It had been a long two weeks; first the greif and anger about the death of John Sienna, then the thrilling unbelievable announcement that he hadn’t died after all and finally the controversial rumors that the family firm was hiding his death for financial reasons. The small children had wept at the news that their “Grand Daddy” was gone. Their mothers’ insisted confidently that their grandfather was not dead; much to the consternation of their husbands and older sons.
“I have wonderful news!” Roxanne announced sweetly amidst the gathered gloom of the last several weeks.
Angry teenagers and sullen men raised their blood shot eyes off their dinner plates at the far end of the big table. It had been a hard day with most of the men working in the family woodlot on the slopes above the rambling house. In honor of Aunt Roxanne’s visit they gathered at the “Family Farm”. With a mutual sigh of relief Roxanne’s granddaughters excitedly looked her way. It’s at that moment they realized that Roxanne Scamander was speaking to her great-grandchildren.
“Your Grand Daddy is coming to visit you!”
Squeals of delight answered her announcement. Chubby little hands applauded the news. The youngest, Ian couldn’t understand the excitement but his older sister Agatha, named for their mother, explained it to him. She smiled for the first time in weeks. The men (and older children) exchanged questioning glances with their smirking spouses.
“Along with my sister Maeve. Yes, the doctors say he can travel now. So he is leaving Italy tomorrow and the first people he is coming to see is his grandchildren. He has a surprise for you.”
Ian understood this time and clapped like the other small children. Roxanne poked him in the cubby belly just in case he needed a little help to encourage his excitement. Some of the men actually rose from their seats. Most of the disbelieving teenagers now burst into smiles of relief; Grand Daddy was okay! Questions arose from every quarter. Someone made a quiet reference to the similarity of the return of Uncle Orion. Roxanne would hear none of them and Agatha, her sisters and their female cousins shushed them all. Roxanne continued to tease her great-grandchildren with promises of the coming day and stories about their Grand Daddy; like the time when he and his wife Maeve renewed their vows in a fairytale wedding.
The next morning at the airport in Aud every member of the Sienna family, living in the area, awaited Grand Daddy. Most the men wore dark wool suits or their dress uniforms. A few angry teenagers still wore their black armbands. The women wore flowery summer dresses in honor of Aunt Roxanne. The first person off the family jet was Maeve Sienna, Grand Daddy’s wife. Maeve usually wore black, but since the “accident” she wore black suits with a black armband. It was a declaration of war. Her black eyelashes batted against the bright sun light. Her cheek bones blazed with color from her days in the field for the last two weeks. She flashed a determined smile to kinfolk and let her shoulders fall to ease the tension. At the moment armed bodyguards slipped by her and took their stations at the bottom of the stairs. Maeve was not the favorite member of the far-flung Sienna family, that was Roxanne. But, her resolute actions over the last few weeks earned her the respect and admiration of everyone. A roar of greeting erupted from the crowd, particularly among the teenage boys. A rare honest smile sprang to her lips and rested their uncertainly as the approbation settled.
“Is that the fairy princess?”
Agatha (actually dressed like a fairy princess) reached to cover her little brother’s mouth but Ian’s loud, squeaky question was already out. This great-grand mother gasped in surprise and then smiled again this time in delight. Her lashes fluttered this time with emotion. Someone spoke to her from inside the jet, she turned a profile to the crowd, flipping her collar-length ebony locks and returned a comment. She reached an ivory hand into the gloom. After another glance around for threats, she eased her husband into the daylight. The crowd gasped. The children screamed in delight.
Grand Daddy moved slowly beside his “fairy bride”. Clearly, he winced on occasion. Due to the heat, he wore his usual three piece dark woolen suit, without the jacket or tie. The startling thing to Roxanne was how young her brother-in-law looked. The scars and lines of a lifetime faded during the reconstructive surgery she surmised. He didn’t yet wear his wedding ring, that needed to be resized, but she noticed that the little finger next to broken in a skiing accident in his youth was now straight. Unexplainably, he was tan. Everyone kept their distance. The little children were shushed.
Grand Daddy marched forward with his wife at his side and spoke a few appreciate words to his relatives and descendants. Roxanne noticed his voice had lost the roughness of age as well has the skin at his throat. His youthfulness actually made his grandsons-in-law uncomfortable. His granddaughters smugly saw proof that he’d been okay all along.
It was several hours until Roxanne and Maeve could find a moment alone, at the family farm. Usually John Sienna was the center of attention at any family picnic anywhere, but today Maeve had great difficulty getting rid of her admirers, particularly the teenagers who’d been so impressed with her response to the crisis. Eventually, she sent them off to organized the smaller children into a game of Foxes and Cranes.
“So, how are you doing dearie?” Roxanne asks hiding her voice with a drink, while prodding Maeve in the side.
“Plenty of our competitors think John passed away. A lot of people are showing their true hand. We are cleaning up on the fallen stock prices. We can’t help what people think. Might as well make the best of it. John’s convinced this visit will help with the youngest generation. He’ll tell them the truth. ”
Roxanne laughed at the idea of anyone believing the truth when spoken by babes, before returning to her original question. “No, dearie, how are you doing?”
Distractedly responding, since Maeve was scanning the area for trouble, “John’s doing fine. He’ll be good as new in a couple more weeks. Literally.”
“No! “ Roxanne took her pale thin hands in her ruddier ones. “How are you doing?”
Maeve waves to the teenagers and encourages them with a smile. “It’s hard getting use to the idea that people actually like me.” She responded with a quizzically look on her fair brow . Before Roxanne can rebuff her and assure her of the family’s affection, Maeve asks, “Why are the little girls wearing fairy wings?”
“Your husband asked me to tell them the story about the renewing of your vows.”
“Okay, I was dressed as scouring maid earning my dowry on a Scottish estate when he came to get me. I don’t see any of them dressed in a maid’s uniform. “
“No, but the rest of us dressed as elfin lords and ladies with bells on our horses’ tackle. Hence you are the Fairy Princess.”
Maeve blushed. Agatha and Ian’s mother quickly brought her a glass of water concerned that she didn’t feel well. She thanked her granddaughter at first embarrassed, but then appreciatively. At which point Roxanne spoke up in a loud, sparkly tone of voice.
“It’s nap time for all the little fairy princesses and princes.”
“No!” came the chorus where the little children played.
“Well, Grand Daddy is going to lay down. Don’t you want to lay down with him and listen to a story.”
“Oh yes!” replied the fairy host with a few confused “no’s” from sleepy-eyed tired children.
Grand Daddy’s wife and nurse helped him to lie down for a nap, while their mothers made the little fairy folk beds of blankets and pillows on the floor. Most the children slipped to the side of their great-grandfather’s bed and kissed him good night before laying down themselves. One little girl brushed back the brown curls to reveal his pinched upper ears.
Roxanne was the designated story teller. She spoke of Lord Oberon, King of the Fairies with pangs of emotion. She spoke of Queen Mab with delight in her voice. She searched amongst those still awake for Titania; Queen of the Fairies. Finally, she told a bowdlerized version of Cinderella and her fairy god-mother, closing the tale about the same time the last of the drooping eyelids closed. The adults and teenagers gathered near the door, to listen to the stories and to peek in on Grand Daddy, hoping not to disturb the children. Maeve stood amongst them receiving their praises and reassuring them that her husband recovered nicely.
Dinner was a little low key for a gathering of the Sienna Clan. At one point Grand Daddy excused himself so as to wish the children goodnight, promising to return.
As he rose, Maeve rose too. Everyone thought she was going with him, but instead Roxanne was the one who steadied him as he walked. Maeve announced they had other children to visit and that they’d be leaving late the the following morning. Several adults attempted to flow John and Roxanne, but a shake from Maeve’s head returned them to their seat.
John slept late. The children all agreed to play quietly on the far side of the rambling house. The little ones announced they would not being going to the airport; they’d decided that with Grand Daddy the night before. There was something suddenly mature about the pre-schoolers. Grand Daddy stopped, knelt to huddle with them, saluted, then was on his way.
The Seinnan families departed the family farm and returned to their own homes. More than one couple discussed whether or not it was really “Grand Daddy”.
“It sounds a lot like the return of my grandfather Orion, only to discover later that it was my Uncle Orion.” Agatha and Ian’s father mumbled.
Their mother had no doubts. Her and the other women’s confidence seemed to reassure the teenagers and some of their husbands. More than one father asked his youngest children what Grand Daddy said to them the night before, during dinner the following evening.
“It’s a secret.” Ian answered promptly and firmly. Then sat back and waited.
“Grand Daddy says it’s an open secret Daddy. You can ask grandmother. She knows.” Little Agatha offered with her mother’s smug smile and laughing eyes.
Agatha and Ian’s mother laughed at the grimace on her husband’s face at the mention of his mother-in-law.
“Why can’t you tell me.?”
“We swore an oath.” Ian replied so seriously that his father almost laughed. It was the beginning of the distance that grew between them.
Restraining his laughter, Ian’s father said, “You swore an oath?”
