Annie Rhiannon

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Does the fridge light really go off when you close the door?

Sitting on my backpack outside Seattle's train station, a woman asks me for a cigarette. Take two, I say, like my brother always says when someone asks him for a smoke. They're only small.

Why, thank you, she says. Are you taking the Chicago train? She's in her sixties, I think, dressed from head to toe in white, with a pair of oversized sunglasses hiding most of her face.

Yes, I tell her. But I'm going to spend some time in Montana along the way.

Not a whole lot in Montana, she says, just like everybody always says when you tell them you're going to Montana. What do you do for a living?

What do I do for a living? Nothing at the moment, I suppose. Nothing at the moment, I say. What about you?

Me, I'm an inventor, she says, shaking out her match.

Goddamnit. An inventor? Why did I tell her I do 'nothing'? I could've been a zoo-keeper or an astronaut. I could've been halfway to the moon by now! In America, if you want to say you're an inventor then you can say you're an inventor; nobody is going to mind. You could also be a zoo-keeper or an astronaut. If you're the skinny black son of a Kansas woman, you can be the next president of the United States, if you like.

What a great job, I say, full of pride and encouragement for my fellow man. What do you invent?

I invented the pocket-book light, she says, opening up her purse. You see?

I look into her handbag, lit up by a tiny light-bulb. I can clearly see all her old tissues; her box of matches; a tiny bottle of champagne. Wonderful! I exclaim.

It goes off again when you close it, just like your refrigerator at home, she says, snapping it shut again. So, why Montana?

Why Montana? I can't really remember, except that there was a point last summer when I decided I really needed to spend 36 hours by myself, crawling through an empty landscape on a train.

It's okay, she says, and I realise I've hesitated. You don't have to explain.

8 comments:

  1. I don't think you should ever have to explain. Except to say that to any sane person 36 hours by one's self is about the healthiest thing you can do every once in a while.

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  2. ...and after those thirty six hours on the train who knows what kind of person you'll meet?

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  3. Sometimes the train is the best part.

    Maybe not the best, but it's that glorious time to yourself, to just relax and read and reflect on what's happened. I hope it's going well, and I'll see you Sunday.

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  4. Yes, the fridge light really does go off when you close the door.

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  5. True, you could have said you're an inventor. Even better, you could have said you invented zoos and astronauts. And frosted glass and non-slip tiles. The possibilities are endless.

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  6. I love this post, Annie. It's a gem.

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  7. he is skinny, isn't he?

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  8. Primal, you're too smart for your own good.

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