154 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
154 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
It's All Greek to Uncle Thaddeus
|
||
Copyright (c) 1993, Joe DeRouen
|
||
All rights reserved
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Uncle Thaddeus was a retired travelling salesman. During his
|
||
career, he'd sold just about anything from aluminum siding for cars to
|
||
diet edible underwear. No matter how ridiculous the concept was, Uncle
|
||
Thaddeus could sell it.
|
||
What was his secret to the Great Sell, as people often referred to
|
||
it? He talked them into submission. Something about their lives or the
|
||
product would remind him of a story he'd once heard (or, more likely,
|
||
lived) and he'd just take it from there.
|
||
Thaddeus was by far the best in his field. People would often buy
|
||
anything at all from him just to get him to shut up! If there was
|
||
anything he loved to do more than smoke Royal Cuban cigars, it was to
|
||
talk. And he didn't just talk, he told tales. Tall tales, to use a
|
||
phrase from days gone by. Oh, we could never prove that his tales
|
||
weren't true; he crafted each with the precision of one of those little
|
||
ship-in-a-bottle builders.
|
||
We'd learned to avoid his stories whenever possible, or suffer the
|
||
always-jolting consequences of his punch line. Often, though, it just
|
||
wasn't possible.
|
||
|
||
We were all sitting around the fireplace, waiting for Aunt Louise to
|
||
bring out the Thanksgiving turkey. My brother Bobby, Heather (my wife),
|
||
and, of course, Uncle Thaddeus. "You'll have to come over more often,
|
||
Joe!" Roared Uncle Thaddeus, between puffs on his Royal Cuban cigar. His
|
||
red face beamed down at me, and he smiled. "It's been ages! Why, we
|
||
have so much to catch up on!"
|
||
"Umm. . . I think I hear Aunt Louise in the kitchen." I replied
|
||
hastily, knowing the signs of Uncle Thaddeus gearing up for one of his
|
||
stories. "She might need help with that turkey."
|
||
Heather smiled at me. "I'll go. You stay here and visit with your
|
||
uncle." She rose with a flourish from the couch that we shared and before
|
||
I knew it was through the kitchen doors and gone.
|
||
"Damned woman. . ." I muttered to Bobby, who shrugged with
|
||
resignation.
|
||
Uncle Thaddeus managed to stand, his hulking 6'4" frame just
|
||
clearing the roof support beam above. Crimson cheeks spread out in a
|
||
smile, and he blew a generous puff of smoke in my general direction.
|
||
"This reminds me. Did I ever tell you about my friend Penny Stein? No, of
|
||
course I didn't. You'd remember something like that." He paused
|
||
expectantly, waiting for me to say something.
|
||
"No, I don't think you have." I almost sighed, relinquishing myself
|
||
to the unavoidable.
|
||
Throughout this exchange, Bobby had edged further and further away
|
||
from the edge of the couch. He was just about to make a run for it when,
|
||
quick as his frame could take him, Uncle Thaddeus was beside him.
|
||
"You'll want to hear this too, Bobby. It's a marvelous tale!" He
|
||
thundered, slapping my brother on the back. "You see, it all began many
|
||
years ago, when I was dating a reporter by the name of Penny Stein. Ever
|
||
heard of her, Joe?"
|
||
"I don't think that I have, now that. . ."
|
||
"Probably a little bit before your time." He frowned, rolling the
|
||
cigar around in his mouth. "You see, she was an up-and-coming
|
||
investigative journalist then, and had her eye on the biggest story of
|
||
her career. You see, the King of Shag Gydo'G had just died." He paused for
|
||
effect, then cleared his throat to continue. "Shag Gydo'G was, and still is,
|
||
I imagine, a curious little island off the coast of Greece. Being a
|
||
curious little island, it naturally had curious and quaint little
|
||
customs to go along with it.
|
||
"Tradition held that a King's soul was so full and rich that he
|
||
needed more of a vessel for it that the human body would normally
|
||
provide. On a King's 13th birthday, he was taught in the ways of
|
||
ceramics. By the 14th birthday, he was to have sculpted and created a
|
||
urn of great and magnificent proportions. This urn was to help house his
|
||
soul and, ultimately, see his demise."
|
||
"And what a magnificent urn the King created! There were gold
|
||
inlaid runes on one side, depictions of great battles on the other, and
|
||
great diamonds and rubies everywhere else! Truly, the urn was fit for a
|
||
king!"
|
||
Bobby and I groaned in unison, knowing that the worst was yet to
|
||
come.
|
||
"When the King died, he would be cremated and his ashes sifted into
|
||
the urn, and dumped - urn and all - into the Aegean sea, upon the hour
|
||
of his birth."
|
||
"So all of his life, the king was expected to preserve this vessel,
|
||
guarding it with his very life. If the King didn't keep his urn, as it
|
||
were, he'd soon be out on the streets."