Ian’s little chest puffed out and he drew air to speak. Little Agatha’s hand fell on his little shoulder quieting him. It was the first time that her father noticed that Agatha still wore her fairy wings.
A blog about Greek mythology, classical studies, and the Kosmos Society sponsored by Harvard's Center for Hellenic Studies. Comments welcome in the comments block below
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Saturday, April 2, 2011
M&R: March 13
Steam rose from the simmering soup. A tall dark haired young girl urged the liquid expertly around the half-full pot. When she needed to lower the flame, she did so with a practiced well-trained hand.
“Grandmother?” She asked as she poked at clumps of beef and barley with her wooden spoon.
Her grandmother Maeve Sienna warmed store-bought whole-wheat dinner rolls in the toaster oven. She looked totally out of place in her flowery ruffled apron. The traditional six-pack of Miller High Life; “The Champagne of Bottle Beers” sat nearby on the counter.
“Yes, Agatha.”
“Grandmother, why do we celebrate great, great-grandmother’s birthday?”
“It’s mostly for your grandma Roxanne. She was the favorite you know?”
“Did that bother you, grandmother? Your sister Roxanne being the favorite?”
Maeve stopped poking at the rolls. The only thing that would bother Maeve was if the other grandchildren knew Agatha was her secret favorite. She tried hard not to show. “No, dear. I was happy for her. She was … our grandmother’s namesake. I remember the last time Roxanne saw her grandmother. Grandmother had been in long-term care for a while. She shrunk, as she got older. Our mother always said that would happen.” Maeve shook her ebony locks and smiled in memory of the story about the ironing board, and then continued. “She got crankier too, but when the nurses said that we were coming to visit, Grandmother Roxanne turned into another person. She was friendly, happy and couldn’t wait until your grandma arrived. I remember that day. It was bright in her room, but not because of the light coming in the north-facing window. Rather it was the smile on grandmother’s face and the giggle in her voice, when she looked up out of her bed and saw Roxanne. It was sunset. The stuccoed white-walled, brick-topped buildings facing the hospital blazed with light. Our mother and sister-in-law stood on that side of the room, almost invisible against the glare. Grandmother positively beamed and in the radiance of that admiration Roxanne positively shown. Her hair was never so fiery. Her green eyes never shone so brightly. I swear to God, that under the warmth of our grandmother’s lovely gaze, Roxanne actually grew taller and more beautiful. She was never so charming, lovely, and witty. She was charismatic in grandmother’s presence. The little nieces stroked the old woman’s wrinkled translucent hands lovely. She smiled whenever she looked their way and said what beautiful young girls they were, but honestly, Agatha, your great, great-grandmother only had eyes for Roxanne.
The two of them spoke as though there were no other people in the room. As the aged sun continued to fail, some passing nurse must have turned on the over light, or maybe it was the mutual inter light of their love because their skin still glowed as they whispered sweet nothings to one another.
“Honey, I could have spoiled you awful.” Grandmother joked as she gazed into Roxanne’s green eyes.
“You always have grandmother.”
I looked up at your great-grandmother at that moment; middle child, forgotten as usual. Your great-uncle’s wife had the smile on her face she always wore around us; her thoughts seemed elsewhere. Roxanne seemed on fire! If I had not been standing in the glory of their affection I surely would have suffocated as the world shrunk to just the two of them. I have rarely seen Roxanne so radiant and self-confident. I swear your great, great-grandmother lost twenty years in those precious moments. Those glorious thirty minutes were an eternity!”
Agatha, eye on the soup, ear to her now silent grandmother, suspected the rolls had been in the toaster oven too long. She looked towards Grandmother Maeve. She found her grandmother looking happily off into space, with something that looked totally out of place on her fair face; tears.
“Grandmother?” She asked as she poked at clumps of beef and barley with her wooden spoon.
Her grandmother Maeve Sienna warmed store-bought whole-wheat dinner rolls in the toaster oven. She looked totally out of place in her flowery ruffled apron. The traditional six-pack of Miller High Life; “The Champagne of Bottle Beers” sat nearby on the counter.
“Yes, Agatha.”
“Grandmother, why do we celebrate great, great-grandmother’s birthday?”
“It’s mostly for your grandma Roxanne. She was the favorite you know?”
“Did that bother you, grandmother? Your sister Roxanne being the favorite?”
Maeve stopped poking at the rolls. The only thing that would bother Maeve was if the other grandchildren knew Agatha was her secret favorite. She tried hard not to show. “No, dear. I was happy for her. She was … our grandmother’s namesake. I remember the last time Roxanne saw her grandmother. Grandmother had been in long-term care for a while. She shrunk, as she got older. Our mother always said that would happen.” Maeve shook her ebony locks and smiled in memory of the story about the ironing board, and then continued. “She got crankier too, but when the nurses said that we were coming to visit, Grandmother Roxanne turned into another person. She was friendly, happy and couldn’t wait until your grandma arrived. I remember that day. It was bright in her room, but not because of the light coming in the north-facing window. Rather it was the smile on grandmother’s face and the giggle in her voice, when she looked up out of her bed and saw Roxanne. It was sunset. The stuccoed white-walled, brick-topped buildings facing the hospital blazed with light. Our mother and sister-in-law stood on that side of the room, almost invisible against the glare. Grandmother positively beamed and in the radiance of that admiration Roxanne positively shown. Her hair was never so fiery. Her green eyes never shone so brightly. I swear to God, that under the warmth of our grandmother’s lovely gaze, Roxanne actually grew taller and more beautiful. She was never so charming, lovely, and witty. She was charismatic in grandmother’s presence. The little nieces stroked the old woman’s wrinkled translucent hands lovely. She smiled whenever she looked their way and said what beautiful young girls they were, but honestly, Agatha, your great, great-grandmother only had eyes for Roxanne.
The two of them spoke as though there were no other people in the room. As the aged sun continued to fail, some passing nurse must have turned on the over light, or maybe it was the mutual inter light of their love because their skin still glowed as they whispered sweet nothings to one another.
“Honey, I could have spoiled you awful.” Grandmother joked as she gazed into Roxanne’s green eyes.
“You always have grandmother.”
I looked up at your great-grandmother at that moment; middle child, forgotten as usual. Your great-uncle’s wife had the smile on her face she always wore around us; her thoughts seemed elsewhere. Roxanne seemed on fire! If I had not been standing in the glory of their affection I surely would have suffocated as the world shrunk to just the two of them. I have rarely seen Roxanne so radiant and self-confident. I swear your great, great-grandmother lost twenty years in those precious moments. Those glorious thirty minutes were an eternity!”
Agatha, eye on the soup, ear to her now silent grandmother, suspected the rolls had been in the toaster oven too long. She looked towards Grandmother Maeve. She found her grandmother looking happily off into space, with something that looked totally out of place on her fair face; tears.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
M&R: The Gandydancer’s Special Night
Her husband gazed heavenward at Hesperus, the evening star. At first Maeve thought he praying. She heard him mumble, “Come darkling. Oh, majestic queen, rise from the abyss. The day is done and the darkness is falling from thy wings.” Nope, not praying, reciting poetry. Then she thought that the weary look on his face, worn expression, his pacing of the floor and the way he kept touching his forehead that her husband must still be hung over from the night before. This was silly because John was born for the night. This started her to worry.
“You know,” John started worriedly. “I know things sometimes.” He smiled weakly as his night-tressed wife as he brushes back the hair at his surprisingly not-gray temples
“Your little voice.” she admitted respectfully in that tone that all his friends and extended family used.
“Remember when our eldest graduated high school and I asked him what he was going to do about his girlfriend?”
Maeve loved her sons, but knew nothing about them for the most part. John handled the kids. She nodded for her husband to continue.
“I asked him if he was going to make some sort of commitment to her.”
“They were too young.” Maeve interjected tentatively, suddenly aware that she’d said that one too many times over the years.”
“That’s what everyone said. I told him, I believed in long engagements.” John chuckles. “Anyway, he said nothing to his girlfriend and she dropped him like a hot rock. So eventually she follows him to college. They date for two years. Your oldest son is getting ready to go off to medical school; I ask what he is going to do about his girlfriend. He says it will be okay. She drops him like a hot rock. So, right before graduation from medical school I ask him if he is going to propose to his new girlfriend of two years. She gave up her apartment and was living in her mother’s basement so that she could move at any time. She’s a beautician, so she can get work anywhere. He says, he’s too young and that it will be okay. He gets accepted into a practice and doesn’t propose. She too drops him like a hot rock. So, now he’s approaching thirty and still looking for love. And you know what my grandmother use to say; as we get older we get more and more particular and less and less desirable.” John finishes with a flourish and lift of his open upturned hands. He shakes his head. “Now his younger brother Rugen has graduated and started a career with the railroad managing a couple of crews of gandydancers. His girlfriend will graduate shortly and if he doesn’t propose… I know what is going to happen.” As he finished his presentation, he bit his plush lower lip in frustration. But something in the dawning thought showing on his wife’s lovely face reassured him and he smiled knowingly.
