âWait. What?! Thatâs like saying youâve lived on earth and havenât felt the sun. Or swum in the ocean. Thatâs like youâve never eaten a Hersheyâs bar. His playing, man . . . itâll just transport you. Itâs like heâs one with his instrument and itâs all coming from some great beyond where thereâs only pure inspiration and creativity. Heâs like a vessel to another land of unsullied, unadulterated . . .â I canât even think of the word, so I just take my air guitar and strike a pose with a look of intense triumph on my face.
Cora smiles. âI see. Well, that does sound pretty cool.â
âPretty cool? No, no, no. Jimi is not pretty cool. Jimi is the. Man. Period.â
âThe funny thing is, you know what Iâm really hearing here?â Cora asks.
âWhat?â
âMaybe itâs time you picked up a guitar of your own.â
chapter 31
Cora
Itâs not long before all thatâs left in the basket are the eggs that I said I would deliver to the food tents. It turns out that the purple tents at the top of the hill are still closed down, but Michael leads me to a blue tent a little farther afield than our medical tents. As we make our way over to them, I think about Michael asking me my deepest, darkest secret. He said Iâd lied.
Heâs right.
I almost told him the truth: about wanting to be a doctor. He probably wouldnât have immediately changed the subject. He doesnât have Nedâs medical knowledge or his ambitions to make me feel silly about it. But something held me back and now Iâm sorry. After all, when else does one get to spill her deepest secret to a handsome stranger sheâll never see again after this weekend?
We find the people with the silk-screened flying pig bandannasâthe Hog Farm people, Michael tells me. I find this pretty hilarious considering I know actual people who run hog farms and they look nothing like these commune folks. But they gladly take the eggs off our hands. They even give us a red bandanna each for our troubles. Michael immediately ties his around his long, shaggy hair. Before today, I wouldnât have thought Iâd find a guy in a headband dreamy but, well, letâs just say this festival is really opening up my horizons.
âWhat are you going to do with yours?â Michael asks me.
I consider for a moment, before finally deciding to tie it around my wrist.
âAllow me.â Michael swoops in as soon as I fumble with tying the knot, and gently wraps the fabric around my wrist and ties it into an impressive-looking bind. âBoy Scouts?â I ask.
He turns the fabric around so that the flying pig is proudly displayed right side up. âNine years.â He grins. âAnd the only reason I didnât become an Eagle Scout is because I got too lazy to do the big project thatâs required.â
âShame,â I say. âI love a man in uniform.â I wink at him and spy the toothless guy with the cowboy hat I saw yesterday, now giving me a big thumbs-up and a grin. Which, for some reason, makes me blush. âWhoâs that? Do you know?â I ask to try to divert attention from my possible awkward reply.
Michael looks over at him. âOh, sure. Thatâs Hugh Romney. Heâs the Hog Farm leader.â I smile politely at Hugh and he tips his hat to me before his attention gets called back to the small army of helpful hippies heâs clearly marshaling.
Itâs already five to eleven by the time we get back to my medical tent. I take out the candy striper apron thatâs at the very bottom of the now empty picnic basket and tie it on. It matches my new wrist adornment pretty perfectly. Already, the tent is busy, and I can hear a couple of freak-outs happening on the inside.
âHi, Cora,â Anna says as she walks out of the tent to help someone hobble inside.
âHi,â I say to her. She
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