When the world stopped functioning at the beginning of 2020 it was impossible to imagine how the following months would unfold, whether the confinement we'd be subjected to would last at most one month as the government said -there was no one to believe it- or if, as the general public guessed we would at least be at home for several months adapting to the "new normality". The future pointed in uncertain directions, more than it already does, and the fear of the virus was not only linked to the health aspect but also to the economic one, theoretically everything stopped except the minimum to subsist. But at home we were relatively calm, our family was small: there were no grandparents in nursing homes to worry about or overweight cousins who, if they "caught" the virus would end up in the ICU intubated due to pneumonia or a thousand other possible symptoms...
Mom had passed away six years ago, and the relationship with that part of the family is practically non-existent, only conditioned by the annual "happy new year" messages through WhatsApp, so simple and formal that they seem more like the announcement of a funeral than the celebration of the passage from one life to another that is supposed to be the cycle of three hundred and sixty something days.... The reality was that if something had happened to someone they wouldn't call to tell us about it, a sad situation that'd be no different if mom was still alive since she was the maximum exponent of aversion towards her own family that for reasons she never told me existed... And now it's too late to understand -we never talk about these things with dad, or rather there's no courage to do so-.
On my father's side I only know my uncle, a happily married and childless fifty-something guy with such a frail appearance that it's surprising that he has been working in construction for almost thirty years moving weights -or so he says he does-, which I reiterate seems unthinkable with tanned arms as wide as a broomstick and clear blue visible veins about to burst. If I didn't know better I'd think he only eats rice once a week and is abused by his wife who has him drinking from a tube like a hamster to be this skeletal... But the counted weekends they show up in our garden with trays full of barbecued meat and vegetables point to the contrary: the man eats like a bottomless pit, and her wife is so calm and kind that you would like to be in medieval times to defend like a knight the honor of such a lady, and accompany her on her adventures. The story is quite consistent because Lucy, her name, works in an NGO as coordinator of all type of projects, the last one related to disabled's due to traffic accidents, a subject that she did not want to go into detail because she clearly saw the reaction from dad and I; still grieving after the years that have passed since "the boss" -that's how we called mom because of her position in the family pyramid- lost her life because a drunk asshole ran a red light... There's only one word now that I'm old enough to understand something about life, and that's that these things are a bitch.
All in all, the relationship with Jack and Lucy has never escalated beyond occasional dinners and occasional birthday celebrations: they've never come to see me at a school piano recital -which now that I think about it I'm grateful for, my hands were shacky enough with the auditorium half full of unknown parents and schoolmates-; nor at the athletics championships -a little more encouragement here would've done me good, maybe then I would've managed to overcome my limits-... And I've never been to their house or taken a trip together as families are supposed to do. In this sense I think we are quite peculiar, our family I mean, but I don't think too much of it. Things are the way they are. Besides, I suspect there's also some untold story of disputes between Dad and my uncle, relationships I don't want to know about. Filling one's mind with dramas takes up precious space.
***
In the living room at home with the TV on the 24h channel but without being too attentive I heard from behind the sound of a door opening, which meant that Dad had come home from work. I moved the mouse to the right end of the laptop screen in front of me so I could see the specific time, almost nine o'clock, a little later than usual for him but not completely out of the ordinary. In theory today, Thursday, was his last day of "face-to-face" work since the travel agency he manages had decided to telework starting tomorrow -which in reality was practically a complete stop of the activity since now with Covid there were no trips-. I knew Dad was under a lot of stress, the virus had stopped everything in relation to travel (especially when his agency's specialty is Europe), and he was having to make some tough decisions; organizing himself and his company in ways he'd never done before. He was having a hard time. I hadn't seen him like this since Mom's death, and that was a very dark time for both of us that's best not to remember.
Dad had explained to me while we were having dinner a couple of days ago that we would follow the government's guidelines and confine ourselves completely starting Friday, tomorrow, only going outside to go grocery shopping and to walk the dog; at least until the situation started to calm down with Covid -which we didn't know at the time would take so long-.
Our dog, Arlo, is a Portuguese Spaniel that we rescued what'll be three years ago the next August. I perfectly remember the night I was coming back from practice and found him wandering in front of the house, painfully dragging himself from exhaustion. I approached very slowly to see if I recognized him, he could be from the neighborhood and had run away, but he didn't look familiar; and his lack of collar and general dirtiness indicated to me that he was an abandoned dog that by appearance would not be more than one or two years old -I don't study veterinary science or anything like that, but I became quite interested in dogs after I was bitten on my left arm and when I was ten years old by an irascible Husky from the neighborhood-. I still have the scars from that assault, slight but visible especially when summer comes and my skin gets a little tanner than its usual almost snow white tone, which highlights the rough teeth marks on my abdomen and arm. Honestly, I'm half grateful for that event as it's always a curious fact about oneself that more than once has served me to try to flirt, with more or less success.