Bernie and Iggy-- A Writer's Digest Flash Fiction Challenge

The February Flash Fiction Challenge prompt today is to write from the perspective of a kitchen item

 

Bernie never had problems with self-confidence. Of the four siblings, he was the strongest. 18,000 BTUs of muscle. He had a softer side, too. An inner ring of precision that could gently simmer the most delicate sauces. But he was nothing without Iggy, and he knew it.

Bernie and Iggy were a match made in Cleveland, TN. The production team at the KitchenAid plant introduced them, and a bond was ignited. They’ve been together going on three years, enjoying the challenges of culinary life. There was the time they roasted Fresno chilies. The smoky char and invigorating spice combined excited their sensors. Together they faced the weight of the Dutch oven and produced the most tender pot roast with the unyielding stamina of “low and slow.” Their specialty, though, was the Power Boil. They could enrage 6 quarts of water into a rapid boil in under 15 minutes. A record among their kind.

Iggy hasn’t been around lately. The dial clicks and clicks for her attention, but she doesn’t answer. Bernie didn’t think he did anything wrong… sure, there was the overflow incident, but they’ve prevailed through worse messes. His siblings’ flames whispered in their little circles, but Bernie couldn’t hear what was said over the clanking of cookware and muttering of the cook.

Then the worst happened. Bernie, with all his strength, was reduced to a supporting role. He did his best to keep the cutting board steady and provide stability under the stoneware waiting for the ribeye. But it wasn’t what he was made for. He continued to click, hoping to coax Iggy back.

It was a cold morning when metal hit metal and Bernie was extracted from his home. Rough, unknown hands ripped him away from his siblings. The Counter, as smooth and clean as she was, wasn’t any place for a burner of his caliber. He trembled as the foreign hands probed through his home with unfamiliar tools. They weren’t the assembly machines he knew in Tennessee. They were quick and efficient. These primitive objects were crude. Bernie would turn up his nose if he had one.

Microfiber draped over him, shielding him from the carnage. The fabric offered some momentary comfort until the peace was shattered by movement once again. His surprise morphed into awe as he was nestled back in his home. It had been cleaned and polished, look almost as good as the day he made his debut at the end of the production line. 

He clicked again.

And Iggy returned.

She was more vibrant than he had seen in a long while. She circled him, playfully dancing about. Bernie still didn’t know if he was the cause; she refused to discuss her absence. It didn’t matter. A plump, deep red bell pepper had joined them. And they knew exactly what to do.

And Shoes to Match

This story features characters from The Rainbow Collection

Rick

We have a new dish soap that smells like Christmas trees. The bottle says it’s “Iowa Pine” and I’m not used to it yet. I keep thinking I’ll see a tree in the living room when I turn around.

But not the type of tree you’re thinking of.

My mind’s eye goes to the late 70s and a small ceramic evergreen that stands maybe six inches tall. It’s painted with decorations and snow and filled with little wax beads holding the scent of our new dish soap. I’m certain those perfumed pellets would now be labeled toxic. It lived on the coffee table of our Brooklyn home in December, and the scent will always remind me of New Years.

My parents were headed to a party and Mom had laid out a flowing black dress with sheer bell sleeves, a black handbag, and thick-heeled platform shoes with wide straps. Very 70s indeed. The handbag was square and had a prominent silver buckle clasped around its middle. To a four-year-old, it looked like something off a Pilgram’s hat. Intrigued, I spent hours sifting through our small closet in search of a flat-topped hat that would match, but the only hats I found were of the sun and woolen varieties.

Mom didn’t wear make up often, but a special occasion required a special face. I sat on the bathroom counter and watched as she applied sparkling, baby-blue eyeshadow, bushy false lashes, and color on her cheeks, transforming her from Mary Ann to Ginger in a matter of minutes.

“That all black outfit is what you’re wearing tonight?” my father asked.

Mom held two shades of lipstick up and examined her pout in the mirror. “You said you weren’t sure if it’s formal or not. That dress can go either way.”

“It’s a New Year’s Eve party, Lily. Not a funeral.”

She considered his reflection. “You said all my other dresses were too loud. You also told me to try for elegant because it’s your boss’s party. That dress is the closest I’ll get without spending money in the next hour.”

“But all black?”

“With silver accents. I could always wear my silver go-gos.”

My father made a face. “Wear something respectable.”

