Port Saint Joe—It’s early morning. It’s dark outside. And it’s cold enough in our room to hang meat.
This is my wife’s doing. She cranked the AC to negative eighteen degrees. I can see my breath.
We’ve been on the road for weeks now, and my wife has enjoyed sub-arctic conditions in various hotel rooms across the Southeast. My nose is about to develop frostbite.
Funny. I remember when my father got frostbite on his ears when I was a kid. He’d been welding outside one January day. He came home in bad shape, the tips of his ears were black.
He wore bandages over his ears for a week.
“Why do you have to work outside?” I asked Daddy.
“Because I love you,” he said. “That’s why.”
“You must REALLY love me.”
“I do.”
“How much?”
“Oh, s’pose you take the stars in the sky, multiply them times a billion, then wrap them in sunshine… That’s not even CLOSE to how much.”
I don’t know why good men die so young.
So, this morning I’m writing you—because I don’t know what else to do while my wife slumbers in this icy, artificial climate. I can’t feel my toes.
This woman. She and I have gone through several phases of life together. We’ve changed careers a dozen times.
I laid tile; she worked in a hospital cafeteria. I hung gutters; she taught preschool. I worked landscaping; she was a nanny. I worked nights, playing guitar at an all-you-can-eat-crab-leg joint; she babysat weekends.
Years went by, and my Great Career Ferris Wheel kept spinning. Then, I got laid off.
It was quite a blow. We didn’t know what to do. So we did what all half-broke couples do. We took a lavish vacation.
Well, it wasn’t exactly lavish. We went camping in Indian Pass, Florida—a sleepy North Floridian…