Strange Manors, Chapter 6

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Chapter Six: Flight Risk
Shingles Manor, Wensleydale, October, 2019 (The following morning)

“Shahlah pute yer bag in’t boot, sir?”

At least, that’s what it sounded like the boy had said. I was finishing a late breakfast, and my brain appeared to be on a soft strike. “Work to rule,” as it were, and the contract apparently hadn’t specified translation services. “I’m sorry?”

“Yer bag,” he said patiently, shifting his eyes to the carryon that was my only luggage. “Would you lahk me ta pute it in’t boot of yer car?”

Slow and surly, my brain brought the memories of my decades-ago stay in this part of the world back online and the boy’s words rearranged themselves into something that made sense. “Yes, please. I’d appreciate it.” I fished the keys from my pocket and gave them to him.

The “Colonel” made no appearance this morning, and I didn’t expect him to. Holweard had been in quite the temper at the conclusion of our discussion. “Since you’ve already wasted the entire night talking,” he’d snapped, “you can bloody well come back to the hollow after moonrise if you’ve anything further to say.” Then he’d vanished, leaving me to make my tortured way back up the many, many levels of stairs to the crypt, and then back to the master bedroom, cursing a blue streak the whole way.

At least he’d left the lights on.

It had been 5:30 a.m. when I got to sleep, but after four hours or so I’d had all the “rest” I was likely to get. I threw off the covers and paced, like I was walking through everything that happened, again and again.

I’d spoken to an honest-to-gods-and-goddess immortal. Someone with first-hand knowledge of the world before Hastings . . . before the Norsemen, or even the Romans. I’m more than geek enough to eat all that up. He was utterly fascinating. Also obnoxious, conceited, opinionated, narcissistic, maddening, narrow-minded, unprincipled . . . . But still.

And, well . . . okay. The experience had been pretty amazing in other ways, too. What I had felt, in those moments that I had worn Freyia’s gown . . . . I couldn’t begin to describe it. If only . . . .

I snorted in amusement. I hadn’t gotten used to being stupid rich yet, but already I’d found that money couldn’t buy a lot of things. Both Holweard’s time and Freyia’s gown were definitely on that list. Indeed, Holweard’s sole interest in me was as the senior surviving heir of the Litton family. And I had zero desire to be Viscount Chingleput or the nominal master of Shingles. Less than zero desire. You couldn’t pay me to do it; sure as hell I wouldn’t whore myself for the “privilege!”

I’m not just a gamer, I’m a game designer. One of the best. I told myself that I had to be missing something, that it was just a matter of finding the right key. But try as I might, it wouldn’t come, and after a couple hours of pacing, I came to the reluctant conclusion that I didn’t have anything more to say to the Sprite after all.

Mom had suggested that I simply go play when I was done with my family business in the North of England, so I hadn’t actually made any plans. I could stay as long as I wanted, and I decided as I finished my beverage of someone else’s choice – which is to say, tea – that I’d more than done that.

Just slip out the back, Jack. Make a new plan, Stan.

Right. I trotted out the back door and down the steps, retrieved both keys and car from the boy who’d put my bag in the trunk, and sped off. Within a minute, a curve in the road wiped Shingles from my rear-view mirror.

Two and a half hours later, my car properly returned, I was at Leeds Bradford Airport, still with no plan, idly looking at places where all the pretty planes were scheduled to go. It might not have been the most sophisticated way to travel, but I literally had no deeds to do or promises to keep. All I had was a desire to be somewhere – anywhere – other than where I was. Get far, far away from trouble.

Or temptation.

Well, I was going to need a ticket to somewhere. So I found myself a cafe in the welcome hall, and wonder of wonders, it actually served coffee. From there, I looked at the list of departures, and tried to think what sounded like it might be interesting. Dublin sounded cool. Or possibly Dubrovnik. Maybe Czech out Prague . . . .

“Luigi Litton . . . what on earth are you doing here?”

Startled, I stopped gazing at the departures board and found a matron looking down at me, a funny sort of smile on her . . . .

Shit. Really? I mean, seriously? “It’s an airport, Heather. Is this a trick question?”

“And of all the airports in all the cities in the world, you walk into mine?”

That was . . . pretty good, actually. But . . . “Isn’t that s’posed to be my line?”

