Every year at this time we head out for a week at the Mecca of Massachusetts, Cape Cod.
We’ve been renting the same house for 7 or 8 years, in a town without the crazy-as-a-bedbug fun of Provincetown or the historical significance of Hyannis. We’ve simply grown fond of this house and its handy location for reaching other parts of the Cape.
We’ve been renting the same house for 7 or 8 years, in a town without the crazy-as-a-bedbug fun of Provincetown or the historical significance of Hyannis. We’ve simply grown fond of this house and its handy location for reaching other parts of the Cape.
You adjust to a different mind-set on the Cape, one of flip flops and shorts at dinner. A front yard of sand instead of grass is just fine,
and driveways back at home look like superhighways compared to the roads here. When we arrive, we always wander through the house to see what’s been changed since last year: maybe a new lounge chair’s been added on the patio, or we’ve been upgraded to a fancier dish drainer in the kitchen.
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| Beware the Couch With No Springs. Small children have been known to disappear, never to be found. |
The furniture seems to be an eclectic and changing inventory of cast-offs from the owner’s primary residence.
Definitely constant are the knick-knacks, doodads, and the unexplainable.
For instance, every year I wonder why one of the bedrooms houses a saddle; there’s not a horse to be found within a ten-mile radius of here.
I am able to explain why the clock in another bedroom is an hour slow. It’s been hung so high that obviously no one bothers to change it for daylight-savings time.
But outside of getting to the beach for high tide, does anyone really care what time it is?
There’s also a rich assortment of cute-as-pie decorations. I’ll let them speak for themselves.
Also, as promised, and to keep the shameless self-promotion going, here's another passage from my book Earthly Needs:
(And yes, you too could be the proud owner of a copy merely by clicking on the link provided to the right of this column!)
It was the end of first period and Lila Wallace was just beginning to present the homework assignment to the protesting faces before her when she heard a loud thump against the heavy brown classroom door. This was followed by a great scuffling and shrieking. Her 10thgrade English class reacted as one, preparing to leap to their feet and investigate. One thing you could usually depend in an urban high school was plenty of excitement, thought Lila. “Sit!” she commanded on her way to the door. At the end of the corridor she would have sworn she saw Assistant Principal Paschetti, but then whoever it was vanished as quickly as virtue at a senior prom.









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