December, 1986
Happiness, Last Chance
After
the divorce, I helped Cory move a 900-pound piano from the big old
house to a funky little cottage that he'd rented nearby. There I met a
shy, skinny woman. "This is my lover, Melissa," Cory said by way of
introduction.
Cory was in his sixties. An engineer who'd survived cancer. Retired.
Melissa, lover, looked a little younger, fifty-something.
When we'd wheeled the piano into place, Melissa said, "That's it?"
Other
than the piano, Cory had brought one suitcase. "That's it," he said.
He'd given everything to his ex-wife: house, furniture, all earthly
possessions. He would start anew.
Melissa, apparently, was
starting over as well. In the living room there was weight-lifting
equipment and nothing more. In the bedroom I could see a mattress on
the floor. The walls were all bare.
Cory limped into the
kitchen. He'd injured his leg in a bicycle accident as a child.
Opening cabinet doors, finding nothing but nutritional drinks, he asked,
"Don't you have a single pot?"
"You know I don't eat," Melissa said.
They kissed. Taped to the refrigerator was their only decoration, a calendar featuring photos of muscular body-building women.
They had equipped the house with their passions, nothing more.
For
a couple years thereafter until Cory's cancer came back, evenings when I
was walking my dog by the cottage, I could hear the piano and see the
thin shadow of Melissa on the curtains, lifting weights, not eating. He
loved that boogie-woogie.
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