The neighborhood gave an impression of idyllic normalcy. Small, tidy yards, some with cut grass and some with banks of flowers, fronted modest houses, each showing creative architecture and elegant wood finishings. Diverse trees lined the quiet street. Walking the weathered sidewalk, lifted and cracked by roots, Ethan let himself notice the cool edge of the evening breeze. Notice. Observe. Pay attention. It was interesting how that simple instruction could make such a difference to his experience.
The last rosy light of sunset kissed the treetops. He caught glimpses of the crimson-streaked sky in the west. Earlier, shopping for school supplies, he had seen the rugged edge of the mountains in the distance, both west and east. Warm light streamed out of expansive windows. Living rooms, some aglow with the dance of firelight, most with the hazy gold of shaded lamps. Bookshelves, cabinets, families at dinner, people reading. Every now and then, not as much as he expected, the blue tint of television.
Ethan missed his home if he thought about it. Pangs of longing for the familiar. A sudden uneasy sinking in his stomach as he felt the distance and the vast difference. But outside those stumbles, this was a world of wonder. He couldn't help but imagine that in the upper floors of each house were shrines and temples to sex goddesses; that the appearance of normalcy belied rituals both exotic and erotic. People talked about the United States as if it were all fundamentalist loonies, gun-toting cowboys, and drug-addled hippies. Nobody mentioned the sex cults!
After his morning "lesson," Amy had helped him unpack. When Emily returned home, looking both modest and wholesome, she had helped him create a list of everything he would need, which was completely unsurprising, and just what he expected. Amy had taken him out to a couple of stores, which - oddly - they called "drug stores." For a nation ostensibly waging a war on drugs, it seemed peculiar to have these vast drug stores every few blocks in the commercial areas, and selling almost everything
but
drugs. Including school supplies for children! She also showed him their local supermarket, more aptly named: a mind-boggling warehouse of a place, perfectly cool, and banked with beautiful produce perfect to an implausible degree. This, Ethan concluded, must be one of the benefits of living at the center of global empire.
And that, plus a long nap, was his day. He took a walk around the neighborhood before dinner to shake off the nap.
Dinner itself was salad and a stir fry that Amy and Marcus prepared together.
As they ate, Ethan found himself becoming more and more awkward with Emily across from him. First of all, she seemed to look at him. A lot. And when she did, she looked right into his eyes, in a way that was very hard to interpret. He found himself avoiding her gaze, and he became self-conscious about it. There was something fierce about her. Yet she ate slowly, with care.
"How was your day, Ethan?" Marcus asked, with a casualness that seemed completely natural and at ease.
"Ah, good, yes. Getting on me feet. Adjusting."
"Adjusting. Yes, time zones, first and foremost I would imagine. Maybe a little culture shock? What are some of the things that seem very different from home?"
Your wife!
Ethan thought. "Well, aye, lots actually. Your shops are quite huge, really."
Ethan laughed. "Wait 'til someone takes you to Costco. But I take your point. I'm from New York, originally. Everything is very compact there. They have to fit a lot into a small place. Suburbs are different. West coast, different. And get yourself out into the heartland, or the south, different again. What else?"
Your wife!
Ethan thought again, this time remembering some of the visuals, and blushing.
He glanced at Emily, who was observing him closely, a smile quirked on her lips, her eyes deep pools of cornflower blue.
"The, uh, architecture. And everything. Trees. Different." He could feel his words deserting him. Against his will he glanced at Emily again. Observing him carefully, the sharpness in her smile taking on a finer edge.
Seemingly oblivious Marcus nodded. "Craftsman homes, a real hallmark of Seattle. Exquisite workmanship on some of these, and the best materials in the world. The city is growing, expanding. Moving toward higher density. Each one of these houses torn down is a tragedy. It will take a while, not quite a threatened species yet, but someday."
Ethan took some deep breaths. Observe. Notice. Pay attention. He tasted his food. He sipped his juice. Cranberry and maybe ten other things, all from that perfect produce aisle, thrown in a blender.
"And Amy gave you your first lesson, yes?"
Ethan froze; he could feel Emily watching him.
"Ah, yes," he said, deeply uncomfortable.
"Conscious touch, 101, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"No sirring me, Ethan. Relax. Take some breath. Nice deep breath. Amy, did you teach Ethan anything about breathing yet?"
"Only a little, my love. Just the
tiniest
introductionβto breath. The
big
lesson was... elsewhere.
Ethan felt the blush becoming a radiant heat.
Marcus laughed kindly, "Be gentle, dear. This is a
hard
lesson. Overcoming our impulses, staying in conscious awareness and presence. A beautiful meditation. Did you find it useful, Ethan?"
Ethan felt Emily's intent gaze on him. He found himself paralyzed with anxiety.
Marcus gave a short, quick rap on the table with the flat of his knife, giving Ethan's overloaded circuitry a sudden shock.
"Ethan," Marcus said with a sudden force that was unlike anything in his previously casual demeanor.
"Yes, sir," Ethan replied, automatically.
"You're embarrassed. You are worried that you've done something wrong? Maybe you are experiencing shame? Maybe you think you're in over your head. You don't know what's going on, what this is about. What are we? How weird is all of this?"
He paused, and Ethan felt the heat of his body filling the empty space.
"This is the wrong house for all of that, Ethan. I chose you out of thousands, because you are ready for this. There are no secrets in this house. None. Everything that happens here is known to me. Nothing happens here that is not fully blessed by me. You cannot do anything wrong in this house, Ethan. Not even this, this embarrassment you are feeling. It's completely natural, perfectly ordinary. A little too ordinary, however. I want you to understand why you are here, and here's the deal. Maybe I was wrong? Maybe you are not the right choice? You have until dinner tomorrow to tell me that, and I will make alternate arrangements for you, that would be quite satisfactory to any merely
ordinary
boy. Do you understand me?"
"Yes, sir."
"Yes,
Marcus
."
"Yes, Marcus."
"Now, in order for you to make that choice, you need to completely understand why you are here. Amy, did you explain it?"