Sunday, August 7, 2011

Concerning the Cafe

   Café du Monde, but not THAT Café du Monde. The place tried to style itself after the best parts of New Orleans gothic nostalgia, but the point where they truly succeeded was in the vitriolic coffee and immortal atmosphere.
  Kevin went here as frequently as he was able, partly for the coffee, beignet and ambience, but mostly because he knew a waitress. He would never frame it to her in these words, but Ivy remained his haven, lighthouse, the thread that kept him from plummeting absolutely. He was afraid that even this hold was too tenuous, despite her consistent attempts at reassurance. He had few other friends. Mostly his father disapproved of everyone.
  Poorly clad against the wet spring chill this morning, a black pea-coat he’d grabbed on his way from the house over a t-shirt, he stepped over the iron rail and helped himself to an empty table. It was beyond his routine, it had become a sort of intimacy, birthed ideally amid the nostalgia the café attempted to appropriate. They had first met as he had seated himself in her section.
  Mirrored pools of rainwater lingered in low spots in the concrete, floating leaves blown in over the wall before dawn. Kevin emptied a puddle from the peeling metal chair beneath a green awning, clearing as much of the water as he could before he sat.

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