“I do what?”
“A half step. Like a baby step. But with bigger feet.”
Just now we’re stuck at the most difficult part. Getting
started.
“Which direction do we step?”
“I guess toward the beach.”
We are presently five hours and six more weeks of winter away from the
shore. We pause and gaze serenely eastward in honor of the ocean.
“What are you doing?” The Captain wipes his eyes with the
sleeve of his Jimmy Buffett t-shirt and peers at me.
“You’re gazing toward the kitchen. East is the other direction.”
“You’re thinking of
the cheesecake in the refrigerator.”
“It reminds me of the beach”
“Because they both remind me my swimsuit doesn’t fit.”
“Step.”
“Okay.”
We immediately step in opposite directions, then back, then
smash each other’s toes into the biological equivalent of strawberry jam. Our arms are locked around us and we’re stuck
together like purse-bottom postage stamps. Every time he breathes, my glasses
fog up in a half moon shape.
I glare at him through a sliver of light at the bottom of my
right lens. “The men on the video were light on their feet.”
He grimaced and limped to a chair. “I wish you were light on my feet.”
“You need to practice. You’re supposed to look like you’re
hovering just above the ground.”
“The hovering thing got beat up before I got the butter on
my popcorn.”
“I’d rather line the bed of my truck in taffeta and throw an
afternoon tea for the Sugar Tit chapter of the Hell’s Angels.”
“The only motorcycle in town belongs to Old Man Pirkle, the
Volunteer Fireman and Assistant Mayor.”
“We could just watch You Tube demos and eat cheesecake.”