The Joy of Travelling (Maria Melillo Jones)

Travelling comes with pros and cons. The much-needed time off. Those unique places you have yearned to visit. 

Some of us pack the bare essentials. I fall into the category of packing everything, even the kitchen sink if I could. My logic is why buy it if I already own it. Perhaps it is not logical, more like my own stupidity.

 My suitcases are always packed to the maximum weight, leaving only a few ounces to spare.

Next time I travel, I’ll pack lightly, repeating to myself after each trip. What a joke; until today, I have not yet learned a lesson. At the airport, I find myself dragging around two suitcases and a purse. The feeling of a donkey overloaded suddenly creates a picture in my mind.

Standing in the long line at the airport, I look at myself in disbelief to have done it again. I push one suitcase with a foot while dragging along the other.

I finally reach the airline counter, droplets of sweat are overcoming my body with fear of my suitcases been overweight.  The luggage has finally made it through the conveyor belt without penalty.  A deep breath of relief overcomes the fear.

” I did it,” Repeating to myself with enthusiasm and pride. Until the next trip, I suppose.

Coming back from Italy is not different. When I see an object costing less than what I would pay in Canada, I’ll buy it. I saved myself a few dollars.

Last year while in Italy, I bought cheese every time I went to the market, not thinking about its weight. By the time I began packing to return home, my suitcase was thirty pounds overweight.

I had a big dilemma, leaving my clothes behind or the cheese. I couldn’t come to a compromise.

After a few days of thinking, I decided to buy a new suitcase.

The suitcase cost me about one hundred and twenty Euros. At the airport, I had to pay an additional hundred euros for extra luggage. 

Was all that cheese worth my pain and suffering? Hell ya!

 Adding the cheese bought in Italy to my food, is like being home.

My mouth explodes with fireworks.  The saltiness, the creamy milk, and that tad of bitterness create a perfect marriage, called cheese, playing a harmonious dance on my tongue.

 Pasta in my house, it’s music in the heavens, immersed in cured buffalo ricotta and my homemade tomato sauce. 

Boarding a plane is a joke, waiting for hours. When the boarding is finally open, everyone stands up, resembling a herd of cows entering the barnyard. Most people move with the flow while others push themselves through to get ahead. Everyone gets called by the first letter of their last name. By the time my turn arrives, I find myself the last one in line due to my last name, starting with the letter J. I push myself through the overpacked aisles, dragging the hand luggage and an overstuffed purse.

The struggle begins the minute I need to get into my seat. The luggage spot above my seat has being taken by some inconsiderate individual a few rows down.

“How dare you come and invade my space; I paid for this spot, you wild ass.”

The reason for rushing ahead suddenly makes sense. I squeeze myself into the tiny 18-inch seat, feeling like a stuffed sausage. With no room to move, more like a planted tree trunk.

Flying for nine to ten hours straight with my ass cheeks planted in one spot is cruelty.

Hardly any room to stretch my feet, never mind eating.  I have dreams of seeing many places, but the nightmare of boarding a plane takes a vacation to another level. 

Now I have a clear vision of how animals feel being caged and shoved into small places.

I feel for them deeply.

Years ago, I travelled in first class. I had   a family emergency back in Italy; there were no seats left in second class; they decided to put me with the diplomats. My seat was a sofa chair, soft and comfortable; I sunk into the comfy chair like your head sinks into a pillow. I had plenty of space in front of my feet and my side. I could probably fit another person beside me.  First-class is the way to travel.

Just imagine yourself having to toot and stuck by a window seat. Either you clench your butt checks very hard with the hope that nothing will escape, not even a tiny squeal or try to make it to the bathroom.

In many cases, you will never make it to the bathroom without leaving a trail of foul odours along your way.

Oh the joy of travelling.

