We Were Flying to Chicago by Kevin Clouther
Author:Kevin Clouther [Clouther, Kevin]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781936787166
Publisher: Catapult
T-BONE CAPONE LOVES THE LADY ACE
In Islamorada the sky was blue and cloudlessâperfect, except that neither of us could see the sun from the car, which Angela said was a bad sign. We had the windows down and the air conditioning on, a luxury we never allowed ourselves with my car. The rental was so clean it embarrassed me, as if my cluttered car were a testament to my reluctance to change or inability to recognize when I should. When I said this to Angela, she said my car needed a new muffler.
âEvery time you go over thirty, it sounds like itâs dying,â she said.
âYouâre just saying that because this car is so quiet. This is the quietest car Iâve ever been in.â
Angela turned off the radio and made a noise like she was gargling without water, which sounded a lot like my car at forty-five miles per hour.
âThatâs good,â I said.
âWhere is the sun?â She undid her seat belt and turned around. âI havenât seen it since Miami.â
Weâd been driving for two hours, enough time for the spontaneity of the trip to approach frustration. We left after lunch, not sure how else to spend a long September Saturday. But when Angela ran to put on the one dress Iâd ever bought her, and I scrambled to stuff clothes into a backpack, I was sure this was exactly what we needed: a long drive and a hotel stay far from the city. The rental carâa gift from the bus that ripped off my side mirror and cleanly scraped the carâs doorâseemed then a chariot sent to take us south. But the hotels looked dirty and expensive, and the sun was so far above us I felt directionless, and Angela sounded lonely.
âI didnât tell Stephanie we were going,â Angela said.
âWe didnât tell anyone. We filled the catâs bowl and we left.â
âWhy canât I get a signal?â
âThereâll be reception at the hotel.â I could fill the ice bucket and see when the pool closed.
âLetâs stop at the next gas station. The car needs gas.â
I always did what Angela wanted when it came to Stephanie because she was Angelaâs sister and she was dying. I read a poem once that pointed out how weâre all dying, that every day weâre dying, and itâs only the speed at which weâre dying that makes any difference. That poem stayed with me because I thought it was a remarkable word to use: speed. What the poet knew, and Angela came to understand when her sister got sick, you can only understand when someone you love is dying. That was the difference between Angela and me. She understood dying, and I didnât. If I were a poet, Iâd write a poem about that. But I didnât know what to say to Angela, so I tried to give her what she wanted and give her space, figuring someday I would understand what she understood, and if I never did, I would be more ignorant than most people and more fortunate.
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