Yesterday was a fine day.
The fog didn’t come in so much, but it was overcast, and strangely warm and very strangely humid, for the Bay Area. Pleasant. I had my usual Monday on tap – do some computering, physical therapy Monday morning 10 o’clock, top that off with a visit to the gym until around noon, find stuff to do the afternoon and evening – there’s always stuff to do.
The girl of my dreams is in town, leaving later this week on orders from immigration. Her trip curtailed from three and a half months to two weeks, mindlessly and gratuitously cruel, after about 24 hours of mourning and confusion and planning for an immigration lawyer, she staged the most resilient performance I’ve ever seen. She planned like a madwoman. She had planned to see her 25+ friends – she says she has more friends here in California currently than she has ever had, total, back in Germany. I think she becomes a different woman here, which is why she wants to be here.
So what she did was plan to see every one of those friends that she had planned to spend time with over three and a half months in just two weeks. I told her it seemed like when she packs her suitcase, and she agreed. And amazingly, in these two weeks, there has still been enough time for me. It helps that we live four houses away, and that she uses my washing machine and dryer, and that she borrows my spare car. But we also eat and shop and do things. All I really need is one hit a day and I’m happy. I’m transformed, too.
So, yesterday I got her text – we text pretty much every day. We leave each other saying “Let’s keep in touch,” ironically and humorously, mocking closeness with words of distance. I knew this was the day her friend from San Diego – she had planned to go down there for maybe a week before she got screwed by immigration – was coming up. I knew I’d be seeing her for a fancy dinner in the city on Tuesday, so that was my current milestone, so I thought maybe a text on Monday, or maybe not. But it seems that she had a 3 o’clock meeting planned, and she had stuff to do in the morning, but there was a hiatus just after noon. That worked fine for me.
She has been in search of missing Birkenstocks – where have they gotten to? We don’t know. She searched the suitcase and other stuff stored in my closet – where are they? Not just any Birkenstock – she shops with precision, she dresses with style and precision. We had searched for replacements down at REI – no go. But we got her some very nice other stuff there, she loves REI, she tries it all on, she is so beautiful. But, Monday after noon, we could search for those Birenstocks elsewhere – I had looked on the internet and identified the Walk Shop over in North Berkeley on Vine as a possibility. And she wanted to go to Saphora down on Fourth Street to get just the right blush. She is precise and very effective. We could go together or she could borrow the car. Guess what our choice was.
So we head out to Fourth Street first. It’s usually a hassle to park there, and it looks like the old parking lot is unavailable from construction. No matter, just turn down Fourth and see what pops up. Is that a spot? Yes it is! Right on the street! I’ll take it! There are a couple of others, she says, that one is easier to park in, up ahead. Well, maybe, but then two cars come up past me as I’m poised to back into spot number one, and the first car keeps going but the second one takes the sport we were contemplating. Rule number one when parking, I say, take the first spot. Unaccountably, I do a masterful job of parallel parking. I have admitted to her that I’m not that great a driver, knowing that she is ready to highlight my driving deficiencies as I scrape the right front wheel as I pull forward into the curb in front of my house. But then she has said back to me, you should be more confident of your driving, that’s all that’s wrong. I could just eat her up.
So we get out of the car and I take maybe four steps in the direction of Sephora, but she doesn’t get even that far. The store we have parked in front of is one we weren’t aware of, it’s called Buck Mason. We walk in and Lauren, our young saleslady from Fremont, pretty girl, says to Jenny – I like the cut of your shirt! Yup, Jenny is stylish, a great striped linen shirt with a different cut, and oh so attractive when worn by Jenny. So she looks over the merchandise. It’s a small store, with space to walk around, not that large a stock, but really nice. And there is music. On a turntable, with vintage vinyls on the shelf underneath. And they are playing Buddy Holly. Buddy Holly! They’re playing Buddy Holly! This is my music, I say. Lauren has introduced herself to Jenny, Jenny has some stuff to try on – shirts; she doesn’t need more jeans, and she got some nice pants when we were at REI – and I talk with Lauren and ask if she knows how Buddy Holly died. It’s vague to her, of course, and she tells me I would probably like some of the other vinyls there, although she bets that some of them are before my time. Well, I look younger than my years, and I’m with Jenny, so yeah – but no, of course not. Sam Cook. It’s true, there’s some Nat King Cole, but I remember him on TV, and he was there on a movie the other night on TCM – I’m having trouble remembering just which one. Before my time, not so much.
Jenny comes out of the dressing room a couple of times. She’s like a model, everything looks great on her. We consult with each other – we are very practiced co-shoppers, it always goes well. Lauren has shown me their limited selection of men’s T-shirts, which are nice. She tells us that their stuff if manufactured in Pennsylvania, and I ask where, telling Lauren that I’m from Pennsylvania, so exactly where matters to me. She’s hazy on Pennsylvania geography, but Google isn’t, and yes, Mohnton, where the mill is, is just outside Reading. Reading! That’s where my first girlfriend came from! I know Reading well – the home of beer, pretzels, vice, and Albright College. Vice – Carol King, my first girlfriend, told me how their girls’ service club delivered goodies of some sort to houses in the poorer area of Reading around Christmas time, and a woman at the door took the donations to the poor gratefully from the high school do-gooding girls and said, “Thank you! The girls will love it!” Reading. Vice in Reading.
