* * *
Spring Commute
Heading down the 401 with the Barbaras and Bonnies and
Brendas before seven in the morning. The
sun is still low in the sky, just a suggestion of light climbing the tops of
the trees. All the women named Barbara
and Bonnie and Brenda drive sensible, North American cars, Regals and Luminas
and LeSabres. Their make-up looks
practised and sedate, their suits appropriate and professional. They are beating the traffic, going to the places where they hold
responsible jobs in office administration, finance, human resources, but
there’s something around the eyes or their grip on the steering wheel,
something pursued and worried. It’s as
if they are dogged, even on the morning commute, run to ground by the Lisas and
Kellys and Jennifers nipping at their heels.
As I pass Barbara (or maybe Bonnie or Brenda), she clutches the wheel,
eyes steely and straight ahead. No
matter how much faster I go, I get the impression Barbara is miles ahead, ready
and girded to meet her pursuers.
Monday morning.
Another spring commute. To ease
the boredom, I start to take a body count.
Putting aside the parts of corpses, the clumps of hair glued to the
asphalt with guts, some of the
corpses reduced to woolly sweaters discarded on the road, indefinable
carnage, London to Woodstock looks like this:
Raccoon,
raccoon, rabbit, raccoon, deer, possum, raccoon, raccoon, raccoon, groundhog.
I’ve barely crested the hill,
Woodstock spread out across the saucer of its valley like an apron draped on a
warm lap, when the sky warms like an oven element. On a morning like this, who could maintain a
death toll? I look to the shoulders and
start counting the strips of discarded tires from transports.
1, 2, 3, 4 …
3.
Traffic thins so I contemplate the morning drive.
Don’t get
me wrong: I feel a kinship for the Barbaras and Bonnies and
Brendas. But as I pass out of Oxford County, I drive into an imaginary
landscape. A gauzy blanket of fog lies atop the sleeping fields of soy
and corn, juvenile plants wriggling their toes in the rich earthy bed.
This is a dream place, or a place I dream. I start to imagine the
Barbaras as the roadkill, the tires of their Regals and Luminas blown out,
scattered on this asphalt ribbon. In this imagined geography, passing,
passing, are we as good as the strewn remains of the dead? Are we as good as dead? Am I just another casualty of the commute,
another bit of the flotsam, weighed and considered and preyed over by ministering
crows? I am turning this around in my head and driving almost unconscious
amidst occasional swirls of ground fog, for the moment, making good time.
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