Dave was sweating. The sun was warm but not uncomfortably so - it felt considerably milder than the sun back in Orange - but dragging the bag along the street probably hadn't been the best idea. It was well-suited to the task but the route he had decided to take to the hostel he was booked into was rather longer in person than it had seemed on paper. As he trundled down 33rd Avenue, he espied some shady greenery which turned out to be a park. Families were parked hither and yon; people were sitting on benches, watching kids frolicking or ignoring them completely, absorbed in a newspaper or book.
Dave found a seat occupied by only one person, a woman who looked to be in her fifties. She wore sandals, denim cut-offs, and a white t-shirt under a loose olive shirt and a floppy, broad-brimmed hat. Sunglasses sat on top of the bag beside her on the bench and as Dave sat down they were smoothly transferred to the woman's other side with one hand while the hand holding the book she was reading barely wobbled.
Dave set his bag in front of the bench and set his feet up on top, then stretched his arms out in an ecstatically wide yawn. He rubbed his eyes and looked around blearily.
"You always carry that much baggage around with you?" came the woman's voice, everything else about her still focussed on what she was reading.
"We all have some baggage," Dave replied, smiling. "Do I earn any points for being open about mine?"
The woman laughed. "Perhaps. At least it sounds like you've got a sense of humour about it," she said.
"I'm an Australian," Dave said. "It comes with the territory. We have a sense of humour about everything."
"Really?" remarked the woman, her hat rising along with her eyebrows.
"Oh, yes. And the more serious something is, the more likely we'll joke about it."
"Politics?"
"We had a Prime Minister who held the Guinness world record for drinking a yard-glass of beer."
"Religion?"
"The only thing sacred about a cow is how you cook it."
She laughed out loud. "Don't say that kind of thing too loud around her, my dear. Portland is full of crunchy granola, vegan, animal liberation types and it's not always easy to tell us apart from other people."
"I'll try to remember that," Dave said. He turned to look at her, finally. "Crunchy granola?"
"Healthy living, green, vegetarian, supports Greenpeace, anti-war... you know? Someone who's into all that natural crap and eats tofu and does yoga and hugs trees..."
Dave nodded and asked, "So when did we stop calling them hippies?"
The woman turned finally to look at Dave. "Not long before I retired."
"You're retired?" returned Dave, surprised.
"Yes. Three years this summer."
"I thought maybe you had... relatives running around here somewhere."
She smiled. "Oh you're sweet, aren't you? No, my children moved away some time ago. I just like to come here and read old books from time to time. Old librarians never die..."
"... they just get renewed?"
The woman laughed. "I was going to say they just end up overdue and lose their circulation, but I think I like yours more."
Dave smiled. "You're welcome to use it but I want a nickel every time you say it."
"It might be worth it," the woman said. "I'm Evelyn," reaching out to shake Dave's hand.
"David," he replied, wiping his hand on his shorts before he accepted her hand and shook it gently. "You can call me Dave."
"And you can call me Evie," she said.
"It's good to meet you, Evie."
"Likewise, Dave." She slipped a bookmark into her book and laid it down on the bench between them.
"So what are you reading there, Evie?"
She glanced down at the book. "An old children's story. The author used to live around here and she set some of her stories in a street just up the avenue there."
Dave leaned back and looked up the street to where he'd walked down from. "Up there?" he asked, pointing up the hill.
Evie nodded. "Yes. Klickitat Street."
"Why does that sound familiar to me?" Dave wondered aloud.
"Do you know Beverly Cleary?" Evie asked.
"Not personally," quipped Dave, "but the name sounds familiar. Why is that?"
"You might have read her in grade school," Evie said. "She wrote about a boy named Henry Huggins, his dog Ribsy, and friend Beatrice. Beatrice had a little sister - "
"Called Ramona!" finished Dave. "I remember those at school, yes!" Dave leaned forward, taking it all in. "I thought the name sounded familiar. I cross the street there at Klickitat Street to come sit down here."
Evie pointed to the children playing in a fountain further down the park. "The statue there is Ramona, and off to the right there is Henry Huggins and Ribsy."
Dave smiled. "Awesome. That's such a surprise - I wouldn't have expected to be connected to here like that. After I visited Austin a few years ago, I was told I'd love Portland but I didn't expect to make connections so quickly!"