Color of Cold

ISABELLE: “It’s not that Henry doesn’t say, “I love you,” it’s his awkwardly forced look, like a child taste-testing spinach. I can’t describe it any more than I can tell you the color of cold, but that’s what it’s like, something short of certain. No one is, right? I mean about the certainty of love. I tell him you have to love unafraid, but even as I say it, I know it’s a shallow improbability. We’re preprogrammed to race into relationships seeking ways out. It’s like riding an airplane, there’s no way anyone’s going anywhere, yet they have us mark our nearest exits. That’s what love’s become, an airplane ride with someone other than us in control.

“At least he doesn’t turn the tables. If Henry were to press me on how I love unafraid, I’m not sure I can answer; at least not in ways that’d satisfy either of us. I need his confidence to convince me, and there-in lies the rub, Henry’s hesitant and I’m uncertain; two souls clinging to separate lifelines. We want love to sweep us away in its powerful torrents but are unwilling to let go of our tethers.

“Henry says I relationship-shame him. Fair enough, but then don’t toss “I love you’s,” around like expired Metro tokens. When a guy tells a girl he loves her, it means something, even if the girl doesn’t say it back. She shouldn’t have to, we’re rock solid. Guys can be madly yours one moment and walking out the door the next, so, of course a girl has to peel back such statements to see what’s inside. The irony is, we wouldn’t be here if he’d just say it like he means it, or doesn’t say it at all.”

KYLE: “I’m ten when we move to this rundown rural North Carolina town with formally palatial homes that speak of a long-ago time lost to the consequences of conflict. People either work in the textile mill or support those who do. The Mill makes clothing labels and sometimes things go wrong, and labels get tossed into dumpsters; huge rolls with literally hundreds of labels stitched together in one seamless strand like a roll of colorful movie tickets.

“Kids collect them, mostly from their parents. Me and my boys though are rouge pirates seizing our treasure through more adventurous means, which demands a dangerous game of escape and evasion with security guards. Our quests require rescuing damsels in distress and labels are the currency needed to ransom freedom. We sneak onto the factory premises and rummage through dumpsters for the coolest discards; the rarest being prototypes no one’s yet seen.

“We’re young and still foolish, but already our hearts are filled with fantastic notions about being men of courage and valor ready to risk everything to prove our chivalry. We hide in the forest that runs along the back side of the Mill near where factory workers huddle during breaks; the men in one group and women in another, each further subdivided based on age, race, and factory position. Smoking binds them, occasionally an athletic man or pretty girl doesn’t, but they mostly don’t fit in. We pick the prettiest woman then invent a back-story about her sad fate-filled life, augmented by sworn oaths to see her rescued.

“The boys call me Dakota, on account of coming from South Dakota and because I teach them the Sioux way to count coup; that’s what we call plundering labels from dumpsters without getting caught. Tim and Tom, who we call T1 and T2, are freckled-faced Irish twins who don’t look anything alike and somehow both end up in fifth grade. We assume Bogie’s named after Humphrey Bogart, but one day we’re at his house and his dad’s hopping mad because Bogie hasn’t done his chores. In between the yelling and swearing, his dad says he got his name cause every time there’s work to be done, he vanishes like a ghost. We consider renaming him Casper but decide he has a Bogart kind of swagger. Gary’s called, Preacher, on account of always fretting about doing the right thing and Reggie’s tag line is Polo, since his dad wears a suit and drives a new Mercedes. We’re a rouge group of misfits but what binds us like brothers is our zest for high adventure and willingness to risk capture; maybe not so much Preacher, but the rest of us for sure.

“Our strategy’s always the same, wait for workers to finish their smokes and then, with a daring reserved for the bold and reckless, sneak over to the dumpsters to secure our booty. That’s phase one, phase two involves slipping inside the fortified fortress to find our fair damsel. Once found, to complete the quest, she has to smile indicating she understands rescue is imminent. The game is won if you get the smile and make it back to the rally spot unscathed, which no one ever has. Finding a way over the electric fence fortifying the fortress is the first task. Then we have to secure sufficient labels to bribe any sentries we may encounter. Danger lurks around every corner and success is far from certain, but as dedicated warriors embracing destiny, we can no more stray from our quest then we can falter from finding the courage required to persevere.”

