I have locked myself out of the car. I borrowed my husband’s
ignition key for the weekend — since I left my keys at work Friday afternoon —
but was ignorant of the need for a separate door key. While I wait for my
knight in shining armor to come, I watch the world go by.
I face what once was Denver’s main street. As in most cities
the main drag was long since bypassed by the interstate and the need to rush
around the city. Further east there are blocks of dilapidated Motor Hotels with
quaint western themes; they are a glimpse into a bygone era when a road trip
was a family adventure rather than a trial of togetherness. This far west I’m
in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, an eclectic mix of grand old homes, dive
bars, and newly fashionable restaurants, all with a fantastic view of snow clad
mountains rising above downtown.
Last week’s snow has cleansed the city, leaving an empty sky
and emerald grass. Trees are reluctant to leaf out just yet so the finches,
sparrows, robins, and magpies stand out as they weave fences of song. Squirrels
hang upside down on those same trees like diurnal bats. I have little use for
them, although I concede their fuzzy cuteness. Gray squirrels were introduced
to my city a hundred years ago by a homesick Chicagoan. I loathe them for
driving out our native fauna and fear the bubonic plague they carry. Still I
chuckle at their antics as a pair chase round the base of a barren elm tree most
likely planted before their kind came.
Traffic is leisurely. Roaring engines and impatient
acceleration will come later in the day, when the drivers have woken to the urgency
of getting somewhere. For now they’re all still sleepy or perhaps enjoying a
cup of coffee with the window down and spring blowing in.
Cyclists shrink-wrapped in logo-spattered spandex roll
slowly to a red light. Their muscles are drawn long and lean. Green light.
Standing above their saddles they thrust forward, a melding of man and machine,
ungainly in the first strides but picking up speed across the street. They soon
are out of sight.
A fire engine bustles past, impatiently shouting its way
through traffic to aid an otherwise forgotten man who has collapsed. I wonder
who called for help, cynically imagining the restaurant owner phoning in,
desperate to rid himself of the homeless nuisance diverting customers. The sun
warms my shoulders and then my heart and I hope instead that passersby offered
assistance to a fellow just a little down on his luck.
Before me rises a modernist apartment cube. The building is
clad in large rectangles of matte blue gray aluminum, lending it an air of
space-tech. There are balconies for each residence. I watch as two men, most
likely strangers despite their proximity, mirror exactly each other’s
movements. Mr. Seventh Floor South is a stocky, bearded black man in a
vest and do rag who is obviously enjoying his coffee. Tenth Floor East is lean and
muscular and white and confident enough that he stands in just bicycle
shorts. They simultaneously lean on the black iron railing, looking out like
satisfied kings surveying their tiny kingdoms. They stretch and sip and turn
and lean again in an unscripted ballet that — more than any work of art —
speaks of our common humanity.
The grumble of my husband’s truck draws my attention down to
the parking lot. I trade him a kiss and a doughnut from the bank for the key
and we each drive away.