“I shouldn’t think so. Unless maybe you bought the place, which I suppose you might have done. Though, I’m not sure it’s the best investment.”

“So you’re saying I should tell them I’m not interested?”

“Definitely. One star; would not recommend.” She stood for a moment longer, then playfully said, “Aren’t you going to offer me a biscuit?”

I stood slowly, trying to regain my equilibrium. Just seeing her brought an immediate flood of memories, but not all those memories were good ones. I remember every detail. The Germans wore gray. You wore blue. I wore . . . Well, I was dressed like a French maid, so . . . very little?

After a quick and frantic search I found my manners where I keep my default settings. “Will you join me? Do you have time?”

“I’d like that.”

“Can I get you something?”

“No need.” She sat. When I still stood, irresolute, she said, “I’m fine. Sit.”

So I sat. I still couldn’t think what I was going to say to this woman, who had inadvertently shaped my life so much.

Heather being Heather, she took the initiative. “I’ve got a bone to pick with you,” she teased.

She seemed so glad to see me; I just smiled . . . .

Well, not exactly. Sure I smiled – but it probably made me look less like the happy-go-lucky student she remembered and more like a shark. “Do tell.”

Her eyes narrowed. “My boys – all three of them – couldn’t get enough of your horrid games. All day, all night. Why in heavens did you have to make such irritating characters?”

“That would be ‘Jiro. Or possibly his evil twin, Fus.”

“No! No! Don’t say the names! Never say the names! Those names are banned in my house! I can’t even hear them without their stupid, insidious laughter ringing in my ears!”

I chuckled. “All the characters, and their voices, were tested out the ying yang to ensure deep market penetration and profit maximization.”

“I can’t help thinking, somehow, that everything you just said is horse manure. Why might that be?”

“Because it is. My investors bought it, though.” I said nothing more, but my shark smile stayed firmly in place.

“Oh, come on, Weej. You know you’re going to spill!”

“Can you keep a secret?” My face, I’m sure, was wholly free of guile.

“Of course I can!”

Heather was, as I knew full well, constitutionally incapable of keeping a secret. But I didn’t mind this particular rumor getting around . . . very informally, of course. So I’d have just the right amount of plausible deniability. “I had a personal score to settle with a guy named Fusajiro.”

Her face lit up like the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree. “Oh, that’s simply delightful! Do remind me not to make you angry!”

I tried to come up with a non-revealing response, but all of my mental search terms generated non-valid results. Error 503. Backend fetch failed.

After watching my face register the internal malfunction, she sighed. “I guess it’s a bit late for that, isn’t it?”

Dammit! Do NOT go there! Reboot on safe mode! “I wasn’t angry at you, Heather.” I tried my very best to make it sound sincere.

“You are an appalling liar, Luigi Litton!”

You have no idea. “Nonsense! I’m an accomplished liar!”

She laughed. “You will say anything to win an argument, won’t you? But you can’t win this one. If you hadn’t been angry, you wouldn’t have tossed all my shoes.”

“I gave you back everything else. Even boxed it up for you.”

“I have a distinct recollection that my feet were very sore!”

Yeah. Got me. “Sorry about that.”

“There you go again.” Her smile, broad, amused, almost wicked, was exactly what I remembered. Still crazy, after all these years. “Lies. Just atrocious!”

“Same old Heather,” I chuckled. “The best defense is a good offense.”

“It is!” she insisted. “Well. That is to say . . . it is when you don’t have a defence.”

Keep it light, dude. “You’ve always got a defense.”

“Not this time.” Her voice was low, and serious in a way I’d seldom heard from her, which naturally made me both suspicious and uncomfortable. “I was an idiot. There’s no defence. I’ve wanted to write to you, so often, to apologize for how I treated you.”

I had locked this pain away for so many years. Why is it still there? My throat was suddenly dry and I took a gulp of coffee, playing for time. Disengage!

“That’s okay,” I said. Or intended to, anyway. What actually came out was, “I wasn’t hard to find.”

“You certainly weren’t. Could have knocked me over with a feather, the first time I saw your name on the back of one of Hector’s games!”

“You could try not to sound quite so astonished.”

“I was, though . . . I never really understood what you did with all that computer Hocus Pocus. And you have to admit, Brutus would never have said you were ambitious.”

“Given his track record with ambitious guys, I’m thinking that’s a good thing.”

