Travel Secrets September - October 2015 | Page 33

SPECIALSECRET woman called to check if her granddaughter had taken out the trash and done the dishes. A gentleman stared at the quaint shops across the street and I resorted to gazing at a cobweb collecting water droplets. After ten minutes, parts of the street bounced light. It had stopped raining. I got up to walk to the house. As my cell phone died, I asked a stranger at the end of Princess Street if she knew the route to the blue house. “Oh, the blue house,” she said, “Walk two blocks down the road. Make a left on Queen Street and it’s the second house on the left.” Before the smiling stranger left, she added, “That blue house, it’s cute as a button. You can’t even fit a couch in there sideways. And don’t knock. It’s not a museum, you know. Somebody actually lives there.” “Oh thanks for the tip. I was not going to knock but who knows. Now I know won’t,” I smiled and walked on. Princess Street was paved with cobblestones. A marker indicated most streets in the 1790s of Old Town Alexandria were paved with cobblestones, and that Hessian soldiers cobbled the streets. The cobbles were untouched until 1979 and then restored using the original cobbles. On Queen Street, the blue house was right where the stranger had said it would be. At first it was something like those see-if-you-can-spot-it games where you’re competing with your cousin, and you feel rewarded and accomplished if you can spot it before your cousin. Then, it was something like nostalgia mixed with wonder at how I got to that point, place and time. I had been in America for a year and a half, read about many other places but had not wanted to visit any of them as much, waited at a bus stop for the rain to stop, had my phone die on me, asked a stranger for directions and then an hour later, I found myself standing in front of the narrowest house in the nation wondering if pixies lived there. As I stood on the brick sidewalk observing the blue sliver, Hollensbury’s story became real for me. I wondered what life was like for Hollensbury 200 years ago, imagined him walk down the cobbled streets and brick sidewalks in his boots and tall hat. For three whole minutes, I imagined the loiterers and horse wagons making him upset and getting into his property. I imagined he tossed at night when the epiphany to build a blue house struck, soothing his pains and worries. I imagined Hollensbury, the man with solid boundaries, to have had the last laugh. Before I headed back to my car, I listened to the sounds of horse hooves amidst cars. Juliet Philip is a daydreamer, doodler, writer, adventurer and traveller. She eats her chocolate dark (85% cacao and up) and drinks her coffee black. She earned two degrees and worked at three well-paying corporate firms but was mostly miserable. She loves to tell stories. If she doesn’t tell stories, her head is gobbledygook. One of her stories turned into a novel, The Runaway Daughter and the first chapter is free on Amazon. Juliet finds it funny to write in third person and also wants to enrich her stories with her artwork. The artwork may allow viewers to experience a place from her perspective, and project their own meanings to it. A frown, a nod, a smile or something to observe. If you want to get in touch with her, drop her a line at [email protected]. September-October 2015 Travel Secrets  33