The big house on the hill has roosters crossing the road, a pool, a lawn game set up to play on the lawn, and a bird room. The bird room is a room with bird-patterned wallpaper, windows looking out at the treetops, a pair of binoculars nearby in case you want to watch birds.
I want to want to watch birds. I want to want to swim in the pool and play the lawn game. But I can’t shake this unsettled feeling. How did we get here? my husband and I keep saying to each other. We say it when we’re idling in the car, waiting for the roosters to cross the road. And later, when we’re playing the lawn game, and after, when we’re floating in the pool. He means how fancy the place is and how beautiful.
I mean, no really, Where the hell are we?
The pool is heated. A nice touch. The people who own the house have invited our daughter and son-in-lawn to stay in the guest cottage while he does his stint as a chef at a nearby restaurant. Make yourselves at home, the people said. We ran into them on the road with the roosters and they said it to us too.
Make yourselves at home. Meanwhile, we are living out of suitcases. There’s something I keep forgetting.
Oh, right. I don’t have a home. We bought a house, but it won’t be ready for weeks. And what if the sale falls through? Every other day we are on the phone with our mortgage person Dianne with two N’s. Everything is looking great! she says, before asking us to explain every financial transaction we have ever made in our lives and then she wants us to upload another document.
We upload the document. We leave the Airbnb where we have been staying and drive back up to the big house to see our daughter and son-in-law. We go for a walk along a stream and everyone gets ticks. They hop at us from all directions.
They’re easy to pull off and flick away, but I can’t shake the feeling that they’re crawling on me. I slip on my reading glasses and do an inch-by-inch check. I dip back into the pool. When I get out, I can’t find my reading glasses. Never mind, they’re on my head.
Let’s go out to eat, our daughter says. But how will we justify the expense to Dianne with two N’s? At dinner we make up a story about her, a meticulous mortgage broker just trying to do her job when she stumbles onto a seemingly mild-mannered couple who might be hiding something. The husband is cool under pressure. The wife is a loonytoons who catastrophizes about ticks.
I have been watching too much Law & Order. The theme song dum dums into my dreams. I am not the kind of person, apparently, who can make myself at home when I have no home to go back to.
But we have a home to go forward to, my husband reminds me. Anyway, we’re on vacation.
This is mostly true. After dinner, we order dessert. Dianne with two N’s will be beside herself. But I think she will get over it. I’ll upload a picture.







