I was walking across the Kaw River Bridge. The rain fell steadily down, stippling the surface of the water below me. The trees along the banks of the gray river were distant and shadowy. There was a soggy sameness to everything around me, but, in truth, I wasn’t discontented.
It was just a steady rain. Actually, more than a little welcome in August. My umbrella had kept me mostly dry as I walked, but by the time I got to the bridge, my shoes were pretty wet. I turned to look over the railing and I saw down below me a great blue heron standing on a rock in the shallow water near river. The heron was near enough to where I stood up on the bridge that I could see that its gray feathers were completely soaked. But the heron simply stood there, unconcerned, motionless, staring out over the river.
And then I thought of Audrey.
Audrey is a barista I know. Our separate paths are crossing at a coffee shop as we both head in different directions. Our time together will not be much more than bits of conversation - and glasses of iced tea passed from her hand to mine.
And so I had seen her only and hour or so ago. It had been just another forgettable Sunday afternoon at Aimee’s coffee shop. I had been sitting at the counter with a couple of other older guys. Staring out through the plate glass windows I could see that it was beginning to rain. There was a little idle conversation in the air. I sipped my iced tea. Just passing time.
Audrey and another barista, Riley, were putting paper trays of eggs into the refrigerator in the kitchen area below where we were sitting, stocking up for the next day. There were jokes bantered back and forth from one side of the counter to the other about what might happen if someone dropped a whole tray of eggs onto the floor.
And then Audrey picked up an egg from one of the trays and held it in her hand. Standing just a few feet away from three not very wise men sitting on the other side of the counter, she looked over at us and said, “Did you know that you can squeeze an egg in the palm of your hand as hard as you want and it won’t break?” And then she squeezed the egg and a blur of yellow yolk arced just past Riley’s head. We all laughed.
“It wasn’t supposed to work like that,” Audrey said with a rueful look on her face. And indeed the egg trick had worked a couple of Sunday’s earlier. Several of us had passed around a raw egg and had squeezed it as hard as we could. The egg hadn’t broken - then. We speculated that it had something to do with the shape of the hand and the shape of the egg. Physics. Or maybe it was hard boiled.
But on this Sunday afternoon it was hard for me to stop laughing at the failed egg trick – and at Audrey. It wasn’t just the egg breaking, squirting its insides across the room. It was the look on her face. That look was very nearly indescribable. Surprise doesn’t begin to cover it. And rueful is just another word, although it’s a good place to start. It was one of those times when you just had to be there.
I was still laughing as Audrey cleaned up the mess. “This is the high point of my day,” I said. And then then after a pause I reflected: “But then, the day isn’t over yet, so who knows?”
Audrey and I had talked earlier in the afternoon about what each other’s high points over the past week had been.
And then I had realized that I had been asking the wrong question. I changed it. “What was the most memorable thing that happened to you recently?” But it turned out that that question was not really any easier to answer.
And then it was closing time. The baristas had their real lives to get back to and I had a slow, easy walk in the rain ahead of me. I had nothing in particular in mind. I walked towards the river as I often do. The rain came down. The sidewalks were wet. Not very many people out. Cars splashing through puddles. Sometimes one day seems to blur into the next, but I still enjoy the walking, seeing what I will see.
And so, eventually, there I was, walking across the Kaw River Bridge in the rain. I saw the Great Blue Heron standing. And then it turned its head slightly to one side and stabbed its long beak into the water. And then, almost like magic, a small, white, wriggling fish appeared in its beak.
And that is when I thought of Audrey.
That is how memory works. I don’t quite understand it. What we remember seems to slip in and out of our minds faster that we can grasp our forgotten moments. And even our more memorable moments quickly fade as we move from one place and time to the next.
And so then, on that rainy afternoon on the bridge, a moment of life popped into my mind. This time it was Audrey’s face. Her smooth, freckled cheeks. Her brown curly hair. Her hand, dripping with broken egg shells and slippery egg goo. And I could almost see it all in my mind. And especially, for just a moment, I had somehow quite memorably seen Audrey’s eyes as they glanced with surprise into mine. And in those few moments as I watched the heron, I wondered what Audrey might have seen in my eyes.
But it was just the rain was coming down, steadily. I continued walking, circling around until finally I was standing below the bridge. I imagined that the heron might still be standing on the rock just below the bank ahead of me. I walked carefully towards the river in the wet grass - but not carefully enough. Suddenly the heron was flying away from me over the river, its outstretched great gray wings pulling through the rain with strong easy strokes. And in no time at all, it was just me and the river. I stood there watching the rain, my memories slipping in and out of my grasp.
I suppose that the memory thing is all a kind of trick. We see. We forget. And then, sometimes, we remember again. And then we forget all over again.
Life seems to happen in unexpected moments. And if we are lucky, we can laugh at each other and at ourselves. How indeed could we ever forget that life is full of surprises? And laughter. If we are looking, we can see our lives in each other’s eyes. And then we move on.
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