Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Through the kitchen door at Gloria's

Every table in the shop was occupied, full beyond normal capacity, chairs were becoming scarce.  Good thing the volunteer fire marshal had other matters of public gathering on his mind.  It was announced, confirmed, that there would be a showing of North by Northwest that evening, location being determined.  Meanwhile, the sight of Cove matrons in the colors of tropical sunsets demanded addjustments of perception.  The whole-heartedness of their laughter and the gleam in their eyes could be called a bargain at any price.  Gloria felt a feather's brush of longing to step so far outside what she thought of as her expected, institutional self.

As she sliced more lemons, limes and oranges for iced tea, she heard two sharp knocks at the back door, then watched the knob turn.  The gentlemen callers, Mr. Guscott and Mr. Apotienne, explained it seemed wiser, perhaps less disruptive to look for her in the kitchen rather than enter through the front of the shop.  Squeezing between tables would have thrust them into the maelstrom and caused, most likely, a lot of silly guessing as to their purpose.  For a moment appearing almost as Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee, quite smart and not at all silly in their not-too-musty-or-mothballish first-choice shirts, they announced in unison,"We found this for you," held out the tissue wrapped object - Mr. Vetter was most accommodating - and Mr. Guscott added, "We have nearly lost our wits.  If there is a parade, we will probably end up in feathers, throwing beads to the crowd.  Our compasses and barometers have become useless relics.  We thought this might suit you."

Since Mr. Guscott got to make the speech, Mr. Apotienne was the obvious candidate to hand Gloria her surprise.  With a nod of thanks and a wistful look, just for a moment to the summer world beyond the kitchen door, she turned back the tissue to reveal the under sea pattern, shook out the shirt to see it whole.  The prominent starfish, all its leggies intact, stood out near the right front hem where it seemed to shine with an inner light that reached into the printed water outside its shape.  Fish, crabs, other shelled and tentacled and finned creatures appeared to cavort with slow purpose in the shirt's lagoon water.

"If I'm not the grandest tiger in the jungle in this, I will be very close.  Thank you," Gloria told them.  "It's perfect."

8 comments:

Erin in Morro Bay said...

"It's perfect." - And so it was. Dreams may not come true in the Cove, but they come closer than in most other places.
Erin

Claire Beynon said...

As Erin and Gloria say, 'It's perfect'. Each episode is a surprise and delight, Marylinn. What wouldn't give for a shirt in whose 'lagoon water' fish, crabs and other shelled, tentacled and finned creatures appear to cavort. . .

I also think we would do well to adopt the term (and spelling for) addjustments of perception. Anything that aids and adds colour or magic to the illusion. . .

xo

susan t. landry said...

this seems so real to me, now, this world that you've created.
i realized while reading this installment that i i was thinking, 'oh i hope Marylinn posted some pics of the Cove matrons in their tropical sunset colors'...,
before i realized it was
only
a
story.
hmm. magic arts there, my friend.

Lisa H said...

The story itself is only out shined by the beauty of the writing. A perfect piece of art: each and every installment.

Marylinn Kelly said...

Erin - Perhaps not all dreams, or maybe the ones that matter most and yes, they come much closer in the Cove, which is why it has to exist. And why I find I want to spend so much time there. xo

Marylinn Kelly said...

Claire - Thank you. Do you, as I, find the ad(d)justments to perception to be a constant, continual task? Everything is always in flux or, if it is fixed, our ability to connect with it in a meaningful way has a long learning curve. The beginning of realizing that it is up to us to recognize the magic, to be that open and flexible, to be that new, always. xo

Marylinn Kelly said...

Susan - I could not be happier with your response, thank you. To create any form of magic, is there any higher aspiration?, and when it arrives and calls your name, wants you to come out and play - I have never had such an experience. The shifting sands of reality. There is so much to learn. xo

Marylinn Kelly said...

Lisa - Thank you. This nourishes me as I never imagined, befriends me in what is becoming reality, a whole new way of falling in love. xo