Say it With Me
It’s
Wednesday night, and the kids and I are holding one of our (now-regular) Family
Dance Parties. Chris Brown’s “Say it With Me” blares from my iPod speakers. Fiona, Finley and I jump in a circle, singing
(Fiona and I) and yelling (Finley) the refrain: “Say it With Me, Say it With
Me, Baby…” I bounce onto the tile patio and face the ocean across the street: “Say
it With Me!” The ocean whooshes and rumbles her reply. I turn up the music. Can
anyone coming over the rise above the beach see me? I’m too blissed to care.
At that
moment, Pete strides into the living room. Dapper in his flight school uniform,
with the short-sleeved white shirt (he actually irons them), navy and gold
epaulets and navy pants. I want to jump him the way you want to jump someone
whose looks, warmth and scent give you nerve-deep shivers – the kind you get
during a really good massage when, suddenly, the therapist's hands palpitate
your scalp.
The only
jumping we’ll do for now is to the music’s beat. Earlier, the kids had asked me
about my favorite song. While I can’t pick just one (Level 42’s “Something
About You” remains a favorite), Brown’s is stuck in my head – a pleasant ear
worm I’ve no desire to exterminate.
The kids’ dancing
expresses vitality, their no-moment-but-now-ness. I’m dancing because
finality eludes me – permanent residency, part-time job, rental house where we
can stay at least an entire year – it’s
like I’ve unwittingly joined a Kiwi craps game and I’m waiting to see if the
dealer rolls Snake Eyes or Boxcars. Wondering if I’ve placed the right bet
(should I have gone with Hard Six?).
You don’t
know, do you? That’s why I heed the Gospel According to Jamiroquai when (in the
song “Canned Heat”) he sings, “Nothing left for me to do but dance.”
Fiona and I
clasp hands and hop. Finley crawls between my legs like an obsessive-compulsive
puppy.
The song
finishes, and the kids continue DJ-ing and dancing inside. Pete grabs a beer, I pour myself
a wine, and we sit outside. He has the ‘I have news’ look.
“Well, how
was work?” I ask, wondering if I want to hear the answer. Pete’s work at the
local flight school has seen (pardon the pun) a lot of turbulence the past
year. Major drama for minor pay.
Pete says, “I
lost my stripes today,” as he pulls off his epaulets. “And I lost my job.”
Anger starts
crackling in my chest like an unprotected patch of skin sizzling in New Zealand’s
sun. “I knew it!” I say. “They don’t deserve you. There’s something really
wrong…”
Pete stops
me before I can continue my rant. “I lost my old job because I got a new one. I’m
the new manager.”
I refrain
from shaking him for his 30-second deception and whoop, instead, with
delight, “Oh, honey! I’m sooo happy for you. I can’t believe it!
I hug him.
My Petey – the man who was still a flight student and sometimes-instructor when
I met him; the one who lived with four flat mates in the house behind us, the
bulk of whose time, it seemed, consisted of watching movies on the flat panel
TV in his room. That Petey. He’s still the same guy, only the person I once
perceived as Handsome Slacker works overtime each day in the service of
students from all over the world whose dream, like his, is flying.
I used to
drive past Pete’s place en route to the kids’ school and peak at whether his
car was there. I’d emit a little sigh when it was, thinking the-guy-has-no-kids-he-should-be-busting-his-ass.
Now, he’s busting his (sweet) ass partly because he lives with me and my kids. We don’t see him as much as we’d like.
The
days of Pete and I making love mid-day are over – for now. Those employed
full-time can’t shag in the middle of the day – unless they possess excess pep
and take lunch breaks (neither of which
Pete has these days).
I remind
Pete I fell for him when he had no job (though I prefer my partner to
have some form of employment, mostly because I like the house to myself while
the kids are in school) but tell him I’m proud - happy his long
hours and dedication in the absence of validation have finally earned
recognition.
Pete
explains the latest unfolding of the soap opera that’s creating the restructuring
of his work place. He pauses mid-sentence:
“There’s your song,” he says.
Level 42. Something About You.
We know this
promotion creates new challenges – more demands on Pete’s time, a drain on his mental
energy. It won’t be easy. And he still wants to make the airlines, which will
require a Dreamliner’s worth of delegation so he can earn hours in the air.
Come on,
Snake Eyes...
So much
uncertainty. That’s why you dance.
Say it With
Me.
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