“Then I’m wearing the black shoes.”

He huffed and thudded away. Mom leaned into me and whispered, “The shoes are supposed to match the purse anyway.”

An idea sparked and I grinned. She disappeared into the bedroom to change and I raced to the kitchen cupboard. Her shoes could match her purse a little better and I was determined to make it so.

It took me a few tries to pull a clean sheet of foil over the jagged metal strip. My folds weren’t as neat as I wanted them, but decided the crinkled aluminum would only add more sparkle. One was a little bigger than the other, but if these little squares were moving and hidden by the skirt of the dress, who would be the wiser?

Attaching my secret crafting project proved to be a bigger challenge than cutting the foil cleanly. Taping them would take too much time— I wanted to get them in place without much fuss. I wasn’t allowed to use the stapler after driving one of the little menacing staples into my thumb earlier in the year. Paper clips would have to do.

Mom was in her party dress when I got to her bedroom. She was clasping long silver chains around her neck and smiled at me in the mirror. “Where’d you go off to, my Rich boy?”

“Nowhere,” I said with a grin and she narrowed her eyes at me.

“You went somewhere,” she urged and smiled back.

“I got a surprise for you.”

Mom swirled around wearing a Christmas morning grin. “Do you? Should I close my eyes?”

I nodded fast and laughed when she did it. I waved to see if she was peeking, and when she didn’t respond, I attached my gift as quickly as my less than nimble fingers would go.

“Ok. You can look now.”

Mom blinked and came closer, curiosity playing across her face. I pointed at her shoes.

After a confused moment, she picked them up and marveled at the sight. “Buckles! You made buckles for me!”

“You said the shoes gotta match the purse. Now they match!”

“Yes, they do!” she giggled and slipped her feet in. “They’re perfect. Now it’ll be like you are at the party with us!”

She scooped me up with a kiss and swung me around. “And I’ll tell everyone just where I got these one-of-a-kind gems,” she vowed.

“The babysitter is here,” Dad said and strode into the room. “Are you ready— What are those?”

“Silver buckles,” Mom said with pride. “Now my shoes really match my bag.”

“You’re not wearing tin foil to this party, Lily.”

“Yes, I am. Rich made these for me and I’m proud of his imagination. You should be too.”

“You’re not wearing tin foil on your shoes.”

“Then I’m not going,” she said and crossed her arms in defiance.

I beamed with pride, having no idea how tense the situation was. All I knew was my mom loved her gift and she was determined to win this argument.

“Don’t worry, Chuck,” Mom said. “I’ll be sure to tell everyone they were designed by a four-year-old.”

“Four and a half,” I reminded her. It was an important distinction then.

Mom nodded at me. “Four and a half. And they will be as charmed as I am.”

So my parents went off to the party. I imagined the compliments she would get all night and the smile on her face as she explained the buckles’ origins. I spent the night with my sitter. She woke me up just before midnight and I kneeled between the couch and the coffee table with my nose over the ceramic Christmas tree, breathing in its Iowa Pine scent. The sparkling ball dropped in Times Square and somewhere in the Brooklyn night, a proud mother displayed her shoes to all her husband’s associates.

“Happy new year, Mom,” I whispered and yawned. My eyes were heavy and my sitter carried me back to bed where I dreamed of tin foil buckles hanging all over evergreens.

Morning Snow

Inspired by several true stories, none of which happened all together.


When I had gone to bed, a winter storm was in full swing. The wind rushed, rattling windows, while heavy snow dropped to the ground. It was still very early, nearing 6am, when our Old Man Pup decided he needed to venture out to do his morning business. Being a senior pup and a 92lb mix of Australian Shepherd and Woolly Mammoth, his joints aren’t what they used to be and he requires assistance with our home’s many stairs. I heard him scrabbling to get up and decided I would guide him down, allowing my husband to stay-toasty warm under the covers.

I should have known something was wrong before I opened the bedroom door. A chilly slice of air attacked my ankles before I could turn the knob, and I was greeted by the bitter cold that would have been expected if I were opening a door to the outside rather than one leading to a hallway. Our Old Man Pup fluffed the air with his nose and pulled back in obvious confusion.

