"Unbelievable,"
I brushed tears away from my cheeks.
"You like it?"
"I love it... You
know I'm going to write about it."
He grinned.
"You knew it when
you picked it."
His grin
grew...............................................................................
This time of year has
always given me anxiety... Christmas, New Years, followed shortly by my
birthday... So by the day before my birthday, I was jittery with worry- Afraid
I would melt down, run away, fall apart... But somehow, when I got a text from
Victor asking if an Italian restaurant would be okay for my birthday dinner- I
calmed myself down. Be positive. Whatever it is- It will be
perfect... Even if it is chaos- It will be a perfect day.
He called me the moment
I hit send on the my response, "Hey... Oh, is this you answering my
text? What did you say? ...Sorry, I didn't want to wait to make the
reservation- So, I called."
He sounded excited.
"Yeah- I said,
anything sounds good to me- as long as we can order something with chocolate
for dessert," I was smiling and starting to convince myself that it
was all going to be okay.
"If not- I'll take
you somewhere else for dessert... But I think you're going to like this
spot."
.........Not much later,
he came home. As we made dinner and ate, he asked whether we ought to go
buy beer to celebrate at midnight. So we bundled up and took a brisk walk
through the freshly fallen snow. "It's beautiful!" I
exclaimed, "Did you order it just for me?"
He laughed,
"Sure."
"Oh, thank
you!" I clung to him as my boots slipped on the concealed uneven
pavement.
By the time we came home
with the beer, we were in a creative mood. We played guitars... I began
writing lyrics... Victor went to his computer and began programming drums.
By his second beer, he had a plan. "I'm going to make
something really silly."
"Yeah?"
"Yeah..."
At first the jumble of
experimenting to select specific sounds did not seem musical... I paused in my
process to put away the leftovers. My mind wandered to other things...
Life, plans, philosophy- Then seemingly suddenly, dots began to connect.
Ideas began to come full circle. Should I be writing any of this
down? I realized then that Victor had found his groove, and it
was taking me along for the ride. "It sounds good, babe. I
like it!"
I went to his side and kissed his cheek. He smiled but barely pulled his gaze away from his
work. He was on a roll and keeping momentum.
"I'm gonna hop into
a quick shower, okay?"
"Yup."
In the shower, where
beat sounds meshed with the white noise, melodies mumbled out of my mouth-
erupting from some unknown source. There was no way to capture
them... Should I wrap myself in a towel and get some of this recorded
into my phone? I don't want to disrupt Victor... Let's see where this
goes before I start to impose...
By the time I rejoined
him in the living room, Victor was tinkering on his guitar and asking,
"Whenever you're ready to throw something on this..."
My mind was suddenly
blank, "Well, I was... When I was in the shower, but now it's different...
and I didn't want to interrupt."
"Go ahead," he
began to set up the mic.
"I will... When I
hear something again."
"Whatever you have is fine... I'm going to autotune it."
"I know, but it's
gone now. Every time you add something, it changes," I felt I
was failing him, but I told myself to be patient and let it come on its own.
"I will."
..............................................................It
was a natural pause.
Right where it was
supposed to be... I saw him stand up from his chair, regaining perspective,
clearly feeling embarrassed for having completely geeked out for more than a
moment. Now, returning to reality, self-conscious... Remembering it was
now after midnight. He came to my side, trying to make me feel like all
his attention was mine for these twenty-four hours.
He made a ceremony of
showing me he was giving me my birthday wish- Our phones
powered off for a full day. Then he kissed my cheek, "Do you want to record now? ...Or you can wait-"
I could have backed out.
There was a temptation to be meek. But I felt an impulse... I
grabbed the scribblings that I was already forgetting had I not written them
down... After briefly giving him a preview of a few melodies, we started
recording. Without any structure in mind, I ran through all the lyrics
without stopping... Letting my vocals continue and trail and trickle, as I knew
the autotune would blend them. I felt silly... ridiculous! I wanted
to stop and blush and laugh as myself, but I pushed through. I told
myself to let go- and I was singing the lyrics, "let go". Some
adlib escaped- Where did that come from? Actually, I can't
believe I liked that... The rush ran through me, out my mouth-
And when it had passed, I looked down to Victor, sitting in front of the
computer. His eyes asked me if I was finished.