ISABELLE: “What the hell does any of that have to do with Henry’s hesitation, and how do little boys playing with labels address the aftermath of “I love you?” That’s not even my question if I’m being honest; it’s the aftermath of what follows happily ever after, something Hollywood’s done nothing to prepare us for. I’m not sure happily ever after even exists, if it does, you and I wouldn’t be sitting on this park bench night after night. Does love make us neurotic or am I being dramatic – don’t answer that! You reminisce about an age of chivalry as if it’s all so romantic, when in fact love back then was a matter of survival. Men needed women for the things women do, like cooking and childbearing. In return women needed men for the things men do, like hunting and protection. No one needs anyone anymore, that’s the sad tragic truth. I don’t need Henry to survive, or even to be happy. I don’t need his hesitation any more than I need him clinging to lifelines and that leave me lost. What is “I love you,” supposed to mean in the modern age? If you remove physical passion, what’s left?”

KYLE: “I assure you my story has meaning, and while we can concede love’s intimacy requirement, it also has to have elements of the fantastic. It takes courage to love, which is why our quests begin with bold bravado, an eagerness to take on risk, endure any hardship, face any foe; unfortunately, things never end well for me and the boys, but it doesn’t matter, not when oaths are taken, damsels are in distress, and the adventurous demands of destiny are set in our sorcerer’s stone. That’s what love is, a willingness to set aside pragmatism to embrace the fantastic.

“We never actually make it past counting coup, except one time, the time that makes all failed attempts worthwhile, and isn’t that the essence of love: fearlessly failing with an unfaltering need to keep trying. Like anyone daring the dangers of love, we treasure our labels because they’re earned and come with tales of courage and bravery that are told and retold wherever boys gather to boast of their boldness. What seems romantically ridiculous to you is far from foolish, that’s what love’s taught me; to be both bold and foolish. What you dismiss as unrealistic I denounce as Hollywood plagiarizing every young boy’s zest for adventure; and the thing is, as I’ve lived through the ecstasy of passion, the agony of betrayal, and the suffering of sorrow, my need for the fantastic has never waned.

“The quest isn’t about finishing, it’s about battling barriers, living in the moment, and pushing through setbacks and disappointments. That’s the power and promise of being ten; romantic fantasies have permission to be real. After all, once an oath is sworn, obligations and commitments must be honored. Thus is the mind and imagination of an undiminished boy on his way to becoming a grown-ass man who still finds the fantastic in romantic adventures worthy of Nordic sagas.”

ISABELLE: “It’s all so freaking convenient for you, isn’t it! I try talking about something serious and you hide away in fantasy, just like Henry. I’d like to argue in love’s defense in real terms; Henry says love is how you feel when you’re with someone, but aren’t the feelings when you’re apart more profound? Henry says love is not expecting anything from your partner, but doesn’t it really hinge on expecting everything from them; and conversely surrendering everything to them? What happened to good old-fashioned needing someone? Henry says true love is self-sustaining, but I say love needs constant nurturing. If a tree survives in the desert, alone and unprotected, can we say it thrives? If its leaves are vibrant and its fruit nourishing, do we call it strong? If birds build nests in the full foliage and raise hatchlings while the tree provides shelter from storms and safety from predators, is the tree not necessary, and does the bird not love her tree; and would not all she holds dear perish without this tree? Is this not love?

“Henry says he loves me, but not in the way a tree loves her birds, surrendering everything so they might thrive. But what has me completely unhinged is that his hesitation causes me to question if I can love Henry as the bird loves her tree? Need is a necessary part of love, and if I don’t need Henry and he doesn’t need me, how is whatever future we hope to build not doomed?”

KYLE: “I once equated Newton’s Law of Motion to what I call my “Law of Love.” Newton says every action has an equal and opposite reaction, or as I like to say, a consequence. Love’s a strange thing when it comes to such matters; people in love know their consequences full-on but ignore them; they’re calculated but seldom weighed against an expected reward, which leads to a life lesson I’ve had to relearn repeatedly. When consequence occurs, you can fight it, deny it, or accept it, but you can’t outrun it. Mark that down as my marathon of wisdom.

“It’s all about cause and effect, which leads to what I call “Reaction Theory,” something Isaac should’ve spent more time exploring because he would’ve concluded reaction is a function of both context and our inherent nature. My nature is to accept consequence because to deny is dangerous and to fight is futile. Before you accuse Henry of hesitating, know his nature. I possess the untethered imagination of a boy on a quest. The consequence is I often find myself out of phase with reality; out of sync with other people, out of rhythm with life, out of touch with all the clues we’re provided, out of step with the ebb and flow of powerful currents guiding our destiny. What you call hesitation is perhaps just Henry not in sync with your uncertainty.

