In the library, the woman walks, cane in hand, bundled in a red coat, green scarf over her shoulders, her husband beside her, in his slate coat and cap, a checkered scarf tied at his neck. She pushes her white hair off her forehead and peers up at the paintings on the wall, splotched and messy and bright, the work of elementary students. Paused at the paintings they think of times when they were that young too, under the open sky-- her leaving clothes on the line him chasing his dog back home. They didn’t know each other then, or maybe they did. The details slip away like summer into fall. It doesn’t matter now, but there was a time when she held his hand on their walks instead of a cane. Oh, the watercolors look like ones Dan and Janie made, Oh Dan, he’d said he’d call, or did Janie? They can’t remember and think of disintegrating paper and blue drips on the table. Instead, they finish their stroll and both agree-- Lovely, wasn’t it?