305 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
305 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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LETTER TO LILLIAN
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by Gay Bost
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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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"Oh! Look! Mama! A tr-u-nk!" Childe bounced in exaggerated
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abandon, fluffy tangles and curls, mop-top that might have been
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in eyelet and satin, rather than denim and little else. Childe had
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discarded sensible outfit after sensible outfit in favor of her
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brother's denim coveralls, no shirt, no shoes and no decorum at all.
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"Hush. You'll wake the rest of them and I don't want sticky
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boys before I've had a chance up here . . . in relative peace." Lil
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glanced meaningfully at Childe, wishing her to settle, softly, if at
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all possible. "Now, let's have a look. Open it."
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"Oh! Mama!" Delighted, Childe pounced upon the slightly domed lid
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of the old trunk, its wooden braces still structurally sound, metal
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hinges and attachments time pitted but unrusted. It would, more
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than likely, survive Childe's attentions.
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Lil pulled a dubious looking chair from its canted exile and
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tested the seat. She sat, gingerly, secretly smiling at Childe's
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attempts to free the locking mechanism. Slipping her hand into her
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apron pocket, noisily patting the key ring within to attract Childe's
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curiosity, she waited. Not long, the waiting, with this, her youngest
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issue and only daughter. Childe's bright eyes flashed with shared
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mischief, catching the mother at play. Like a wild kitten she leapt
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at Lil's lap, batting at the larger hand and claiming the rather
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large, old fashioned key ring.
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"Wicked Mama!" Childe laughed, rattling the keys above her head,
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dancing about the front of the trunk, bending industriously to the
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task at hand.
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Lil had a momentary flash of hidden memory, an imposition of
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short term over long. When the house had come to her at her estranged
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father's death she'd rejected, immediately, the idea of possessing it
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or anything it held. But the keys had come from the lawyer, boxed,
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quite ridiculously, as if they were a precious jewel, in a brass case
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shaped like a book. Copper strips bound the "book" as old school
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books had once been bound by leather straps. Two copper "buckles" the
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closure.
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Then, as now, a face, framed by silken mahogany brown curls, wispy
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as Childe's, had peered down at her. She shook her head, cleared
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ancient cobwebs from unseen corners, as she supposed she must, soon,
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in this attic.
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"Mother!" Childe said, adult and perturbed at the ripe old age of
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three-going-on-four, "You'll simply have to assist me."
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"I think the smaller brass key, my love," she said.
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Childe separated said key from the others and held it aloft,
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quite suddenly the image of pained patience. Lil wrapped her fingers
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around the small hand and guided the key into the lock, her cheek
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brushing against Childe's hair. "Now . . ." the key fit snugly,
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turned as if thirty years of abandonment had never passed "so!" the
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latch popped loose. "Voila!" Lil lifted the lid and set it back on
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its hinges for Childe. "Carefully," she added in a whisper.
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"And WHO does this trunk belong to?" Childe wanted to know --
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now that the treasure had been breached, the lace and satin freed.
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Morning light mixed with silent melodies, dancing with attic dust
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in narrow beams which fell from window to floor, as if the opening
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of the trunk had somehow altered the quality of illumination.
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"I think perhaps this attic will make a fine sewing room, once
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it's had a good cleaning." Lil brushed a strand of her own honey
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brown hair away from her temple and looked about the room. "Yes,
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and perhaps a little girl will learn to be a little girl here." She
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had her doubts, well founded, but she could dream. Brothers coming
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before could alter a young lady's life before it had begun,
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especially if the young lady was, at three-going-on-four, already
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a match for boys of 5 and 7.
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"Mama!"
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Her attention demanded, Lil bent double over her own lap and
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leaned her elbows on her knees, peering into the trunk with a
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Childe-like interest of her own. "Carefully, one item at a time.
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Lay them outside the trunk neatly. This is our treasure and we
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don't want it tattered anymore than time has already done."
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Childe lifted a lace edged hanky, long tapered fingers, scruffy
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but clean, slipping beneath the damask, lifting oh so carefully the
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feather light and age fragile relic. "What is it?"
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"A hanky."
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"It is not!"
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"But it is, dear." Lil accepted the thing, laid it on her apron
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and spread it upon her knee.
