Two chairs in the kitchen. Items on the table spread out like a hotel continental breakfast. Mandarin oranges, cream cheese filled danish, bananas, hard boiled eggs, buttered wheat toast, and a couple of cherry yogurts in a bowl of ice wait to be devoured. Coffee from a carafe is poured in a cup with a picture of sand and ocean, which reads, Wish You Were Here on it. He bought it years ago while on vacation in Myrtle Beach. They went there often.
He sits at the table and sips his coffee, opens a yogurt. Do you remember the time you opened a yogurt in Myrtle Beach? He asks. And it exploded on you. Covering your whole face with cherry yogurt, he laughs. I couldn’t help but laugh at you. You always had a sense of humor about you. He took a bite of toast.
Music plays in the background of his morning ritual. Easy listening music. The kind that plays in hotel lobbies. Elevator music.
It’s a rendition of Eleanor Rigby played with violins and piano. He hums along. Do you remember me putting suntan lotion on you? Rubbing your shoulders and back? He looks at the empty chair. You always wore a one piece, he says. Kind of shy. He cracks open a hard-boiled egg by tapping it with a spoon and rolling it on the table. I remember, he says. I remember.
Can I take your plate? Are you done? He places the paper plates in the garbage can and pulls out the empty chair.
After you, my love. After you.