When we got to the landing, the smaller of our spry cats dashed up to greet us with an excited mew and hurried back down. The Old Man Pup settled on the floor and glanced at me as if to say, “I’ll wait right here while you go check it out.” In the span of a few steps, my mind danced with possibilities, its favorite being a branch came down through a window. By the time I reached the ground floor, meaning only a few seconds later, I was convinced I’d encounter shattered glass. What’s more, I imagined the troublemaker sibling of the excited cat balancing on the branch and in desperate danger of encountering a sharp shard. I’d have to wrangle both cats, sweep glass, pull a heavy limb back to the outside, and staple a tarp over the damaged window. All in the bitter cold while being shoeless. All while our senior pup held in whatever he wanted to let out in the yard.

The reality of the situation was quite different.

A door had blown open.

Let me explain a little about the doors in our house. None of them latch without extra attention. They look closed, but they are always teetering on the edge of open. The deadbolts turn just enough to appear in place, when they are really resting in an indentation rather than the proper slot to engage the lock. When the house is closed up for the night, it’s customary to tug on all the swinging doors to check for stability, curse at the ones that open, and repeat the dance until the damn thing is solidly locked. This early morning, I was taught that sometimes even that sequence of steps aren’t enough to ensure we are locked up tight for the night.

It was the mudroom’s door that had opened, one of the few without the added feature of a storm door. The wind had blown a good two to three inches of snow into the room. The smaller cat sat at the threshold connecting the mudroom to the interior of the house, her tail curled around her paws and her yellow eyes watching the snow show. Her brother stood on a nearby cabinet, body and tail stretched into a runners stance with one paw raised and curled in anticipation of the race to the begin. The Old Man Pup woofed a light reminder that he was waiting patiently and that his bladder wasn’t as reliable as it used to be.

If you’ve ever seen snow blown into your home, you know that it’s deeper by the door and slowly peters out further in. My eyes focused on the thicker of the layer until the cat on the cabinet dropped lower into his crouch. I tracked his sight into the mudroom. That was when I first spied the paw prints in the shallow end of the snow. They were traveling inward and not shaped correctly to be of the feline variety. Beyond the blanket of snow lay holiday packages of cookies and bread that were set to be mailed when the morning was a little older. Two boxes were torn open and a gaze of raccoons were enjoying the holiday treats meant for human consumption. The four had liberated a loaf of sourdough, a pan of cinnamon rolls, and too many cookies to count. I blinked at the furry family feasting on their holiday banquet while warm(er) and cozy in the corner of their new den. The presence of the cats were not enough to deter them, and the scene was too foreign for either feline to formulate a plan of defense. The smaller cat looked up at me as if to say, “we’re outnumbered.”

From the doorway, I couldn’t reach my boots, but my fingers could just graze the handle of an umbrella. I reached lower to grasp the canopy. No sooner did my fingers close around the fabric, the entire umbrella fell open. While I intended to open it to scare the animals, I wanted to be in control of the surprise. The four critters stopped chewing long enough to take notice of me and the cats, but they agreed with our smaller cat’s assessment: despite me towering over them and the possible weapon in my hand, there were still more of them.

The Old Man Pup woofed again, this time with some urgency. The raccoons silently conferred, reassessing their options. It seemed that two cats and an armed giant in the doorway were fine, but the woofing of a mysterious fourth threat was deemed too much. They stuffed as much of my kitchen labor into their mouths and waddled one by one in a straight line to the door.

The final and smallest of the raccoons stopped half way and came up on its hind legs, looking back at the treats. A raccoon that had already left stuck its head back in to urge the last one on, finally turning and leaving in disgust that its friend wasn’t listening. The interloper spun around and grabbed the remnants of the sourdough loaf. It made a break for it on its hind legs, slipping and sliding over the slick tile, and at one point running in place like a cartoon, never letting go of the bread. I pulled the umbrella closed, flipped the tip to face me, and used the hook of the handle to guide the cartoon wannabe out.

Both cats crept into the mudroom and stretched their necks to sniff where our holiday house guests had been. Still curious, as cats are, they tiptoed toward the open door, only to recoil in horror as their paws touched the snow. “Some help you are,” I said to them. They only returned a wide-eyed look in my direction and sauntered off to warmer parts of the house.

Still barefoot, it was my turn to tiptoe around the frosty fluff. After securing my feet in cold boots, I grabbed the shovel and scraped snow off the tile and out the door. The raccoons didn’t get very far. They stood in a valley of snowdrifts, watching me put the outside back where it belonged. The little one was still on its hind legs, clutching the bread and nibbling on its edge. I turned to look at the destroyed boxes and cookie crumbs, then back at my visitors. I gathered the remaining treats back into an open box and set it outside. “Happy holidays,” I said and shut the door.

