Stories &
interview

By Michael
Tufaro
Grade 9, Lord Byng High School, 2002
"The sky is a shade of deep misery. Everyone but you, it seems,
is warm and dry. How easy it would be to turn around and go
back into the musty school from which you came. You press on,
determined to break up your monotonous, painfully boring day
with a bit of non-regulated life. A cultural interlude of
sorts. As you round the next corner a warm glow catches your
eye. A café? Walking more briskly than before, you arrive at
the source in no time flat. Pull open the door, and step into
the warmth that is The Well.
The Well is a welcome addition to lower Dunbar, an area sadly
lacking in java-based culture. With its fresh brewed coffee,
original pastries, award winning hot chocolate, and the Italian
style panini sandwiches coupled with smoothies, it surely
delivers on the food front. As good as this food is, it is the
atmosphere that assures it a place in my heart. The first think
you see as you walk through the doors is the smiling staff.
Look to your left and you'll see an artistic fountain, large
windows, high backed chairs in "funky" colours, and several
traditional four place tables. To your right are the
condiments, up to date periodicals and fresh, crisp newspapers.
Quite a change from the lumber yard, vacuum store, and the
Quik-E-Mart equivalents that otherwise clutter up lower Dunbar
St.
You get a certain feeling when you sit down with a tall black
coffee, a Financial Post and a freshly baked brownie. You feel
the soft back of the chair supporting you, the wind and rain
driving outside, cars passing by, too slowly it seems. It is
similar to the feeling you get if you try on an expensive suit,
Armani maybe, charcoal gray. It is a feeling of having made it,
even though you are far from it. It is the feeling of reading
the market reports and wanting them to mean something. The
thought of having a job where if you were watching CNN and
something happens, you got a call five minutes ago telling you
all about it. The Well delivers that feeling and maybe others,
although I have yet to experience them. I guess that is one of
the reasons I go back day after day, hoping that one day, on
cue with my desires changing, the feeling will change. It will
become my having made it, looking back on today and dreaming
about what it was like in grade nine, when life was simpler,
and I would have given anything for it not to have been so.
All the remains of your brownie are crumbs, and the water has
almost dried up from your jacket. The last sip never is as good
as the first, is it? Lunch is drawing to a close, and you are
expected back for class very soon. You’re going to miss the
good food and fresh, comforting coffee, but don’t leave with a
heavy heart, for you know as well as I do that we’ll both be
back again tomorrow, same time. You can count on
it.”
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