La Dame sans Camellias 6

in experience •  6 years ago  (edited)

Part Six://Sparkles of days long past

Her parents were divorced long time now. They separated in the most inappropriate time when Mia needed a father the most and when “the society” wouldn’t nod approvingly at such “unaccountable” human acts. She never got the complete idea what is that a society constitutes of, apart the common stereotypes introduced by someone, somewhere in time. Yet, by the way people seemed to use it as a tool in so many important for the adults occasions, Mia could guess The Society might have looked like a fat judge in black robe and a snow white wig, covering quite a bald head, who took the obligation to define what is and what is not appropriate, handed out to you as a leaflet at the very entrance of Life.


Loui Jover

To put it commonly, this was the yardstick measure, used by everybody around to qualify various important and less important things and it proved to be a grandiose excuse to poke one’s nose in obviously other people’s private affairs, including the availability or the lack of people’s fathers and the primal reason for both. During the forthcoming years, the family would devote all efforts to feel the gap left after the missing parent. Tall order.

The kids would be thankful most probably, showing their gratitude mainly by the way they have been maturing silently through the years.

"It's time to go now. Kids, you have homework to do." Mia's mother used her most deliberate nuances of her voice for such occasions.
Auntie Pavla emerged like a morning fog over stale lake waters with her rosy cheeks now even better defined by the kitchen warmth. The sitting room was overtaken by the smell of just open tuck-shop like the ones that may be spotted in every schoolyard, the ones that added an enchanting zest of marvel to the air of that particular street and that was in power to turn almost every passenger, but those on a diet, off the road.

"Why hurry now – I'm baking the Agnes. You should stay for a nice piece."
„The Agnes“ was the family pastry at Mia's house. A delight with crispy yellow top covering a full and soft nut body as an after taste. Mia adored the afternoons in Grandpa Grantzy's house. They stayed. Like those tourists at the end of the summer who find it difficult to depart from the sea, the beaches and the seagulls.

"Just let the bread be baked" she thought out of the blue. Let the bread be baked.
Her words flew up imperceptibly for Mia all the way up to the second floor and stood calmly at Granny Rakitsa’s door. "Bringing the loaf up to try it." For complete strangers they were to each other, the two women quickly managed to get well along. No instructive arguments, so common for mothers and daughters, or bad concealed intolerance as in the conversations of the young wives with their mothers-in-law stood between them. The old woman was like a healing warm tea in winter's evenings when she would feel most definitely the absence of her own grandmother Tsveta, at whose funeral serves Mia hadn't been allowed to go. That August! It was her mother's decision...at the awareness of it, Mia felt she might need the biggest Russian samovar containing the hottest tea that was possible to be found in the world.

Jover art

Half the year now. She still had the visions of grandma in her sleep. Almost every second night Mia cried in her sleep asking the skies above to allow her another visit. This part took a long time accompanied by the usual consolations that souls are making their ways to a better place above. Everybody believed it was so, even the fat judge “The Society”. Old Greeks would comfort their tears with the convincing argument that it was light and not tears to be drawn in, a soul needed on its way afterlife. Zendagi migzara.

That’s what she read in a book she last read and over which pages she decently cried too. Mia was not attributed a “best father” figure in her life. She simply had a father. The possession of whom was also a questionable matter. The content she poured to fill the rest of the days until full year was mainly baking breads and drawing from time to time thinking of Simeon who always started conversations by asking her how she gave a meaning to that particular day.

„You, Maria...it’s more expensive to bake the bread on your own. Better go and by one before noon down at the bakery. It’s not far from here…and yes, it’s cheaper to use electricity after 11 p.m. until 7 in the morning…but, of course the shop can’t produce a real taste of bread. I wonder what they put inside a shop bread… ”
The old woman was able to make Mia laugh only with a word a day and this melodically designed voice of hers. It was then easy to make jokes even with her mother if she appears to be on the line with two of her regular questions. What are you eating today?At this point, it’s essential to state the list of meals for the day…Do you have enough money?At this one, Mia was supposed to negate the option of “God Himself forbid” being at dire straits.

In due course of time the replies were molded to take the form of – appropriate for mothers. ”Mom, I’m baking the best bread ever. It’s good enough to run my own bakery. Can you imagine that?” A clear and chiming laugh would pour over the line. Could she imagine, hah! Mia has graduated Marketing at the National economic academy, Grandpa Grantzy’s school. Were such people supposed to bake their own bread instead of taking care to brand it? Anyway. Mia believed in the existence of at least a couple of kings who did baking breads and washed some dishes occasionally…

Three years exactly since Mia hasn’t felt the smell of the air in her hometown. It was only the river that floated as a clumsy thread to bind her home and the New Place…unluckily, even the river didn’t look the same here. It was Ivan who sent her off with the valuable piece of advice to not get intimate with new places and she decided to follow such and attitude avoiding to call the things around by names while losing dear things and people on the way. “Do not hold in possession things you can’t go along without even for three minutes”, those were her grandmother’s words that sounded like a soft version of the First commandment You shall have no other gods before Me…quite near to that one at least.


The Kite runner by Jover

On the second floor, Mia wondered why Granny Rakitsa had to dwell so deep into her painful memories. The old woman buried her younger brother in less then a month after he was diagnosed at the hospital. In those days, a vague moist would appear from time to time in granny's eyes. She knew how. She was an old school type – strong women class. She knew how to bear pain.

She melted it as if pain was a cheese cube in preheated fondue pot and then covered pain with joyful chat and laugh trying to spend less time alone on the second floor. It seemed old Rakitsa knew the meaning of those Zendagi migzara, although she never mentioned she might know where Afghanistan was. For her genuine wisdom it was all part of the East, like the martial arts, she swore she have mastered once.

Hm! was the short onopathopea she mixed in an impossible and awkward laugh that was by that time choking in her breast and causing tears of intense feelings to appear in the light of her eyes. She then perfectly clear explained her methods with bad behaving males. “Oh, hold yourself at resistance, you! – I say, and he pretends he hasn't heard me...“

Mia choked her giggling thought Perhaps you wanted to use at a distance instead...Granny continued to pour over words and impressions like a warm sauce over Victoria's sponge. „At a resistance, I say...if you understand me!“ He didn't understand her apparently...“So, I went taaak and once more taak and then shooot“, the old woman's eyes glared some kind ferociously at the very full stop of this story, if any. Sparkles lifting up in the chimney from the wood in the fireplace and sparkles trembling in the eyes of what were complete strangers a conversation ago warmed Mia's stark shoulders preventing icicles to get over her heart.

The bread was baking.

Zendagi migzara.

The life moved on.

End of Part Six

Previous parts you may want to read
1 2 3 4 5

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