|
||
That one hurt! I stifled a groan at my uncle's pun. I'd never let
|
||
him know that one got to me!
|
||
"Of course," He continued, seemingly oblivious to my lack of
|
||
response. "I wouldn't expect either of you to understand. After all, it
|
||
IS just Greek to you."
|
||
"Oy vey!" Bobby slapped his head in mock-rage, apparently unable to
|
||
show the great restraint I'd thus far managed.
|
||
"This King," Intoned Uncle Thaddeus, the barest hint of a smile
|
||
visible on his full lips. "had been born at the stroke of noon, and
|
||
would go out the same."
|
||
"I think I need to. . ." Bobby started, then fell quiet as Uncle
|
||
Thaddeus' gaze turned to meet his.
|
||
"It's no use." I sighed to Bobby, leaning back in the couch.
|
||
"Penny had stowed away on the yacht that had been assigned to take
|
||
the King's ashes out to sea. You see, the Crown Prince Hali was also on
|
||
the yacht, and the world awaited with bated breath to see the new King's
|
||
visage. Penny planned to shoot a few pictures and then escape on a
|
||
rubber lifeboat she'd managed to hide aboard the yacht, and, with a few
|
||
photos, make her career. What she hadn't planned on was terrorists from
|
||
H'Chali, a small island off the *other* coast of Greece, and mortal
|
||
enemies of the great King of Shag Gydo'G."
|
||
"Penny had managed to steal a few shots of the Crown Prince Hali,
|
||
and was just about ready to make her escape when it happened. The
|
||
terrorists were upon the boat in seconds, just half an hour before the
|
||
urn was due to be dumped. The terrorists - there must have been hundreds
|
||
of them - overwhelmed the Shag Gydo'Gians, slew the Crown Prince, and
|
||
set the yacht on fire, all in a matter of minutes. And then they were
|
||
gone."
|
||
"Penny drew herself out from the lounge she'd managed to hide
|
||
behind, only to discover everyone dead and the ship going down in
|
||
flames. Her film forgotten (alas, for she never gained the fame she
|
||
rightly deserved) and her hidden lifeboat blocked by flames, she let her
|
||
instincts for survival take over. Running to the ceramic urn, she dumped
|
||
the King's ashes into the sea. With a wish and a prayer, she jumped into
|
||
the urn, pulled the plug in over her, then rocked herself until the urn
|
||
tipped over the bow of the burning ship and into the waters below."
|
||
"Just about a week later, the urn washed up on the southern coast
|
||
of Greece. Dehydrated and half-starved, Penny thanked her lucky stars to
|
||
be alive. She'd lost over half her body weight during her week-long
|
||
ordeal but, of course, everyone agreed that if they couldn't have the
|
||
full Penny a ha'Penny would just have to do. Truly, she must have been
|
||
blessed!" Thaddeus smiled, scoring another stifled groan from Bobby and
|
||
myself. "You see, the moral of this. . ."
|
||
"Ahem." I coughed, barely able to contain myself. A smug grin
|
||
spread over my face. I had him! "May I?" Uncle Thaddeus look
|
||
non-plussed, then motioned for me to speak with a grand sweep of his
|
||
arms. I smiled again to myself. Finally, I was going to beat him at his
|
||
own game. "The moral of the story, of course, is this: A Penny urned is
|
||
a Penny saved."
|
||
Bobby smiled, the light of truth finally dawning upon him. "Hey,
|
||
you're right!" Thaddeus reduced us both to silence with a single nod.
|
||
"Close, my boy, but," He paused to sit his still-smoking cigar in a
|
||
nearby ashtray. "No stogie. You see, your moral is a good one, and
|
||
partly true, but it doesn't quite capture the essence of the story."
|
||
"Oh C'mon!" I was starting to get annoyed. I had him, and he knew
|
||
it. I'd finally beaten him at his own game.
|
||
"Hear me out." He smiled, a merry twinkle dancing through his eyes.
|
||
"The Shag Gydo'Gians hadn't been paying attention. I said it was
|
||
half-an-hour 'til noon when the terrorists attacked. That wasn't
|
||
altogether true, though it was from their standpoint. You see, they'd
|
||
crossed a time zone only hours before, but failed to take that into
|
||
account. It was actually 12:30 PM when the terrorists had boarded their
|
||
ship, half an hour *after* they were to have dumped the urn. If they'd
|
||
been on time, Penny would have been forced to go down with the ship."
|
||
Uncle Thaddeus winked at us, on a roll now. "You see, if the Shag
|
||
Gydo'Gians had been better clock-watchers. . ." He paused, plucking his
|
||
cigar from the ashtray. Things grew hazy as he sucked on the end of the
|
||
Royal Cuban, billowing out a stream of smoke, then stepped through it.
|
||
"Suffice it to say that a switch in time saved Stein."
|
||
I groaned with defeat, barely able to discern my uncle's crowning
|
||
smile through the gauzy screen of smoke.
|
||
|
||
|