We refer to this part of the kitchen as the pantry.
“I wish we had some apples,” Radar said. “God, wouldn’t an apple taste good
right now?”
I sigh. Stupid fourth food group. Also, even though I stopped drinking
Bluefin a few hours ago, I still feel exceedingly twitchy.
“I still feel kinda twitchy,” I say.
“Yeah,” Radar says. “I can’t stop tapping my fingers.” I look down. He is
drumming his fingers silently against his knees. “I mean,” he says, “I actually
cannot stop.”
“Okay, yeah I’m not tired, so we’ll stay up till four and then we’ll get them
up and we’ll sleep till eight.”
“Okay,” he says. There is a pause. The road has emptied out now; there is
only me and the semitrucks, and I feel like my brain is processing information at
eleven thousand times its usual pace, and it occurs to me that what I’m doing is
very easy, that driving on the interstate is the easiest and most pleasant thing in
the world: all I have to do is stay in between the lines and make sure that no one
is too close to me and I am not too close to anyone and keep leaving. Maybe it
felt like this for her, too, but I could never feel like this alone.
Radar breaks the silence. “Well, if we’re not going to sleep until four . . .”
I finish his sentence. “Yeah, then we should probably just open another bottle
of Bluefin.”
And so we do.
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