Tuesday, October 15, 2013
The two men at the end of the motel walk I passed each time
to and from my car seemed to connect several elements of my life.
One, recovering from what appeared to be an auto accident
with a brace on his leg and neck, had come to Cape May to attend the Victorian
Fashion Show – an event that usually took place in the beach side conventional
hall during Victorian Week, but apparently was not to take place this year.
And the two men were disappointed.
They also got some humor from the Lima Bean Festival that
opened the last holiday week before winter, part of a throwback to when the Garden State
was still the Garden
State and not a bedroom
community for McMansions.
This, too, got postponed because of the heavy rains and
would take place on Columbus Day prior to their return north.
The men said they had a similar festival near where they
lived called the onion festival, signifying a similar tribute to the farm
heritage rapidly vanishing from New
York State
where they lived.
The one man’s injuries reminded me of similar injuries I had
suffered a year and half earlier. But my injuries were the result of a fall off
a curb, not from a crashed car.
The men, who came from Kingston ,
seemed to connect my various worlds, since I made trips to that part of the
county once or twice a year, sometimes in spring, sometimes in August, and so
we bonded even though I never asked their names.
They sat outside at all hours taking in the air, protected
by a narrow awning over a narrow walkway. Each time, I felt guilty about going
to my car since it required the man to move his injured leg. Eventually, I
simply went out into the parking lot, letting the rain drops drip on me, and
waved as I went by.
I kept thinking how the plans of small people like us
sometimes went a foul, and yet, these two men seemed to make the best of it,
lingering on the edge of darkness waving at those of us who came and went.
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