“The problem with being me is that I’ve never seen a fence I didn’t want to climb, a river I wouldn’t cross. I’ve never known a road that didn’t demand exploring or a mountain not clamoring to be conquered. I’ve never tasted a wine I wouldn’t finish, never poured a whiskey I wouldn’t drink. I’ve never known someone well enough to not want more, never fallen in love while holding a lifeline. I never dip my toe in the water because that only robs the rest of me. Most men are not me though; they won’t climb mountains, would drown crossing rivers, and can’t appreciate good whiskey. What if what you call hesitation, is just Henry in his nature; you can fault a man for that.”

ISABELLE: “Are you suggesting this is all he can offer, because that then leads to the age-old dilemma, do you love the man for who he is or who he’ll become? My dad always says “Remember, Isabelle, a man falls in love hoping his woman never changes, but a woman falls in love knowing exactly how she’ll change her man.” Dad would say to let Henry be, to embrace his hesitation. He’d say the problem is not in what Henry says, but in what I hear. And here I am, like always, questioning dad’s wisdom.”

KYLE: “One day me and the boys are at the factory fortress; can’t really say how things start, but on an otherwise casual December day in a place that knows nothing about winter, we’re playing basketball waiting for school to start and the next thing we know, we’re in the forest on the freedom side of the electric fence taking stock of factory folks finishing their morning smokes. We don’t mean to skip school; it just sort of happens. There we are young warriors swearing an oath to rescue the new girl who’s more beautiful than any damsel that came before. It’s evident she’s there against her will cause she hasn’t yet learned to smoke through regrets and requisite disappointment. Our imperative is clear, to rescue her before the influences of her cellmates resign her to unjust fates. As I stealthily scale the electric fence with my cohorts, I sense-, well-, there’s no other way to describe it other than to say it’s like the voice of fate whispering gentle encouragement.

“This sense is soft at first then grows stronger and more intense until it causes me to pause as the others move on. T1 is first to establish a beachhead at the dumpsters; per our rules of chivalry, his box and all it contains now belong to him. Polo is almost to his chosen dumpster when he’s spotted by an out of shape guard. Rather than retreat, Polo takes off down the asphalt road separating the line of dumpsters from the red brick factory wall with the guard in close pursuit. T1 ducks down as a second guard starts flipping open dumpsters shouting something about finding us rat-bastards.

“It’s hard doing justice to the comical string of events that follow; T2, probably to prevent his brother’s capture, runs straight at the second guard shouting and screaming like a crazed animal. Then, just as he’s close enough for the guard to grab him, T2 darts down the paved road skipping and singing like a leprechaun; occasionally looking back to torment the beer-bellied guard lumbering in pursuit.

“For the moment T1’s safe, that is until a third guard arrives. In a move that shocks us all, Preacher steps around a semi-trailer and onto the road spouting bible verses. We’re looking on in amazement thinking, “what the hell’s he doing?” The guard stands frozen like a confused statue as Preacher rants and raves about getting right with God. No one’s sure what happens to Bogie, he seems to have just disappeared.

“At the height of all this chaos, fate nudges me to make my move. I duck behind a row of blue plastic barrels stacked two high and arranged in a way that creates a random maze. By now a fourth guards arrived and he’s standing beside the statue guard equally mesmerized by Preacher’s theatrics that would humble any Baptist minister. Slowly, I inch toward the barrel’s edge, hoping to avoid detection. Preacher spots me and re-positions himself causing the guards to turn their backs. I slink across the road to the door of the factory fortress with the stealth of a seasoned Sioux warrior.

“Even before touching the door’s handle, I hear the embryonic melody of machinery in motion as it emanates through the red brick wall; I’m instantly hypnotized by the soothing harmonies tickling my soul the exact same way a lover does when whispering in your ear. I have no idea what to do next, no one’s ever made it this far before but proceed I must, so, with tepid trepidation, I slowly open the door and silently slip inside, slithering down a dark corridor doing what I can to stay in shadows. I reach the end of a long hallway transfixed by a sight so profoundly magnificent I’ve never found words to adequately describe it.

“Before me is a room so large I’m not convinced it ever ends. It’s filled with massive fabric weaving looms driven by rubber belts two-feet wide and fifty-feet in diameter. At the opposite end of the belts are the largest engines I’ve ever seen; quietly churning to the slow steady revolution of industrial economics. Below the belts and between each large loom are smaller machines whose job it is to manage hundreds of colorful threads going into the looms. The machine nearest me has multiple rows of thread spools stacked in a pyramid of colors; each thread feeding through independent eyelets and guides on its way to the loom.

“The waspy sound of each loom’s warp is countered by the sharp troll of the treadle and taken together in concert with all the looms form a slow melodic symphony of passion and drama. The smaller machines, each with their own engines, provide percussion, tapping out a beat that’s uniquely theirs and yet, when taken as a whole, provide the pulse of production.

