The property caretaker brought over not one, but three, dinners of turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, fresh corn, fresh peas, whole-wheat muffins with real butter, side dishes of sour cream, and one each a quarter of a pumpkin pie, a cherry pie, and a blueberry meringue pie.
“This should set you up for the next day or so,†he assured me, “because damn, you’re not looking any better.
“You got to eat, boss.â€
I told him I was going to see a physician in the big city on Thursday, but it’d probably be a wasted trip and wasted expense, because he was probably going to tell me to do exactly as I’ve been doing, bed-rest, orange juice, eating the proper foods, avoiding stress.
It probably would’ve been bearable if I’d had a primitive for New Year’s, but as that never happened, I was now shooting to get a primitive for Martin Luther King‘s day.
- - - - - - - - - -
The business partner left this morning, having reported that the party at the neighbor’s last night had gone pretty good, but I probably didn’t miss much, it mostly being drinking and yak-yakkety-yak.
It was arctic cold outside, and the caretaker decided to stay a while, warming up in the house.
One of his elbows on the table, he mentioned, “Maybe you should open up another one of those presents, boss; at the rate you’re going, it’ll be your birthday before you’ve opened them all.â€
I said sure, even though I wasn’t in the mood, and reached over for one of the big ones, one of those given me by his wife and him.
“Oh no,†he said; “I already know what’s in that one.
“Here’s a little one from [the
femme]; I’m interested in knowing what kind of intimate presents you lovebirds give each other.
“Maybe it’s something to, you know, make hopping around in the sack more fun.â€
I let the insult pass, and opened it up; it was a pair of sunglasses.
“You got to be kidding me, boss--that’s what she gives you, sunglasses? What kind of intimate lovey-dovey present is that? Sunglasses?â€
I commented I thought it an eminently perfect gift, and one hard to find.
“See the bows on this?†I asked, pointing out the mechanics of the eyeglasses.
“I don’t have anything on which to latch the bows of other eyeglasses, and so have to tie the bows together around the back of the head. The way I have my hair covers it, but it’s a nuisance, especially if I don’t tie the knot right.
“With these, I can just take a rubber band, and snap! they’re on and stay on.â€
- - - - - - - - - -
While sitting at the table, he shoved two presents at me, one a small one still wrapped, and the other an open box of home-made jams and jellies, both from the same person, a woman who usually wins all the purple ribbons for such condiments at the county fair, and sometimes even at the state fair.
They were from Wanda, the all-purpose, with no specialty, cook at the bar, the cherubic one of Polish derivation.
“Now, tell me, boss why were you pulling Wanda’s leg about hobnobbing with lordships and ladyships when you were younger?
“I mean, sure, you’ve always hung out with a high-class sort of people, but this was going a little too far, you taking advantage of her gullibility. You know she believes everything you tell her, and it wasn‘t nice.â€
I looked at him with the glazed look of a man who’s just been shot in the stomach.
“What are you talking about?â€
“Oh now, boss, Wanda down at the bar told us all about it last night--â€
I groaned.
Now, I sometimes misunderstand what hearing people say, but I have an excuse; I can’t hear. One wonders what sort of excuse hearing people have, when they misunderstand something a deaf person tells them.
“I didn’t tell her that at all,†I told him.
- - - - - - - - - -
Wearily I explained to the caretaker what I’d told Wanda when she’d been here the previous morning.
When I was young, 18, 19, and 21 years old, I spent three winters in England, doing nothing but simply roaming around to see what was there. I resented being in college; I’d go just before Christmas, and promise I’d be back in time for the second semester which at the time started in late January.
But I stayed as long as my money held out, which was about three months, give or take a couple of weeks, in all instances, meaning I’d be back in Lincoln long after college had resumed, and wouldn’t have to worry about it until June.
- - - - - - - - - -
When I was there, I used as my “headquarters†a room in a pub in Canterbury, in southeastern England. It was called the “Shakespeare Inn†but was really a pub where the family rented out a few rooms on occasion.
A regular boarder there for part of each year, winter, was a short slight white-haired man who was always impeccably dressed in a gentleman‘s style, maybe about 70 years old at the time. His eyes were those of a madman, although he was well-behaved. He had to be taken care of, but he behaved.
The family that owned the pub constantly referred to him as “Lord†and “his Lordship,†telling me that he was in fact a
bona fide Irish peer. Not a major lord, but much more than a minor lord, one who’d been presented to the Queen (and before her, the King) more than few times, during his years with the British Foreign Office.
Preposterous, I thought, although being well-mannered enough to never betray my doubts.
If anything, this guy was a caricature of a Lord, nothing at all as I imagined Lords, such as Lord Curzon or the Marquess of Reading or Baron Hardinge, men of formidably heroic stature.
I couldn’t see a real peer being ga-ga, and assumed the family referred to him thusly simply to humor him. After all, he was well-bred, he looked as if he had money, and despite that he went bonkers every so often, he was on the whole gracious and well-behaved.
And so it was just simply good business for the owners to cater to a whim, a fantasy, of his.
- - - - - - - - -
All three winters I spent in England, when in Canterbury, his Lordship demonstrated a curiosity about me, always stopping to talk when I was seated at the bar dining upon turkey. He said I was a “novel American, different from the usual run of that breed.â€
I didn’t know what to make of it; I was just a withdrawn sullen saturnine young lad at the time, with a too-high opinion about my evaluations of others.
Whenever he learned I was going to some obscure part of the country, he offered suggestions on what I should see, and expect. Always amenable to the guidance of others, I always went, inspected, and reported back to him it all was as he said it was, and I thanked him for the illumination, a gratitude which was sincere.
There was one time I had High Tea with his Lordship, to humor him. The wife of the pub thought it a great honor that I’d been extended an invitation, and spent far more time fussing about and setting things up than the tea actually lasted, the scheduled forty-five minutes.
It wasn’t me; Canterbury is a popular destination for tourists, and the pub had accommodated Americans for years, for decades; we were pretty much run-of-the-mill customers for the place. It was simply that it was High Tea for his Lordship, and had to be carried out just right.
It went right; I managed to not err or offend in the slightest, but it was a trial. On that day, his Lordship seemed more agitated, excited (about something not involving me), and his speech was very difficult to follow. I’m sure he said a lot of interesting things, but I couldn’t grasp any of it, and my head burned for hours after the ordeal, from the stress of desperately trying to “listen.â€
- - - - - - - - - -
When back home, during intervening years and after my last trip, I wrote him six or half a dozen times, letters to which he always replied.
Sometime during the later 1980s, I learned he’d died, and sent a note of condolences to the owners of the Shakespeare Inn.
After which I forgot about the matter, until one day when I happened to be near a
Burke’s Peerage, and checked to see if the ancient lunatic was in it.
Much to my startlement, he was, and with a long string of acronyms after his title and names, and upon further query, learned that he’d been instrumental in attempts to keep Argentina neutral (rather than joining the Axis) during the second world war, and was conceded by allied foreign officials as having been the one to make the recalcitrant
Peronistas behave.