My 5-almost-6-year-old is going to karate camp this summer, up in Rogers Park. So twice a day I go up and down Western Ave, as always watching for any minute change in the culinary offerings (the long-dead Kabob Corner, up near Foster, suddenly had its front door open yesterday-- my guess is it's about to become something else).
Anyway, a whole little saga transpired in the last several weeks. In the strip just north of Lawrence, where Parker S's ill-fated Carmen restaurant is as well as a number of presumably Balkan coffeehouses with dark windows and, presumably, sullenly smoking soccer-watching clientele, a sign appeared:
Coming soon: Tropical Shipwreck Cafe.
Probably another Balkan place, as so many of them have that tropical theme which seems to suggest the exact opposite of Kosovo and Sarajevo to emigres from that part of the world, conjuring up a cheerful and enticing image of escape even when the normally unappealing word "shipwreck" is worked into it. (Then there's the record shop named optimistically for Dayton-- yes, Dayton, Ohio, city of peace accords. Imagine an American naming a record shop for Versailles or Appomattox.) A painted sign over the top showed a Spanish armada-type galleon (or a ship of the line, to you O'Brien readers) cast up on a sunny beach.
So Tropical Shipwreck Cafe was coming soon, and coming soon, and coming soon for weeks and weeks. I went to Traverse City around the 4th of July and it must have opened while I was there, because when I came back it had big posters in the window for sugary creamy coffee drinks.
And then suddenly it was closed. Not just closed, but downright scavenged. All the furniture was gone from the inside, even the painted scenes on the wall seem to have been ripped from their places, leaving jagged teeth of art on the walls. My guess is, it was coming soon for three months, and closed within three weeks.
That they ran out of money to stay open, that they didn't draw a crowd because nobody knew what the hell it was (a place to have coffee? a place to smoke all day? a place where non-whatevers were not welcome?)-- all that's easy enough to guess, and mundane. But the violence with which they seem to have closed, the way a dream seems to have been angrily obliterated, scribbled out, stomped, is more compelling. What was the secret, who has the answer to the mystery of Tropical Shipwreck Cafe? Like so many mysteries of the deep blue sea, we will likely never know.