“Right you are. But anyhow, there you were, the picture of success. And then, of course, I couldn’t possibly write. You’d just have thought . . . .”

Apparently she couldn’t bring herself to say “gold digger.” I wasn’t going to say it either, but that didn’t mean I wasn’t thinking it. We both were. The white elephant in the room.

“Weej —“

Danger, Will Robinson! I cut her off. “You don’t have to explain anything. It’s been over a long time.”

She shook her head, hard. “I need you to know the friendship was real. And I should have left it there — we were good friends.”

I’m afraid my look was a bit skeptical.

“We were friends, and we were good at it? Had fun together?”

I smiled. “Yes, absolutely.”

“There you go. But then I let my head get all filled with rubbish dreams about becoming some sort of great lady. God! I mean really — I’d have been a complete disaster at it.”

“Nah. You’d have rocked. Thrown the whole peerage on its collective ear.”

“I’m sure it’s been tried.”

“Not by someone with your . . . skills.”

“I’d have looked ridiculous.”

“Compared to whom? You have seen the peerage, haven’t you?”

“I’d have been beastly to the staff.”

“Yeah, well. Okay. Can’t argue with you there.”

She was silent for a moment. “I feel horrible about chasing you to California.”

“The tan looked good on you.”

She brightened. “Did it?”

“Absolutely! Best shade of red I’d seen outside of a lobster pot. Must have hurt, though.”

“Bastard!”

“Nah. You wouldn’t have chased me if I had been.”

“Certainly not!” It came out with her trademark zing, but then she caught herself, and added quietly, “And that was the whole problem.”

Dammit! Damn, damn, damnedy, damn, damn! Can’t you let me blame you in peace? Why can’t you just stay properly villainous? Rub your hands together and cackle or something?

“Okay, listen.” Deep breath. “You need to stop beating yourself up about this. I let it happen, and I knew . . . I knew it wasn’t love. It was fun; I enjoyed it. But we didn’t love each other.”

Her expression was indescribable. “You might have said something!”

“Told you that you had a defense.”

“You little git! What were you playing at?” The tone was humorous— but also, not.

“Charades?”

“Really?” No humor this time.

“Well . . . kind of, yeah.” I shrugged, uncomfortably. “I mean, I’m not normal; I get that. But I thought, ‘hey, I sure look normal. I’m in school, I’m cruisin’, and I’ve got this hot English girlfriend.’”

She gawped. “‘Hot’ and ‘English.’ Together. In the same sentence. Are you quite all right?”

“Well, hot and super cool all at the same time. You know Americans swoon whenever they hear a British accent.”

“Ah, yes. The colonial cringe.”

“Hey!”

“So I was effective arm candy?”

“Yeah. And so I figured, you know, maybe I’m okay? After all, my hot English girlfriend doesn’t mind if I like to . . . .’” I stopped myself before that got even more embarrassing, and simply concluded, “Anyway. I thought maybe I could fool the world.”

She saw where I’d been going. “I noticed all my little presents to you were in my box. Even that delightful maid’s outfit.”

“Yeah.”

“You looked adorable.”

“Thanks . . . I think.”

“So you just put it behind you?”

“Yes . . . .”

She gave me a skeptical look. “Your pause says otherwise.”

Keep it concrete, Weej! “I stopped dressing. I stopped fooling around, stopped trying to be normal. I thought I’d take a shot at being extraordinary instead.”

“If you do say so yourself?”

I shook my head. “Didn’t say I succeeded. It was just a dream.”

“Based on what I read about the sale of your company, I’d say you managed a pretty fair dream.”

“I got a good price for it.”

“Your company? Or your dream?” When I didn’t answer, her look softened. “Are you happy?”

“Bad time to ask.” Attempting to lighten the mood, I added, “after all, I’m still largely pre-caffeinated. How about you?”

“I had a cuppa.” Her smile said, two can play that game, and you’re outmatched!

“Witch! Are you happy?”

“You’re not going to believe this.”

I leaned back, smiling. “Probably not.”

She stuck her tongue out. “Well, don’t believe me! But I am. Happy, that is. I have all the things I never wanted, and I’m just ecstatic. Does that make any sense?”

“Given that you used to want to be ‘Viscountess Chingleput’ of all things, I’m going with ‘yes.’”

