That's my theory and I'm sticking to it.
JZ grilled brats for supper yesterday. HZ sent four of them home with me. There are two left. Man, there's nothing like a grilled brat. I learned from GZ to put coleslaw on my brat. Yum. Guess what I'm having tomorrow. That's right, brats!
Tonight at knitting I diligently knitted around and around and around on the Afterthought Everything Socks. In about an inch I can knit the cuff and then the fun begins. I have only once used waste yarn to hold a place then pulled it out, catching the stitches as I went to add a thumb to a mitt. This should be an adventure. Want to bet I'll blister the paint with my "frustration"?
When I got home from knitting I powered up the iPad (opened an app where the pattern is most easily followed) and cast on the second Fair washcloth. Aren't these cool colors? This is such a quick and easy pattern, here's what I knitted in a hour.
05 July--Barbara Malcolm, Horizon.
My untouched tea had cooled and
tears were flowing down my cheeks. I
hated to argue and it seemed like I’d been at odds with Clara for the last three
months. I was surprised at her for being
so angry, so hurt, so petty
over a few pairs of jeans and a haircut.
Okay, I suppose I had been waving my new life in her face. Had been doing the middle-aged version of
skipping around the playground singing “I’m better than you are” when I shared
my frustration with my painting and Abel Baker with her, but she was supposed
to be my best friend. She was supposed
to be on my side, be happy for me.
Instead of sympathizing with me, instead of laughing with me, she kept
bleating about how I had new friends, was bragging about my painting, and only
thought Abel was pursuing me to make myself bigger and better than her. That thought dried my tears. Ooh, she made me so mad sometimes.
She
was my oldest friend; I thought she knew me better. I loved her and I wanted her to love
me--warts and all. I supposed I’d have
to figure out a way to apologize, although I didn’t feel like I had anything to
apologize for. She was the one who got
angry and said all those hurtful things.
I
was working myself up to calling her, to figuring out what to say that would
tell her, without apologizing, that I still wanted to be friends, when I heard
footsteps coming up the back steps. I
heard the screen door open, and got up to open the back door.
“Oh,
Gail, I’m so sorry.” Clara’s
tear-streaked face was pinched white with cold and snowflakes covered her hair.
I
pulled the door wide. “Get in here
before you freeze.”
She
sat down in the nearest chair and put her hands over her face. “I’m sorry, so sorry. I don’t know what came over me today.” Snow fell from her shoulders and head as she
shivered, making a ring of melting white around her.
“Good
grief Clara, how long were you outside?”
I stood up and went to the bathroom to get a towel. “Get out of that wet coat and let me hang it
up. Here’s a towel to dry your
hair. You’re going to catch pneumonia.”
“I
don’t know how long I stood out there. I
just couldn’t go inside and face Hank.”
She sat back down, twisting the towel into a knot. “You know he always wants to hear about my
day and I couldn’t bring myself to tell him what I did.”
I
poured some tea into a mug and shoved it into the microwave to heat. “For heaven’s sake, all you did was speak
your mind. It wasn’t World War
III.” The microwave buzzed and I handed
her the mug. “Here, drink this before
you shiver yourself off the chair.” I
reheated the untouched tea in my own mug and sat across from her. “So, what was all that about?”
She
sipped her tea. “Mmm, this is good. Thanks.” I could see color beginning to come
back in her face, then she said, “I don’t know.
I guess I got to feeling that you’re changing everything about yourself
and I’m not changing anything. I’m the
same old boring Clara I’ve always been—fat, plain, and dumb. You’ve gotten a new hobby, well I guess you’d
call it a passion, and I’m the same.
You’ve got all new clothes and a snappy haircut; I’m the same. You have all these different friends, young
ones, old ones, and I don’t know anybody new. You’ve got two men interested in you and all
I’ve got is Hank.”
I
knew I had to stop her before she compared herself right into suicide. “Clara, you’ve got a terrible case of the
winter blahs, that’s all. You’ve always
been an interesting person, you’re active in the community, you love your kids
and Hank, right?”
“I
guess.”
“No,
don’t say ‘I guess.’ I’m right.” I reached to hold her hand. “You’ve always been the one on committees,
active in sports booster clubs, doing volunteer work. I’m the one who sat around here staying the
same all these years, keeping to myself, and never a part of the
community. So in reality, I’m just
catching up, that’s all.”
“Hey,
now that you mention it, you’re right.”
She put down her mug and smiled.
“What took you so long?’
Tomorrow's Saturday, right? Yeah, it has to be, I went to Friday Night Knitting tonight and there were other people there so it must be Friday. Either that or there are five very confused women on the west side of Green Bay, WI. Maybe I'll go to the Y tomorrow. I for sure am going to extend my morning walk tomorrow.
--Barbara
1 comment:
Whew!! Clara came to her senses and all's right with the world. What a pair they are.
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