Fable #1: Peaches and Silk

20161023_164908.jpg

It was July and the peaches were green.  Usually somewhat predictable, the natural world was in the process of changing her mind.

In the quiet order of their lives, the community noticed additional oddities. These were filed into categories: some were good omens, and others, dreadful.  Interpretations depended on the disposition and age of the various people of the land.

Jamie witnessed thousands of walking sticks making their way up his favorite walking path.  He quit counting at four hundred eighty-four.  That was the month and year of his birth.  The parade went on for days, ‘Like an exodus,’ he claimed.

Over a single night, Mary’s roses went from full-blown blousy, sweet smelling, county-famous ruffles, to looking fake and dusty, like old paper.

Lightening bugs blinked in tandem, turning night into a throbbing stage.

Bullfrogs, absent for years, converged into a song that woke the children from their sleep, all of them in panic.  The common thread of their collective nightmare: a background of screeching.

In broad daylight, feminine garments were stolen from clotheslines.  A teeming gossip-fest erupted, worse than the one the year before when a husband ran off with a neighbor’s son.  Theories on who might be the thief spilled like poison from the town’s tongues.

Men accused the poor woman whose husband took the teenage boy.  They assumed she was out for vengeance for the town turning on her.  The women worried themselves sick over what was happening and began suspecting each others’ husbands, sure each was guilty of unspeakable desire.  Then they turned against each other, and in no time, the mostly peaceful village was in war with itself. 

Even the children had their theory: one boy made the mistake of telling his closest friends in school, and they told their mothers who thought it sounded like incest, that he wished his sister had beautiful things to wear. 

The constable said it was the Almighty stripping away their finery, ruining the land that supported them, laying bare their selfish souls. A line formed around the back of his stone station, scared citizens seeking support, making reports.  The one thing everyone agreed on was that all signs pointed to something worse about to rain down on their heads.

Sitting and weeping at his grand desk in the center of a nearly empty room, a young girl said her matching underwear went missing, as if it walked off on legs.  He took notes on her opinion about the culprit, a jealous boyfriend.  Like a flattened honeybee, his yellow phone vibrated across the desk.  

With commanding countenance, he excused himself from the girl to take the call.  Her eyes roamed the immediate landscape.  On his windowsill, her gaze settled on the biggest book she’d ever seen.   

As if the book were a magnet, she left her chair and floated to the window.  Surprisingly light when she picked it up, the girl discovered it was not a book of vast knowledge, but a box made to look like one.  

She heard the constable’s voice growing faint, talking and walking in the opposite direction of his office.  Knowing better, she told herself the world was already falling apart: still-green summer fruits, converging insects, returning amphibians, the fate of flowers, a fighting village, this wave of undergarment thievery.  What damage could a little peek cause, she asked herself.  One finger lifting the cover of the box, an eye on the door, the other inside the lid, she discovered a stack of unmentionable silks.  On top lay her favorite peach camisole.

The Urchins

A sparking juju for the natural world gets set off when I visit my friend, George, in upstate New York. We once went reptile and amphibian collecting at a state park in an attempt to populate his newly built pond. The only frog he was fast enough to catch, a move that had my graceful companion hopping right behind his target, was lost when I slipped in the mud.  It flew out of the paper cup I was carrying.  We were forced to pay five dollars for a couple of freshly caught frogs and a tiny turtle to a local kid who stood in a muddy lake up to his waist. It was shameful to not have the prowess of the hunt but while standing at the water’s edge in transaction, the boy squeezed one frog so tightly I feared its belly would pop.  It felt good to take them off his dangerous hands.

Frog in New Home

Frog in New Home

This past summer, I was at The Grove, George’s property. The Echinacea, commonly referred to as Coneflower happened to be in full bloom.  Out admiring the lush beds of pink flowers, without much thought, we committed to making the extract from the plants known to boost the immune system.

While still in their prime, the first step requires pinching the pink petals from the living plant; a very genteel past time.  But not all the parts are as soft and lovely as they.  In fact, the name Echinacea comes from the Greek word echino, meaning sea urchin, referring to the prickly center, the seed dome, which we planned on harvesting later in the season.

