Drives to the lake in the dead of winter where frost hushed every living inch. These were my favorite. Leftover snow cakes the water’s still edges. The scene looks like a cheaply-framed painting that someone abandoned at the Goodwill. I smile, because we cherished tchotchkes like that. The beauty, it’s there, if you tilt your head just so. This girl, with her magic, she taught me how to find happiness in the simple things; that song that you’d love enough to memorize could save your life on a sad day. Boys were simply there for amusement; adventure was only a car ride and a trespass away. Life was at its coolest when it was secondhand, and price tags were a waste of paper. The farmer’s market on the one-way was our very own Marrakesh, where we’d fill the air with spices and let them trail on the tails of our long sweaters. But drives to the lake in the dead of winter, where the stars seemed to wait for us to fill the space between them with laughter. These were my favorite. Wrapped tightly in scarves, we’d oblige them; happy that we could not predict the future; happy without knowing this end.