Note: I mentioned in "The Next Morning" that it was part of a longer story. Well, here's the beginning of that story, drenched in the grief of a man who has lost his wife, who wakes up every morning wondering how to go on and then, one day, wakes up on a private island in the South Pacific. He's comfortable enough. There is a beautiful beach house fitted out with every known amenity (and some that are still unknown). But the grief stays with him. And then, on the first anniversary of her death, things begin to change.
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December 23
It rained.
It's never happened before. I don't really know what to make of it. The sky just wept for hours. I sat on the front porch of the beach house, under the tin roof, and listened to it beat down. Eventually I got up to pour a glass of red wine, and to light some candles. By late afternoon it looked like a little shrine around me--candles flickering, a half-finished bottle of wine on the table, and me--staring straight ahead into the gloom, watching the lightning flash its anguish across the grieving sky and listening to the rain pound down like fists on a grave.
December 24
All that rain caused a mudslide that came oozing down the mountain and into the back side of the beach house. There's lots of it. It comes almost up to the kitchen window. So, I spent most of the day yesterday shoveling mud into a wheelbarrow and pushing it through the forest to a nearby ravine where I dumped it and went back for more. I'll do it again today. I'm trying to get it while it's still mud, before it bakes in the sun and hardens so that I have to chip it apart with a pickaxe and haul it away in pieces.
It's not supposed to be like this on the island. There isn't supposed to be rain or mud or heavy manual labor. But yesterday it felt almost good to have something difficult and mindless to do: to fill the wheelbarrow again and again, push it through the forest, and dump it out. I didn't have to think about; just had to do it. Today will be the same. It hasn't rained again but it has been overcast both days and that's good; that keeps the mud from hardening. I can hardly believe what I'm grateful for--overcast skies and difficult, mindless mud-shoveling labor.
December 25
I finally got through shoveling all that mud from behind the beach house. I hosed it off and when I got done it looked almost normal again. I may have to scrub it with a brush. But I was exhausted--hot, sweaty, muddy. I went down to the water and stripped off my shorts, jumped in and let the ocean roll over me for a while. It felt wonderful.
When I finally headed back in I saw that something had washed up on the shore. It was a wine bottle, a Cline Zinfandel 2002, with a cork still stuck in the top. I love the Cline Zinfandel, but there wasn't any left in the bottle. There was a rolled-up note, clichΓ© as it sounds, and on it the words "Blessed Christmas."