Anyway, domestic goods. Nice T-shirts, I’m looking to refresh my collection. Lauren suggests a mauve and a brown, I tell her I need Jenny to help, Jenny comes over and says, no brown for him, he doesn’t like brown, well, he always wants blue, and we go through a couple of possibilities and I take two to try on and she says – the blue one will look best on you. We’re a couple out shopping. Lauren sizes us up and thinks that, since I said I was from Pennsylvania, we are on a trip together as travelers, and treats us as such. She says, what else are you going to do today? I smile a little and say, well, at three, she has to be in the city to meet another guy. Jenny says, yes, that’s true. Lauren now doesn’t know what to make of us at all. Who does?
We buy our stuff, put it in the trunk of the car, since we parked directly in front of the store by chance, although you have to wonder if it really was by chance, so much that we do together winds up like this, you really have to wonder if it’s chance, and head off to Sephora, which was our destination. She gets something close to the blush she wanted, I ask her what foundation she uses, she shows me – not so clueless, me! A guy asking about foundation! She says, why do you want to know? I say, well, just because.
We get back in the car and take off for the Walk Store. We find it and park – good parking spots just come up for us, all the fucking time, I swear. We get out and the guy sitting in front of Peet’s says to me, how much does it cost to change oil for a Mercedes at Jiffy Lube? Strange question, I think, and I say, what $85? I don’t know. We walk off and Jenny says, you should really have been nicer to him, if you’re nice to people you … something or other. It’s true, I was a little annoyed – I think it was being identified as a Mercedes owner – it was Ann’s car originally, I drive it now without loving it much, but it’s a good car. You’re probably right, I tell Jenny, which I generally do say, and I think about everything she says, and I treasure her criticism, I take it for love, of a sort, and I wonder if there’s anything wrong with my doing that, but then I think I don’t care, maybe. If she pays close attention to me, I’m going to complain?
The Walk Store doesn’t have exactly what she wants. Close. She needs narrow shoes, and the style that she wants doesn’t have that in stock. She’s been frustrated by this for over a week! Where are those shoes? OK, Budd says replace them, but that’s proving hard. If only she had more time. Why is it she needs to find Birkenstocks in Berkeley, not back in Germany, anyway? She has some explanation....
We go back to the car empty-handed, and we engage in gentle conversation with they guy who wondered about the oil replacement. Jenny shows me how it’s done. She really doesn’t know how good I am at talking to people, I think. Maybe. Anyway, I love seeing her talk to people. She’s proud about how she does it. She claims that she used to be an introvert. Something happened to her in Germany. I remember we did that getting coffee and pastry down at Baker & Commons, down on College Avenue, and the lady next to us agreed with all our opinions, a teacher in Berkeley, loved talking with us, maybe newly retired, and Jenny said, see?! Her new best friend. Which we also did when we got pizza at Rose Pizza over on University, and the couple next to us were a new couple, his wife had died, but they were very close with each other, clearly, and we talked for maybe an hour and then the next week we had extra tickets for the Giants and we invited them and had a great time. Doug and somebody, from down the Peninsula. They were nice. I wonder if they got married – I’m betting they’re still together.
Can we go to REI and check out the shoes again, she asks. No, I say, you don’t have time. It would take 15 or 20 minutes to get there, and you have to be in the City by 3. It could have been earlier, she says, but his plane was late getting in so he missed his Walnut Creek meeting and texted me that we could get together earlier but I had already made plans. We go back home and she takes about half an hour getting ready and comes back to pick up the car and it’s already 3 o’clock when she take off. She has on a completely different outfit. I ask her what they will do and she says he rides a motorcycle and they will motorcycle around the city and she loves that. I caution her about motorcycles and she says they wear helmets. She drives off and I stop myself from thinking about the rest of her day and I count myself so lucky to have had this couple of hours.
She gets back about 11:30 at night and I hear her lock the car in the driveway and I step outside and call to her – I’m up because I took a nap and when I do that I stay up late, working on the paper I said I would. She had asked me what I was going to do and I told her I had some writing projects and she made sure I was going to do them. I lazed around, actually, watched Slaughterhouse 5 which I had seen some of a couple of days ago and had saved, and I really liked it, Vonnegut is a very favorite author, I don’t know if Jenny reads him, I think she read one of his books a while ago, I did buy her a copy of The Years by Annie Ernaux and I hope she read that because both she and Annie view their lives as adventures. So Jenny said she had had a good time and was tired and will text me tomorrow.
Budd Shenkin