Maeve didn’t have a close relationship with many people beside her husband and sister, but she was close to his youngest son Rugen. She went to visit him the next evening.
“Mom!” the handsome young Rugen called in surprise as her unreigned car advanced swiftly upon his job site in the middle of nowhere. His most-fair mother exited her limousine attended only by the stars.
Being his father’s son, he gave her a big bear hug. She returned it with unnatural strength. When she thought about it, Maeve thought she loved Rugen (Bennie, as she called him.) the best of all her sons. They had a special relationship. With any of her other sons, she would have their lovey-dovey father speak to them. She admired Rugen’s broad shoulders and muscular upper arms, the produce of several summers during college swinging sledge hammers while working as a gandydancer. When she took his hands, she proudly noticed he still carried the calluses from hammer, crowbar and shovel.
She licked her blood lips predatorily before speaking after the preliminaries. “Your father and I think long engagements are alright. I think you will propose to Thyona. So the next thing I want to hear is that it happen.” Unknowingly the young man’s lungs sucked in air in order to… Maeve’s moon pale right hand went vertical, palm out, affectively stopping any unwarranted question. “Ask your older brother.” In response to the shocked look of understanding rounding his eyes and lips, her razor-sharp manicured right index finger lifted and lowered his dimpled chin; her sparkling diamonds and angular knuckles resting at his throat. She laid her velvet hand upon his weary brow and with her returning smile, his “fears decay and courage springs.“ Then she left for the airport and home.
Being more of a doer than thinker, Rugen proposed at the first opportunity; at his favorite cousin’s birthday party back at the college they all attended. Seeing a bright future for the two of them Thyona accepted. They agreed to do it (wed) once he got a job in town and wasn’t always on the rails. Though mostly college-age people attended, Rugen’s Aunt Roxanne was at the celebration and impromptu proposal.
“Dearie? Dearie, did I wake you? ” Roxanne screamed into the cell phone. “I just had to call you! It just happen. I had a feeling. I woke up this morning and told Stan, I just had a feeling and how it happen! Rugen proposed to Thyona.”
On the other end of the call Maeve laughed, not so much at the success of her plan, but rather at the delight in her sister’s voice. She could hear the great sobs rolling from her ample bosom and thought for sure big round tears accompanied them.
Roxanne literally jumped up and down waiting for Maeve’s response. Her face positively glowed with excitement, the false dawn rising over the mountains echoed back the color. Jumping about made her jewelry sparkle like the departing stars Her feminine frame shook and dangling earrings rocked in anticipation of telling how it was almost midnight, the place was really hopping, Rugen slipped the band a twenty to play their favorite song and then knelt there on the peanut shell covered floor. “He offered her a ring with a large black sapphire surrounded by diamonds. And she said yes! And then the band kept playing and playing. They took a break and this is the first time I could call you! I have a really good feeling about this. It’s wonderful!”
Roxanne’s husband Stan came out on the concrete patio with drinks and Kleenex, all quiet and solid, totally unfazed by the events of the night. He smiled bemusedly at his wife’s excitement as she chatted with her sister over the cell phone.
“Isn’t it wonderful?” Roxanne asked as she accepted his offerings.
Stan just smiled back slyly.
“You aren’t surprised! Did you help our gandydancer set this up?” Roxanne gasped.
“No. John talked to me about it Rugen proposing to Thyona. I understood it would happen.” Stan could feel the heat of the risen sun on his face. “Shall we drink to their new life and the new day?”
Roxanne turned to see the dawn and burst into tears, again.
“You know,” John started worriedly. “I know things sometimes.” He smiled weakly as his night-tressed wife as he brushes back the hair at his surprisingly not-gray temples
“Your little voice.” she admitted respectfully in that tone that all his friends and extended family used.
“Remember when our eldest graduated high school and I asked him what he was going to do about his girlfriend?”
Maeve loved her sons, but knew nothing about them for the most part. John handled the kids. She nodded for her husband to continue.
“I asked him if he was going to make some sort of commitment to her.”
“They were too young.” Maeve interjected tentatively, suddenly aware that she’d said that one too many times over the years.”
“That’s what everyone said. I told him, I believed in long engagements.” John chuckles. “Anyway, he said nothing to his girlfriend and she dropped him like a hot rock. So eventually she follows him to college. They date for two years. Your oldest son is getting ready to go off to medical school; I ask what he is going to do about his girlfriend. He says it will be okay. She drops him like a hot rock. So, right before graduation from medical school I ask him if he is going to propose to his new girlfriend of two years. She gave up her apartment and was living in her mother’s basement so that she could move at any time. She’s a beautician, so she can get work anywhere. He says, he’s too young and that it will be okay. He gets accepted into a practice and doesn’t propose. She too drops him like a hot rock. So, now he’s approaching thirty and still looking for love. And you know what my grandmother use to say; as we get older we get more and more particular and less and less desirable.” John finishes with a flourish and lift of his open upturned hands. He shakes his head. “Now his younger brother Rugen has graduated and started a career with the railroad managing a couple of crews of gandydancers. His girlfriend will graduate shortly and if he doesn’t propose… I know what is going to happen.” As he finished his presentation, he bit his plush lower lip in frustration. But something in the dawning thought showing on his wife’s lovely face reassured him and he smiled knowingly.
Maeve didn’t have a close relationship with many people beside her husband and sister, but she was close to his youngest son Rugen. She went to visit him the next evening.
“Mom!” the handsome young Rugen called in surprise as her unreigned car advanced swiftly upon his job site in the middle of nowhere. His most-fair mother exited her limousine attended only by the stars.
Being his father’s son, he gave her a big bear hug. She returned it with unnatural strength. When she thought about it, Maeve thought she loved Rugen (Bennie, as she called him.) the best of all her sons. They had a special relationship. With any of her other sons, she would have their lovey-dovey father speak to them. She admired Rugen’s broad shoulders and muscular upper arms, the produce of several summers during college swinging sledge hammers while working as a gandydancer. When she took his hands, she proudly noticed he still carried the calluses from hammer, crowbar and shovel.
She licked her blood lips predatorily before speaking after the preliminaries. “Your father and I think long engagements are alright. I think you will propose to Thyona. So the next thing I want to hear is that it happen.” Unknowingly the young man’s lungs sucked in air in order to… Maeve’s moon pale right hand went vertical, palm out, affectively stopping any unwarranted question. “Ask your older brother.” In response to the shocked look of understanding rounding his eyes and lips, her razor-sharp manicured right index finger lifted and lowered his dimpled chin; her sparkling diamonds and angular knuckles resting at his throat. She laid her velvet hand upon his weary brow and with her returning smile, his “fears decay and courage springs.“ Then she left for the airport and home.
Being more of a doer than thinker, Rugen proposed at the first opportunity; at his favorite cousin’s birthday party back at the college they all attended. Seeing a bright future for the two of them Thyona accepted. They agreed to do it (wed) once he got a job in town and wasn’t always on the rails. Though mostly college-age people attended, Rugen’s Aunt Roxanne was at the celebration and impromptu proposal.
“Dearie? Dearie, did I wake you? ” Roxanne screamed into the cell phone. “I just had to call you! It just happen. I had a feeling. I woke up this morning and told Stan, I just had a feeling and how it happen! Rugen proposed to Thyona.”
On the other end of the call Maeve laughed, not so much at the success of her plan, but rather at the delight in her sister’s voice. She could hear the great sobs rolling from her ample bosom and thought for sure big round tears accompanied them.
Roxanne literally jumped up and down waiting for Maeve’s response. Her face positively glowed with excitement, the false dawn rising over the mountains echoed back the color. Jumping about made her jewelry sparkle like the departing stars Her feminine frame shook and dangling earrings rocked in anticipation of telling how it was almost midnight, the place was really hopping, Rugen slipped the band a twenty to play their favorite song and then knelt there on the peanut shell covered floor. “He offered her a ring with a large black sapphire surrounded by diamonds. And she said yes! And then the band kept playing and playing. They took a break and this is the first time I could call you! I have a really good feeling about this. It’s wonderful!”
Roxanne’s husband Stan came out on the concrete patio with drinks and Kleenex, all quiet and solid, totally unfazed by the events of the night. He smiled bemusedly at his wife’s excitement as she chatted with her sister over the cell phone.
“Isn’t it wonderful?” Roxanne asked as she accepted his offerings.
Stan just smiled back slyly.
“You aren’t surprised! Did you help our gandydancer set this up?” Roxanne gasped.
“No. John talked to me about it Rugen proposing to Thyona. I understood it would happen.” Stan could feel the heat of the risen sun on his face. “Shall we drink to their new life and the new day?”
Roxanne turned to see the dawn and burst into tears, again.
Labels:
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two year rule
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
M&R; Puck’s Gap Year
“Mother.” Harmonia begins. She says the word awkwardly to
her mother-in-law as though inexperienced at its use, which she is. “Before I
can explain where your son was during his “gap year”, I must tell a tale of his
youth. Maybe you can explain parts of it to me.”
