What’s it Worth to Ya?

 


What’s it worth to ya?


He asks, his Scottish accent heavy.


He’s older, squinting in the violent


San Francisco sun


the same sun I’ve been baking under


for 8 miles of walking.


What’s it worth to ya?


and I laugh


because I don’t know how to bargain.


 


See,


we walked from North Beach down to the Golden Gate Bridge


and the whole time,


my husband kept saying


that bridge,


and then he’d sigh, that bridge


and I’m thinking


Yeah it’s beautiful,


look at us baby, walking over the Golden Gate bridge


 


And he sighs again and says,


That bridge, goddamnit


it just isn’t getting any closer is it?


 


And he’s right because we’ve been walking


for miles


following older women in yoga pants


who seem like the type


of spry ladies who walk this bridge all the time, just for fun.


But 5 miles later,


they got into their cars, laughing


we knew we were on our own.


 


And still that red rust goliath was just swinging out there in the bay taunting us.


I walk five miles a day back in Brooklyn


but we’ve got clouds back there and here, over San Francisco


it’s just so much open sky, so much blazing sun


you could go dizzy staring into all that blue


 


So that by the time we got to Sausalito and realized,


there was no way back but to turn around and do those 8 miles all over again,


I said


No,


I can’t


not in these shoes


not after driving the pacific coast highway


not now.


No way.


 


And walked right up to the old guy sitting on the brick wall


next to the parked sightseeing trolley


and said, pointing to the thing, is this yours?


 


Aye.


 


How much to get a lift back over the bridge?


 


The company charges $35 a piece.


 


Steep, I say.


 


And he nods. Steep, he says.


What’s it worth to ya? he asks


and I laugh


because, I’m not good at this.


 


But we settle on 15 for both of us, and my husband hands him the money


and we slip down into those hard wooden seats


that held so many fat lady asses


so many old men with their bum knees


and Chinese tourists with ipads


 


and he drives us over the bridge


and I think to myself,


my god, there isn’t a prettier city in America


than San Francisco.


Look at her shine.


From this wooden seat


the wind blowing my hair crazy


and the ocean


just laying out


waiting for you


like a beautiful woman


lying in your bed,


and right now,


I’m as golden as the coast


I’m driving over


thanks to this wooden trolley


and my Scottish hero


pulling her home.


 



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Published on October 22, 2013 05:05
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