I choose San Francisco because I miss ocean air. I’ve been sleep walking in a dusty valley but the air in San Francisco is cold and saline. When you walk through it without a hat or scarf it’s bracing. You feel alive. I choose 1967, imagining the Summer of Love, thinking I might land in the middle of a concert to spend a vivid afternoon with Joni and Janis Mama Cass and Grace Slick. But I arrive in mid-December on the ground floor of the City of Paris Department Store beneath the massive branches of their five story high Christmas tree. I back away, to get a better view, remembering the many times I’d begged my father to bring me to this very spot, and always he’d complied despite holiday traffic. I can feel my mother’s tight grip on my tiny hand, guiding me around large glass cases of perfume bottles and ladies’ gloves, dodging other shoppers and gawkers, my gaze on dark pine needles heavy with colored light bulbs, Venetian glass balls, candy canes, red ribbon, silver tinsel: the sight overwhelming from below . So I search for an elevator, and head up to the 5th floor mezzanine, seeking a new vantage point. Here the tree is magnificent but less imposing, as are the decades, a perspective I could not have achieved any sooner than now. On the streets below flower vendors offer fresh roses—where do they come from?— even in winter. Someday soon, a lanky young man in an army surplus jacket will buy me a small bouquet, rose buds wrapped in crinkly green paper, the blossoms as innocent as pink pastel party mints, and I will feel a flush of flattery and infatuation mistaking it for love. I see them there, the youthful me with her imagined prince, holding hands, heading up the hill to catch a cable car. We are as young as this optimistic landscape, looking down at the clean blue infinity of the bay. In a year, or perhaps less, I will learn I have been his beard, and he will shame me because I cry when he confesses his infidelities. Don’t I realize I am expected to celebrate his self-discovery? I hear a siren and turn quickly, startled, but it is not an emergency vehicle. It is a coyote, howling, calling me home to river and cottonwood trees. I am an old woman again with as much clarity as I can handle watching San Francisco fog evaporate in a warming climate. Please let me wander back upstream past the delta into the tangled mess of berry vines and fennel stalks that lend an earthy perfume to my very own backyard. Photo by Patrick Robert Doyle on Unsplash I was surprised to discover that few of my friends remember the late, great City of Paris Department Store and its magnificent Christmas tree, but then I learned the store has been closed for well over forty years. You may learn more here.
This is truly amazing, Nancy!
Thank you!
Thanks so much, Dick!