
The first heart had been sitting on my kitchen steps on the morning of the first Valentines Day after my husband Bob’s death. I’d brushed it off the step as I opened the back door to feed the cats but had seen a flash of silver and retrieved it from the yerba buena. It would have been easy to overlook – a Milk Chocolate egg about the size of an almond M & M, wrapped in silver foil with tiny red hearts all over it. I couldn’t figure out how anyone could have reached the kitchen step of this house which was surrounded by a wall and locked gates. And who would want to? I barely knew anyone here in Mexico.
After that, hearts showed up everywhere, and my brain went along with the part of my heart that decided these were signs from Bob.
Stones in the shape of hearts lay directly in front of me on my walks along the 20 miles of lakefront between Chapala and Jocotepec, I still have some of these rocks … starting out with a perfect little white heart and ending in a progression of multicolored irregular stones that were, nonetheless, hearts. Then within a few months of my finding the first heart rock, I noticed one calf with a perfect heart on its forehead. By then, I had started taking a camera along on my walks, so luckily, I was able to snap a photo. A month later, I saw another cow with a heart on its side. Now, I had grown up the daughter of a cattle rancher in South Dakota, and in my 18 years of riding the plains in a pickup with my dad, checking out cattle, I’d never seen such a mark. Now, in the course of a year, I’d seen two.
It isn’t that I thought Bob had slipped into the gene pool of local cattle and engineered these love signs, but rather that my finding them was some sort of special synchronicity that kept me believing that he was still near, guiding me a bit, sending messages.
I’d walk along through the silt of the dried-up lakebed, look down and find a perfect little plastic heart, or a few heart imprints in the dirt. Where had that sneaker that had made them gone afterward? Had it disappeared? Bob had been cremated in his red suede high-tops. What had the soles looked like? I’d never noticed. But over the years, I learned to appreciate these little Bob reminders … and to be comforted by them if I was feeling lonely, to try to decipher some message if I were thinking out a particularly hard problem.
On the beach in Baja, I’d found other perfect heart prints. In San Miguel with no camera along, I kept seeing countless cacti that grew in perfect heart shapes that a friend grew tired of photographing for me.
Once, five years after his death, when I’d returned to Bahia de Los Angeles, a place where Bob and I had shared a very special time during our first driving trip to Mexico, I had reached down to examine a stone that, buried in the sand, looked heart shaped. When I’d pulled it free from the sand, it had proven to be ordinary, but when I threw it into the bay, a favorite heavy ring had gone sailing off my throwing hand and landed about 20 feet out in the water. I’ve always had faith in miracle finds, so I waded out and scanned my eyes over the sandy bottom. After only minutes, I’d found the ring. If it hadn’t been so broad-banded, it would have been hidden in the sand, but as it was, enough of it was showing to allow me to slip my finger into it and scoop it up … along with a rock it was nestled next to … a rock in the shape of a heart.
It is the strangest thing. I’ve been to Melaque, on the Colima coast below PV and above Manzanillo, four or five times, but I can’t remember if I was ever there with Bob. One thing is sure. I always think of him when I’m there. I think a lot about how we would have been camping out in our van right on the beach. He would have found a hammock he didn’t feel guilty lying around in all day. And no one would have blamed him – even me – I hope.
Instead, I am here all alone in a two-bedroom, two-bath bungalow meant for two. I’d rented it with a friend whose life went elsewhere, and I’d just never bothered to cancel the reservations. Some part of me cried out for solitude and wanted to try another vacation alone to see if I’d fare better than my last attempts 22 years ago in Amsterdam or 35 years before in the Sudan. Both times, I’d felt unsure and bored without a companion and gone back quickly to rejoin friends.
But this time I had just turned 60 – certainly old enough to sit alone in a restaurant or club and not be embarrassed. At first, I felt like I was a wandering ghost. Midway through my second week, I finally learned that once you get into the right place, you start meeting people, and for me it was when I went to the plaza at the times when Mexicans were there. I started a photo essay on games and was even asked to join in some of them while the players explained the rules.
Meanwhile, with all the extra time gained by no TV, no telephone, no local acquaintances, I’d started going online more to check emails and Skype messages. During the two weeks, I hooked up again with a friend from Switzerland I’d carried on a Skype relationship with for over a year. His name was Paul, and although he spoke three languages, our communication via typed messages back and forth had been hard for him, and after 16 months, I still knew little about him. Earlier in the week, he had sounded me out about coming to visit and I had panicked. Now he had turned on his camera and was phoning me so I could see him for the first time. He seemed nice and friendly. Cute. Not as handsome as in his picture, which was kind of a relief. He’d asked me a few times how old my pictures were in my Skype profile, and this made me wonder if his pictures were older ones. In every one he looked totally different, and all were different from Paul on camera. At any rate, I felt like this was some kind of a milestone. We were flirting a little bit, at least I was – first for me since Bob’s death.
After about an hour of trying to get the sound connection right so his voice didn’t cut out and of me getting camera-ready, I told him I had to go catch the sunset on the beach. I was very busy, he remarked, and I knew this was true, compared to his life which seemed to consist of meeting his children, going out to dinner with friends, or sitting in front of the computer. I could never get much information about his life. Meanwhile, I told him about my art, my writing, travels, friends, working with different disaster relief groups, readings, a book I’d published with friends.
I had begun to think he might be a man with little life, yet he was fun to talk to in person – gentle and gentlemanly. Now I walked on the beach and the sense of panic that I’d been met with when he hinted at his coming over lessened a bit. The sun was at that particular point, about an hour before sunset, when it was lying on the sand like a sparkling carpet. Whenever a wave came in, the sand caught the water and water caught the sunlight. I sat for a half hour trying to photograph the different stages of waves, foam, sand and light. Then I walked. Stooping to pick up a pelican feather that lay on the sand, I idly wrote in the sand, “Paul?,” feeling teenagerish as I stepped back to look at it. Since I’d been chronicling my day, I decided to snap a picture of it. Only then did I notice the outline of a perfect large heart that rose out of the sand directly below his name. The product of two footprints, placed heel-to-heel with toes pointing outward, it had been run over by a wave at least once and been smoothed out into a perfect heart. And I knew, finally, that Bob was sending a sign. Did he mean to say that I should go ahead, or was he trying to remind me that he was still with me and always would be? As I pondered it, a wave came up behind me, covering the heart and washing it away. Only Paul remained, and the question mark. Seconds later, a second wave wiped out the writing and a third washed out even my own footprints.
My heart opened in a feeling so different from anything I’d felt in the 21 years since I’d met, married and been widowed by Bob. Suddenly, I felt totally single and free. And I realized how quickly time passes and that we need to seize opportunities while we can. Whether I chose to meet Paul or not was not the issue. The point was, for the first time since Bob had died six and a half years ago, I felt totally open to the possibility.
The next morning as I was packing up the car to leave, a man walked by holding a large open flat of three dozen eggs. He stopped, asking where I was coming from. When I said I was in fact just leaving, he stayed for a few minutes anyway, trading information. He lived there year-round. In the hot months he just stayed inside all day, coming out at night. He was the first man in two weeks who had approached me in a flirting manner. Now, minutes before I left, I wondered if it had been a change in me that triggered his interest. Or was it just another little synchronistic prod, reminding me that I have life and juices left and some time left to use them.
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