Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Blackbird



Blackbird

Most of the Spirited Scotland tour group had gone to bed, bored stiff by the peace and quiet of the tiny Highland town of Aithness. They’d spent a dismal day in the chugging coach, teetering over the ancient cobbled roads. At one point the whole group had to disembark and walk ahead to keep the coach from bottoming out on a humpback bridge. As it turned out, this had been the defining moment of the day. To the great disappointment of most and secret relief of a very few, no headless man had appeared at Holmwood Castle, and no Blue Lady at Thorne.
Around the scarred oak table in the lounge of the Highland Pearl only four remained; the guide, Des Sinclair, Ivy Montrose, of Perth, and the two Canadians, jet-lagged and dozing in the hardwood chairs.
The clock showed nearly eleven and yet the sky was awash in violet light. It was late July but the landlord had lit a small fire in the grate, taking pity on his shivering guests.
Ivy hugged herself in her cashmere shawl and took a tiny sip of the peaty liquor set before her. The Canadians held hands loosely and blinked at the topknot of blue flames above the little mound of scrap wood and sawdust in the fireplace.
Des had promised a tale to those who sat up to meet the midnight and just as he’d expected it was these three who hung back from their beds. He hunched forward in his chair and his muttonchop whiskers twitched as he tossed back the dregs of his whisky. He patted his lips dry with the back of his hand, then cupped his ear.
“D’ye hear that?” he whispered theatrically. Ivy shook her head and the others shifted in their seats.
“That’s good,” Des continued, “because there’s nothing there. Not yet. But it’s coming, mind you, sure as the stars come out in the sky.”
Ivy glanced at the purple expanse through the broad window that fronted the little hotel. The sky was like a swath of soft plain cloth, as yet unspangled. This comforted her a little and for a moment she relaxed against the thin cushion at her back.
“There are many paths in these Highland hills,” Des began, “but few that appear on any map. Some have been traveled for centuries, worn deep into the stone by countless feet; others only once, only once and never again. For paths such as these, y’must have a guide, for if you’re lost, you’ll never be seen again, in this world or the next.
One evening, I’d taken my supper late. The roast lamb and pudding sat still and heavy in my belly. When I lay down in my bed there was a nasty press around my heart and so I rose again and thought to walk it off in the night air. It was cool enough when I set out, but the further I walked the more it turned icy cold and all my woolens were not protection enough against the chill.”
The Canadians shifted closer together and the man wrapped his arm around his wife’s shoulder. Ivy thought they looked a bit blue around the lips, but perhaps it was a trick of the failing light. She touched her own face and found it waxy cold. She knew she needed rest, having reached the point when she could not rightly remember why she had chosen to come along on this tour, but the thought of lying down and covering her face with a bed sheet made her queasy. She tried to focus again on Des Sinclair’s droning voice.
“I tried to stumble back to my rooms, but instead ended up far up the hillside, knee deep in damp heather. The few lights of my village seemed far in the distance. The more I tried to walk toward the light, the farther away it appeared. My legs were pillars of ice and in my ears was the sound of beating wings. I flapped my arms around my head like the fool that I was, for I was in the dark, in the silence, as alone as a soul can be in endless night.”
Ivy was dismayed to see fat rivulets of tears run out of Des Sinclair’s eyes and into his beard. She tried to stand, but was stuck in her chair like a lump of dead flesh with no option, it seemed, but to hear out his story.
“I held my breath, which came as a relief to my aching lungs, and listened to the dark again. There came a flutter of wings and a few soft notes of birdsong. The path turned clear and whitely lit ahead of me, the sky filled with shards of obsidian light…”
It was like a black tide, Ivy thought, rushing toward the plate glass window and a blast of birdsong lifted the three travelers out of their seats. The window crumbled to sparkling dust against the deluge of glossy beating wings and a like a breath through a gauze curtain, they passed.
The landlord shook his head at Des Sinclair, who was finishing off Ivy’s drink as well as his own.
“Obsidian light,” the landlord muttered as he placed the empty glasses on his tray. He nodded toward the trio of empty chairs. “Not going along as guide?”
Des Sinclair gazed out onto the twilit loch, the purple hills and indigo sky. High up in a dark tree a lonely blackbird screeched and sang and Des took back his glass off the tray.
“Another small one, Jimmy,” he said, “I’m off the clock”.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Five Stars for White Stripes