Pretty Pink Petals

Pretty Pink Petals

The Urchiins of Echinacea

The Urchins of Echinacea

As if dealing with flower petals was too delicate a task to sustain,  we balanced our botanical efforts by marching into a simultaneous agenda: war on the natural world. The conflict was over George’s tomato patch, and the enemy, the chipmunk.

Alternating laying out feathery petals in a pretty basket to dry, we ran through the garden like banshees, clapping, yelling and chasing the rodents to their side of the fence.  We checked and tightened fences, securing every inch of the perimeter.  When a chipmunk scurried over my bare foot, I said, while wiping the sweat from my smeared face, “This isn’t working.”

Under normal circumstances, neither of us would pick up a flyswatter.  But upon another discovery of a bushel’ worth of green tomatoes lying all over the ground with teeth marks in them, we activated an elaborate defense program to save the fruits of his labor.  We drove to the nearest hardware store for some heavy artillery.  George already had two big live traps, which no living thing had visited.  Back and forth in the aisles, we tossed phrases like ‘unusually mild winter,’ ‘global warming,’ ‘population explosion,’ ‘koyaanisqatsi,’ all justifications for what we were about to do. George paid for the biological weapon, a three-pound bag of sunflower seeds, and drove us back to The Grove.  By then I was referring to his pastoral acreage as The Killing Fields.

George dragged the garden hose from the shed and noisily filled five-gallon bucket two thirds of the way.  He sprinkled a thick layer of the dark seeds over the surface and carried it to ground zero.  Back inside where the newly picked Echinacea petals were already hanging in place from the drying rafters, he shuffled through a stack of boards in search of the perfect width and length.  Jamming one end into the ground, I watched as he rested the other on the rim of our bucket.  Before my eyes, George built a miniature model of walking the plank.  But it was for chipmunks instead of blindfolded, weighted down sailors.  If things went as planned, they would dive head first into a seedy sea never to destroy again.  “Diabolical,” I pronounced when the contraption was in place.

Living inside murderous intentions is, as my mother would say, ‘God-awful.’ In the morning, George awoke in a shuddering sweat from intermittent rodent nightmares. Our consciences forced us to dismantle the construction and abandon the mission, before we were able to face breakfast.  The only hope was that one night of shock and awe was enough to send the army of chipmunks running for the hills.

I took the train back to The Grove in early November for the final phase of the harvest: leaves, the urchin seedpods, gnarly root clumps, and the dried petals of August.  We brought all the ingredients back to my kitchen in the city AKA, The Lab.  I scrubbed the roots while George chopped them.  They were fibrous and difficult to penetrate.  He ended up with a nasty blister from the effort and later that night I found a tick stuck to my side.

Gnarly Roots

Gnarly Roots

George dismantling the Urchins

George dismantling the Urchins

The Fresh Brew

The Fresh Brew

For six weeks of daily shakings, as I wrote and lived, behind the closed door of a kitchen cabinet, the colorful concoction brewed.  A friend standing in my kitchen when I was making Roibus tea caught sight of the jar and said, “What’s that?”  By then it was really dark and looked more like tar than a medicinal extract.  After she left, I called up George and said, “It’s time.  That stuff is putting me under suspicion.”

A few days later, George came back to The Lab and we sterilized the squeeze rubber tops and brown bottles, strained out the plant material from the final brew in cheesecloth, avoiding all metal because it has an impact on the contents of the brew.  We put some in a little in water and tasted it, gave it our official approval, and poured it through a tiny antique glass funnel that has been floating around my kitchen for years.

Sterilizing Process

Sterilizing Process

Separating Liquid from Solids

Separating Liquid from Solids

A reason to own this funnel

A reason to own this funnel

Finished Product

Finished Product

George’s two contraband frogs grew and prospered.  But the endeavor did not turn out exactly as we planned.  One morning, we took our tea outside to the pond and discovered the horror of a reality we had not yet heard of: a frog eat frog world.
IMG_0352