The sky
keeps changing colors, the wind roars all night and morning. Sometime overnight
it pulled the chicken-hut door off its hinges and smashed it to kindling.
We are down
to one aged hen. The orange cats sit with her on the woodpile, keeping her
company.
Moratinos
hunkers down. The water in the furrows turns to ice, the dogs delight the
sudden slide underfoot. I have to take them out each morning, even when the
wind is knocking me sideways, tearing aluminum strips off the highway bridge
and flinging them down the autopista. There are almost no cars or trucks on the
autopista. It’s dangerous to drive, wind here, snow to the north, the passes
over the mountains are closed. A man was
killed up there yesterday, putting on his tire-chains at Pajares. A car slid on
the ice and into him, hit his head, knocked him dead.
The roaring
goes on
for hours and days, it shoves smoke back down the chimney, it takes
down the rotten trees along the road to San Martin. Our house is drafty. The
furnace goes and goes, but the halls are chilly. We keep the doors closed. Breezes
blow under the sills and around the edges, through the little holes in the
electrical outlets. The chimneys moan.
Boris the
canary sings on. We play Chopin nocturnes.
We spend
our days apart. Paddy sleeps. Ollie is down at the hostal bar, there is noplace
else to go in Moratinos in January. The cats and I sit on the sofa near the
pellet stove, hidden behind two lines of drying laundry. Last night’s pilgrim
was shocked that we hang laundry in our living room. “My wife would never
permit that,” the Slovakian man said.
“We are not
bourgeois,” I told him. “We don’t have a dryer. The laundry dries in here where
the stove is.”
The laundry
smells clean.
It’s
started to snow. It won’t last. The sun shines bright, but the sky is grey as
gunmetal.
The chimney thunders. Another pilg is on his way, a Swede, or maybe a Finn, or a Dane.