They’re Putting Up a Christmas Tree At The Hospital (Annie Carpenter) 2020

18 Hours left to figure out how we can get a Christmas 🌲 tree up outside the Children’s Hospital. Batman, Wonder woman and the three wisemen have come to help. One of the Camels has been dragging the tree behind him, his o2 tank has already run out and his lips are a bit blue. He has no intention of letting the baby Jesus down. There’s some politics this year so it has to be put up farther away from the hospital. As we all looked up not a window was without a little child’s face looking out at the stars and the tree below.  Wonder woman flew up and waved at all the little kids on the Cancer floor. She was in a uniform different than her traditional one. A set of Nurses Scrubs giving a nod to the fact this is the year of the Nurse and no one had given them even the smallest acknowledgement. One of the respitory therapists came out to give the camel a new o2 tank! He was grateful. Batman flew to the second floor and started to pull the tree up so that it was standing perfectly in front of the children’s faces. Not a dry eye. It’s been a tough year. On the top of the tree a star that shines without batteries or electricity. It is powered by the greatest super power of all the baby Jesus himself. Batman put on a show for the kids swinging from the floor. They loved it. The wise men stood in awe. The oldest said…how things have changed…yet the message is still the same. At the very heart of Christmas lies a selfless heart. A baby born, and joy to the world, especially children. Even during a year like this…it only takes a little kindness to make someone feel thought of. 

A Boat Decked Out in Christmas Lights (Marian Bron)

Another email from Uncle Harrison’s lawyer popped up in my inbox. It was the eighth one. What did I want to do with the canal boat that my late uncle had left me? Uncle Harrison wasn’t really an uncle. He had been one of my late mother’s many paramours.

            I didn’t want a boat. I had enough on the go. I would rather he had sold the thing when he was alive and had given me the money instead. With three growing kids all under the age of ten, I had my hands full. On top of that there was a global pandemic, and I was homeschooling, plus playing full time secretary to a husband who had made his home office of my kitchen table. I didn’t need a boat.

            Roni the five-year-old glued to the TV, wiped her perpetually runny nose on the sleeve of her new jumper. Horace, the eight-year-old, was making flies. He was obsessed with fishing. Something he couldn’t do in December. Gloria sat with her phone, somewhere out of sight. Surrounding all this domesticity was a house that needed repainting, a tree that need trimming, a van that needed replacing.

            This time the lawyer had included pictures of the boat. It was dark green with red and blue trim. Much like the tree that had to be decorated. It slept eight. Full kitchen and a tank full of gas. 

            The husband paced back and forth, wheeling and dealing with a computer screen. Roni sniffed and wiped, and Horace dropped another completed fly into his fishing kit. From somewhere in the depts of the house Gloria huffed. All the boat needed has a couple of strings of fairy lights and it would do.

            “Pack your bags,” I declared. “We’re going on an adventure.”

            Roni sniffed.

            Husband stared.

            Horace squinted.

            Gloria groaned, “Seriously, mother. Christmas is two days away.”

            “Exactly, Christmas Vac-cay! Time for a change of scenery,” I shouted at the unseen Gloria.

            Roni, with tears in her eyes, asked, “But what about Santa? He won’t know where we are?”

            “Nonsense, Santa knows where every kid is. He has Santa GPS on every one of them.”

            The car was packed in under two hours. Roni had her tablet, Husband his laptop, Horace his box of fly making feathers, and Gloria hid in the back. 

            We stood on the dock in the unseasonably warm weather. There was no snow or ice. Uncle Harrison’s boat was the only one left in the water. All the others had been dry docked for the winter. It didn’t matter, it would provide us with a physically distanced vacation. We’d deal with dry docking afterwards. 

            “But mommy.” Roni tugged at my sleeve. “Santa won’t find me. It’s a boat. It doesn’t have a chimney.”

            “Husband, the box with rope lights please.” I climbed up on the roof of the boat and carefully laid out the lights.

            “Take Roni back up to the parking lot, Husband.”

            When they were back up top, I turned the lights on. 

            “What does it say,” I shouted.

            “Santa please stop here!” The three kids shouted.

Transported to a Christmas in a Past Century (Catherine A. Campbell) 2020

Curled up in front of the fire in a small Scottish cottage in a place called Lundin Links. Christmas without family but welcoming strangers.

Christmas Eve is a special time. Music is resonating in the rafters along with laughter. The twelve days of Christmas, starting tomorrow. A festive time since Elizabethan days. Mulled wine in hand I stared into the fire. I had been dreaming of the stories that my hosts had shared with me. Slowly a Yule log appeared on the hearth. The room turned into the foyer of a large old house. The fire crackled even more vigorously. The laughter became raucous. The room was filled with partiers all clad in Elizabethan garb – stiff collars, corseted gowns, capes. All seemed to have silver goblets of mulled wine. 

There were garlands of ivy and bay leaves hanging from rafters. Christmas Eve was the time for giving and unwrapping. Piles of gifts were scattered around a Christmas tree. The Lord of Misrule (a clown organizing the entertainment) cavorted around the room. Actors, masqued, mimed the messages of Christmas. Guests clapped their hands in glee. I found myself doing the same although I scarcely made sense of this story of Christmas. Definitely more about festive events than the birth of Christ. 

