anything to do here that will keep you busy for more than two days.
But thatâs in the summer mainly, when people actually come. Nobody comes now. Nobody but her.
Our café is far enough off the beaten path that where we sit at the far edge of town the shops and restaurants give way to homes. Itâs an assorted mix, reallyâa souvenir shop to the north, a bed-and-breakfast to the south. On the opposite side of the sett street is a psychologistâs office, followed by a succession of single-family homes. Condos. A gas station. Another souvenir shop, closed until spring.
A waitress passes by, snaps her fingers before my eyes. âTable two,â she says, a waitress I call Red. Theyâre all just nicknames to me: Red, Braids, Braces. âTable two needs to be cleared.â
But I donât move. I continue to stare. I give her a nickname, too, because it feels like the right thing to do. The woman staring out the window is building castles in the air. Daydreaming. Itâs a big deal, really, something different happening around here when nothing different ever happens. If Nick or Adam were still around, and not away at college, Iâd call them up and tell them about the girl that showed up today. About her eyes, about her hair. And theyâd want to know the details: whether or not she really was different than the dime-a-dozen girls we see every day, the same girls weâve known since first grade. And Iâd tell them that she is.
My grandfather used to call my grandmotherâalso a brunette, though in my lifetime Iâd never seen her as anything other than a mass of weblike grayâCappuccetta. The nickname Cappuccetta purportedly came from the monks of Capuchin, or so my Italian grandfather claimed, something about the hoods they wore bearing resemblance to the coffee drink, a cappuccino. Thatâs what Grandpa said, anyway, when he looked my grandmother in the eye and called her Cappuccetta.
Me, I just like the sound of it. And it seems to suit this girl well, the modicum of brunette hair, the ambiguity that surrounds her like the hood of a monkâs cowl. But Iâm not a coffee drinker, and so instead my eyes drop to her narrow wrist where there sits a pearl bracelet that looks much too small for even her small hand. Itâs pulled taut, the elastic cord showing through the creamy beads. I imagine it leaves a red imprint along the skin. The pearl beads are worn along the edges, losing their sheen. I watch as she plucks habitually at the band, pulling the elastic up off the skin, and allowing it to snap back again. Itâs mesmerizing, almost, that simple movement. Pluck. Pluck. Pluck. I watch for a while, unable to shift my eyes from the bracelet or her fluid hands.
And thatâs what cinches it. Not Cappuccetta, I decide. Iâll call her Pearlinstead.
Pearl.
Itâs then that a cluster of churchgoers appear, the same ones who arrive every week about this same time. They claim their usual table, a rectangular slab that seats all ten. Theyâre delivered carafes of coffeeâone half-caf, the other leadedâthough no one asks. Itâs assumed. Because this is what they do every Sunday morning: cluster around the same table, talking passionately about things like sermons and pastors and scripture .
The waitress Braidsdisappears for three consecutive smoke breaks so that when she returns she reeks of a cigarette factory, her teeth a pale yellow as she dribbles another inadequate tip into the pocket of her apron and moans. A dollar fifty, all in quarters.
She excuses herself and heads to the restroom.
The café takes on a vibe of normalcy, though with Pearl in the roomâthe lady with the ombré hair, staring out the window at the colorful homes and the redbrick buildings across the wayâthings are anything but normal. She eats from the plate of food now set before her: scrambled eggs with an English muffin on the side, smothered in