
When I was a little girl, I loved playing with paper dolls. Wardrobes made of paper hanging onto bodies formed from cardboard with little tabs folded over shoulders and around waists and legs. It was temporary, a strong breeze could render them naked once again. Easy to change if I changed my mind.
J stepping into my eye line was a lot like that. Hanging there, against blue skies and cotton ball clouds, a fifty shades of aqua backdrop bordered by island sand. Did I say stepped into?. . . I meant sailed. The background and my friend Pat’s boat (and Pat for that matter) were all familiar–the cardboard constant. Making J the paper outfit overlaid on top. New. Different.
But what I was really grooving on that morning–besides my love of water, boating and snorkeling the reef–was my essay placing in the contest I’d entered. It would be published in the next few days. I had champagne and was planning to celebrate with mimosas.
Earlier I’d shared the news with my close writing friend and she’d offered to build me a website. After the toasting and enthusiastic congratulations, I floated what I thought was a crazy idea. I wasn’t a big enough deal to warrant a website.
Pat nods and J says, “You probably should have a website.”
His words spread on me like frosting–a nice feeling on top of the nice feeling I’m already having.
The wind picks up the farther we get out, so I man (woman?) one of the winches adjusting the sails, prompting Pat to make a compliment about my strength in relation to my gender. To which I quip, “I like to be all the Spice Girls.” I’m sporty, at times scary, other times posh, and have been ginger. I’ve tucked my frilly dress up into the leg band of my underwear so it didn’t get caught in my bike spokes, riding in wedges for miles.
I break into a really bad cover of “If you wannabe my lover, you gotta get with my friends.”
J chimes in from his winch, “I never understood that song. Sure, I’ll get with your friends.”
I laugh into the gap extending to let this new interpretation settle in. Clever. Sexy. I’ll never hear the song the same way again.
Another tab of J’s paper folds over.
I watch his back muscles roll underneath his shirt. The way a sleeve folds into the crevice of a flexed bicep. And I watch myself watch, wondering what I’m up to.
Two weeks later I’m climbing aboard again and as we get ready to sail, I go down to link my phone with the Bluetooth speaker in the salon. At my elbow is suddenly J asking, “Need any help?”
My knee jerk response to this question is always, no. Because it hits me like an insult, implying I’m somehow incapable. But in that instant, I see how it pushes others away. I turn away in the circumference of this realization, a fighter pilot who’s just fired a missile but wishes she could take it back. It’s early and I secretly hope for another chance to play it differently.
A tab folds over.
We sail on and he says other things I like and jive with. And I notice myself watching his lips as much as I’m listening to the words coming out of them. Sometimes he does a little smirk and it makes me smile. I like his lips. I think the smirk makes him look cute.
Coming from self-awareness, he shares about needing to have his own personal space and how hard it is to have it in Key West. How it’s all cramped living quarters for this huge chunk of change and he’s not really down with it. Neither am I, that’s why I have a camper. Neither is Pat, he’s on a boat tied to a mooring ball. J couldn’t find a boat he and an insurance company could agree on so he applied for a job in Indiana.
There it is, the eroding of our island community conversation I’ve had with more people than I’d like.
“I’m so tired of saying goodbye to cool people,” I stare past him in a quiet moment of memoriam to all those who have gone before him. I feel his paper flutter in the winds of change.