Looking down I realized that I was wearing an embroidered gown, cinched tight at the waist and cut low in the bodice. A man grabbed my hand and spun me around in a wild gavotte (how did I know what steps to do). He pulled me up to him and kissed me full on the lips. His were moist with the mulled wine.

Hunger made me head to the tables loaded with wildfowl – turkey, pheasant, swan – and bread and beer and more wine. It seemed like the partying would go on forever. Dogs wandered around the room stealing tidbits where they could.

Then a hush. The Queen glided into the room. All elegance. Hair piled high. Gown stitched with jewels. Pointed toe slippers. Sparkles on her face and elaborate makeup. Courtiers bowed and then toasted her. Was it really Sir Walter Raleigh who knelt to take her hand and then guided her onto the dance floor? And my childhood idol, Sir Francis Drake, looking every bit the naval officer bowing to me and reaching out…

I started awake, someone gently shaking my shoulder. The space around me shrank back to the small cottage living room, the fire back to smoldering coals. Sir Francis Drake faded and I returned to Christmas 1967.

What Christmas Means To Me This Year (Muriel Allingham) 2020

What does Christmas mean to me this year?  As most people’s celebrations are arranged by a pandemic, mine is shaped by loss and struggle and having to grip a reality that I wasn’t prepared for.  Oh no, not the least of which is being ripped into living and cracked like an egg. And while the details of my loss are gruesome, I must admit that I am experiencing something unexpected this Christmas season. 

            I have not pulled out the delicate and sparkling Christmas decorations that are reminders of travels and years now literally left forgotten.  I am fortunate that I still have remnants of last Christmas on my doorstep and mantle—they seemed too heavy to remove after my loss, and they slipped from sight, as though they should be there all year.  Guess I am the epitome of a Country and Western song.  

            One thing I am feeling is gratitude, and there are many on the list that deserve my praise. Friends that have held my hand and walked with me through inclement weather, both literally and figuratively.  Friends that have laughed and cried with me, commiserated with me, and supplied me with unique and delightful avenues of revenge to carry out in my late-night fantasies.  

            And the crazy friends so full of life that it is hard not to be infected with their disease (as opposed to the Covid one).  

            And the unique people that have reached out to help me, and have become dear friends and sources of understanding and compassion. 

            My sister, who has worn the brunt of my emotional collapse, and from afar (UK) has reached out every day, since February 23—she is a saint, and being in lock-down since the beginning of the pandemic, has still listened to my woes on a daily basis.  And there are days where it must be difficult.  

            And then there’s me.  I didn’t think I could do it.  I did not feel as though I could care for my property, deal with all the legalities, take care of the house, look after two aging dogs or even survive after 20 years of living a life I thought I would go out in.  No, the house is not as clean as it used to be, but I did (with a bit of help) get all the outside work done this year.  

            Split from stern to stem; that’s what I feel like, but deep inside me is a growing joy, a personal best so to speak.  A cyclist that rode 2000 plus km this year, a meditation practitioner, a singer (very poor one, but a singer none-the-less).  A yoga enthusiast and a cook; yes, a cook.  I am learning French and reading poetry and the classics.  And I don’t have the leisure time I had a year ago, but that relaxation time is now golden moments that I can cherish.

            Yes, there has been shit; pure shit, but I’m learning to embrace it all and to risk everything knowing that a great new adventure awaits out there somewhere.  

            This Christmas will be definitely different.  I will at times be unhappy and I will feel lonely, but I know that I am blessed beyond what I felt last Christmas when I frolicked in what I believed to be my life of abundance.  And maybe the miracle of Christmas will be in the forgiveness I will learn, and as I grow into accepting that which I cannot change, I will realize how much I can change.  To everyone who has reached out to me this year; thank you from the bottom of my heart.  And to those that have surprised me with their own humanity and their crazy love of life, I will say cheers.  Next year’s goal; live in joy!  

The Smells of Christmas (Diane Chartrand) 2020

Jody walked into her mother’s house on December 24th and was hit with so many memories from her past.

The crisp citrus scent coming from the living room where the decorating was beginning to happen.  Jody pulled a needle to her nose and inhaled the sweet, spicy smell taking her back ten years to the last time she came home.

“Mom, do you remember when we went out to the lot to get this?”

“You mean when you got knocked over after trying your luck with the saw?”