I returned to the staircase to help the Old Man Pup down, but he wasn’t on the landing. I climbed back up and found the bedroom door ajar. I stuck my head in and squinted. He was back on his bed, curled up, his chest rising and falling with the deep, even breaths of sleep. I wondered for a moment if the Old Man Pup had heard the raccoons and only got up to investigate.

Though I was now fully awake, I slipped back into bed. My husband stirred and turned, draping an arm over me and mumbling some kind of thanks for taking care of the dog. I wanted to put my half frozen toes on his nice, warm legs, but decided that would ruin the story I’d surely tell to disbelieving folks for years to come.

At the Gym

This excerpt features characters from The Rainbow Collection. Sean has Dissociative Identity Disorder and Trevor is his alternate personality who loves to put his two cents in.

Sean

I hit the gym before going home and spend an impossibly long time on the elliptical. Walking on solid ground afterwards is like hitting land after a two-month cruise. Maybe. I’ve never been on a ship for any length of time, but I swear it can’t feel much different. After a sauna and shower, I’m at my locker getting dressed when this gorgeous man travels down the row, freshly toweled off and as naked as the day his mother met him. I’ve seen him before, though not nearly as much of him, and am pretty sure he’s gay too, but I ignore his display just in case. Should probably ignore it anyway, even though the place is empty. Rule number one for gays in a mainly hetero locker room is ‘Do not let thy eyes wander, lest the Straights become uncomfortable.’

“Good morning,” he says as he passes and stops at a locker about four away. His voice holds an accent I can’t place.

“Morning,” I reply, and Trevor pulls our eyes to his.

Hello yumminess! he warbles in my head. Look. No tan lines.

I shove Trevor hard, and he retreats with a laugh. But it’s true; this man stands maybe 6’1” and is nothing but long, sleek muscles shaded a toasty brown. His dark hair falls in wet waves around his face, ending somewhere at the middle of his neck. I still prefer blonds, but one must acknowledge art when it’s presented.

I go back to dressing and consider shedding the towel bound around my hips. Trevor dares me, but I don’t indulge. I poke my head through the neck hole of my t-shirt and Mr. Toasty is next to me, dressed in faded jeans and nothing else. Even his feet are long and gorgeous.

“I’m Marco.” His lips barely tick up.

“Sean,” I say without the same invitation his tone implied.

“I’m always starved after a workout. You?”

My cheeks tighten to hold the smile at bay. “Sometimes.” Oh, this is a bad, bad idea…

His eyes brighten, but the rest of him remains smoothly casual. “Can I interest you in brunch?”

Trevor groans at my response before it passes my lips. “As much fun as that sounds, I shouldn’t.”

“Shouldn’t?” There’s amusement on his handsome face.

Damn, he’s tempting. “There’s… someone I’m trying to work things out with. Brunch could be confusing.”

Marco leans his back against the lockers and considers me. “Brunch doesn’t have to be confusing. Breakfast or lunch. Coffee or cocktail.”

Uh huh. “Discussions and dessert?”

“If there’s a someone,” he tilts his head in consideration, “dessert can be another time.”

Another man enters. I expect Marco to straighten and adopt a less sensual stance. He doesn’t, and that is definitely a point in his favor. Our intruder glances at us and chooses a locker at the far end of the row, which means he’s not a regular with an assigned spot. I wonder if Marco’s obvious interest will scare him to another gym.

Marco waits for an answer. “I’d really like to say yes.”

“Then say it,” he smiles and I melt.

I swallow the temptation and shake my head. “Rain check? If I find myself less… involved?”

He straightens, still smiling. “If he works out, we can shelf dessert completely. Maybe I’ll find a friend and we can all enjoy a nice meal.”

“Maybe,” I echo.

Marco leans in a sort of bow. “Enjoy your Sunday, Sean.” His deep voice is melodious and exotic. He pulls on a white button-up shirt, shoulders his gym bag, and leaves me dizzy in his wake.

I blow out a breath, fold my arms on the locker, and lean my forehead into it.

I hate you, Sean, Trevor grumbles.

