Again the conversation flowed, crackled. Burgers came and went, uneaten. I felt an overwhelming sense of Overture, Prelude, Kettle Drums, Act I. And yet also a sense of ending. A phase of my life—the first half?—was coming to a close.
As the night neared its end we had a very frank discussion. There was no way round it.
She put a hand to her cheek and said:
Surely in the whole summer we could find one small spot of time.
She shook her head. She was doing the full
I felt intimidated. She was so the opposite of me. She read. She was cultured.
Not important, she said with a laugh. The point was, she was going with three girlfriends to Spain, and then with two girlfriends to Italy, and then—
She looked at her calendar. I looked at mine.
She raised her eyes, smiled.
Recently, she explained, a castmate had advised her not to be so structured about her summer of eating, praying and loving. Keep one week open, this castmate said, leave room for magic, so she’d been saying no to all kinds of things, reserving one week, even turning down a very dreamy bike trip through the lavender fields of southern France…
I looked at my calendar and said:
It was the same week.
I suggested we spend it in Botswana. I gave her my best Botswana pitch. Birthplace of all humankind. Most sparsely populated nation on earth. True garden of Eden, with 40 percent of the land given over to Nature.
Plus, the largest number of elephants of any nation on earth.
Above all, it was the place where I’d found myself, where I always re-found myself, where I always felt close to—magic? If she was interested in magic, she should come with me, experience it with me. Camp under the stars, in the middle of nowhere, which is actually Everywhere.
She stared.
6.
We couldn’t fly together. For one thing, I was already going to be in Africa. I was scheduled to be in Malawi, doing conservation work with African Parks.
But I didn’t tell her the other reason: We couldn’t risk being seen together, the press finding out about us. Not yet.
So, she finished her
And looking like…perfection. She wore cut-off jean shorts, well-loved hiking boots, a crumpled Panama hat that I’d seen on her Instagram page.
As I opened the gate to Teej and Mike’s house, I handed her a chicken-salad sandwich, wrapped in clingfilm.
We were both thinking the same things.
I asked about the flight. She laughed about the Air Botswana crew. They were big fans of
We all jumped into a three-bench truck, Mike driving, my bodyguards trailing, and set off. Straight into the sun. After an hour of tarmac roads, we were facing four hours of dirt tracks. To make the time go faster I pointed out every flower, plant, bird.