Power Outage
Frank Detmer ate the same dinner four nights out of seven: a can of soup heated in the pot it came from, crackers on the side, a glass of water he filled from the tap and forgot about until it was warm. The other three nights he drove to the diner on Route 9 and got the turkey club, which he ate alone at the counter reading whatever was left on the stool beside him—fishing magazines, supermarket circulars, once a brochure for a water park in Kissimmee that someone had apparently carried all the way from Florida. He was not unhappy. That was the thing he would have told you, and meant. He had his routines. His tools were organized by application, not type—everything for plumbing in one drawer, electrical in another—which he considered the only logical system and which he had explained to no one, because no one had ever asked. He watched television in the evening. He slept well, mostly. He was midway through an Antiques Roadshow marathon when the TV went dark. The refrigerator groaned t...