She had the grace to giggle. “I reckon I had that coming. But it’s true. All I had to do was stop fussing about what I needed to be happy, and suddenly, I was.”

Uh huh. “Sounds like something I’d find in a fortune cookie.”

“You should be so fortunate. Anyway, you don’t eat fortune cookies.”

“I don’t. So, what made you stop worrying about being happy?”

“The usual, bougie story, I guess – the sort I’d hear from Mum, that would make me just roll my eyes.” She shrugged helplessly. “I met a great guy – Donny. Strong, quiet type. Helped me get my head screwed on straight.”

“That must have been a shock. How could anyone recognize you?”

That earned me a finger wag. “Now, now. Yeah, it was a bit of a shock. But that’s alright. Anyhow, we did the church wedding, and had three boys, and . . . God, Weej. It’s just been the most amazing ride!”

I sat back in my chair, stunned. She sounded — no, she wascompletely sincere. This was Heather!

“Come on, let me show you pictures!”

No!!! “Of course. Whatcha got?”

She pulled out her phone and started whipping through a staggering large photo collection. Her husband Donny looked like he was around six three and handsome in a reedy sort of way; the boys appeared to be twenty, eighteen and fifteen, give-or-take, exhibiting various combinations of their parents’ not-all-that-dissimilar Northern English genes. There were heaps and heaps of smiles . . . and a love that was real, warm and genuine.

I would not be convicted, by a jury of my peers . . . .

After showing a recent photo of Donny and the boys right in the airport, she explained, “They just were off on holiday together in Dublin; I had to work so I couldn’t go with. But they should be landing in just a few and I should get to their gate. Would you like to meet them?”

Oh, look at the time! “I’d love to, Heather. I would, but . . . I really do have to be going.”

“You are an appalling liar, Weej.” She put her hand lightly on my wrist. “But I understand. And I’m sorry if I’ve rubbed rock salt in old wounds.” She rose, put her phone in her bag and a smile on her face. “If you do buy the airport, knock it down, would you? Piece of rubbish, if you ask me.”

I stood. “I’ll do that.”

“You’ll be alright?”

“I will. Take care of yourself. And . . . Heather?”

She raised an eyebrow.

“Thanks. I had no idea I needed this.”

“Right then. Don’t squander it!” She gave my hand a final squeeze, turned, and was off.

I watched her go, shaking my head in wonder. Heather, a doting suburban wife and mother. I didn’t see THAT coming!

I felt a familiar click in my brain . . . The feeling I get when pieces of a problem that I’ve been worrying about suddenly rearranged themselves, creating a pattern that highlighted an unexpected solution. All I had to do . . . .

My gestalt moments were famous at my company. Partly because they were responsible for some of our greatest triumphs, but mostly because I might as well be catatonic while they are rearranging my brain, which can take an embarrassingly long time. The world continues to do its thing, but I kind of check out from it for a bit, like I’ve slipped out a side door for a breath of fresh air. One of my partners had even managed to draw a mustache on me during an early episode, without my even noticing.

Click.

Click.

Clicketty-clicketty-click.

After a moment of staring blankly into space in a way that almost certainly tripped silent alarms in airport security — foreign male acting suspicious! — I downed the dregs of my coffee, picked up my bag and headed resolutely for the exit. Heather was right after all — I was an appalling liar. In fact, I was so bad at lying that I might have inadvertently told her the truth.

I did have someplace I needed to be.

To be continued . . . .

~o~O~o~

Author's note: Many thanks to RobertLouis and AlisonP for their help reviewing this story.

For information about my other stories, please check out my author's page.

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Comments

A Sprig Of Heather

joannebarbarella's picture

And the jousting hasn't gone away. She has jolted Weejie into some kind of decision.

Now I could guess what it is but I would probably be doing a spoiler.

I will speculate that a variation of a maid's outfit is somewhere in the mix.

And even Steph C couldn't match the conversational fencing on display here.

Wow!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Thanks, Joanne! But I’m going to have to demur— no-one does dialogue better than Steph! Though, when it comes to that sub-set of dialogue that is labeled repartee, or persiflage, or badinage, Ricky is the world champion!

Emma

Strange Manors

Something clicked for him. Is it a new goal or a new goad or did he find a new game to play?

Time is the longest distance to your destination.