I laughed, "There's
still more time?"
He clicked the stop
button, "It's enough." He began mixing... toying with my
voice.
I watched in amusement
and amazement as he worked his magic. We giggled and listened to it
through all the different speakers in the apartment, tweaking and discussing
what else we might try...
How on Earth am I
supposed to not love you?
....................................The
following morning of my birthday, we awoke to roads paved with dirty white
snow. I had suggested that we have brunch at Reading Terminal Market.
This turned out to be a brilliant idea! Victor and I wandered the
aisles for hours. He introduced me to Halvah, a sesame based candy that I had never
heard of before. I found gummie bears with twelve different flavors for
my friends who love anything gummie. We picked up cheap produce to start
a week of healthier eating, following a very indulgent holiday season-
Since I had two weeks
off from my speech therapy job, I thought that I would devote more time to my
other ventures... However, only so much progress could be made- So I filled
some of my free time making home cooked meals for us. Christmas eve-eve
was single-serving chicken pot-pies... Which turned out to be single-serving
for Victor but twice the pie I could eat in a sitting. I made many
omelets, lots of hand-cut homefries... biscuits and gravy. I found fresh
Amish sausage for the gravy. When there was leftover chicken and
vegetables from the pot-pie, I turned it into soup... and each night we had
chocolates for dessert, courtesy of Victor's clients, for Christmas.
We had saved my birthday
to be the final big extravagance for the holidays... My special surprise from
Victor...
On our way home from the
market, we paused in the SEPTA trolley gift shop, browsing like tourists in our
own city. The snow made the ride home a
long and motion sick one… So we spent the couple remaining hours before our
dinner reservation recuperating with cartoons and British comedy. Feeling refreshed, we braved public
transportation once more to South Philly.
On the train, we discussed a dance performance we had recently attended. He had composed the music for the choreographer. What we enjoyed about the pieces, the performances. We discussed what other ways we could bring dancers into what we do for more exposure; Where they might perform to gain his compositions more of an audience.
As we ascended the subway staircase onto the sidewalk, Victor told me, “This way- Those lights. That should be it.”
As we ascended the subway staircase onto the sidewalk, Victor told me, “This way- Those lights. That should be it.”
Lights, yes, and a few
people standing outside… As we approached and the sign became legible, I began
to feel the excitement arise in my gut. Is this the place? Or a coincidence? I looked at Victor, “This is where you’re
taking me? Victor Café- Music Lover’s Rendezvous?”
He was smiling and
watching me unravel into an ecstatic teenager.
“That’s part of the surprise,” he hinted.
“Wow. Wow..........
No words. Victor Café!”
…This is the point at
which I must digress to remind my readers that- if you don’t know me, you may
not realize that ‘Echo’ and ‘Victor’ are not our real names… (Although we have laughed more than once when he's been called this.) It was something more or
less randomly assigned after I named my band, went crazy, and started
fictionalizing my life into a blog. It
was as if he had reached into my mind and manifested the restaurant just for my
birthday dinner! …except of course- It
is real!
“What’s a music lover’s
rendezvous?” I asked rhetorically, as we
walked in.
A hostess walked us
through the length of the restaurant to a nice table in the back. Our waitress introduced herself, “Hello, my
name is Iris. We’ll be sharing this
experience together this evening.”
I noted this
introduction to be somewhat odd but assumed that she had a certain manner of
speaking. She was middle-aged, wearing
the same black and white uniform as the other staff. Her hair pulled back. Her eyes obscured by large black-rimmed
glasses. I laughed a little to myself
about how Clark Kent it seemed.
We ordered drinks and
began reading the menu… It was the kind of menu we really wanted to spend some
time mentally tasting as we read each description.
