While putting finishing touches on an ‘Antique Store’ birdhouse, including a Coke machine, old tube radio (minus the electronics), tin signage, windows and doors, my mind got to drifting away, and I somehow ended up in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, the smallest of Canada’s provinces, soon to be the home of two of three of my lovely sisters.
[“Future home of an antique-loving bluebird?”: photo GH]
I saw myself pedaling along Kensington Rd. toward my small store/workshop in a refurbished two-story walk-up, rescued lumber and bag of one-and-a-half inch galvanized nails strapped to my old Schwinn bicycle, knowing a customer might be waiting for me to open up so he could pick up the bluebird house he ordered the week before, and knowing wife Pat might be wondering where I got to when I left an hour after sunrise (I said I’d be back with coffee in two shakes, but she knows my bike stops for yard sales).
I parked my red bike beside the old Coke machine, said hello to Frank - he already had his money ready for the birdhouse in the display window, red ‘sold’ sign hanging from its perch - searched for the keys to the store in the pocket of my dusty ‘workshop jeans’ with one hand, and balanced three coffees in a cardboard tray in the other.
“Frank, I’ll knock a few dollars off the birdhouse if you can help fix a brake line on my old motorcycle,” I said.
“Not a problem,” he said. “I’ll fix it for nothing, the birdhouse looks so good. Where’s the bike, old man?”
“Around the corner here, at the side of the store.”
Off we went, coffees in hand.
[“Frank and I are around the corner, in the lovely shade of the baobab tree.”]
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