Day 5
Our earliest wake-up yet. I’m up, showered and changed before the others wake up. Time to start packing. It seems I packed just enough clothing to get me through the trip, plus two extra pairs of socks. Once packed we hang about in our room until Vicky arrives. We assemble, and we march out. I feel a bit melancholy as we do, knowing full well that this shopping trip will be our last venture before we leave the Second City.
We return to the bakery for a full-on breakfast. Their bizarre ordering system seems completely ridiculous to me as it forces the staff to do a scavenger hunt for one’s table after one orders at the register. Delicious french toast, though.
After breakfast we break again, the girls and I heading to Burberry and Aaron and Mike off to unknown areas of the city. The Burberry store is pure class and way out of my price range, but I enjoy the thought of wearing a $700 shirt and paying for it out of a $300 wallet. Burberry clothing appeals to me because of its simplicity. Clean lines, solid colours, bold prints. I resist the urge to splurge as even the ties are in the $100-$200 range.
Next we go to Coach, where I can practically hear Becky’s heart race. She and Vicky eye the purses while I eye the one male shop attendant. Becky finds a purse and I can tell she’s a little bit in la-la-love. It’s definitely a lovely piece of hardware, but she wisely holds off until she has time to think (swoon) about it. The girls move on to Forever 21 and I break off to check out Hugo Boss and Kenneth Cole. I start to feel antsy for whatever reason as I shop. I go back to Forever 21 to hang out with Becky and Vicky but the anxiety starts to get worse and I need to get outdoors. I excuse myself and tell the girls I’ll meet with them later.
Off I go on my own, in the rain, in downtown Chicago. I start to feel a bit better, thinking that maybe the confining atmosphere of the clothing stores was what was getting to me. It’s cold out, but in a refreshing, non-recirculated air kind of way. I decide to follow Luke’s directions to Reckless Records, manage to walk the wrong way down the right road for a while, but find my way once I discover that Chicago too has Transit maps in their bus shelters. Hooray for that flash of inspiration.
Reckless Records is smaller than I expected, but its selection is marvelous. Here I find a souvenir for my brother (a rare Pearl Jam single) and Of Montreal’s Hissing Fauna, Are You The Destroyer? on vinyl, all for under $20. Not too shabby.
I return to the hotel, briefly stopping at a Macy’s on the way but feeling again like I’m navigating a sealed crypt, and discover everyone has already returned. Becky reveals that she’s now a majority shareholder in Coach with the bag she purchased and Vicky models her Burberry wallet. Mike and I pound back a few Rye and Cokes in the room before we check out and have some dinner. Life is good.
Dinner is great. We go to Harry Caray’s for our final Chicago meal, which is coincidentally Aaron and Becky’s 6-month anniversary dinner, which they celebrate in grand fashion. Sadly Kitty must depart early for the bus. We say our goodbyes and she leaves for her own adventure on the Greyhound back to Toronto. Meetings and partings. The food arrives.
The five survivors emerge from the restaurant well-fed and serene. The next task is bringing Vicky to her car so she can return to Madison. We part ways with another friend and head back to the hotel. We try to find the Macy’s I went to earlier but to no avail, so Aaron and Becky go to another one located on the Magnificent Mile while Mike and I hold the fort and talk turkey.
Bags gathered, we cab back to O’Hare airport. The drama begins when we arrive. Line-ups as far as the eye can see, and thunderstorms brewing overhead. We wait in line, finally get through security, and to our gate. Relief sets in for a moment, until we hear that Chicago is under a tornado warning and that all passengers should stay away from the airport windows. Delays are expected. Aaron and Becky peruse the shops at the airport, then return to allow Mike and I to do the same. I discover a place to sync my iPod and download spoken word poetry. Sonnets performed by snooty-sounding Brits, as well as Romeo’s “But soft!” soliloquy. Comedy gold.
Gate change number one. Not so drastic, just one over from the one we’re at already. Second gate change, slightly more intense. The attendants say that there are a few seats left on an earlier flight to Buffalo, so we decide to stay at our gate. Then we learn that that earlier flight is actually OUR flight, and we have to run from gate B8 to gate B19 in one of the largest airports on the continent. Slight irritation turns to extreme panic.
We arrive at the gate with plenty of time to spare. Crisis averted. Suddenly, Aaron points out a familiar face walking past our gate: the lead singer of the Black Kids, who just performed at Lollapalooza. I creepily follow him until (Chance!) he stops at a magazine rack. I casually walk buy and pick up an issue of GQ, then turn to him. “Aren’t you the lead singer for the Black Kids?” I ask coyly. Why, yes he is, and of course he’ll give his autograph. Reggie is shy and practically inaudible when he speaks, but this being his band’s first major world tour, I’m not entirely surprised. I thank him and return to the group with my token.
We board the plane, finally, and I trade seats with Becky so she’s not alone on the aisle. Oddly enough i sit next to a guy named Alex who also traded seats with someone else, and as we learn of the further delays we’ll be forced to suffer through, he and I get to talking. And talking. And talking. Music, travel, anime (of all things), video games, it’s all out there. I make him listen to the Go! Team on my iPod and shablam! Friends. When we finally take off, we can see lightning jumping from cloud to cloud and I force myself to keep talking so I don’t freak out form the turbulence. We hear the word “emergency” over the intercom without much context and more panic sets in. “What luck,” I think to myself, “to have such an amazing trip only to die before I can put up my Facebook photos.” I pray that if I die, they at least find my memory stick intact.
Just kidding on the Facebook thing. But it was pretty scary.
We land and I say my goodbyes to Alex, promising internet contact. The four regroup and we await Aaron and Becky’s baggage, which arrives safely. We chill out on a conveyor belt waiting for our airbus until it begins to move, scaring the bejeezus out of me, and we park ourselves on more conventional seating. The arbus driver arrives, and we get our stuff in just in time to see the driver get a ticket for leaving the bus unattended. The traffic cop is a total dickhole and our driver fumes for most of the drive home. Most of us pass out.
We get to Aaron’s place and say our goodbyes to Mike, I give him a customary smooch on the head and he drives off into the sunrise. But oh, when will I ever see him again (a few days later, apparently)?
Aaron does me the kindness of driving me the rest of the way to my place on the way to Becky’s so I don’t have to carry my monstrous backpack any further. We part, promising future merriment, and I lurch into my house, wildly unhappy to be home but too happy high from the trip to care. I barge into my own room to discover my father sleeping there, apparently booted from his bed for snoring. I ride the couch for 20 minutes until he relinquishes my beautiful chamber, and off I drift, dreamless, into a good morning’s rest.