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"One good honk and it'd fall apart!" Sane eyes, reasoning with
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an irrational concept, demanded the world be set right, indignantly.
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"Ladies didn't honk into their hankies, Childe.
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"Mama!"
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"Ladies didn't scramble over fences and fly from trees into
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rented dumpsters, either."
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Childe searched for something else of interest within the trunk,
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a sudden convenience to distract a reproachful mother. She produced
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a dresser scarf, tiny faded pansies the edging, presented it regally
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to her mother and awaited explanation, all innocent expectation.
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* * *
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Half way into the right side of the trunk, after numerous
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discussions on the fine details of life in "the old days" with
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explainations of such things as dressers, scarves, hand mirrors,
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perfume atomizers of cut lead crystal, silver filigree letter
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openers and matching wax seal stamps -- a tousled head appeared
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at the top of the stair.
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"Oh neat!" Thundering footsteps, a temporary retreat in search
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of backup, pounded away. The scout had found the women encamped on
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prime real estate.
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"Childe," Lil said. "It is time we took our stand." She stood,
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took her daughter's hand in her own, led her to the head of the
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stairs and bent to whisper into her ear. They two placed themselves
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across the threshold and awaited the invasion.
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Not long in the coming, two sets of hooves approached, expensively
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shod in the finest synthetic substance available. Nikes advanced,
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matched in stride. Two heads appeared. Two sets of eyes looked up,
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two boys, advancing.
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Childe squared her shoulders, stood tall and announced, herald
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of the bright morning, "We claim these heights of Womanhood!"
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Lil bit her lip, stifling a loose giggle, released a stage
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whisper from the corner of her mouth, "That's `We claim these
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heights *FOR* Womanhood'."
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"But Mom!" their arms crossed over their chests, as they whined,
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in unison.
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The boys advanced a step upward. Childe advanced three,
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instinctively realizing the advantage of established occupation and
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glared at them. Lil mirrored the glare, her head cocked a tad to the
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right for emphasis. "Done deal, boys."
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A larger head appeared, a stouter foot upon the bottom most
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steps, advancing. A dark head, furrowed brows, soft eyes which,
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thankfully, the children shared, lifted, assessing the silent scene.
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He winked at Childe, clapped a hand on each of the boy's shoulders
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and bent to murmur between their heads, "What stands before you, my
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sons, is the unmovable, the inevitable, the reason for your very
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existence." He stood erect, patted each shoulder firmly and added,
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"Looks like Cheerios are on me this morning."
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"Bill?"
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"Yes, Beloved?"
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"Nut n' Honey." She winked back at him. "We're out of Cheerios."
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"It's ours?" Childe asked. She knew a too-easy win when she saw
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one.
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"Well, Love, with diligence and an ever watchful guard, it will
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be."
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* * *
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"What *is* it?" Childe wanted to know. Lil blinked, trying to
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count off the times her daughter had bounced and bobbed, her face
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up-turned, expectantly demanding, cheerfully yet another explanation.
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A tidy hand had covered a wooden cigar box with padded fabric,
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trimmed it in lace and tied it off with satin ribbon. Lil's fingers
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worked at the knotted bow. Something, many somethings rattled within.
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Childe's hands twitched, nearing. Lil gave her a warning look and
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smiled.
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"Patience. Patience is a virtue," she said, a rote recital she'd
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performed as a child.
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"No she isn't. Patience is a Moore. Her mommy always said she
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wished she had more patience and then when she had a little girl she
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named her Patience."
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Another rote recital, Childe style, her father's playful
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attitude forever imprinted upon the name of a playmate. The ribbon
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came undone, at last. Lil lifted the lid and peaked inside, teasing.
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Childe's hands came up, imploring. Lil chuckled and handed her the
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box.
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"Buttons!" Childe exploded, jiggling the box recklessly. "Oh,
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Mama! May I count them?"
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Lil nodded at her daughter's retreating back, a bit relieved to
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see Childe perch on a quilt-piled day bed near a window.
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"Don't . . ." she began.
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"Oops!" The first button had found the floor. Childe scrambled
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after it.