Jody laughed and admitted it was a lot of fun, but now realized it could also be dangerous if you weren’t careful.

The scent of sage drew her away from the decorating and into the kitchen to check it out.  Jody’s sister was draped in a red apron with a picture of a reindeer with a shiny red nose sprinkling flour into a bowl.

“What ja making, Sue?”

“Close your eyes and tell me what you smell, and then you will know.”

Jody closed her eyes as she held her nose close to where her sister was standing.

“There is a strong smell of cinnamon and fresh, crisp apples.  I know, you’re making my favorite pie.”

Jody put on a kettle of water and began to set several cups on the counter.  This was her favorite of all time.  Coloured Candy Canes melting in a sea of swirling, hot milk mixed with a packet of divine chocolate for each one, leaving off the mild scent of peppermint.

After preparing the drinks, Jody put them on a tray and carried it out to the living room for everyone to enjoy.  The children were having such a fun time.  Mom pressed the white button when the decorating stopped, and the lights came on, flashing back and forth in sequence.

At noon, everyone sat at the dining room table, and Jody’s Dad carved the turkey, and the passing began.  As each plate or bowl came to Jody, she inhaled the wonderful smells emitting from them.

Melted butter mixed with celery, sage, pork, and bread crumbs all rolled into a ball.  Special drinks covered in nutmeg’s scent. The smell of mandarin oranges, clove, and cinnamon mixed as the wick flickered lightly in the background. 

Overstuffed from all the delicious food, Jody went into the den to recover and make room for dessert.  The aroma of hickory filled the room as she sat in her father’s recliner and closed her eyes.

The smells of Christmas can be overwhelming and, at the same time, pleasant.  Sometimes we are always in a hurry and never take the time to enjoy what is right there in front of us.

Jody spent the last ten years working and not even putting up a tree because she couldn’t be bothered.  She promised her mother that from now on, she would come home every year for Christmas.  The smells were divine.  A hint of nutmeg.  A stronger one of ginger from her sister’s cookies.

Although they spent several hours wrapping presents, Jody could never figure out what the smell was coming from the paper even with her eyes closed.  Guess paper is just paper and has no scent unless someone adds it in.

Christmas is a time to re-connect with family and friends. Still, most of all, we need to re-connect with the wonderful smells associated with the holiday.  So try and be like Jody.  Close your eyes and take in the wonders given to you from your sense of smell.

This year see what smells of Christmas you discover.  Maybe some will become your favorites or those you don’t even want to be close to.  

“Virtual” Christmas Lunch

With London now in a red zone we have to face the reality that Forest City Wordwrights annual Christmas lunch at the RiverBend Clubhouse is not going to happen in 2020. So it seems like the best substitute would be a wander down memory lane.

Lunch #1 – 2017

Hard to believe – 3 years ago. The Forest City Wordwrights have been an entity for four years. For some reason there don’t appear to be any pictures from that lunch. Our “prompt” exercise consisted of writing about winter before the meeting and reading to the group at the meeting.

Lunch #2 – 2018.

The full group attended.

800_4705
800_4727
800_4710
800_4723

Lunch #3 – 2019

800_5262
800_5260

Lunch #4 – Virtual

Reflect on 2020 – well not too long. Best put this year behind us and look forward to a new year.

Lunch #5 – 2021

Let’s plan!!

One more thing…

Readings from past meetings:

https://www.forestcitywordwrights.com/2018/12/20/12-days-of-christmas-rian-elliott/

Missing You – July 11, 2020

I think about you several times a day.  You are missed.  When I get up and make my coffee, you are there beside me, waiting for your cup to be ready.  I see your smile and hear your laugh.

One year ago today, I learned from your sister that you were finally awake, off of oxygen, and talking.  She and I had discussed earlier in the week about the e-cards the hospital had on their website to send to patients.  When they got them, they would be printed off and taken to the patient.

I sent two that very night—one from me and one from our writers’ group telling her to get better soon.  I have no idea if you ever did get to see them, especially the one from me with a cute dog on it.

That was on a Tuesday, and your sister said she wasn’t able to see you again until Thursday as her husband would be out of town.  I so wanted to go visit you, but we decided no one would like to be seen that way, so I didn’t push it.

I regret now that we didn’t’ arrange for me to visit you on Wednesday when your sister couldn’t.  I waited for another e-mail from her on Thursday to see if you had seen the e-cards, but no answer.  That day was Thursday, July 11, 2019.