Thank you, Siteseer!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Tune in next week for the answers to these and other questions. Same bat time. Same bat channel. :)

Emma

Thank you

Andrea Lena's picture

For choosing Vicountess Airlines. Please place your perspective and attitudes in the upright position!

She had the grace to giggle. “I reckon I had that coming. But it’s true. All I had to do was stop fussing about what I needed to be happy, and suddenly, I was.”

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

No, no, dahling!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

We don’t insist on the upright position. Here at Viscount Airlines, we’re not fussy about positions! ;-)

Thanks, ‘Drea!

Emma

Heather

Wow, talking about a chance encounter.

It seems like the classic Universe Tapping You On The Shoulder moment that suddenly alters the course of your life if only you recognize it.

Weej always seems kind of dense to those kinda signals but for him to recognize it this go round is a testament to how hard that signal is being beamed at him.

But given his so low sensitivity it makes sense that signal gets slammed into him so I guess it is less a tap on the shoulder and more like a solid smack to the face.

Now, let's see what will be necessary to fill in that hole in his existence and humanity and purpose which he had been trying to find in that random destination he was planning to go to at that airport.

Once again

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Once again, Kimmie, your comment shows a deep understanding of the character. And, you’ve hit on one of the ways that Luigi has an element of the autobiographical about him. As should be clear from all of his asides and internal monologues, Luigi spends most of his life in his head. His nearly-catatonic gestalt moments are an extreme example, but it certainly seems like he is mostly focused inward almost all the time. In chapter five, he acknowledges that he has “cogent arguments with non-existent people” in his sleep.

A rich interior life is a wonderful thing, of course, and it probably explains his success in his chosen field. But it does mean that it can take a whole lot of external stimuli before the rest of the universe can break through!

Thank you, as always, for your great comment. I hope the ending does not disappoint!

Emma

Fridays...

RachelMnM's picture

The new Christmas morning present opening. The new eat the raw cookie dough before it's baked. That's what Friday's are for me with this incredibly well written story that I've happily swallowed the hook, line, sinker, pole, reel, well - you get the drift. Emma... You raise the damn bar every chapter and this one is no exception. The internal and external dialog going on in this story sparkles! Now if Weej can just, "Don’t squander it!" as Heather made a point of pointing him in the right direction.

Gonna be sad after next Friday, but hopefully you'll grace us with a glimpse of Weej's adventures in the future. :-)

Brilliantly done Emma! Brilliant! <3

XOXOXO

Rachel M. Moore...

Fridays

Emma Anne Tate's picture

If I may paraphrase an absolutely brilliant parody of a living ex-president, “Jesus had Good Friday. I say we should have Great Fridays. Maybe even TGI Fridays . . . . .” (If you haven’t seen it, you definitely should — here’s the link: parody).

Now, if I may be heard on a public health matter, the Food and Drug Administration cautions against eating raw dough due to risks of salmonella and E.coli bacteria being present. I could not find a corresponding caution concerning the dangers of ingesting fishing line — no-one appears to have thought of this one, though I can’t imagine why not. I’m sure it’s bad. Very bad. ;-)

Thanks, Rachel — so glad you’re liking it. I’ll convert you to fantasy yet!

Emma

Crossing paths at the airport -- coincidence?

Nah!
As wiser people than I have said, "There's no such thing as . . . ".
I'll just have to hold myself together before Ian Fleming's James Bond would have said "Three is enemy action"
I think I can do it!
Until then
Dave

Good evening, Mr. Bond

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Hi Dave! Luigi clearly wanted Heather to be a Bond villain, rubbing her hands and cackling . . . but the universe refused to go along!

Glad you are enjoying the ride. :)

Emma

I spent the better part of my life traveling…….

D. Eden's picture

20 years of it in the service, and then more than that as a business traveler. It always amazes me the people I would run into in airports.

You expect to run into people you know at your home airport - after all, you all depart and return to the same airport. But when you run into people you know in some strange, out of way airport far from home it is always a surprise. Sometimes pleasant - sometimes not.

I have run into people I know through my children schools or sports programs, people I know professionally, the occasional relative (usually the not pleasant part), once an old friend from high school, a few times an old friend from college, and even old comrades from my time in the service. And in some unexpected places as well. Some were easily understandable - travel takes people through certain airports more than others; Orlando being a pretty common destination, not to mention the hub airports like Philadelphia, Charlotte, Washington DC, Chicago, etc.