Her mother-in-law’s dark eyebrows
lift quizzically, while her Aunt Roxanne encourages Harmonia to continue with a
silent nod and settles into her seat in anticipation.
“The first thing my husband
remembers in life is you putting your wedding ring on a chain around his neck.”
Roxanne almost giggles aloud,
thinking of the time they dyed Easter eggs while the kids drank pop. Puck
accidently drinks out of one of the mugs with dye. He immediate burst into
tears, crying, “I don’t want to die. I don’t want to die.” And then there was
the time… but a gentle touch from Maeve cool right hand stills the breath the
red head is about to take.
Harmonia continues. “You say, Puck,
I can no longer wear this, but your wife will.” The two older women blush with
pride at the memory of young Orion (Puck) Sienna Junior with his ornate
sparkling ring around his neck. “He is always the captain of his equippiers,
of course. Always so straight backed and serious. One day around ten years of
age, he leads his brothers Shep and Nom on a fishing trip to the Merse.”
Her mother-in-law and aunt nod
knowingly at fond memories of fishing and swimming trips to the green oval
pools beneath the overhanging live oak trees in the ox-boughs of the Merse
River, And of the family picnics on the short grass above the pebbly gravel
bars they enjoy year, after year.
“And one other boy.”
“That would be Agatha and Deuce’s
father. The four of them were inseparable.” Her mother-in-law adds quietly.
“They use to make a small fire and cook their brown trout for lunch. The boys
were out in the sun all summer. They were all blonde back then, even Puck with
his black curly hair. They were all tan too, particularly Puck with that
coloring he got from his father’s family.”
“According to Puck, returning from
the river one day, their path meanders through that perfectly ordered Tuscan
countryside dotted with tall cypress trees-“
Roxanne nudges her sister Maeve
“Leave to Puck to notice at ten that the landscape is orderly!”
“-they pass through one of those
cute little villages in the valley on the day of the Great Fair.” Roxanne and
Maeve exchange questioning looks until they realize Puck’s story starts with
one of the monthly fairs put on to entertain the tourists. “An aged brega
sits alongside the road beneath an orange tree with branches almost as gnarled
as the old hag’s dark, wrinkled hands. The afternoon heat settles on to the
single lane road as the breeze dies. The boys tuck their shirts into the back
of their pants. Puck leads the way, your ruby and diamond wedding ring bounces
on his smooth, narrow dark chest. When he tells this story the stone is always
the size of a goose egg.”
Harmonia peers at his18-carat ring
there on her left hand. All three women laugh aloud. Maeve in amazement shakes
her short dark hair in disbelief at her most serious sons telling a tale.
It is Roxanne who says, “Isn’t it
amazing how different men act around the women who love them? I always wonder
who Puck lets his hair down with.”
“As if he ever has long hair!” his
mother blurts out.
Harmonia’s ice blue eyes return to
her mother-in-law as she mumbles, “I always wonder about his hair.” Then she
continues with the tale. “The witch offers to tell them who they will marry in
exchange for the ring on Puck’s chest. He laughs and offers whatever change he
and their friend can scrounge together. Apparently, his friend is Deuce and
Agatha’s father.” Harmonia pauses here and gathers her thoughts. “Why do Nom
and Shep never carry money?”
“They never need money. Puck always
handles it for them.”
Harmonia nods her head softly and
continues. “She shuffles the cards, mumbling some incantation as she does, asks
Puck prying questions, then flips over the five of cups. All the boys stare.
Shep even wonders aloud if they know the person. The character on the cards
wears a long dark traveling cloak, her dark locks tied down by a pair of braids
forming at her brow and running to the back of her head. She stares in the
pooling water of a river. The boys recognize it as the Merse. They even
recognized the high arc bridge in the scene. But, the woman’s coloring is off.
The witch explains the moment in the picture is twilight. The girl’s hair is
actually blonde and the cloak pale blue.”
Roxanne jumps back in her chair, her
right hand coming to her breast. She looks at Harmonia’s long flaxen hair. “I
remember those traveling cloaks you and your great-grandmother always wore!”
Harmonia smiles demurely and
continues. “The next card was for Shep, the three of cups; a dancing girl holds
each cup.
Roxanne smiles with pride, “My
girls.” She murmurs
“Shep likens them to the three
Graces in the painting by Rubens. He picks a girl in the card to his liking and
gives the witch the nod to continue. She shuffles as she quizzes Nom, then
flips over the exact came card. Nom approves of the idea of them marrying
sisters, but the crowd who has gathered thinks the crone is ripping the boys
off. Their buddy steps up; same routine, the witch hesitates, but flips the
card. Again the Graces. The crowd boos her and demands she give the boys their
money back. Of course, she was right, but... Instead, she offers to tell their
futures. She flips up the Magician for Puck. It is easy for anyone to see he is
the leader and will be a leader in his future. Puck points out the infinity
symbol like a sideways “8” over his character’s head.
Shep steps up and get the “Strength”
card. He points out that Kratos has an infinity sign over her head too. He
turns and shares one serious look with Nom. They burst out laughing, take their
friend in their arms and say they had heard enough. They run off, yelling for
Puck to follow.“
Here Harmonia pauses. Maeve and
Roxanne share a nervous glance.
“Puck knows from that moment that
the bond his step-brothers share with one another he will never share with
them.”
“People use to call them twins! And,
yes, they are their father’s son, as Puck is his father’s son.”
No emotion moves Harmonia’s feature
during this interlude in her narrative. “So, that brings us to the time he has
to go away. He tells of camping out in a distant forest for some time. At
night, the great pines creak and sway in the biting wind. The oaks stratch at
his tent. His rations run thin now and again-“
“Oh, my poor boy! All alone.” Maeve
wails.
Roxanne turns with a broad smile
thinking her best friend jokes. Beginning with a jesting tone, she points out.
“He wasn’t exactly a boy.” But quickly sees her mistake and softly adds, “He
was a grown man dearie.” She pats Maeve’s right hand in a consoling
manner.“Plus, he wasn’t exactly alone. Jake was with him.”
“Jake was with him? My 120-pound
mongrel? Jake scares off grizzly bears in Alaska. I wish I’d known that!”
“Dearie, “Roxanne reminds here, “I
heard you say a hundred times before today, that you didn’t want to know.”
“Oh, you are right!” Maeve admits
waving away her worry with a flap of her hand and a smile on her face.
“Plus, either your husband, Shep or
Nom spent the night with him when he hid in the our wodded property above
Siena.”
“What? My boys were in on it?”
“From the beginning.” Harmonia
assures here. “After that they move him to a bed&breakfast along the
Merse.
“My boy with strangers.”
“Not really dearie. It was Senora
Sumito from il Colombaio. You know her.” Roxanne assures her absently
while encouraging Harmonia to continue.
“You knew too! My best friend! Okay,
okay I know; I didn’t want to know. Go ahead Harmonia.”
“He was there for a while. There he
met his giant. It bursts through the thickly wooded hills overlooking the
swimming holes on Merse, pushing up wildly into the sky. Black, gap-toothed and
covered in hair. “
“Actually, Puck bursts through a
patch of green cat-tails surprising Hank sunning himself beside an opaque pool
by the river. I think it was just up from where we usually lay out the picnic.
” Roxanne corrects.
Maeve visibly restrains herself from
glancing accusatively at her sister.
“And he’s handsome; nice teeth too
as I recall.” Harmonia continues. “Hank is a recently retired footballer,
American style. He is “mulatto”, tall, dark, muscular, with startling blue eyes
and sun streaked dark curly hair. At that time, he’s old enough to be Puck’s
father. Of course, Senora Sumito and her guests notice the similarity between
the two men. Although fair-skinned and blessed with his biological father’s
regal features, Puck’s negroid features stand out in Hank’s company. “
Harmonia pauses again. She gazes at
neither her mother-in-law nor her aunt. Her interlaced fingers lay comfortable
in her lap. She sits stiff and erect as usual. “Mother, you know Puck loves
your husband. His real father was always so distant. Your husband is the only
father he’s ever known. He always felt that “Granddaddy” loved his brothers
more than he.”
She reaches out and touches Maeve’s
arm in sympathy. Maeve’s dark eyes begin to water. Roxanne’s hand joins theirs.
“Dearie, the truth is the other way
around. Shep and Nom love their father to distraction. They have adored him
since the moment of their births.” Roxanne whispers as though everyone doesn’t
already know that, with Maeve nodding in tearful silence.
“Puck knows that now.” Harmonia
assures them as she squeezes Maeve’s pale hand. “But, with Hank’s looks and age
he could be Puck’s biological father. And Hank bonds with him instantly.
