a hot
smell of nicotine and iron and talc. She put her knee against the chair
and gave it a shove. He was heavier than she'd thought. She shoved it
again, harder. He put his foot down and held out his hand.
She pushed him forward until the wheels were a few
inches from the curb, then rolled him back. "It's not that high.
Maybe you wouldn't get that hurt. Unless I get some momentum." She
took another step back.
He cleared his throat but didn't say anything.
Francie glanced at the security guard, who was talking
to someone in a car. She said, "'It was an accident, officer. You
know, the painkillers. I tried to grab the chair . . .'"
He touched his temple, pushed at his hair. She watched
his belly rise and fall.
"Afraid?" she said into his ear. "Welcome
to my world."
He scratched at a spot on his stump. Francie leaned
forward, angling her body so that she could see his face. He licked his
lips and looked her in the eye. She was close enough to see the different
colors in his mustache and eyebrows.
He said, "Go for it."
She blinked, surprised.
He lifted his foot and faced the street. He gripped
the chair with his good arm. "Do it," he said. "Do it."
Francie looked at the back of the man's head, at
his shiny, healthy hair, again at a loss for words. She turned her head
away. She was suddenly so tired that she sat down on the concrete. Her
sunglasses slipped down her nose. She sat for a moment, hand over her
mouth, her left leg growing wet from a puddle. "Okay," she
said finally. "You win."
She put the scarf around her neck and stood up,
brushing at the dampness on her pants. She adjusted her sunglasses, nodded
a couple of times, and checked her watch, as if he had just given her
directions. She hefted her backpack on, then reached into her pocket
and pulled out both packs of cigarettes. She tossed them in his lap.
He picked up the cigarettes and put them in his
shirt pocket. He nodded at her, and she shrugged, lifting her hand. She
walked toward the doors. Her backpack slipped, and she hefted it up higher.
"Hey," the man called out.
Francie turned and looked back at him.
He said, "It's not you, honey." He didn't
smile, but he held up his hand. Then he wheeled himself down the sidewalk.
Francie watched him go, the second man who had made
her cry that day. She wiped under her eyes and blew into her cold hands,
rubbing them together. She went through security and waited in a plastic
chair, her red pack on the seat next to her. She watched passengers emerge
from the tunnels, dazed, rumpled, towing cargo and kids, and she thought
about how quickly things can change. Just like that, for better or worse.
She looked at her watch—she still had more than an hour until her
flight. She looked down at her boarding pass—her ticket out of
that city. The date was bold and black: September 12, 2003. The day she
got dumped. The day she accosted a man in a wheelchair. The day she quit
smoking, again. The fiercely jagged day that she already wanted like
hell to forget. She sat at the terminal, and she closed her eyes, willing
it all to hurry up and fade, as if by sheer resolve she could hasten
the process, do without the weeks or months of hollow nights and red
eyes, so that tomorrow she would wake up with shoulder-length hair the
color of topaz, her mind on someone new, and that faraway day would come
to her suddenly as she stepped off a curb somewhere, the faces now nothing
but flashes of light, the details only muted fragments: the flick of
a lighter, the glow of a planet, the soft hair of a stranger, an old
self who struggled with the new, who loved and lost, who wore sunglasses
in the rain.
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