It’s when you run into people in smaller, less well used airports that it surprises you. Places like Greensboro, NC, or Tri Cities Airport outside of Bristol, TN - those are the places you don’t expect to see someone you know. Indianapolis, Memphis, Phoenix, Columbia, Detroit, DFW, San Antonio, Des Moines, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis…..……..

They all kind of run to a blur after a while.

I guess if you spend enough time in airports, eventually you will run into someone you know, lol.

D. Eden

Dum Vivimus, Vivamus

Been there so often . . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

As a frequent US traveler, I bet you bumped into people here:
IMG_1244.jpeg

I love airports. They just have an amazing vibe. And I’ve definitely bumped into people I know — and scrambled to identify them, since they weren’t in their normal context!

Emma

A few times…….

D. Eden's picture

As well as running into people sitting at the gate. I probably ran into more people at the bar, or sitting in a restaurant or food court though.

Depending on the airport, and the amount of time I had to layover, I spent most of my time in the Admiral’s Club, or before US Airways bought out American the US Airways Club, or the United Airways Club. The clubs are always quieter, less hectic, and have free food and beverages (you can buy full meals, but if your content with snacks, pastries, fruit, or a salad, etc., they are free, as well as coffee, tea, and bar brand drinks - although some drinks have a tab) - plus they make a great place to sit and catch up on work or find a comfortable chair to read, or just take a nap. For people who traveled every week like I did, the cost was negligible and was easily made up by the savings in buying food and drinks - plus, I simply put the annual fee on my expense account so the cost to me was zero.

The only issue with the airline clubs is that they offer day passes to those who are flying on their airline. This means that whenever there are a lot of flight delays/cancellations due to weather, etc., that you get people buying a day pass and bringing their entire families into the club rather than sitting in the concourses. So the club fills up with loud people who don’t pay attention to their children while they run around and scream. The redeeming factor to this is that I have actually seen people get thrown out because of this before; not often, but it does happen. After all, if enough actual members complain they can’t afford to lose the annual pass holders.

I think the most surprising time for me to run into someone I knew was when I ran into an old college roommate in John Wayne Airport, which is now known as Santa Ana Airport. The fact that I ran into someone I knew in Orange County wasn’t surprising - I graduated from USC after all, so I know quite a few people in that part of the country. What surprised me was that he recognized me, as it was after I had transitioned and no one I went to college with was aware of my transition, at least as far as I knew. I found out that was wrong; thanks to social media, apparently it was a well known topic among some of my old friends.

I was still surprised that he recognized me. We had a drink at the bar (and now Billy Joel is running through my head, lol) and a very nice conversation until I had to run to grab my flight. We have actually stayed in touch, and through him I reconnected with a few other old friends. Apparently, my transition was not the surprise to some that it was to others.

D. Eden

Dum Vivimus, Vivamus

Not only airports

You can run into people you know/acquainted with (or be recognized) in the most unexpected places.
I had not expected to meet an acquaintance in Banana Court Bar in Avarua or have the very nice lady in charge of the cloak room at Vilnius university library tell me that she knew that I had been in Georgia (the one with magnificient mountains) the week before. I had meet some fellow VU students there and one of them turned out to her son.

Serendipity

Emma Anne Tate's picture

It’s not just for airports anymore. ;-)

My goodness, you’ve been to some interesting places. With all of those stamps in your passport, people will think you’re CIA!

Emma

-

Double post

Have you been talking to Barbielee?

She is beyond the stage of just thinking ...However, not necessarily the CIA.

Just because FBI, MI5, DGSI, DIS, SÄPO, AIVD, MAD, PST, PET, VSD, their Singapore counterpart and, most likely, GRU have got files on me doesn't mean that I'm a spy.

As for travelling all around the world - did you read RobertLouis' comment?

Loving it. . .

SuziAuchentiber's picture

I met my old lover on the street last night
She seemed so glad to see me, I just smiled . . . .

You have a wonderful way of making dialogue feel real and mixing it with references that we can all relate to from popular culture and historical fact. Damn girl, you've got it goin' on !!!!
Gimmie some sugar, I am your neighbour !! Chapter 7 can't arrive soon enough !!
Hugs&Kudos!!

