Wilmawood's topography rises gradually as one ventures from the riverbank promenade into the sanctuary of the arts quarter on Castle Street. The geography itself elevates the spirit along with the terrain.
From the sidewalk outside Circular Journey Café, one enjoys a panoramic vista: charming storefronts and eateries line the street that falls away to the river's edge. The majestic span of Memorial Bridge rises above downtown, and beyond the river, verdant cypress sentinels stand guard around our slumbering naval guardian, the battleship North Carolina.
As I entered the café's aromatic interior with Island Irv following on my heels, I felt the stirrings of Princess Amy, my little imaginary life coach and social critic. Her critical gaze swept across the room with the practiced precision of a lighthouse beam.
Standing behind the counter was the newest barista, Lilly, the Castle Street oracle, chronologically young but with the wisdom that female humans mysteriously acquire around middle school, while men stumble toward similar insights only after decades of accumulated blunders and enough gray hairs to weave a wisdom rug.
"You're tardy," Lilly said, laughing.
"Time is relative," I replied, taking up a position at the order here station. "According to my internal clock and the quantum mechanics of café arrivals, we're precisely on time."
Lilly's eyes performed an Olympic-worthy roll. "It's not even nine o'clock and you're spouting physics already?"
"He's been insufferably chipper since sunrise," Irv explained, signaling for coffee. "Bouncing around the street and making declarations about the magnificence of the day. I checked for a fever, but he seems medically sound."
"I have a revelation for you," I proclaimed, leaning forward conspiratorially. "After extensive research and spiritual contemplation, I've reached an incontrovertible conclusion: Wilmawood—our humble Wilmington—exists as an unacknowledged paradise on Earth."
"Is that your hypo-manic assessment?" Lilly inquired, her eyebrow arched with skepticism perfected through years of questioning adult logic.
"Indisputably! Consider the evidence," I insisted, counting on my fingers. "We have a magnificent river system, pristine oceanfront, a thriving creative community, and enough film production to earn our Hollywood-adjacent nickname--Hollywood East."
"And traffic congestion on College Road that rivals Los Angeles," Princess Amy interrupted from somewhere deep in my limbic system, her voice dripping with cynicism. "Without the celebrity sightings or the inconvenience of dealing with ten million people."
"Plus humidity levels in August that could qualify as a gentle rain shower in other states," Lilly added as she frothed my oatmilk cappuccino. For a second, I wondered if she'd somehow intuited Amy's remark.
The Islander added, "He's excited about the new retail outlet coming to Waterford. The Waterford village is quickly becoming an up-town suburb. Is that a thing?"
"More footnotes in paradise's ledger," I said. "No other place along the Carolina coastline offers such a perfect synthesis of natural beauty and cultural vibrancy as our little sylvan community."
The barista delivered our beverages, and we chose a table outside, near the window but not too near the door. Our conversation meandered like the Cape Fear itself, flowing from upcoming film productions to Irv's philosophical musings on social media psychology.
From our elevated perch in Castle Street's artistic heart, the world below appeared manageable and comprehensible. Heights offer perspective, and perspective breeds contentment, something understood and appreciated by Abbie Hoffman, our tuxedoed cat, who spent hours surveying his domain from high atop kitchen cabinets.
The morning light shifted as our drinks emptied, and conversations reached their natural conclusions. The day's obligations began tugging at our collective consciousness, yet I lingered in the moment, suspended in the warm embrace of friendship, elevated by both geography and companionship.
Paradise, I realized, isn't merely a physical location but a way of living in the moment. With the right attitude, those moments collect, like seashells after high tide. That explains why, despite my familiar wanderlust and my forecasts of future road trips, I find myself returning to the same streets, the familiar faces, and this elevated view of the river that feels increasingly like home.
As we gathered our belongings and prepared to say goodbye, I remembered Abbie once more. He taught me so very much in his time with us. I learned from him that elevations aren't measured in feet above sea level, but in moments of clarity and connection.