By H. K. Hummel
I crack an egg against the edge of the bowl while thinking about the bistro I worked in when I was nineteen. I wore corduroy pants, Doc Marten Mary Janes, and hand-sewn peasant blouses. I wrote poems on the order pad I kept tucked in my apron. I liked stepping out into the hot night and bicycling home under the streetlights. While students loitered over their books at the cafe tables, a boy named Adam taught me how to spin the batter on the griddle. While I practiced, he slouched against the counter and talked about his role in A Streetcar Named Desire. For weeks, I spun crepes in my dreams. I perfected the flip and fold, learned the menu on the sly, neatly plated the coq au vin blanc. The manager discovered what I could do, and made me a cook. That spring, the restaurant clamored with life: ruddy cheeked Joe sang madrigals as he wiped counters. Olivia, a punk with hair as black as motor oil, would snort and roll her smoky eyes at the boys. Everyone had someone to be. Now, I slide a crepe in front of my daughter and remember a dawn morning sugared with the scent of pastry and a single kiss. There was something simple about the way we lived: if we were hungry, we ate. If we wanted something sweeter, we made it sweeter.
H.K. Hummel is the author of Lessons in Breathing Underwater (Sundress Publications, 2020), and the co-author of Short-Form Creative Writing: A Writer’s Guide and Anthology (Bloomsbury, 2018). She is an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, and one of the founding editors of Blood Orange Review.
Image by anatoliy_gleb courtesy of iStock
“Everyone had someone to be.”
Nice one.
–oh, i love this so much. the simplicity of the memory, the weight of the reflection and contrast between that time and this time. lightly rendered, but powerful. great work in so few words.
Just lovely. I am posting to Instagram and BLueSky.
I enjoyed the simplicity of this reflection on youth and the freedom we felt and maybe didn’t always appreciate.
I loved the simplicity and this piece, yet so resonant. I am posting to Instagram and BLueSky.
This is outstanding writing. “hair as black as motor oil.” “We all had someone to be.” “if we wanted something sweeter, we made it sweeter.” Please keep writing. I want to read it all.
This is wonderful. Vivid and heartfelt. Love this!
Lovely: precision of memory and insight sans sentimentality.
This is amazing!
Exquisite writing. Very evocative!
“sugared with the scent of pastry and a single kiss.” Such delicacy in this early morning, like you don’t want the tension to break by talking above a whisper.
Big fan of your work from “Short-Form Creative Writing: A Writer’s Guide and Anthology”! Love that I get to keep up with your writing outside of that book.
So beautiful!
Gorgeous! I love your ending lines.
Delicious.