Suzi

Sweets to the sweet. :)

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Thanks, Suzi. You picked exactly the right time to binge-read, going straight from the beginning to the final cliffhanger— and then stopping! I am delighted that you are enjoying the story. Hugs!

Emma

Hot English

This reminds me of a show I’ve heard about but not been able to track down. A cooking competition in France requires contestants to use only ingredients from their home country. A Londoner entrant breaks his bottle and must scour the shops of Paris for British wine.

Oh dear!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Old England, like my New England home, is not exactly known for its wines (though climate change may alter that). I’m not really sure why they try. Here, for example, we have poor grapes but absolutely magnificent apples. We should be the hard cider capital of the world, and we ought to be able to make pretty amazing Calvados too. But no; people keep standing up vineyards producing wines that would even embarrass the Gallo brothers.

While researching how U.K. wines were doing these days, I ran across this:

In 2015 Scotland's first home-grown wine was produced by Christopher Trotter, in Fife at a vineyard he started in 2012. One merchant described it as sherry-like with "nutty" notes, and thought that it might complement a "very strong cheese". After four successive very difficult wet seasons, he abandoned and uprooted the vineyard in 2018.

Kind of says it all, don’t you think? :)

Emma

The Kippen Vine

Robertlouis's picture

Well, Ms Tate, did you know that from the early 1900s till 1964 the world’s largest vine was to be found in the small Stirlingshire village of Kippen, not far from where I grew up, and that its grapes were sold in Harrods and served at Buckingham Palace? OK, it was all under glass and involved enormously complex and expensive horticulture to maintain it, which was what led to its eventual demise, but it was the most northerly vine in Europe as well.

We’d visit during the season and buy a precious bunch or two, which my parents would then dole out one at a time, like liqueur chocolates. They were large, red, and very sweet. The grapes that is, not my parents, though they were nice too.

Since it was cut down, it’s rumoured that there are thriving descendants all across the fertile straths of Stirlingshire and Perthshire. Who knows, with careful nurturing and further climate change, Forth or Tay Valley wines might still be a thing. Or perhaps not.

Cheers!

☠️

Apples

My friend who now lives in Si Valley used to do a special stop at an orchard in Connecticut, just off 95 just to get their apples on her way to P-town Mass for Fantasia Fair (now Trans Week.)

Though I really don't need what Trans Week offers anymore and my friends don't really go there anymore either. I still find the town welcoming and relaxing (though quite expensive though, keep that in mind, it is far more expensive now then when I went there in the 80s) so since this year it is the 50th anniversary I figure I should go and maybe meet up with some old acquaintances.

producing wines that would even embarrass the Gallo brothers.

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

My memories of Gallo wine is that odd shaped screw cap gallon jug they sold in the fifties. The first time I saw it, my mothers boyfriend was laying in bed with it tipped up to his lips. It was about 3/4s empty and I'm sure he had started with it full.

The jug itself stayed around for years and became our go-to container to hold Kool-Aid.

As for New England wines, perhaps they might consider becoming a supplier to the folks that produce MD 20/20 (Mad Dog 20/20). For those who haven't been unfortunate to find out on their own, Mad Dog 20/20 is a fortified wine (and I use the term "wine" very loosely.) They spike it up to 20% alcohol content. As I'm sure you know wine will max out at about 17% in natural fermentation.

MD 20/20 is most often seen being consumed straight from the bottle which is inside a paper sack, ala wino.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

A gallon of Gallo . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

. . . and a bowl of Froot Loops. Breakfast of Frickin’ Champs. U.S.A.! U.S.A.!

The New England wineries that I’ve visited are far too chichi for 20/20. They even sell some decent wines. Those are almost invariably the ones made from imported grapes. :) We’re really not in the vitis vinifera belt.

Emma

Airports and Chance Meetings

Robertlouis's picture

Another excellent chapter, Emma. More brilliant repartee, but very noticeable that the tone and content shift significantly from the heavily weighted conversations between Weej and Holweard. Nicely done.

And airports are places for amazing encounters, and not just coincidental meetings with people you know. I’ve met people all over the world on long layovers who’ve become lifelong friends. My work took me all over Europe, to the US, Canada, Central and South America, into Eastern Europe just after the Wall fell, the Far East, India and Australia. Pretty well everywhere and enough stories to fill two books at least, including singing with a transgender girl group in Shanghai!

☠️

New meaning

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I think you’ve given new meaning to the term “I’ve been Shaghai’d!”

