Aaron
Stander comes to Dog Ears Books in Northport today to sign his latest Sheriff
Ray Elkins mystery, The Cruelest Month, and wouldn’t you know that while the
power was back on this morning, the phone was still out? No internet at home!
Well, plans can be changed with the weather and its exigencies, as the last few
days have plainly demonstrated. Weather today in Northport? Power? Phone? Time will tell!
Let’s
start with the morning of Thanksgiving Day. Beautiful sunrise! Oatmeal or
waffles for holiday breakfast? Hardly a question, is it? A friend and I had
divided up the items to be prepared for dinner, and she would be bringing
dressing and dessert, along with yams, so my part of the feast did not require
a pre-dawn start. Instead, my holiday morning was waffles with David, a walk
with Sarah, a little radio with David, a dog bath for Sarah (she is so good
about baths!), and then the dive into cleaning!
After
settling Sarah out on the front walk, drying in warm sunshine and enjoying a
beef bone reward, David dove into cleaning along with me, which always makes
for a more thorough and more interesting and surprising job. Lots of surprises! It was
good to get so much done. I just had not planned on doing quite so
much.
We
had the door to the front porch open to the outdoors. It felt like September!
At David’s urging and on his inspiration, we moved the indoor dining table and
chairs moved out onto the porch, and took the leaves out of the big porch table
so that it became a small square and could move to the indoor dining area with
the smaller captain’s chairs. (Should it be captains’ chairs, as there are two
of them, because doesn’t that indicate two captains? Hardly the case at my
house, or I would not be moving all this furniture!) The change in tables
necessitated a change in lighting, with various lamps tried here and there
until Goldilocks herself would have had to agree that it was “just right!”
Meanwhile,
as David kept having ideas for more and more changes, I had been wielding
vacuum, broom, dustpan, rags, and an array of cleaning products. Piles of
discard items, from clothing to kitchen pans, were growing on the walk outside
the front door. And somewhere in the course of all this madness a couple loads
of laundry had gotten done and hung out on the line, too, and the first load
brought in, wet laundry having dried quickly in the sun and breeze of the
unseasonably warm day. Oh, let me rake leaves for a while! Attend to my
compost!
At
last I called “Enough!” and announced an intention to wash my hair and rest my
back. The porch had grown ever more appealing, sun-warm and newly arranged and
swept clean. A sofa bed down at the south end was calling my name, and I
answered the call. For a while my reading was interrupted periodically, as
David had decided the porch closet needed to be cleaned out, too, and kept
asking me if I wanted to keep this or that. “I’m reading philosophy!” I finally
cried out pitifully. At that he disappeared down into Man’s World (basement),
where he could putter in peace. Sarah took up her windowseat post, and I was
left with my book. My book was so interesting.... At last, quiet....
It
was only a short nap, I swear! And after the refreshing break, I had plenty of
time to chop red onions, white mushrooms, and morels to be sauteed and added to
red quinoa. Cream sauce for the creamed onions was a snap. Cranberry-orange
relish had been made the night before. The turkey breast would not go in the
oven until shortly before Laura arrived, to give us time for a walk and
leisurely conversation on the porch.
“Can
you believe we’re sitting out here on November twenty-second?” David couldn’t
help remarking as the three of us tucked into almonds, black olives, and smoked
oysters, toasting to friendship with glasses of red wine. This was after Laura
and I had gone with Sarah for a walk up Claudia’s hill, but outdoors or on the
porch, the balmy sweetness of the day continued to thrill. It was a little
unexpectedly extra something to add to things for which we were all grateful.
Laura and I met first 42 years ago, David and I and then David and Laura in the
mid-1970s, and many is the Thanksgiving dinner we have enjoyed together. Once,
long, long ago, Laura made duck à l’orange! Her dessert this year was Julia
Child’s apple tarte! Lovely, lovely, lovely....
After
dinner and a movie, the dark sky was strangely mottled with clouds as we bid
Laura goodnight, and during the night the wind picked up speed and the
temperature dropped. Friday morning—snow! Bitter, fierce wind! Tall meadow
grass bending horizontal and penitential. Barn doors flapping! The front porch
issued no invitation to relax on Friday morning!
What
next?
It was hardly surprising: the power went out. David came home first late Friday
afternoon and got the oil lamps filled and the fireplace going. My contribution
shortly afterward was fresh candles (from the Pennington Collection in
Northport). We had leftover turkey and dressing and cranberry relish by fire-,
candle-, and lamplight, and after dinner I read nearly all of A Small Farm
in Maine,
completely lost in that other world, without the distractions of radio or movie
in the background. Then David and I went to bed in caps and robes, entertaining
each other with our respective reminiscences of childhood dream hours spent
over Sears Roebuck catalogs until we were too sleepy to talk any more. That was
nice.
Sometime
in the middle of the night the power came back on. The phone, as I say, was
still out come morning.
What
are the roads like between Interlochen, where Aaron lives, and Northport? What
will today bring, and tomorrow? The forecast had something like a 40%
probability of more snow both days.
Seasons
change as the year cycles around, and then there are stretches where one season
is surprisingly tucked into another for a few days. We had a little extra
September leading up to and going through Thanksgiving Day, and now November is
back. But what does that mean? It hardly gives certainty about any specific day
or how plans may have to be altered at a moment’s notice. Is it Michigan? Well,
yes, and it’s life, too. Life is change, and change is surprising as often or
oftener than it is expected, and it’s good to have jugs of water and candles
and matches on hand.
5 comments:
This is such a lovely description of a lovely Thanksgiving in northern Michigan. It felt like I was right there sipping red wine with you. You are such a good writer, Pamela.
You are kind to say so, Kathy. My little life is quite ordinary, but it means a lot to me.
Anything in your mailbox yet? If you're checking it in the dark, that must mean your delivery is late in the day.... ???
Sounds like a really nice day.
Dawn, it was such a nice day that now, if I wake up in the middle of the night and have trouble getting back to sleep, I go back to that day, start at the beginning, and see how much I can remember. It's very calming.
Makes me smile.
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