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Lillian returned to the trunk. Beneath the button box was
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another fabric covered cigar box, less securely tied, which held
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short lengths of lace, twists of ribbon and a pincushion. She set
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that aside, having uncovered an off-white piece, soft satin ribbon
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edging a tiny yoked bib. She inhaled sharply as she lifted it, her
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throat tightening with the caught breath. By size for a smallish
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child, the long skirt meant to brush the tops of patent leather
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shoes, a dress sewn for her too many years ago.
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There was so little memory left of the soft hands that must have
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started this gown, sewn this ribbon into the piping, gathered
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these sleeves. She laid her cheek against the fabric, ignoring the
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slightly musty smell time had imparted to it.
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There had been Aunt Clarinda, but she'd never sewn. Lil
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wondered, her eyes gone distant focused. On the day bed Childe
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murmured, having stilled long enough to fall asleep, the button box
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held tightly against her chest, the ribbon hopelessly knotted by
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inexpert fingers.
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Lil smiled at her sleeping tomboy, the two of them somehow
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caught up in a world of lace and old buttons, a world she herself
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had rarely seen as a child and wished to capture for her own sleeping
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angel. There were rhinestone covered buttons in that box, ceramic and
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bone. She'd wager very few were of plastic. She shook the dress
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lightly, preparatory to refolding it. A dry rustle slipped from the
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hanging folds of the skirt and fell into the trunk.
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Slow, frozen for a moment, she looked from Childe to the piece of
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paper and back. The attic room was silent, Childe's breathing even,
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shallow, barely discernible. Outside a bird chirped. Another joined
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it. They'd probably discovered a lazy long haired tabby sitting in
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the pantry window, watching them.
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"Never fear," she consoled them, her hand reaching for the
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fallen note. "Mr. T. Tom would rather dream you than actually chase
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after you."
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Shadow grew across her wrist and forearm as the edge of the
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trunk cut off the sunlight coming through the window. Soon the sun
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would warm the room. In summer curtains would need to be drawn to
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reduce the heat.
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She watched her own fingers open the folded paper, things separate
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from herself. For a moment the dark lines refused to come into focus.
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Reading glasses occurred. Her eyelashes fluttered as she realized she
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had none to her name. The line cleared.
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"My Dearest Lillian; " it began, a flowing scrawl cut short. The
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rest of the page was blank. The aged paper had been wrinkled and
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smoothed, folded a bit unevenly and slipped into the skirt of the
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gown.
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She folded it and unfolded it, her fingers pleating the ancient
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crease over and over again.
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"My Dearest Lillian," she whispered.
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From the small day bed Childe spoke. "I would have written pages
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and pages, but your father found me and tore me away. They said I
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was unfit. They said I was crazy. Sent me away to a Rest Home where
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I rested little. I loved you, my sweet baby. I love you still."
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Lillian rose slowly, quietly, so not to awaken Childe, if indeed
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the frail pale lashes were lowered over the lively eyes, if indeed
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she was talking in her sleep, again.
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Bending over the sleeper, wistfully marveling at the dreamer in
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denim and scuffed elbows, she whispered, "My Dearest Lillian," her
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breath touching the hair above Childe's delicate ear.
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The lips moved, "They took my house. They took my baby. I was
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too "flighty", they claimed, to raise a child. But your father was
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too stern. I loved you, Lillian. I loved you." Childe's voice was
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deeper, devoid of its usual exuberance, a strange mix of urgency
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and melancholy. Lil fancied she was listening to the adult voice
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that would be.
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Lillian wondered how many of her mother's words could be gotten
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from Childe's dream before the approaching line of sunlight crossed
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the sleeping face and woke her daughter.
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"My Dearest Lillian," she prompted, again -- waiting . . . .
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# # #
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Copyright 1994 Gay Bost, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Gay is a Clinical Lab Tech with experience in Veterinary medicine.
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From NORTHERN California, she's resided in S.E. Missouri with her
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husband and an aggressive 6 year old boy, since 1974. Installed her
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first modem the summer of '92, has been exploring new worlds since.
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Her first publication, a short horror story, came when she was 17.
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The success was so overwhelming she called an end to her writing days
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and went in search of herself. She's still looking. Find Gay's great
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stories in the best Electronic Magazines.
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=====================================================================
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