Everyone sees it and encourages it. “ Harmonia send an appreciative glance
towards Roxanne. “ They delight in one another’s conversation at il Colombai’s
dinner table. They lunch at the “The Drunken Maid”. They soak in the
natural thermal baths at Petriolo fed by hot springs trickling down a rock
formation, steam rising around them.” Harmonia pauses her tale and turns
stiffly to Maeve. “I’ve always thought it fortuitous that you insisted the boys
learned English and German along with their native French. But, why Chinese?”
Maeve clears her throat and glances
conspiratorially at her sister before replying simple, “We anticipate business
opportunities in the rapidly expanding Chinese market.”
Harmonia nods appreciatively and
continues, “But, beyond what they say to one another, it is what they don’t say
to one another. Puck can’t reveal his real name. Hank doesn’t talk much about
his retirement at the top of his game.” Harmonia begins to say more on the
topic but instead takes a sip from the bedewed glass of ice tea in front of
her.
“Then what happens?”
Harmonia finishes her sip, swallows
and says, “They sail off to explore the world. Ends up that in a few days Hank
intends to join “The World” in Marseille.”
Maeve’s shoulders relax and a smile
comes to her face. Roxanne notices the expression, relief flushes her face and
raises the corners or her lips.
“That cruise ship you took to
Alaska?” Harmonia asked
“Luxury ocean residence travelling
around the world.” Maeve corrects laughingly.
“Only this leg of the cruise intends
to visit and dawdle at each of the great beaches of the Ligurian Sea.
Granddaddy arranges passage for Puck.”
“My son in one of those tiny rooms,
all alone?”
“Well, Donald was with him.”
Harmonia confesses
“My husband’s valet was with Puck?”
“Well, dearie, how would it look for
a young man to board without a servant. Everyone would think he was a gigolo or
a gold digger. Moreover, we took a large suite what with his family coming and
going secretly. Plus there was cooking to do and clothes to attend to ”
Maeve’s jaw hangs open. Her black
eyes swell with surprise. “And why didn’t I notice Donald absence? Why didn’t
any of my friends on “The World” recognize Puck?”
“You don’t remember Donald's absence
because you are distraught over Puck’s disappearance. And no one recognizes
Puck with red hair and green contact lens.” Roxanne explains cupping her own
hair. It’s more coppery than usual due to the summer sun.
“Still the crowd on “The World”
is older than Puck and probably this Hank.”
“Yes, but their daughters aren’t.”
replies Roxane with a knowing arch of her right eyebrow. Her face flushes again
as she learily turns to see Harmonia’s reaction.
Harmonia sits up right and calm as
always. “And the girls particularly in their ports of call are all over Puck
and Hank. With Hank’s fame as a footballer and notoriety over his sudden
departure from the National Football League and our family connections the two
men get invited to all the best homes, wildest parties and always have the best
seats in the house. The World stops at discrete Nikki Beach in St.
Tropez, arrives in Cannes for the latter part of the festival, ties up outside
the artificial breakwaters of Antibes
to visit the silky sandy beaches, and enjoyable old town, allows the passengers
time to enjoy the nightlife of Nice, makes the Grand Prix in Monaco-“
“That’s who I got an invitation to
the palace?” Maeve gasps
Nodding Harmonia continues, “And
finally The World sails the Riviera di Ponente to Genoa. Everywhere they
go Hank clears the way with a woman on each arm. Puck likewise accessorized.
Hank is known as a bit of a playboy; a millionare athelete with no family
connections. Hank thoroughly enjoys himself with the ladies, but Puck never
avails himself of his opportunities. When Hank asks why not. Puck tells him of
a periodic dream. His future wife appears to him. She appears thin with a
feminine frame, with pale complexion, ice blue eyes, long shear blond hair,
always calm and always sweet.” She pauses and a little color rises on her
modest expression. Maeve and Roxanne sit speechless “He waits for her. Hank
seems to take a moment when Puck tells him this story. He seems to recall
meeting a girl of that description, recently. He promises to think on it.
Hank rarely sleeps alone, but always
breakfasts with Puck. On the odd occasion he sleeps alone, he’d settle for the
evening in his room at Puck and Donald’s suite. You know how Donald is; he
insisted on doing both men’s laundry, polishing their boots, helping them dress
for the evening. One morning Hank arrives for breakfast, and drops a bundle of
clothes on his closet floor. The laundry knocks over the walking stick Hank
left there the night before. It is a diamond-studded walking stick that causes
quiet the stir when the two men would go out. In reaching to pick it up, Hank
bangs his head on the door jam, which he has to laugh at. Then lifting the cane
he realizes it caught under the French door. He exclaims at the impossibility
of it all, manages to get it free only to knock down some clothes hung there.
Laughing aloud he hangs them up only to discover he derailed the French doors.
Puck and Donald hearing the commotion come to see and find Hank seating on the
floor laughing so hard that he is crying and short of breathe. They lift the
giant man to his feet and head out for today’s marvelous adventure.
Even with the frenzied fans and
chaos of celebrity, the two men grow every closer. Whether crammed into a
private box with friends at Cannes or sunning themselves on the sunny beaches
of the Côte d'Azur surrounded by bathing beauties they grow closer. Everyone
takes them for father and son. His natural reserve and aloofness which Puck
inherited from his father fades before the taller man’s charm.
The morning they arrive in Nice;
Hank arrives for breakfast to find the ship hairdresser working on Puck. Donald
packing. Puck’s naturally black wavy hair returned gray at his temples to make
him look more like his biological father. Puck explains he has business to
attend to and will rejoin Hank on the imported sands of Monaco. The news so
shocks Hank that it takes breath away. Puck doesn’t know what to do. But, he
knows who would. In a flash he asks himself the proverbial question “What would
Grand-daddy do?” That is what would your husband do, mother? What would your
brother-in-law do, Aunt Roxanne? What would his father do? Puck hurries to
Hank, hugs him, kisses him and promises to return in a few days.
“That’s clearly one of my nephews!”
Touchy-feely Roxanne cheers with a slap of her hand on the table.
All three women smile. Reserve and
aloof Maeve pats her sister approvingly on the shoulder.
“While their lips are still close
Hank whispers that he doesn’t even know Puck’s real name. So, once his
hairdresser departs Puck explains that he is Orion Sienna. Hank seems a little
taken back, but the American says the name means nothing to him. Puck explains
that his family has him poised to take over the import/export business and that
he is meeting with a co-operative of French grape growers in Provence. Hank
seems somewhat relieved by his explanation. Donald nudges Puck; he will stay on
board and tend to Hank. This seems to relieve the older man’s concerns totally.
When they part at the gangway, Hank tells Puck that he remembers meeting Puck’s
dream girl in Italy, that she is younger than Puck and that he’s sure he’ll
remember where they met.”
Harmonia takes a sip of iced tea
again. Roxanne even pours her some more. Maeve and Roxanne then lean in closer.
“This is where Puck meets his one
true love.”
“What!” “No!”
“His driver gets lost in the
alluring landscape, stunning rock formations and rich colored dazzling soils.
Between the rugged hills and mountains, lie deep gorges and fertile valleys
filled with carpets of lavender, almond groves and ancient olive trees. You can
everywhere smell the aromas of lemon verbena, rosemary, thyme and basil. And on
the slopes stand vineyards. They find their way to his host’s property late at
night and Puck is shone his room without ceremony.
The morning after his arrival at the vineyard, at the very
moment he wakes, his eyes delight at the charming creature who brings him
coffee. She was a very young girl, but as well formed as a person of seventeen.
The snow of her complexion, her hair as light as sunshine, her blue eyes
beaming with light, the innocence he mistakes for serenity, and the prettiest
tiny feet, every detail presents the perfect beauty Hank had spoken of the
previous morning. Puck looks at her with the greatest pleasure. Her eyes rest
upon him as if on an old acquaintance.
She asks how he finds his bed. He says very comfortable and
prays to know her name. She is Lucy, his host’s daughter. She has neither
brothers nor sisters, and is fourteen years old.
He sits up in his bed and she helps put on his robe, saying
a hundred things, which he does not understand. He still sips his coffee, when
Lucy's parents come into his room.. The moment she leaves her father and mother
begin to praise their daughter as their only child, darling pet, the hope of
our old age. She loves and obeys them and fears God; and has but one fault. She
is too young. Puck assures them it is a charming fault which time will mend.
Puck ascertains that they are living specimens of; honesty, truth, homely
virtues, and real happiness. Just people we enjoy doing business with. Lucy
returns gay as a lark, prettily dressed and her hair done in her own peculiar
way . Not in twin braids tied back. She gives a hearty kisses to both her
parents, and sits on her father knees. When the honest family leaves his room,
Puck dresses and goes to breakfast with his host to meet the other growers. The
day passes off very pleasantly, as is generally the case in the country, when
amongst agreeable people.
The next morning, the conversation Puck and Lucy share
proves without the shadow of a doubt that her parents had every reason to
idolize her. Her vivacity, her eager curiosity, and the bashful blushes, which
spread over her face whenever her jesting remarks causes him to laugh,
everything, in fact, convinces Puck that she is the angel destined to be his
wife. He even laughs when she comments how youthful he looks for a man with
gray hair, probably old enough to be her grandfather. As he enjoys her
conversation, he tells her that she would afford him great pleasure if she
could come earlier in the morning, and even wake him up if he happened to be
asleep, adding that the less he slept the better he felt in health.”
