goldwingers
going somewhere
by celia miles
Today
I was shot through with a dart that entered as envy and emerged
as wistfulness. It was a calm enough time. My husband and I
were driving on I-40 in a damp drizzle that wasnt yet
a hard rain. The car was warm. We were companionably quiet.
I was working a crossword puzzle and had just learned a new
word. My world was as serene and placid as a flat pancakeonly
I didnt realize it until we passed a convoy of Goldwings.
Six of them traveling together. Each big machine held two personsa
man and a womanand as we passed, I could look closely
at each couple. These werent Hells Angels or teenagers
or leather clad, tattooed types. These were my types! At least
in some ways chronological and physical. I saw plump grandmotherly
cheeks, gray hair, glasses, solid and stout stomachs, some (surely)
false teeth, some gray eyebrows.
They
all had their rainsuits on, which may have added to their filled
out quality, but clearly they werent lean and mean
boys and girls. One couple had on burgundy suits that matched
exactly their Goldwing, and, of course, their helmetsglistening,
polished, shedding raindropsmatched. They were talking
into their microphones, oblivious to the murky day. The others
wore bright yellow or orange suits, colors mostly matching their
bikes. It couldnt have taken us more than a minute or
so to pass them by, but they stayed with me. They all sat proudly,
straight, comfortably. Not one looked irritated or disgusted
with the weather. Well, I wasnt disgusted either. I like
rain, but I was protected, ensconced in my steel and plastic
buggy. I didnt feel the rain on my face, the wind, didnt
hear the sizzle as tires cut through the slick pavement.
Now common sense told me that all six of those couples are not
perfectly matched, perfectly happy, perfectly content, but my
gut told me something else. They seemed at one with each other,
at one with the big bike, at ease with the world, rain be damned,
were enjoying ourselves! I suddenly felt older than my
years, older than the bikers, older than the wet asphalt! I
was returning to a cozy house, a quiet daybut the Goldwingers
were going adventuring, slipping through the elements in style,
not ignoring the rain and not protected entirely, meeting it
and glorying in it. So what if I was safe and secure, happy,
a whole day at my disposal. At that moment what I really wantedreally
wanted was to be on one of those Goldwings headed somewhere.
Celia Miles is a native of Western North Carolina, born in Jackson
County. She is the author of A Thyme for Love (Xlibris, 2000)
and Matties Girl: An Appalachian Childhood (Infinity,
2002). The books are available online, or in bookstores, or
by contacting the author.

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