| Yeah, I'm still not drawing all that well, but effort counts. |
We spent at least an hour driving around Virginia Beach, trying to get onto Route 64. There were no GPSs at the time, and we didn't have a map. Random corner turning accomplished nothing. I was beginning to wonder if Chad were a reliable pilot. Chad hid his self-doubt with devil-may-care. We didn't know each other at all, having met a month or two before.
Finally, Chad spotted the 64 overpass as we drove up Virginia Beach Boulevard. It was right there, two blocks away.
"I bet I can get us on the highway in 5 minutes," he bragged, big and proud behind the wheel of his new Volkswagon Quantum.
"What do you bet?" I asked, laughing.
"What do you want?" he replied.
I worked in a hospital at the time, and there was a gorgeous metal plant holder in the gift shop that I lusted after. Don't ask me why. It was pretty, I was poor, and I wanted it.
"The swanboat," I ventured.
So he bet me the swanboat that he could get us on the highway in 5 minutes. I didn't know that Chad doesn't gamble. If there's a chance he might lose, he doesn't play. He chortled quietly, convinced that the swanboat was his.
And guess what? Virginia Beach Boulevard has no entrance onto Route 64. None in either direction. Chad could see the road, but couldn't get on it--not within the time limits, at any rate. So I won the swanboat, and we still have it, sitting in our living room.
He might say he won a wife, and children, too.
Anyway, in my efforts to make Christmas presents for my beautiful ones, I drew a picture of the swanboat for Chad. It's grossly imperfect, with rose-shaped dents in the paper caused by the production of a previous picture. First, I drew a thumbnail sketch, as taught by Anne Holland in her ESO drawing class. I even included a thumbnail in the thumbnail. I get a kick out of it, but Anne says not to do it in the future.
The purple glass is a splendid pre-WWI piece of beachglass from Cape Charles. On the back I taped a poem:
Our love is a swanboat,
risked, lost and won.
Entwined, a sturdy boat
transporting broken
burnished treasure.
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