Maeve and Roxanne swap worried glances, which Harmonia
dispels with a wave of her hand.
“That day they meet with the lawyers and make a ceremony of
signing the contract. A big dinner follows for all the involved families. Lucy
sits as near as ceremony will allow and they talk all through dinner. A small
band entertains after dinner and they all dance in the moonlight. Lucy is
clearly smitten with a man old enough to be her father. Of course, in truth
they are only eight years apart. But, Puck begins to have doubts. Lucy seems
stouter than the woman of his dreams, more robust, more outgoing and her hair
is coarser.
That night he dreams of his wedding. It is at our family
home outside of Siena. The sun fills the cloudless sky with light. His brothers
and Uncle Stan hold the staffs of his wedding canopy. Above him and the pastor
floats an arbor of grape bearing vines on orange boughs from the orchards.
Granddaddy escorts his bride to him.”
Maeve and Roxanne sigh in relief. Harmonia blushes in memory
of the day.
“ The society of this angelic child affords Puck the
sweetest delight, but she is not the woman he loves. The third day he promises
to return during the harvest; their farewell is tender and very sad. In route to Monaco, Puck stops to get his hair
re-colored in red. His eyes grow green again. He rejoins Hank on the imported
sand on the beach at Monte Carlo. The big man is sunning himself as usual with
a bevy of beauties (and Donald) in attendance. He’s made plans for them for the
race and for events in the evening. As Donald helps him dress, Puck asks how
Hank has been. In his usual simple words, Donald says that Hank’s heart beats
more steadily in Puck’s presence. Puck smiles at the poetry in Donald's words
forgetting that he’d formerly been an emergency trauma technician. The two men
have a wonderful time during the Grand Prix, finally The World lifts
anchor for Genoa. “
Another sip of ice tea.
“It is along the Riviera di Ponente that Hank dies.”
“What!” Maeve says with a disbelieving shake of her head.
Roxanne nods her coppery crowned head sadly.
“It was heart failure, a common effect of gigantism.”
Harmonia whispers. “Puck wants to fly Hank to his specialists in the United
States, but the doctors in Genoa knew the flight would kill him.
Puck never leaves Hank’s side, except when the nurses force him
out. Then he waits outside the intensive care unit. His worry and sorry
overwhelm Puck, not just for Hank but for Donald too, who’d been left behind on
the boat to care for his luggage. Be that as it may he can’t help noticing the
Italian family waiting there also, tearfully and prayerfully.
He joins in their prayers. They all console one another.
They are an older couple of modest-means and their grown daughter. The man is
ex-military, coarse, but kindly. His wife and daughter are witty even in grief and
empathetic. This son had gone for a motorcycle ride after a short summer rain.
The water lifted all the oil out of the asphalt. He lost control at the first
stop sign, laid the bike over on its side and slapped into a passing car. When
night falls, knowing that Puck has no place to stay, the gentleman invites Puck
to their home. The daughter returns to her own home and husband.
That night alone for one of the few days in his life, a
sleepless Puck sits up in bed, head in his hands, in despair. His new friends
gave him their son’s room. A quilt of roses lay across his lap. The skirting on
the bed pictures two swordsmen fighting in a glade, the one on the left had
fallen back and although his opponent lunges, they are too far apart to harm
one another. As his sobs ease he hears his host and hostess sobbing. Although
Puck poorly understands Italian, he understands that their son will recover;
something else worries them.
They leave for the hospital as early as possible planning to
grab breakfast there. Puck eats with Hank, though more accurately, Hank watchs
Puck eat. The Serrafinis eat in the cafeteria. Puck joined them there when Hank
goes for treatments. For the first time, Puck notices how good looking they all
are. Sergente Serrafini is a ruggedly handsome man and his womenfolk are
beautiful. Their son will recover, but he will never be the good-looking young
man they’d always know. They all go in together to visit their loved ones. Puck
introduces the Serrafinis to the American football hero. When they all part,
Hank with heavy breathe expresses his concern for the lovely family. Money can
easily solve the problem. The Serrafini’s can’t reject a dying man’s
generosity. Puck explains that Hank is flying in plastic surgeons in from the
United States to care for their son. Granddaddy arranges everything.
Even out of intensive care, on-oxygen, sunning himself in
the solarium, Hank is in too frail to be removed from the hospital. The
appreciative elder Serrafinis take turns visiting with him and Puck. Their daughter
stops by each day to see Hank and her brother. Puck isn’t surprised when she
doesn’t arrive one day, her brother is out of danger and the surgeons have
faith in their abilities to put his face back together again properly. However,
her parents worry about her absence. The following day she returns with a black
eye. Her father pushes up out his drab green chair, color rushes to his
features. His fists clench and he begins to curse his son-in-law in language so
loud, dark, and obscene that Puck can’t follow it nor the rapid argument that
follows in their native dialect. She returns to her parent’s home that night.
There is more sobbing and arguing in the night. In the
morning, Sergente Serrafini explains that he is taking his daughter to
her husband’s house to gather some things. Puck accompanies them. The husband
makes trouble, but between Sergente Serrafini’s sledge like fists and
Pucks training in the martial arts, there is no trouble.
Hank dies that night in Puck’s arms. With his dying breathe
he admits all along he’s known Puck’s true love. He explains that he’d
collapsed while touring Siena before they met. He’d taken to the hospital. He
meets me there when I visiting my great-grandmother. She and Hank were in a
ward together. Donald had taken me. We saw Hank there all alone. Donald stops
to visit. Apparently, I mention my name, our family business and my distant
relations to Orion Sienna. Hank was released from the hospital in Siena on the
promise than he’s rest in a nearby bed&breakfast for a week. That’s where
Puck and he met, when Hank was recuperating. The rest you know.
By then, word of Hank’s stay at the hospital and death has
leaked out. Donald will soon disembark with their luggage. The paparazzi pant
and sniff in a frenzy outside the hospital spinning after their tails, trying
to discover the name of Hank’s traveling companion. Puck can’t be seen in
public with the Serrafinis. “The World” won’t reveal his identity. There
is no chance that Puck can attend Hank’s funeral in America without being found
out, no chance to travel with his huge body. He leaves Hank’s affairs to Sergente
Serrafini to arrange. He arranges things so that the son-in-law won’t be
bother any more. He inherits Hank’s fortune. He is the son Hank never had. He
assumes Orion Senior’s coloring and indentity again. The father he never had.
He slips away, a changed man. A new man coming home to kiss his mother, to hug
the father he’s always had, to embrace his new life and to make me his wife.”
Labels:
dogs,
gap year,
God,
Maeve and Roxanne,
National Football League,
riveria,
The World,
wedding
Saturday, January 1, 2011
M&R; The Family Reunion in Ashland
Her heart swelled so large, Agatha found it hard to breath. It contracted with such a “thud” that her slight frame shook with the shock. The blood-hammer hit the anvil of her eardrums so strongly, that she could hear nothing but the beating.
Her cousin Maeve’s words fell distant and frail. “You okay Aggie?”
Agatha’s young heart had not pounded like this since news of her father’s death when she was six years old. Most her girl cousins stood on tippy-toes straining to see the commotion down the sun-scorched street. Agatha stood flat footed enthralled with “him”. Only “Little Maeve” noticed Agatha reaction, but at first she could not see over the heads of everyone else to determine the cause.
Agatha and the other girls in her family stood on the bench framing a flower bed to get a better look at the performance entertaining the crowds waiting for the three theatres to open. She and Little Maeve shared a bottle of now warm “spring” water. She was college age, the eldest of the girl cousins, but only by a little. Maybe a little taller, maybe a little darker, but like them all slim, tan and raven-haired. Only Agatha inherited their grandmother Maeve’s dark eyes. They wore light summer dresses at Grandmother Roxanne’s insistence. She declared today “informal” due to the extreme heat. But Agatha talked her maternal grandmother into allowing her to wear something a little longer, something a little more adult.
A small band of musicians played. A group of dancers in blue and plum took turns performing as couples or small sets. The crowd had really been enjoying the show. Moistened sawdust covered the concrete sidewalks leading to and from the Allen Pavilion. A gasp moved up the busy lane leading to the theatres, heads turned to look down Pioneer Road, relatives leaned in that direction, some started moving that way.
As the crowd started to ease around them, Agatha had spotted the young man. His eyes were green. Green eyes were common in Agatha’s family. Agatha is French/Italian. He was not. Curly blond hair covered his head, almost a page boy hair cut like you’d see on a roman statue of the god Apollo. He and his friend (too dark to be his brother) wore nice short sleeved dress shirts and matching ties. “He” outgrew his shirt just recently. It clung tightly to his slight muscled frame. The short sleeves bulged trying to enclose his massive biceps. He wasn’t that much taller than Agatha, but…
”Tall enough.” She mumbled to herself.