Ok I admit it, I love Jack White. I won't blather on about the sordid history of this latest musical crush but I will say that I let out a tiny whoop when Icky Thump arrived in my rusty old mailbox yesterday ( along with Mahler's 5th, ahem ). Whether its White Stripes or Raconteurs, I tell ya I have a great time with Jack White's music. Maybe I'm just hearing echoes of my old faves, Lennon, Plant et al, but whatever. Sign me up as an unapologetic fan :)

And about the ghost story..well..maybe tomorrow. I'm in a good enough mood to make Finnish Apple pancakes for my family. Want the recipe (phonically correct or otherwise) from Bon Appetit-

1 cup whole milk
4 large eggs
3 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2/3 cup all purpose flour
4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter
12 ounces Golden Delicious apples (about 2), peeled, cored, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons (packed) golden brown sugar
Powdered sugar (optional)
preparation
Preheat oven to 425°F. Whisk milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla, salt, and cinnamon in large bowl until well blended. Add flour and whisk until batter is smooth. Place butter in 13x9-inch glass baking dish. Place dish in oven until butter melts, about 5 minutes. Remove dish from oven. Place apple slices in overlapping rows atop melted butter in baking dish. Return to oven and bake until apples begin to soften slightly and butter is bubbling and beginning to brown around edges of dish, about 10 minutes.
Pour batter over apples in dish and sprinkle with brown sugar. Bake pancake until puffed and brown, about 20 minutes. Sprinkle with powdered sugar, if desired. Serve warm.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Brave New Virtual World

Today I've been thinking about my own internet history and how it has changed over the past couple of years. Just over two years ago I didn't even have email, didn't see any use for it. Then I began to test the virtual waters, (eek, shark!) joined and abandoned several online "communities" and ended up here, with only a handful of online contacts and pretty much talking to myself :) In other words, my online life now mirrors my reality!

However I do feel as if I've learned something, I've revived as a writer and have once again established a sense of self apart from an identity as parent and partner, and not a moment too soon!

I was working on a mini-ghost story this morning...might just post it here tomorrow..check and see if I wimped out!

Today's listening pleasure- Howlin Wolf, Moanin in the Moonlight, 4 stars.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Geek Salad, always a winner



Ok, I think I'm prepared for the socializing. Want my salad recipe?

Dressing:
Whisk together

2/3 cup olive oil
1/4 cup lemon juice (not from a bottle ya lazy lump)
2 T red wine vinegar
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp each basil and oregano
1 tsp salt
pepper to taste

Drizzle over a salad of chopped tomatoes, cukes, sweet peppers. Add olives and artichoke hearts if you like them. Sprinkle crumbled feta cheese on top and drizzle with a little more dressing. Hope you like it.

I'll let you know how the literary fun and games went when I get back. Saturday, Saturday nights all right!

Today's listening pleasure;
Manteca! the roots of Afro-Cuban Jazz, four and a half stars.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Social event looming...

Tomorrow evening I will have to come out of my shell for a couple of hours and make an appearance at my writers' group spring potluck...ay caramba!

Not only do I have to make something edible but also have to produce something readable. The piece must be no longer than one typed page and somehow incorporate the phrase or refer to the theme "in various translations".

This is a game we've enjoyed for years at the potlucks- all the works go into an envelope, then after dining we each take a piece out of the envelope and read it to the group. We then write down who we think is the author of the piece. More challenging and much more fun than it may sound.

Now if I can just decide on a recipe that will not turn toxic in the summer heat on the buffet table.

Today's listening pleasure- House of Refuge by Jim Byrnes, rated five stars by this listener.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

My Shiny New Toy



Who'd a thunk it? Blogs on demand.







Now any ordinary jane like myself can hold forth on the world wide web!






So why Mirrorball? To cast forth teeny tiny reflections that spun together might provide just a little illumination :)

I like metaphors. I like to to be surprised and delighted and often am, thanks to a) a failing short term memory and b) the multi-faceted and fascinating neighborhood I call home.

I plan to talk about the music I'm listening to, the recipes I'm making and maybe just a bit of witchy gossip and innuendo from time to time.

I don't pretend to be even-handed or fair, not here anyway.

Come on in and join me :)