“I’m in such overwhelming awe that without thinking I step up to a small machine with multi-colored spools just to marvel; to better understand its role in the label making orchestra. I don’t last twenty-seconds before a gigantic man in pinstriped bibs grabs my shoulder with the clenching force of hydraulic jaws vanquishing any hope of escape. I gaze up at this mountain of a man with his white handlebar mustache tapering into two fine points on either side of a rock-hard chin. His equally long white hair flows freely around his shoulders making him look like the Norse God Thor we’re learning about in school.

“This God of the factory floor looks down demanding to know what the hell I’m doing in his world. Unsure what one says to appease a God, I humbly lower my head to await punishment, which I’m certain will be swift and without mercy. But rather than drop me in my footsteps, his constricting grip softens and the next thing I know, instead of tossing my ass outside like a mis-woven roll of labels, he insists I join him as he makes his shop-floor rounds.

“My mixed-up mass of anxiety and amazement can only muster a nod, which is okay since Thor’s not expecting a reply. As we tour his mechanical wonderland, this king of the factory floor hands me an oil can sternly saying, “everyone here’s gotta earn their keep.” The rest is a blur of Picasso impressions, but not only do I get to see the large looms up close as Thor proudly explains the process of threads going in and labels coming out, I get to squirt oil into open gears and exposed cam shafts, which gives me this never before feeling of profound purpose and is that not the essence of love.

“My reward, the forgotten part of my dangerous quest making all the risks worthwhile, is that when we get to the last loom in this seemingly endless land of magic and motion, there stands the damsel I’ve come to rescue frustratedly struggling to run a neon yellow thread from a spool on her small machine into a large loom. Thor introduces this fair fine lady as his daughter, Christina, who’s earning money for college. It’s only with Thor’s help that Christina finishes her neon task; then, she smiles at me with the grace and charm of an appreciative princess while informing her dad about child labor laws she’s learning about in school.

“My friends, fearing the worst, flee the fortress factory, working up alibis for the pending investigation into my sudden and unexplained disappearance. I don’t see them the rest of that day or even the next, as I’m dealing with the consequences of skipping school. It’s days, even weeks, before I calm down enough to sleep through the noise and shuffle in my head of multiple machines working in-phase, in-rhythm, in an ebb and flow that seems impossible to comprehend let alone ever engineer. Never in my young life have I seen anything so unexplainably amazing, and I’ve been to Disney World.

“That’s your deal with Henry and what you call his hesitation. Fate finds us in unexpected moments from many different angles and while we’re looking left, we’re drifting right, and when we think we’re on an adventure, we’re really laying a foundation for the rest of our life. And it’s not so much hesitation in a moment, as we’re stumbling to grasp what’s happening. It takes months, even years, to muddle through the lessons fate’s teaching me on Thor’s factory floor. I start that day skipping school because men of adventure can’t be contained in a classroom prison, only to discover the muscle and magic of engineering; that sets in motion the rest of my life.”

ISABELLE: “Henry’s hesitation is not about someone stumbling through your minefields of mechanical love, it’s a more obvious form of avoidance. He suffers from what doctors should call RSD, “Relationship Stress Disorder.” Imagine the billions big Pharma could make with a pill to cure that. While I concede your point, I fail to see what you and Thor have to do with Henry’s hesitation. You boldly step onto that factory floor consequences be damned, just as, after all you’ve endured, you still love unafraid. Henry and I are not so lucky, he’s hesitant and I’m uncertain; two forms of fear. He does this, then I do that, and in the end, how can love last? That’s the question your quest fails to address. Would a jury of our peers not conclude Henry’s right to hesitate, or would their verdict be he risks losing everything? Since I’m the one to decide and I’m uncertain, we’re stuck in this bizarre perpetual motion like the belts on one of your looms, moving but not going anywhere.”

KYLE: “I still feel Thor’s crimping grip but, ironically, can’t recall anything about the smiling damsel who completed my quest. What’s that say when even a romantic like me forgets such an essential element of his fantasy. It’s not a question ten-year-olds know how to ask, but one that haunts grown-ass me every damn day. By now I’m more than familiar with my parent’s inquisitions. They worry about my future so, with dad as Prosecutor, mom as Judge, and both as Jury with predetermined verdicts, all that remains is learning my fate. My weak defense is that no day in school can possibly equal a day with Thor, however, for the crime of skipping school, I’m guilty as charged. As I’m led away to serve my sentence, dad sternly states in his clear concise way, “you need to think about the path you’re choosing.