I'll be guest blogging tomorrow with agent extraordinaire Linda Epstein (Associate at The Jennifer De Chiara Literary Agency). Linda always has something interesting to say about writing, publishing, reading, traveling. . . and talking, naturally: her blog is The Blabbermouth.
I'm thinking about writing and saving, writing and frugality. A few days late, but still in time for Earth Day?
Do stop by!
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Howling
Reading comfortably, cat on my
lap, I was too lazy tonight to close the living room blinds, and so I looked
out around 8:30 to see the moon just about full--or fully full? Clear sky after
days of rain and slipped white clouds behind it, the kind that take on a shade
close to brick just where the darkness resumes, and then a thin strip of gray
cloud--steel gray, or darker--that seems to cross the moon itself.
Nothing happens, just a little
movement, a little more, and still, it's fascinating. The moon is cupped in the
frilly, still-bare branches of my neighbor's tree--willow? poplar? elm? I'll
have to ask her. Something light, and this is the upper twigs (we're talking,
after all, about the moon) and still, somehow, black lace against a deep blue
sky, the spindly upper branches seem ready to take its weight if needed. The
neighbor is a friend, a colleague, a person whose company I enjoy, one who has
offered comfort in a time of terrible grief--she seems, in short, like the
sort of person whose front yard tree would support the moon's weight, and more.
And then the moon rises further,
the clouds slip south, and the sky behind the moon is like the deep blue velvet
of my mother's first formal dress, one I could never really fit into properly,
but loved.
And then I turn away from the
window to help my daughter with her Spanish homework. When I look back, the
moon is entirely gone, the sky is black: we live on a planet with neither moon
nor stars. Perhaps the eternal darkness has begun.
But the cat is still stretched out
on my lap, one leg extended languidly across my shin, a hind paw desultorily
raised, tail lost under my book. He must weigh twelve pounds by now, maybe
more. My legs, resting on a hassock, are starting to go numb.
Cheating? This is the moon from my apartment in Rosario. But it is the moon, and I did take the picture. |
The moon might return. There's a
near glow to the puff of cloud just beyond the neighbor's tree. We had hail
today (heavy, like someone in the sky pouring out a spent beanbag chair,
shaking the white pellets down with a vengeance) and sunshine (enough for a
good run) and more hail, a little wind. There's no reason to think, after dark,
the weather will hold still until morning. So the moon might be back; later, it
might be bright enough, outside, to read.
This isn't a story. But it might be where a story begins.
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