Both of us felt it: That day was an island, strewn with rocks and lighthouses and lovers, in the generous ocean. On the mainland, people went about their business, eating the Times, glancing through coffee and oatmeal, as we walked the gangway into an original dream of attentiveness. As if a day’s pleasure could concentrate us as much as suffering, as if the seawall were a banquet without surfeit, as if we could walk hand in hand with no one nearby, as if silence and blue wind became an Atlantic cove to float in, and the air centered itself in small purple butterflies flitting among the **** flowers. In the darkening city we returned to, our privacy completed the cafés of strangers.