Locked Out At The Lake House, He Returned With The Truth-Teptep

When I arrived at the lake house for the Fourth of July, my daughter-in-law said, “You’re not staying. You’re an embarrassment to this family.”

I smiled and said, “All right. Enjoy the lake.”

The next week, when they came back and discovered I had changed the locks, my son called me fifty-three times, but by then I had stopped mistaking silence for peace.

Image

The lake had always sounded different from anywhere else.

It had a soft knock against the dock posts in the morning, a small wooden creak when the wind came through, and a hush under the birds that made you feel as if the whole world had lowered its voice.

That was how it sounded when I pulled up that July.

Then the music from the porch spoiled it.

Not music exactly.

Noise.

Too loud for morning, too loud for the water, too loud for a place where my wife used to carry her first mug of coffee out before sunrise and sit with both hands wrapped round it.

I stopped my old truck beside the gravel and looked at the cars.

My son Marcus’s car was there.

Bianca’s was there.

There were other cars too, polished and clean, lined up as if someone had arranged a viewing rather than a family week by the lake.

I sat for a moment with both hands still on the wheel.

My left hip ached from the drive, the kind of deep, dull ache that follows you after surgery and reminds you your body has become a committee instead of a servant.

I had spent the spring learning humility in small doses.

Getting out of a chair.

Stepping into a shower.

Finding out that a sock can defeat a grown man if his joints decide to be difficult.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *