Yesterday's gale was unnerving. In Portland, gusts close to 60 miles per hour tore at the massive Norway maples as they flailed their boughs over the fragile rooftops. The wind wailed like a train, and Chuck kept staring up at me in wonder and concern. But by evening the storm had died down, and this morning I glimpse only a few small branches littering the yard.
The warm rain washed away nearly all of our snow, and now cold has settled back in. It's the last Saturday before Christmas, and I am tucked into my couch corner as Tom sleeps upstairs, as the furnace chugs in the basement, as Chuck plays chow hockey among the dining room chairs.
It feels very, very good to be unemployed for a few weeks. My writing time will come, but this weekend will mostly feature communal busyness: wrapping presents, acquiring treats for Christmas lunch, confabbing with Tom about plans. There will be eleven of us in Amherst, a crowd of young and old, probably the last big family gathering before the Chicago wedding, and everyone is excited.
Meanwhile, Maine is a hive. This week alone I've had a sleepover with friends in the homeland and holiday hijinks with my high schoolers, been on a movie date with my sweetheart, and gone out for a poetry evening that was also a Christmas party. Ahead are dinners with friends both nights this weekend, and for New Year's Eve T and I are planning a card party.
I love quiet; I crave it; I will soon be begging for it. But in these waning hours of a dark year, the beloveds flicker like candle flame. I'm a moth.