I spent an hour or so this morning working my way through the Yellowstone pictures, got them resized to something more manageable, then copied onto a CD.
CS, the president of the knitting guild, came over to knit and chat for a couple hours in the late morning. I worked on the ribbing of the Fishermen's Cardigan, adding a few rows to the five I knitted last night. Then I spent most of the afternoon knitting up to ten rows of ribbing, cutting one of the natures brown yarns and adding the brown tweed marl yarn, then knitting the first row of sand stitch. Which to my dismay doesn't look all that different from two natures brown and one natural. *sigh*
Because I don't have anything else, here's a picture of Old Faithful.
18 September--Barbara Malcolm, Horizon.
I stayed
in my chair until the light began to fade.
I made myself a cup of herbal tea, pulled on a coat and hat, and went
out onto the porch to watch the sunset.
For the first time in over a week the clouds had flown and the sky was
tinted a beautiful rosy pink color. The
spicy orange steam from the tea warmed my lips as I gazed at the horizon,
thinking about how different my life had become. When I finished the last sip, the sun was
sending its last rays of gold above the horizon making the sky look like a
movie screen. I went inside to dress for
dinner. Ignoring the feeling that I
should be wearing a float-y floral dress, I pulled out a pair of beautiful
charcoal wool slacks in deference to the frigid weather. Over it I put on a thin white sweater and
topped it off with a red wool blazer I hadn’t been able to resist at the
after-Christmas sales. Black leather
boots that looked dressy, but were sturdy enough for tramping through snow and
ice, completed my outfit.
I checked my watch. It would take me about twenty minutes to get
to Abel’s, allowing plenty of time in case the roads were icy. Driving through the mid-winter dark, I could
see couples leaving home, waving goodbye to children left with baby-sitters so they
could enjoy dinner alone. The parking
lot of Sandburg’s Steaks & Beer was filled to overflowing. Every place I passed that served dinner
looked jammed. It made me glad we were
staying in that night. Seeing so many
couples out made me think about the Valentine’s Days Bert and I had
celebrated. Never very romantic, Bert
would usually remember to leave a card for me on the kitchen table when he left
for work. A few times he’d actually
bought me a gift, something practical rather than romantic. He never took me to dinner. He didn’t believe in going out to dinner. He always said he worked hard to raise our
food and I was a good cook. That meant
he didn’t want to pay someone else for a meal he could have gotten cheaper at
home. A few times I had gone all out for
Valentine’s Day. I’d washed and ironed
his mother’s Irish linen tablecloth, stopped at the grocery for a bouquet of
flowers, got out the silver candlesticks we’d gotten from some distant relative
as a wedding gift, and made a fancy dinner.
Actually, I only made a fancy dinner once. Bert had complained the entire meal that he
didn’t recognize anything on his plate, so the next time I made a special meal
I’d made sure to prepare something just a little outside the norm. It was a disappointing way to celebrate the
lovers’ holiday but I kept reminding myself that Bert’s good qualities
outweighed the bad. Useless nostalgic
thoughts like that accompanied me all the way to Abel’s.
When I’d parked and
gotten out of the car, I noticed that he’d replaced the white light bulb in his
porch light with a red one and had hung a heart-shaped wreath on the door. All along the walk from the street to the
door were lumeñeros, white paper bags weighted with sand and each holding a
glowing candle. He had cut out hearts on
the sides of the bags so there were glowing hearts reflected on the
cement. I felt like a queen on the way
to her coronation. I was also worried
that the wood carving I’d gotten him didn’t measure up. Before I had a chance to ring the bell, the
door opened and there stood my valentine, resplendent in a red v-necked sweater
and a white bow tie dotted with hearts.
“Happy Valentine’s Day,
Gail,” he said, and swept me into the house and into his arms.
“The same to you,” I said
nearly smothered in his embrace. When he
released me and turned so he could take my coat, I said, “You’re going to get a
reputation with that red light over your door.
Or are you thinking of running a house of ill repute as a side job?”
“What do you mean ‘house of ill repute’?”
“Oh come on, Abel,” I said,
laughing, “haven’t you ever heard of a red light district? You know, where the ladies of the evening ply
their trade.”
He looked as if I’d slapped
him. “I didn’t mean… Of course I’ve heard of them. I just thought you’d like my decorations.”
“I did. I do, and this whole day has been one long
romantic surprise. I’m overwhelmed. Thank you.
I love your wreath, the lumeñeros, and even the red light bulb. It just struck me as funny.” I cupped his cheek. “I didn’t mean to hurt your feelings.”