Luigi and Holweard debate history, but Luigi and Heather have history. It makes for a very different conversation!

Thank you for all of your help, Rob. This has been a lot of fun. :)

Emma

Subtle...

Luigi's dialogue and narration uses "defense" Heather's says "defence". Cute touch; didn't notice it until my second reading.

Can hardly wait to see Luigi's solution. None of my guesses make any sense.

Eric

As I’m in the UK…

Robertlouis's picture

….perhaps that would be “sence.” ;-)

☠️

Ha!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

There, you see the advantage I get from having RobertLouis and AlisonP beta-read each chapter. Rob pointed out the difference in US and UK spellings here; it’s one I’d definitely forgotten. I was tempted not to make the change, since Luigi is the narrator. But I couldn’t resist, and I’m ridiculously happy that someone caught it!

Stay tuned — one episode left. :)

Emma

Well...

Dee Sylvan's picture

While some of us caught the spelling difference, I am quite worried about your slide into this apparent unconscious duality. Chapter 7 seems like an ominous ending to this wonderful story, my dear. Quite clever of you to bring Heather back for her redemption, while providing Weeji with a foil to clarify his thoughts until his mind finally clickety-clacked onto the solution to his problem with the Sprite. I still feel my comment in Ch 6 is a foretelling of the future. Cheers! :DD

DeeDee

As Cassandra said . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

“I foretold you so!”

I don’t think I’ll manage a True-Bru surprise with this one, but we’ll see. :) So glad you are enjoying it!

Emma

Dun dun dun!

Erisian's picture

Hooray for another wonderful chapter, and hooray for a great cliffhanger!

Greatly looking forward to next Friday...though once the tale is read to completion I may have a sad, as it's been lovely looking forward to each chapter these past few weeks. Thanks Emma!

My personal fave

Emma Anne Tate's picture

That would be right up there with the false advertising suit against Kelloggs, alleging that purchasers of Froot Loops were deceived because — wait for it! — the cereal is not made with actual fruit. The fact that the colors in Froot Loops are found nowhere in nature should have been a tip-off.

Emma

Or the one against Texas Pete hot sauce

Not from Texas, but Winston-Salem, NC. Speaking of which, I just now realized: Camel cigarettes contain no camel. There’s our opportunity! Emma, are you ready to go up against Womble and Carlyle?

Camels

Robertlouis's picture

Oh, I dunno. They certainly SMELL like they contain certain camel waste products, at the very least…

☠️

No Camel?

joannebarbarella's picture

Are you sure? From the smell I could swear there's some camel in those cigarettes.

Thanks, Erisian!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Since I knew the Seraph of Cliffhangers was following this one, I had to do it right! I think I’ve set up the ending as well as possible — hopefully it won’t disappoint!

Emma

Disappoint? Not a chance!

I don't think you've written a disappointing ending yet, and this won't be the first time!

Loved the dialogue with Heather, a bit of closure can be a wonderful thing, sadly it doesn't happen as often in real life as we might wish for.

Alison

Closure

Emma Anne Tate's picture

You are so right, Alison. Closure is a rare and precious thing, and we probably don’t get it more often than not. Endings in life are usually untidy, with loose ends everywhere. I can think of several people with whom I would love to have a conversation not dissimilar with the one in this chapter, but never will. The wounds still heal, but the scar tissue isn’t always purdy.

Welp, we are lined up for our final approach and the landing gear is down. Let’s get this bird on the ground!!!

Emma

ATC

Erisian's picture

"Strange Manors, wind ten at eight, runway five-three right, cleared to land." <3

All roads roam to Leeds

But LBA has no 53R so I’m wondering where this all will land. Friday can’t come soon enough.

Well played, Catherd!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Now, if only Leeds were also the place where Rhodes Scholars picked up their awards, we could manage a triple switch! :)

Also, you provide an excellent example of why BC authors have to sweat the details. ;-) Love ya!

Emma

Roger, Roger! What’s your vector, Victor?

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Roger, Leeds Tower, Cleared to land non-existent runway five-three-right, Strange Manors. Catch you on the other side!

Emma

Leeds 9 3/4?

.

More like...

Erisian's picture

...landing on Friday 5/3 ;)

Luigi

Is about to go some through some serious growth. I hope he/she will be happier for it.