September 12, 2005
You might miss something you were meant to find if you don't pay attention.
A sign can be in many forms, it can come in many ways. It can be a flurry of rose petals that dance down the face and light up the night. It can be a ticket mysteriously appearing in the mail. It can come from a broken down car in the right broken down place at the right broken down time. It can come from a man holding your hand as you cross a busy Bangkok street, it can be the arrival of two furry black cats that heal a hole in your heart.
I found a sign last week on the train. I was sitting in my seat doing some work and I kept seeing a reflection in the window. One row over, something was sitting abandoned, so I got up to see what it was. Sitting there on the row of seats was an enormous Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory posterboard, the one of his letter to the world (Dear People of the World...). It now resides in my kitchen. It was a sign.
Of course, it was a literal sign. There are other non-literal signs. In the early days of Angus, I phoned him one day. We were across oceans from each other, but at that exact moment we were both in book stores. And we had literally just bought each other something, which when we swapped presents we found we had both bought each other one of those cheap plastic snowglobes of the countries we were in at the time. Mine still resides on my windowsill, his had an accident and he has a replacement for it, as I went back to that country another time.
And then sometimes a sign can take a different form. Sometimes it can be something much more tangible, sometimes it can be something that takes you where you need to be, if only you can understand the sign.
Sometimes, it takes the form of a letter.
On Friday we were both working from home, as we can sometimes do now since Angus started his new job last Monday. It's awkward, as we only have one study, and we desperately need more room but can't move until the house in Ovaltine is sold. In the middle of conference calls, Angus sneaks upstairs with a cup of coffee to talk to me.
"The estate agent just rang." he says, running a hand through his hair. "We've had an offer on Ovaltine."
I feel my mouth dry up in excitement. "And?"
"Well, it's about 13k less than asking. I told him I'd think about it." he says, his brow furrowed.
I nod, my heart in my mouth. That house is a constant source of depression and worry, we both just want that to go away. I get back on more conference calls, and then I hear a satisfying thunk of the post arriving on the porch.
I hang up, finished with my call. "Anything interesting?" I call down.
Angus comes up the stairs, looking puzzled. "Potentially. It's the strangest thing..." he says, quietly. He holds up an enormous white envelope that he has torn into, which was sent through the post but is missing his address on it. Somehow, the mail made it to him with just his name only, the postman must've figured out where he lived. He looks at me.
"This post made it to me somehow, even though my address isn't on it." he says, smiling. "And look what it is."
And he pulls out a brochure of that house, that dream house that we bid on twice and lost twice. The last time it disappeared off the market it was mid-June, and my heart crashed and burned. I have thought of that house many, many times since, and so has Angus.
And on the day that we receive a bid on Ovaltine, somehow through the post a brochure comes through. That house is back on the market for sale.
It's a sign.
We called the estate agents and accepted the offer on Ovaltine. Don't get too excited just yet-there's much, much more to come. Contracts to sign, surveys to be done, finances to arrange. The whole deal could tumble at a moment's notice, but we have a deal, and now the house is listed as "Offer Agreed".
Then we called the estate agent for the new house. I blew off conference calls just to go see it with Angus, hanging up my mobile phone on them while driving, my heart beating and my lungs bursting. We pull up to it, and there it is.
The house I love. "It's a sign." I breathe.
"I don't believe in signs." Angus retorts. "But, it is strange how on the same day we finally get an offer on Ovaltine this comes in, and it is strange that the letter found our house somehow, even without the address on it...Look, let's not jinx it, ok? Don't start hoping too much!"
Built in 1914, on an enormous patch of land, it's one of those English specialties that doesn't even have a house number. It's called The Blackberries, and is located in a town 5 miles away from here, a town that sounds like a winding and beautiful ABC evening soap opera. We tour it, and as usual there are the owner's two loping golden retrievers, the fish pond, the greenhouse, the kitchen we could tear out and rebuild, the bedrooms that need updating, the space for the conservatory we will put in and the extensions we can build on, the gigantic sculpted gardens and the quiet of the blood coursing through our bodies, begging for the house.
It is just as wonderful and perfect as I remembered it.
I look at the house and see Maggie and Mumin in the back garden. I see a hammock under the arbor, by the ancient apple tree. I would have a duck for my fish pond, whom I will call Wilbur. There will be a dog loping through the trees, settling with a sigh at my feet. Angus will be nearby, a gin and tonic at hand. I don't have the heart yet to imagine a baby monitor next to me, that's one dream too far, but I can imagine up to it.
We put in an offer on it, contingent on the tricky details of Ovaltine being settled (which is very tricky indeed, as house sales fall apart all the time). We go home and have rampant sex in the kitchen and living room. We drink a bottle of champagne.
And Saturday morning, we found out that we have won The Blackberries.
-H.
PS-Angus has requested that we not jinx it if I do blog about it, so whatever you do, let's not jinx it. If you want to leave a comment, make sure it isn't about houses
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