“That’s okay.” He took my elbow and escorted me into the
living room where soft music played on the stereo, a bottle of champagne sat
chilling in a silver wine bucket and a tray of hors d’oeuvres rested on the
coffee table. “You see, Marcella never
wanted to make much of Valentine’s Day.
When we were first married, I brought her a bouquet of roses and took
her out for a fancy dinner. She berated
me for weeks for ‘wasting our hard-earned money’ so I never did it again.” While he was talking, he popped the cork on
the champagne and poured it into a pair of crystal flutes. He raised his glass to me and said, “To the
woman I hope stays my Valentine forever,” and took a sip.
I raised mine to him and said, “To
the most surprising man I’ve ever had the pleasure of knowing,” and
sipped. I reached down beside me and
handed him the red bag tied with a silver ribbon.
Spots of pink bloomed high on his
cheeks as he took the package. “Gee,
Gail, thanks.” He sat looking at it, not
even peering inside.
“Well, open it!” I said.
“Oh, okay.” His long fingers were gentle as they teased
apart the knot in the bow and lifted the bundle of tissue paper out of the bag,
catching the card with his thumb and bringing it out too. He set the bag down on the floor and laid the
gift on his lap. Carefully he opened the
card, read it, smiled, and closed it.
“Thanks, I feel the same way,” he said, his eyes misty. He leaned toward me and we kissed.
By that time I was
getting anxious for him to see my gift.
My fingers itched to reach over and help him but I resisted.
He unwrapped the tissue
and held up the woodcarving. It was a
statue of a couple dancing but it wasn’t a realistic piece, it more suggested
the man and woman and their graceful movement together. “Gail,” he said, “it’s beautiful. Thank you.”
He ran his hands over the smooth wood, just as I did when I found it at
the winter art fair.
“You’re welcome,” I said
with a tight throat, “I’m glad you like it.
That’s the way I feel when we dance.”
We sat on the sofa and enjoyed the
wonderful things Abel had spent the day making: stuffed mushroom caps, shrimp
with a creamy dill sauce, slices of ham and cream cheese rolled around a dill
pickle, and little cheese puffs.
“Everything’s delicious,” I
said. “You must have been slaving away
since dawn. You know, on my drive over
here I saw a lot of couples out celebrating.
It made me think of how Bert wasn’t very romantic and never did much for
Valentine’s Day. What you said about
Marcella not wanting you to spend money to celebrate it, made me think she and
Bert would have gotten on just fine.”
“They probably would have, but then you and I
wouldn’t have met.” He looked into my
eyes and said, “I wouldn’t want to have missed meeting you for the world.” He leaned toward me, put his hands on my
shoulders, and pulled me to him for a long kiss. Our arms slid around each other in an embrace
and we both leaned into the sofa cushions.
The kiss seemed to go on forever.
He nibbled his way down my jaw to my neck and his hands began to roam
over my sweater. “I hoped you’d be wearing
a low-cut blouse,” he murmured into my throat.
Putting a hand on either side of his
face, I pulled his lips to mine and said, “It’s too cold outside to expose my
tender flesh.”
Just as we got back to
our necking, a buzzing sound erupted from the kitchen.
“Dammit,” Abel said against my
lips. “The potatoes are done. I’ve got to go finish cooking dinner.” He stood up, ran a hand over his hair, and
tugged his sweater down. He held out his
hand to me. “Want to keep me company?”
I let him pull me to my feet and
spent a moment smoothing my own hair and tugging my blazer into place. “Sure.”
He refilled our glasses and carried
them into the kitchen. He wouldn’t let
me help; he insisted I sit at the breakfast bar and watch while he cooked.
He turned off the oven so the
potatoes didn’t overcook. Then he melted
a bit of butter in a frying pan, sautéed garlic, and slid lamb chops
in. While they sizzled, he microwaved
asparagus.
“Mmm, I love asparagus,”
I said. “Where did you find it this time
of year?”
“At that new grocery in Simpson, on
the east side near the greenhouse.
They’ve got a lot of things you just can’t find at Merricks’.” He waggled his eyebrows at me. “Asparagus is a very erotic vegetable, don’t
you think?”
“I guess. I never thought of it as erotic.” I sipped my champagne, wondering how the
evening would end.
My trainer just texted that his packing to move hasn't gone as quickly as he'd hoped (big surprise) so he cancelled our session tomorrow. Funny thing, an hour ago I was wondering how I could get out of it. Fate is my friend.
--Barbara
1 comment:
Oh my goodness -- how on earth is Abel going to keep up the pace when the next holiday rolls around? He definitely "put the big pot in the little one" - whatever that means!!! I still think a diamond ring is coming next.
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