The next morning I found an e-mail your sister had written during the early morning hours.  It said that on Thursday, July 11, 2019, while she was there, you had taken a turn for the worse and left this earth for a better place.

I have so many things in my house that remind me of you as I come upon them.  I have lost many people in my life, but for some reason, this time was different.  I missed our meeting every Tuesday in the food court downtown for lunch before we worked at the library for a couple of hours.

I missed our bus rides all over town just to end up at Westmount Mall to have coffee from the Tim Horton’s there.  For many months after that, I was unable to even take the bus to that area because the ride home would always go by your house.

Today is July 9, 2020, and in a few days, it will mark the first anniversary of your passing.  I find this week you are in my thoughts and I miss you even more than I did then.  I know you are watching down on all of us from wherever you are enjoying your coffee and writing.

There is a bit of good news.  I have what I was able to get of your writing.  Most of it, your sister had thrown out before I got to your house. The group did a tribute to you on our website and posted one of your short stories.  The good news is that story is now a published work.

When I was writing the third book of my trilogy, your story came to mind.  As my characters were getting their lives in order, I thought yours should also be.  After I reached the end of my story, I told my readers a bit about you and then put your story up for them to read.  Yes, I did put the copyright as yours and the year 2019.

Congratulations, my friend, on being able to have one accomplishment done even though you are not here.  We use to discuss what you were writing in the critic group from the London Writer’s Society, and I do have some of those to be another reminder of your words and wit.

I have had many friends, and still do, but you were special.  You were the sister who understood me and helped me to deal with things from my past.  I learned so much from you, but most of all, I learned a lot about you afterward.

I am missing you now as I write this and wish there could be just one more day.  The day you woke up in the hospital might have been that one.  I will remember to wear the shawl you gave me whenever I’m on the bus and get cold.  It stays in the side pocket of my backpack.

When I bake something in the oven, you are there with the oven mitts you gave me, so I would be able to pick up the hot things more easily.  I’m sure you have seen that I finally wrote that book about Buzby after you generously gave me a stuffed one after I admired the one on display at Tim’s.

We are now having a bad time in this world, and with your cancer, you may not have survived this, so I am glad you left when you did.  I do miss you every day, especially on Tuesday’s when my mind goes to making a peanut butter sandwich for lunch and going downtown to meet you.

One day, we will be back together again and maybe can pickup spending some time together.  My thoughts are your thoughts, my friend, and I am missing you so much on this day.

My First Boyfriend and My Father (Diane Chartrand)

It was 1958, I was thirteen, and had just started high school where I met a boy that I really liked, his name was Walter Dudek.

We started spending time together at school then progressed to the movie theatre so that we could kiss in the dark, and no one would object.

When my father found out who I was spending time with, he was furious, telling me he was no good and came from the wrong side of town.

One night Walter came to pick me up at the house. It wasn’t funny at the time but amuses me now.

All I remember is my father chasing Walter through back yards, over fences, and down several hills.  As they kept running, my father was yelling, “You  stay away from my daughter, you stay far, far away from her, or it will be hell to pay.”

This is the picture I still see in my head.  My father was four foot, eleven inches tall, and Walter was five foot, six inches in height.  I never realized my father could run so far or jump so high.

I didn’t stop seeing Walter for several months afterward, but he never did he come to pick me up at home again.

How to Start a Fire (Marian Bron)

Part 1 Ava

Sabine always wore black. Along with the opera length cigarette holder perpetually in her hand, it was her trademark. If one ignored the wild carrot coloured hair leaping around her pale face in untamed abandon, one would say she was classy. The hair, along with the constantly flashing green eyes, eyes that were angry and agitated, and not filled with youthful passion like our peers, kept her from achieving any status among our classmates. Like me, the foreigner, she was relegated to the rank of wannabee. 

            Seeing her dressed in a form hugging deep forest green cocktail dress, her hair smoothed into a respectable chignon at the nape of the neck and her eyes resting on my face as I approached the door of her building for our study session, was a shock. This was not Sabine the student I knew.

            I had come over from Canada in September to study French literature in the City of Lights for a year at the Sorbonne. A flight home for Christmas had been out of the question. While the bedsit I rented was affordable, it was the not being able to cook for myself that had blown my budget. If I wanted to finish my year abroad, I had to make some heavy handed changes. Mooching meals off Sabine twice a week was a start. Her snacks were not the chips and grease-filled treats of my high school and early university days. They were meals in themselves. Cheeses, raw vegetables, grapes and berries, spicy sausages when she received a package from home, and never anything fattening. I’d lost more than my freshman fifteen, pounds I had doubled second year, by the end of December. Unbelievably, I was almost back to my fourteen-year-old weight. The clothes I’d brought from home hung on me, but I couldn’t afford new ones. Unfortunate considering I was living in the fashion capitol of the world, so with needle and thread, I took in what I could. Forever marked as the uncouth American.

