
Another Saturday, another barbecue. What a lucky feature of this apartment! A backyard is a rare amenity in Brooklyn, so maybe that’s why our parties are so well attended.
I wake up feeling a little homesick. There is a tightness in my chest, spurred by a dream of being in the fields with my sisters. My parents aren’t doing much better at handling their untangling, and I am profoundly ill-equipped to manage the mediation.
I check my horoscope: ”What taboo is it high time for you to break in a discerning way?”
Excellent question, Rob Brezny.
This gathering will either assuage or underscore my sadness.
I decided to throw myself directly into the busy that goes into hosting: sweep the floor, hide the clutter, buy the propane.
“I’ll be on poop duty!” Krissie says.
Dolly, Krissie’s dog, tends to do her business across every inch of the yard.
“Ok, I’ll get the projector set up,” Mercedes says.
One night in May, after many bottles of wine, we cracked open some white paint and painted a sizeable makeshift movie screen on the brick wall that flanks our yard.
Tonight’s showing: Spirited Away, a Japanese animated film about a little girl stuck in a fantasy world.
The three of us do these tasks in perfect harmony. Something myself and my two sisters never managed to do.
I am feeling a tinge anxious about the possibility of the Hull guys attending.
At around one, the guests begin to trickle in.
“Hey! Jimmy!” Krissie calls from the kitchen to the figures who’ve just entered the front door.
We’ve left the door unlocked with a sign on the door that reads: “BBQ, come on in!”
Jimmy is Krissie’s former guitar teacher who looks like a punk rock Kramer.
I greet Jimmy from the sink as I shuck some corn cobs.
But, my attention is drawn quickly to his companion. Equally tall, but broader. He has large, deep-set eyes that seem to see things out of everyone else’s view, darkness encircles. He’s wearing jeans tucked into sturdy, weather-worn work boots. A red bandana sits tied around his head. His intensity is magnetic, and I can’t keep my eyes off him as the two tall men make their way to the backyard.
“Who is that guy?” I ask Krissie.
“I don’t know. But, I like his hipster lumberjack vibe,” she answers.
The party gets into a rhythm. People show up with various beverages, and the fridge is brimming with bottles and cans, we make room by sacrificing week old vegetables and soon to be expired dairy products.
Donnie has crowned himself grill master, and every time a round of meat is done, exclaims, “Hot dog! Who’s hungry?” Regardless of the type of meat being served.
The Hull crew eventually shows some time after sunset. I pretend not to notice Jake saunter in and continue bonding with Charli over our shared vegetarianism.
“Thank you. Yeah, I love this veggie burger recipe. Super easy, I can give it to you.”
“No, I haven’t been to Food Swings yet, but I’m not a huge fan of pretend meat.”
“Oh, I love Souen. We should go sometime.”
I’m annoyingly aware of Jake’s movements as he eventually makes his way towards us. I start to feel warm in the face and begin to panic over how I will handle this triangle. Though, I’ve vowed to keep my lips and hips away from his.
Oh god, he’s looking this way. Please don’t approach us, I pray to myself and start furiously avoiding eye contact.
“Happy Birthday!”
I, Jake, the crowd, look to see Mercedes standing, framed by the backyard door, holding a cake. The light from the kitchen behind and the glow of the candles radiate around her. Hark! My birthday angel, here to rescue me from impending awkward doom!
All, on cue, begin to sing. I sigh and take my dutiful position before the flame sticks in the cake and blow. Out with this breath, I expel the cobwebs of this past year, the heart heavy sad and I make space for what I hope will be a better, lighter year.
Mercedes ushers the cake to the picnic table for cutting and serving. I follow with some plates she’d staged near the grill.
“Why is it people are only happy on their birthdays?”
The lumberjack is now by my side, offering his help, while evidently pontificating the meaning of birthdays.
“I’m not only happy on my birthday,” I say.
“What else makes you happy?” He asks.
He’s strange in a way I find charming. But, I’m also irked that he is pulling me into this intimate conversation while surrounded by so many people whose eyes are, thanks to the cake serving, on me.
Someone makes a toast, and I take the chance to break away from his gaze,
“What is up with this guy?” Charli, who is sat across the table, seems to say to me with her eyes.
Well, at least I’ve lost Jake, I think.
I finish my cake, strawberry shortcake with clotted cream and lemon zest, and arbitrarily pour the remaining half of a bottle of sparkling into the cups scattered around the picnic table. As I stand to reach the furthest cup and precariously tip the bottle, to allow the last drop to trickle out, I spy two figures a few feet away in a dark corner of the yard.
I turn to Charli and nod, covertly to the corner.
She looks, then snaps her head back. Her eyes widen to indicate, yes that is Jake and Krissie over there sucking face.
We lock our eyes together for a minute, transmitting our secret discovery through eyebrow twitches.
Then we both break out in simultaneous laughter. I feel all the previously held anxiety and tension dissipate.
Mercedes comes over. “What is so funny?”
“Hey, isn’t this movie called Spirited Away?” Charli nods to the wall where now the little girl is talking to a witch with a mole for a third eye.
“Yes, why?”
“Because so are Krissie and Jake.” Charli gestures to the lovebirds in the corner.
“Oh my… “
Now we are all rolling. In the midst of our fits, Charli says, “Don’t look now, but here comes Daniel Boone.”
I wipe my wet laugh eyes and, in spite of instruction, turn to look.
Indeed he is headed straight for us like a man with intentions. He plops down on the bench next to me, much closer than rules of social engagement would call for, but I don’t move away.
“I really hope I see you again. Happy birthday.”
And before I can even answer, he stands up and walks out.
This exacerbates us, and we nearly fall to the ground cackling.







