The day the movers came the sky was orange haze. I didn’t know it was smoke. I’ve been off the news. I’m in a wildly different part of the country, by a lake, nestled in woods, between mountains. Maybe sometimes the sky is orange here?
But no, it was smoke from the wildfires. The movers and I breathed it in all day while they hauled stuff off the truck, hefted it into the house. It was ninety degrees. I had what I thought was an organized system to help the guys out. Signs taped to the doors of the rooms so they’d know where to put what. That all fell apart the first hour.
Where does this go, they’d say, tromping by with a table, a bookcase, a chair, a rolled-up carpet. I knew, but after a while, I didn’t know. But then, lately, there are so many things I don’t know. How do you clean iron stains off a toilet bowl, for example. How do you set up a mailbox?
(I mean this, literally. The mailbox is lying on the ground. It is dirty inside and out and hosting a full-blown ecosystem of insects.) And why are so many of the boxes we packed leaking? Did I inadvertently pack a liquid? Did something drip on them in the storage warehouse?
This question has an almost immediate answer as I watch one of the heavily perspiring movers set a box down, the leak splotch on the box the same shape as the sweat splotch on his T-shirt.
I have a moment of panic. The sweat. The heat. The orange haze that I now know is smoke drifting down from the wildfires in Canada. What if the fires don’t stop burning? How dangerous is it to breathe this stuff in?
And what if we can’t get the iron and sulfur out of our well water? And what if the insects in the mailbox are poisonous? And what if we’re stranded up here with no way to receive mail forever and what have we done, uprooting our lives, quitting my job and saying goodbye to friends, flinging ourselves so far away?
The movers leave and I am alone with the damp boxes and the furniture in all the wrong places, my husband still circling around with the anxious dog, the haze orangey but lightening a little, the breeze swirling off the lake, some bird I don’t know the name of tweeting at me.
What kind of flower is that at the edge of the yard?
What is the name of the mountain with the little hook at the top?
And who are the new neighbors strolling by with their cute little dog?
Hey, they call and wave.
Are we free sometime this week, after we settle in? Because they’d love to have us over, introduce us to the little community here, answer any questions we might have.
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| Camel's Hump, Green Mountains, Vermont |
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| Smooth Oxeye |
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