“Wow. Wow.
This looks wonderful. I can’t
believe you found this place!”
I was peering around the
room, covered in pictures, like you would see of old fashioned movie
stars. I could see that Victor was still
waiting for the other half of his surprise.
Is it something I am supposed to
see? Is he waiting for me to find it? Is it small? He remembers I'm near-sighted, right?
"Yeah, I would like to find more opportunities to work with dance and theater... Have you seen any opera in Philadelphia?" he asked.
"Opera? No. I am sure there is... But I have only seen an opera singer one time live."
"Yeah, I would like to find more opportunities to work with dance and theater... Have you seen any opera in Philadelphia?" he asked.
"Opera? No. I am sure there is... But I have only seen an opera singer one time live."
Before we could order
our meals, a loud bell rang. The room
became silent. A waiter introduced
himself and explained that he was going to perform a piece from an opera. He briefly summarized his character’s
motivation then sang a lovely tenor piece.
I was wiping tears out of my eyes at the end.
“Wow,” I repeated.
“I was wondering when
that was going to happen!” Victor smiled
and gripped my hand in his.
"That was a surprise!" I giggled, "You're silly. Innocently asking me about opera... How did you find this
place?”
“I was just looking
around online… at a couple of Italian places actually. I wasn’t even really looking at the names
until I saw this one.”
“Perfect.”
Iris brought us bread
and pesto dipping oil. We began
devouring it, trying to save our appetites but absorbed in the depth of the
flavor… Then the bell rang again. We
looked up to see Iris, with her glasses off.
As she began to sing, she became her role. Her arms extended. Her eyes narrowed. The entire of her being became the emotion in
her voice. I have no idea what she was
singing in Italian, but it was heart-breaking beautiful! ...Then, within minutes of
her performance concluding, she donned her spectacles again and resumed serving.
We ordered crespelle
capraiccio- “Prosciutto stuffed with herbed crabmeat béchamel, baked with
reduced balsamic”. They looked like
little crispy prosciutto eggrolls that fell apart to reveal melting crabmeat in
rich white sauce. I gobbled up the bed
of baby spinach and balsamic they came resting upon.
“Have some lemon,”
Victor squeezed the wedge onto my meat dumpling. “It brings out the flavors even more.”
“Mmmmm…” My taste-buds
were dancing.
…Then we had a special,
not on the regular menu- eggplant rolotini.
They looked like ravioli in a red sauce, but when you cut them apart you
could see they were tender thin strands of eggplant rolled up with cheesy deliciousness
inside. I barely had to chew, the
eggplant was so well cooked- not at all mushy, just perfectly prepared.
The bell rang
again. This time it was an older
gentleman, who did not work there. He
explained his picture was one of the many on the walls, and someone had
requested he perform a tune. He obliged.
Lastly, we shared a
pasta entre, ravioli titta ruffo- “Porcini mushroom ravioli in gorgonzola cream
garnished with tomatoes and toasted walnuts”.
Victor tried to talk me to ordering more, but we were glad we had not
when I could barely finish half of my portion.
I was overwhelmed by the
richness of the sauce, “So buttery, mmm… If I finished this plate, I would fall
asleep right here.”
Victor did not let the remainder of my ravioli go to waste, including every last drop of the precious
cream sauce with the bread. I saved the
tiny bit of room left in my tummy for Tiramisu.
As we savored our
dessert, Victor and I mused over which of our family members would enjoy the
food and the ambiance of our new Philly find… which items on the menu we looked
forward to trying next time.
“Good birthday, baby?” Victor asked.
“Best birthday ever…” My
cheeks hurt from all the involuntary smiling.
“I have no words. Thank you!”
“Good… I am surprised I
never heard about it before.”
"I love it... You
know I'm going to write about it."
He grinned.
"You knew it when
you picked it."
His grin
grew...........................................................................
When we awoke the next
morning, I breathed in the last few fleeting moments of phone free time. How to hold on to that feeling………….?
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