Without knowing it, at that moment she mimicked her grandmother Maeve’s habit of licking the inside of her lips with her pretty pink tongue, like she’d just eaten something sweet and wanted to get every bit of its sugary taste. She wished for redder lipstick. It looked like, from his name tag that his name was “Eldon Brigham”.
Little Maeve witnessed all this; the hard stare, the lick of the lip and the squint to read Elder Brigham’s name tag. She whispered “Not exactly your type.”. She nudged Agatha, took her arm and said it again, before Agatha heard her over the hum-bum.
Batting her long eyes lashes in order to escape her trance Agatha assured her innocently that “Yes, he is!” Then awakened to the mob relatives joining everyone already watching the entertainment. “What’s going on?”
“Everyone wants to meet Grandmother Maeve’s cousin Isolde. No one ever met anyone from her side of the family. Everyone thought she had no family.” Little Maeve explained, a little too rote at the end.”
“Everyone” thought Little Maeve was their grandmother’s favorite and treated her accordingly. Little Maeve knew that Agatha was in fact her favorite and their grandparents treated her accordingly. Their little secret bonded to the two girls long ago. They exchanged a barely noticeable roll of their eyes. They knew perfectly well that their Grandmother had no living relatives, but kept it to themselves.
“He’s gone.” Little Maeve pointed out as the mob around Maeve and Isolde passed by.
“That’s okay.” Agatha muttered pretending to stare after their grandmother while her eyes searched the crowd for Eldon.
“It’s wouldn’t have been okay if our fathers had seen the look on our face.” Little Maeve whispered in the other girl’s ear, the fanned fingers of her right hand protecting the conversation.
They exchanged nervous wide eyed expressions and then burst into giggles when they noticed the moat of Sienna men folk surrounding them and their girl cousins. Agatha grabbed Little Maeve’s hand and pulled it to their sides, so that nothing more could be said while surrounded by their extended family. Agatha bent and whispered something in her step-father’s ear. He and her brother Deuce helped Agatha and her cousin down. Deuce intended to go with the girls, but his step-father held him back. The two girls made their way towards the “Group Sales Chalet” across the Green Show stage. Since the “everyone” wanted to talk to Maeve and “everyone in the know” wanted to talk to Agatha, several step-aunts and uncles and many of their males second cousins greeted them along the way. . They never would have a found a moment alone but to each greeting they inquired softly for the restrooms and went on their way.
“Well, Elder looked smart.” Little Maeve commented sotto voce.
“It’s Eldon.” Agatha quipped while pointing absently at a shiny black-winged crow sitting in a tree in case anyone looked their way. “Why do you think he’s smart?”
“He was carrying a book; solid blue cover. I’d guess reference or text book.”
“Think he goes to school here in Ashland?” Agatha blurted out.
Forgetting herself she turned excitedly to better hear her cousin’s reply. Then she froze, while slightly bent towards the smaller girl, people stared at her. Little Maeve saw the scared, shocked look on Agatha’s face. He couldn’t help it, the corners of her mouth started to rise. The same happen to Agatha and they both burst out into giggles and rushed to the ladies room.
“Do you really think he goes to school in Southern Oregon?”
“Why not? We’ll say we are interested in going to school here and check it out tomorrow. Maybe we’ll see him.”
Agatha did a double take at Little Maeve, “You know, Grand-daddy might let me go to school here. Everyone loves it.”
After their dad’s death their grandfather became the father-figure in Agatha and Deuce’s life. He also remained the disciplinarian.
“It’s either here or they’ll send us to Bryn Mawr College.”
The girls really hadn’t needed to use the rest room, but they went in for appearances, splashed water on their faces and fiddled with their hair.
“Ever think about coloring your hair?” Little Maeve asked as she admired in the mirror the affect of sun light pouring in the frosted windows on her own black locks.
Agatha rolled her eyes, then paused. After a thought she chuckled. “Once. When I was six. I convinced Aunt Harmonia to help me paint one strain of hair in rainbow colors. “
“What happen?”
“Next day all the other girls started doing it!”
They laughed again and walked outside. A man in a blue Hawaiian shirt stood a few feet away with his back to them leaning against the bole of one of a cottonwood at the back of the stage. He stood 6’1”and seemed at ease in his muscular body. His full head of auburn hair hung in curls almost collar length., The shirt hung loosely as though unbuttoned and he wore…
“Shorts!” Agatha gasped. Grand-Daddy was barefoot too, ( per his sister-in-law’s request) but the girls never noticed because he talked with Brigham. “I’m going to die, right now.” Agatha insisted.
She clutched Little Maeve’s fingers so tight, that the younger girl felt pain. At least until she turned and saw how white Agatha looked and then she felt fear.
Grand-Daddy’s hairy right arm scooped them up and pulled them forward as he said, “Gentleman, I’d like to introduce my granddaughters. This is wife’s namesake; Maeve. And this is,” there was something sweet and knowing in her grandfather’s voice, but Agatha was too nervous and awestruck to notice it. “my granddaughter Agatha.”
A moment before Agatha worried that her grandfather might hear her heart beating. A moment earlier she saw her brother Deuce’s stern stare. A moment previous she wondered what to say to Brigham. But, now she knew something. The hand that lay in the small of her back was the hand of destiny. That this meeting was met to be.
“Ladies, this Elder Brigham and Elder Ortiz.”
The girls offered their hands.
Maeve made sure to shake Brigham’s hand first so that Agatha need not drop it later as they stared dumbly into one another’s eyes. She noticed that Ortiz’s features were more to her liking than Brigham’s; dark and that she liked his accent. She mumbled something to the affect “Do you guys go to school here?”
Which her grandfather translated more elegantly as “What do you gentleman think of my granddaughters going attending to school here?”
As Ortiz in a thick Spanish accent made courteous replies about how nice the people were, how pretty the town, how ideal the weather, Little Maeve saw Deuce making a bee-line for them. Her grandfather made some little joke in Spanish in response to Ortiz’s diplomatic comments. After a double-take at the girls’ grandfather Brigham responded in like language.
Deuce broke into the circle at that moment. His face flushed with emotion. He stood taller than usual. His chest puffed out. No rage twisted his face when got Agatha’s attention. He saved that for when he turned towards the young men. His mouth open and barked “Grand Daddy!” Apparently, he’d never seen his grandfather behind the tree.
“Deuce!” his grandfather yelled. “I want you to meet these young men. They want to talk to us about God. This is Elder Ortiz. He is here on an English speaking mission from Columbia. Elder Brigham here is on a Spanish-speaking mission.”
Deuce got pulled into his grandfather’s arms. He listened as Ortiz explained that the “Book of Mormon” in his hand was another testament of Jesus Christ. The doors opened to the theatres about then. Agatha’s uncles called for their father and mother to lead the way in. Two additional tickets appeared like magic from his pocket. He pushed Deuce and Ortiz ahead of him.
“Brigham, bring along my grand-daughters please.”
Brigham sat between Agatha and Maeve during the whole performance of, remarkably “Tristan and Isolde”, just in front of the girls’ grandparents. Brigham admitted that Southern Oregon might be the school for him when his mission ended. At the end of the evening Agatha’s grandfather invited the missionaries on the train trip the family planned for the next day. He pointed out how many people they’d be able to give their testimony to. Clearly, neither Ortiz nor Brigham needed the added encouragement.
As the audience strolled their separate ways, their grandfather took Agatha and Deuce under his arms. Little Maeve after exchanging looks with her grandfather knowingly followed along.
“He reminds me of your father.” Their grandfather said. Deuce, who barely recalled their father, nodded vigorously, after all Ortiz has their father’s manly dark looks and serious countenance. Agatha and Little Maeve shared a look of surprise. They assumed their grandfather meant Brigham. Agatha’s father had been notoriously not handsome nor blonde. “He has your father’s graciousness, your father’s artistic ability and charm. I like him.”
Deuce was sent to find his step-father,
“You know girls. Five percent of Mormon missionaries return with foreign brides.”
“Grand-Daddy!”
Her cousin Maeve’s words fell distant and frail. “You okay Aggie?”
Agatha’s young heart had not pounded like this since news of her father’s death when she was six years old. Most her girl cousins stood on tippy-toes straining to see the commotion down the sun-scorched street. Agatha stood flat footed enthralled with “him”. Only “Little Maeve” noticed Agatha reaction, but at first she could not see over the heads of everyone else to determine the cause.
Agatha and the other girls in her family stood on the bench framing a flower bed to get a better look at the performance entertaining the crowds waiting for the three theatres to open. She and Little Maeve shared a bottle of now warm “spring” water. She was college age, the eldest of the girl cousins, but only by a little. Maybe a little taller, maybe a little darker, but like them all slim, tan and raven-haired. Only Agatha inherited their grandmother Maeve’s dark eyes. They wore light summer dresses at Grandmother Roxanne’s insistence. She declared today “informal” due to the extreme heat. But Agatha talked her maternal grandmother into allowing her to wear something a little longer, something a little more adult.
