David spoons mushroom gravy over the chicken I made him. I know what he's thinking. It's a mix, he can tell, but I'm sorry, I just don't have the time or the money to make it from scratch, and Lord knows I can never get the balance right.
"This meal is all out of balance," he says. "You got the crumbly kind of biscuit, and that just doesn't work. Look, the chicken has a grain to it, like wood, right? So you gotta have the layered biscuits, not the crumbly kind."
He's been like this since the stroke. Once he got back to his old self, except for his left side's a bit weak, I told him I'd treat him to dinner anywhere he wanted to go. He said he heard his doctorsay something about a French restaurant downtown, something "Boheme" or something. So we went there and got two specials - turned out to be something like stingray with butter. I couldn't eat much. But it was all David talked about for a month.
Before, he'd just get something at Waffle House for lunch, then go back to the plant, and he didn't ask for much at dinnertime. But the stroke messed up his work, and he would be homebound all day, so I had to find a job answering a phone. He started cooking, which was a relief. Then he started experimenting with spices, and scallops, and artichokes, and avocadoes, and it was hard to keep on a budget.
It's gotten to where I can deal with the Customer Service callers better than I can deal with him.
He's about to say something. He's trying real hard to swallow.
"You know, the beans aren't right. No, maybe asparagus, with hollandaise. Asparagus has a grain to it, too. Then we'd be looking at variations on a theme. Then we'd have balance."