            “Cherie,” Sabine said as she locked the door behind her. “I forgot I have an appointment. Can we do this tomorrow?”

            A long black car idled at the curb. Its liveried driver stood with his hand on the rear passenger door. 

            “Sure, I guess, we have a week,” I replied as I followed her to the car.

            “Mademoiselle,” the driver nodded, opening the door.

            Sabine slid gracefully from sight. “I’ll text.”

            The driver closed the door and with a quick nod he turned on his heels, rounded the car and got in. The black car and Sabine disappeared around the corner.

No longer wowed by the ever present subway music, I made my way home. A long night alone in a box of a room all I had to look forward to. Like the sycamores outside my window it had lost its colour. What was once cute was now a cage. The peeling wallpaper  no longer historic and the water stained ceiling decrepit. I had wanted to spend the evening in Sabine’s apartment not just for the food. It was elegant. It was classy. It was truly Parisian. How she could afford it was a secret she kept. In late October, I had spent a weekend with her at her parent’s house near Dijon and knew they were not rich. Like me, they stretched every Euro as far as it would go. Sabine wouldn’t know how to stretch a Euro if it was made of elastic.

Part 2 – Sabine

Blonde sunshine. Big North American blonde upbeat sunshine. It was annoying. She’s old enough to know life isn’t like that. Regardless, I smiled a smile of welcome as I let her into my apartment. Doing what I do, these last two years I’ve become a master at faking it. This friendship was no different. 

Of course, it had its benefits. Despite not being a native speaker, she was smart. She knew how to write and because she read word by word, she was an excellent editor. Collaborating with her was never a mistake. It was an academic contact worth nurturing and, by extension, feeding. Her eyes lit up at the appetizers I had set out on my kitchen table. Ava didn’t think I noticed the literal hunger in her eyes. She thought she was playing it cool. Her face was too open and her heart too trusting. Those without scruples could easily take advantage of her.

We sat down and began studying. Ava discreetly eating almost everything on the table in front of her. But she wasn’t focussed today, not like most days. There was a question hanging over the table that she wasn’t asking. Her eyes kept travelling around the lovely apartment I had been allowed to live in.

Finally, I asked, “Cherie, what is it?”

She blushed. “It’s none of my business.”

It probably wasn’t, but I urged her to continue.

“This,” she said, a sweep of her hand taking in our surroundings. “Your apartment. It’s not like our other classmates’ apartments.”

I shrugged.

“How do you afford it?” Her big innocent blue eyes widened as she waited for my answer.

I settled back into my chair.  “I’m frugal. My parents taught me how to stretch a Euro.”

She shook her head. “I don’t believe it. They live nothing like this.” Her eyes settled on a signed print hanging over the fireplace. One of only twelve and a gift from a client. “How do you afford to live like this?”

Madame would love her. She was always on the look out for girls to book. She especially liked long-limbed blonde Americans, but I wasn’t going to share. As the oldest of five, I’ve done enough sharing in my twenty-three years. This side gig paid for the schooling I had waited far too long for, and it was mine alone. Besides, Ava didn’t have what it took to be one of Madame’s girls. Like I said, she was too open.

I shrugged again. “Student loans from a generous banker.”

Ava’s eyes narrowed. “But the dress and the limo last night? What was that about?”

It had been an unfortunate mistake. She was not supposed to see the car and driver or the dress. For years the cultivated persona was my shield and she saw behind it. Today I was back in my student uniform, but it didn’t protect me from her questions. She had glimpsed my private second persona. 

“An uncle called for me, a well do-to uncle so I had to dress up. He took me out to dinner.” I leaned forward. “I would appreciate it if you told no one about it. My reputation, you know. The other students don’t need to know.”

Her eyes narrowed as she sat back. “I didn’t think you cared what others thought of you?”

I shrugged again. “I do, to a degree. They are my peers.”

Ava’s eyes swung around the room. Taking in the furnishings and artwork Madame had provided. 

It was her turn to lean forward as she whispered, “Are you a prostitute?”

“Don’t be foolish.” Prostitute was so bourgeoisie.