It was what I expected, of course. Sure, the early morning temps were mild for August on the Carolina coast, and cats were napping on the screened porch. It resembled perfection so much that I'd joined them for morning meditation. But the sky grew darker as I sat with the present moment, and juvenile lightning skittered about in the murk.
"There was a lightning strike nearby," said a familiar voice from somewhere in the kitchen. As if on queue, big, fat raindrops began falling, and the cats awoke and rocketed inside.
"You startled me," I said.
"Not as much as a lightning bolt will startle you," she said. I knew this Ms. Wonder spoke sooth in all situations, so I gathered up my one-day-at-a-time paraphernalia and came inside.
"By the way," she said, "if you're out this morning, my meds are ready at the pharmacy."
Just as she finished that sentence, the sky became darker. It was as though the sun had given up the ghost, and we were living in a wet, wild, and windblown world.
"But I'd wait until the storm passes if I were you," she added.
Now, first of all, I didn't have a lot invested in the future of this storm. In fact, I'd been watching these weather shenanigans with the same quiet air of a drama critic waiting for the curtain to go up.
Secondly, and if you're a regular supporter of this blog, you already know, that I can't get enough of this woman's bouquet. I'm enamored. And when she expresses a wish, it's as though her dainty foot is pressed on the accelerator of my heart.
It won't surprise you to know that when she said, 'My meds are ready,' I heard Princess Amy yell from somewhere in the emotional center of my brain, "Run faster!" And so I replied, "I'll go now."
In an instant, I found myself behind the controls of Wind Horse and out on Ocean Highway, prepared to face any obstacle, as long as I had a steaming cup of Jah's Mercy from Port City Java.
PCJ was a bust. The drive-through window displayed a sign reading, Closed due to shipping delays. No problem, I thought, Starbucks is only a few blocks away, but again, nothing doing; the line at Starbucks was backed up to Texas.
You'd think Amy would have the upper hand now, telling me that failure was written in my stars, but I remained calm; I simply smiled and sang along with Stevie and Tom, "Stop dragging my heart around." You see, the thunder was rolling away, the lightning had lost its pizzazz, and the Niagara-inspired rainfall had become a light mist.
I was sure that the morning was going to be topping after all because I was running an errand for the Wonder, who was waiting for me at home. I pointed Wind Horse's nose toward the Brunswick River bridge and rode into the heart of my personal Camelot, known to many as Wilmawood.
Flying toward the Cape Fear River, my thoughts were submerged in the movie playing out in my mind, but halfway across the bridge, I became dimly aware that something rummy was going on near the seaport.
I turned to look downriver and was surprised to see the solid-looking black wall of a monster storm heading toward the city. It was whipping up a substantial wake and threatening everything in its path with frequent lightning. The earlier storm outside the screened porch had been nothing more than a messenger, sent to prepare the way for this baby.
By the time I parked outside the pharmacy, the storm was at its nastiest. Princess Amy had enjoyed watching the storm develop, clapping her little hands in glee. As a spectacle, she enjoyed it immensely. The only thing to spoil the event, in her opinion, was that I wasn't out in it.
"Go, go, go!" she screeched, and I immediately went out into the rain wearing shorts and a Hawaiian shirt, and with no umbrella.
I returned to the car, squelching as I walked, and I was disappointed not a little. You see, the news about Wonder's meds being ready had been vastly overrated. They weren't ready. Still, I knew that Caffe Luna was nearby, and the thought of a steaming bowl of java gave me hope.
I've heard it said, and perhaps you've heard it too, that you can't buy love, you can't buy happiness, but you can buy coffee. It speaks volumes, doesn't it? Feeling absolutely bucked, I zipped up Castle Street, but much like Lucifer, I fell from heaven to hell when I found the cafe closed due to shipping delays.
I decided to phone Ms. Wonder before heading home. I told her I was heading back toward the Shire and might possibly stop at the Belville Port City Java.
"Yes," she said. "Please bring me a latte and you'll be happy to know that the sun is shining here."
"Ah, Wonder," I said. "The sun always shines where you are."
I was pretty full of myself when I heard that line come out of my mouth. My mood lifted substantially. You might say that I was catapulted into a higher dimension just thinking about being back home with Poopsie, cats, sunshine, birdsong, and the rest of the amenities.
I remember thinking, in a light-hearted sort of way, that here was another case of just one damned thing after another. Nothing to be done, of course, other than taking life as it comes, and life was currently still raining in heavy traffic on Oleander Boulevard. Sunshine would have to wait.














