I am
awakened at 5:05 by the pounding rain outside my window and the wind disturbing
the leaves and acorns that have not yet fallen.
I’d gone to
bed early to finish reading the novel that I need to leave for J when I go to
Argelès tomorrow. My daughter says I
pretend to read when I go to bed, for I often awake many hours later, the
light still on, the book across my chest and my glasses askew on my face.
I listen to
the rain then put the light and finish the novel.
Annabel
comes and sits on my bed. She dressed in the flapper style of the 1920s.
Despite her taking over the cookie factory, she’s never lost her love of
clothing which annoys Dieter, her husband who is always off on political junkets. Annabel has been a difficult character from the start. She has had to hid her strength in flightiness while maintaining the family business.
“I think I
should have an affair,” she tells me. “Maybe the wheat salesman. Make him
Canadian, blond, tall with a Swedish name.”
Annie
appears at my door. “Okay, if my assignment is to write her life story from her journals, how
and hell will I know this. She’d never write about it so anyone else can discover she was unfaithful.”
“Simple,”
Annabel says. “I’ll write it in code.”
“And how
will I break it?” Annie asks.
“You do
cryptoquotes all the time. I’ll do a simple letter exchange, j for e, for
example.”
Annie
sighs. “But you’re writing in Swiss German.”
“So? Don’t
be lazy.”
Annie turns
to me. “Speaking of lazy . . . you’ve got to finish those corrections on Murder in Ely that J
has sent up. That book has got to get to your publisher. And when are you going
to format it?”
I know, I
know. G, my editor, will want the manuscript not only perfect in the writing
but in the spacing, the headings, the type size. Otherwise he’ll yell. Now we
Skype I can listen to his rants rather than read his emails in caps saying “YOU
SHOULD KNOW BETTER” when a tab appears that I forgot to take out.
I nod. She doesn't need to remind her that I also need to proof the final copy of Murder on
Insel Poel, but I’ve reserved the train ride tomorrow for that. And then there’s
about 43 emails with stories for the newsletter that I will also need to work on today.
I get out
of bed, close the window that muffles the sound of the rain, and take my
computer back to bed with me.
As Annabel
and Annie leave the room, they remind me to focus, focus, focus.
The clock
reads 7:50 but it is really 6:50. The reset button is stuck so for six months
of the year, the time is off.
I’m ready
to focus, focus, focus.
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