A small band of musicians played. A group of dancers in blue and plum took turns performing as couples or small sets. The crowd had really been enjoying the show. Moistened sawdust covered the concrete sidewalks leading to and from the Allen Pavilion. A gasp moved up the busy lane leading to the theatres, heads turned to look down Pioneer Road, relatives leaned in that direction, some started moving that way.
As the crowd started to ease around them, Agatha had spotted the young man. His eyes were green. Green eyes were common in Agatha’s family. Agatha is French/Italian. He was not. Curly blond hair covered his head, almost a page boy hair cut like you’d see on a roman statue of the god Apollo. He and his friend (too dark to be his brother) wore nice short sleeved dress shirts and matching ties. “He” outgrew his shirt just recently. It clung tightly to his slight muscled frame. The short sleeves bulged trying to enclose his massive biceps. He wasn’t that much taller than Agatha, but…
”Tall enough.” She mumbled to herself.
Without knowing it, at that moment she mimicked her grandmother Maeve’s habit of licking the inside of her lips with her pretty pink tongue, like she’d just eaten something sweet and wanted to get every bit of its sugary taste. She wished for redder lipstick. It looked like, from his name tag that his name was “Eldon Brigham”.
Little Maeve witnessed all this; the hard stare, the lick of the lip and the squint to read Elder Brigham’s name tag. She whispered “Not exactly your type.”. She nudged Agatha, took her arm and said it again, before Agatha heard her over the hum-bum.
Batting her long eyes lashes in order to escape her trance Agatha assured her innocently that “Yes, he is!” Then awakened to the mob relatives joining everyone already watching the entertainment. “What’s going on?”
“Everyone wants to meet Grandmother Maeve’s cousin Isolde. No one ever met anyone from her side of the family. Everyone thought she had no family.” Little Maeve explained, a little too rote at the end.”
“Everyone” thought Little Maeve was their grandmother’s favorite and treated her accordingly. Little Maeve knew that Agatha was in fact her favorite and their grandparents treated her accordingly. Their little secret bonded to the two girls long ago. They exchanged a barely noticeable roll of their eyes. They knew perfectly well that their Grandmother had no living relatives, but kept it to themselves.
“He’s gone.” Little Maeve pointed out as the mob around Maeve and Isolde passed by.
“That’s okay.” Agatha muttered pretending to stare after their grandmother while her eyes searched the crowd for Eldon.
“It’s wouldn’t have been okay if our fathers had seen the look on our face.” Little Maeve whispered in the other girl’s ear, the fanned fingers of her right hand protecting the conversation.
They exchanged nervous wide eyed expressions and then burst into giggles when they noticed the moat of Sienna men folk surrounding them and their girl cousins. Agatha grabbed Little Maeve’s hand and pulled it to their sides, so that nothing more could be said while surrounded by their extended family. Agatha bent and whispered something in her step-father’s ear. He and her brother Deuce helped Agatha and her cousin down. Deuce intended to go with the girls, but his step-father held him back. The two girls made their way towards the “Group Sales Chalet” across the Green Show stage. Since the “everyone” wanted to talk to Maeve and “everyone in the know” wanted to talk to Agatha, several step-aunts and uncles and many of their males second cousins greeted them along the way. . They never would have a found a moment alone but to each greeting they inquired softly for the restrooms and went on their way.
“Well, Elder looked smart.” Little Maeve commented sotto voce.
“It’s Eldon.” Agatha quipped while pointing absently at a shiny black-winged crow sitting in a tree in case anyone looked their way. “Why do you think he’s smart?”
“He was carrying a book; solid blue cover. I’d guess reference or text book.”
“Think he goes to school here in Ashland?” Agatha blurted out.
Forgetting herself she turned excitedly to better hear her cousin’s reply. Then she froze, while slightly bent towards the smaller girl, people stared at her. Little Maeve saw the scared, shocked look on Agatha’s face. He couldn’t help it, the corners of her mouth started to rise. The same happen to Agatha and they both burst out into giggles and rushed to the ladies room.
“Do you really think he goes to school in Southern Oregon?”
“Why not? We’ll say we are interested in going to school here and check it out tomorrow. Maybe we’ll see him.”
Agatha did a double take at Little Maeve, “You know, Grand-daddy might let me go to school here. Everyone loves it.”
After their dad’s death their grandfather became the father-figure in Agatha and Deuce’s life. He also remained the disciplinarian.
“It’s either here or they’ll send us to Bryn Mawr College.”
The girls really hadn’t needed to use the rest room, but they went in for appearances, splashed water on their faces and fiddled with their hair.
“Ever think about coloring your hair?” Little Maeve asked as she admired in the mirror the affect of sun light pouring in the frosted windows on her own black locks.
Agatha rolled her eyes, then paused. After a thought she chuckled. “Once. When I was six. I convinced Aunt Harmonia to help me paint one strain of hair in rainbow colors. “
“What happen?”
“Next day all the other girls started doing it!”
They laughed again and walked outside. A man in a blue Hawaiian shirt stood a few feet away with his back to them leaning against the bole of one of a cottonwood at the back of the stage. He stood 6’1”and seemed at ease in his muscular body. His full head of auburn hair hung in curls almost collar length., The shirt hung loosely as though unbuttoned and he wore…
“Shorts!” Agatha gasped. Grand-Daddy was barefoot too, ( per his sister-in-law’s request) but the girls never noticed because he talked with Brigham. “I’m going to die, right now.” Agatha insisted.
She clutched Little Maeve’s fingers so tight, that the younger girl felt pain. At least until she turned and saw how white Agatha looked and then she felt fear.
Grand-Daddy’s hairy right arm scooped them up and pulled them forward as he said, “Gentleman, I’d like to introduce my granddaughters. This is wife’s namesake; Maeve. And this is,” there was something sweet and knowing in her grandfather’s voice, but Agatha was too nervous and awestruck to notice it. “my granddaughter Agatha.”
A moment before Agatha worried that her grandfather might hear her heart beating. A moment earlier she saw her brother Deuce’s stern stare. A moment previous she wondered what to say to Brigham. But, now she knew something. The hand that lay in the small of her back was the hand of destiny. That this meeting was met to be.
“Ladies, this Elder Brigham and Elder Ortiz.”
The girls offered their hands.
Maeve made sure to shake Brigham’s hand first so that Agatha need not drop it later as they stared dumbly into one another’s eyes. She noticed that Ortiz’s features were more to her liking than Brigham’s; dark and that she liked his accent. She mumbled something to the affect “Do you guys go to school here?”
Which her grandfather translated more elegantly as “What do you gentleman think of my granddaughters going attending to school here?”
As Ortiz in a thick Spanish accent made courteous replies about how nice the people were, how pretty the town, how ideal the weather, Little Maeve saw Deuce making a bee-line for them. Her grandfather made some little joke in Spanish in response to Ortiz’s diplomatic comments. After a double-take at the girls’ grandfather Brigham responded in like language.
Deuce broke into the circle at that moment. His face flushed with emotion. He stood taller than usual. His chest puffed out. No rage twisted his face when got Agatha’s attention. He saved that for when he turned towards the young men. His mouth open and barked “Grand Daddy!” Apparently, he’d never seen his grandfather behind the tree.
“Deuce!” his grandfather yelled. “I want you to meet these young men. They want to talk to us about God. This is Elder Ortiz. He is here on an English speaking mission from Columbia. Elder Brigham here is on a Spanish-speaking mission.”
Deuce got pulled into his grandfather’s arms. He listened as Ortiz explained that the “Book of Mormon” in his hand was another testament of Jesus Christ. The doors opened to the theatres about then. Agatha’s uncles called for their father and mother to lead the way in. Two additional tickets appeared like magic from his pocket. He pushed Deuce and Ortiz ahead of him.
“Brigham, bring along my grand-daughters please.”
Brigham sat between Agatha and Maeve during the whole performance of, remarkably “Tristan and Isolde”, just in front of the girls’ grandparents. Brigham admitted that Southern Oregon might be the school for him when his mission ended. At the end of the evening Agatha’s grandfather invited the missionaries on the train trip the family planned for the next day. He pointed out how many people they’d be able to give their testimony to. Clearly, neither Ortiz nor Brigham needed the added encouragement.
As the audience strolled their separate ways, their grandfather took Agatha and Deuce under his arms. Little Maeve after exchanging looks with her grandfather knowingly followed along.
“He reminds me of your father.” Their grandfather said. Deuce, who barely recalled their father, nodded vigorously, after all Ortiz has their father’s manly dark looks and serious countenance. Agatha and Little Maeve shared a look of surprise. They assumed their grandfather meant Brigham. Agatha’s father had been notoriously not handsome nor blonde. “He has your father’s graciousness, your father’s artistic ability and charm. I like him.”
Deuce was sent to find his step-father,
“You know girls. Five percent of Mormon missionaries return with foreign brides.”
“Grand-Daddy!”
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