Sparks

Tommy never told anyone how he burned down the roller rink. No one got hurt, as far as we knew, but we were kids and didn’t pay much attention to the news. All we knew was our favorite hangout was gone.

There were four of us who hung out all the time: Richie, Vinny, Tommy, and me, Frankie. We were young, eleven or twelve, I can’t remember. Summers were spent playing handball and riding our bikes over the uneven surfaces of cracked sidewalks. Parks with ramps weren’t a thing in the 70s so the most daring tricks we did were the kind with plywood and cinder blocks. Our makeshift ramps were never sound enough to allow for a jump, so we made due with skipping over the curb between the closely packed cars.

Roller skating was the next best thing to biking. We had gotten good at keeping our balance over the grooves in the sidewalk and had fun letting our voices vibrate along with the pebbly asphalt, but when a roller rink opened not three blocks away, we made the smooth transition to slicked-down cement easily. We sold lemonade and did extra chores around our respective homes to afford to go skating at least once a week.

Birthday parties at the rink were all the rage, knocking McDonald’s to an afterthought. I don’t remember whose party we went to that led to the fire, but I can still see us huddled in the back by the lockers. Tommy had what looked like a real lighter. Not one of those plastic gas station jobs, but a gleaming compact rectangle of metal, complete with a hinged top and exposed wheel.

“Lemme see that,” I said and snatched it out of his hand. From an early age, I loved all things mechanical and I needed to see how it worked.

“Don’t break it!” Tommy grumbled and pulled his next surprise out of his pocket, a pack of real Marlboro Reds. I had no interest in smoking; the bubble gum ciggies were enough for me. They were fun. A cherry flavored cylinder of red gum with a paper wrapper and between that and the gum was a layer of fine, powdered sugar. If you were careful enough to not get the paper too wet, you could blow through it and a puff of sugary smoke came from what was supposed to be the lit end. The effect was real enough to make my father snatch it out of my mouth the first time he saw it.

I turned the lighter over in my hands, inspecting the craftsmanship. It was a solid piece of construction with finely welded seams. I thumbed the wheel and a brilliant golden spark danced for about a half second where the flame should be. Scowling, I tried again, yielding the same result. I shook the container near my ear and thrust it back to Tommy. “It’s empty.”

“But it still sparks,” he snipped back. “The tobacco is dry and it’ll still catch.”

“Not so sure about that,” Richie said and glanced over our group, checking if any adults were hunting for us.

“Coast still clear?” Vinny asked and got a positive nod in return.

Tommy pulled a cigarette from the pack and clamped his lips over the filtered end. He cupped his hand around the front where he held the lighter and thumbed the wheel once, twice, and again with the same result. Nothing.

Vinny dropped back on his heels in a pout. “Maybe I can go swipe matches?”

“Where you gonna find matches?” Richie’s attitude was harsher than if Vinny volunteered to produce a roll of quarters for each of us to hit the arcade section.

Vinny shoved at him with a knock it off vibe and rolled his eyes. “They gotta light the cake candles with something, don’t they?”

Tommy was adamant. “Nah, man this is gonna work.”

“No it ain’t,” Richie answered.

“Yo, guys,” I said and waved my hands. “Cool your jets. The solution is simple.”

“Great. Frankenbrain’s gotta another plan,” Vinny groaned.

“And when have my plans not worked?”

“Alls we need is a light, not a Mission Impossible style operation!” Richie warned.

Tommy tapped a T with his hands. “Time out. Time out. Let’s here what he’s got to say.”

“Thank you,” I said and glared at the others. “I don’t gotta say anything. Just chill and I’ll be right back.”

Most of the light in the place was focused on the skating floor and the tables circling it were in the shadows. I followed trails of blue smoke until I found my target. Now…walking on roller skates then was simpler since we had four wheels instead of the roller blades people use today. Just about everyone would walk/slide along the carpet that bordered the actual rink. But it wasn’t fool proof. Sliding when you should step would cause the wheels to sputter and you end up on your butt with all your friends laughing at you.

Or… on your butt next to a skater’s grandma. On purpose.

“Oof. Ow,” I said when I landed.

“You ok boy?” she asked in an accent I couldn’t place. Wherever she was from, she played her part exactly as I needed. She grabbed me under my arm and lifted, which is to say, I stood up on my own and let her hand guide me.

As I came up, I put a hand on the table and palmed her lighter. “Yeah. I’m good,” I answered. “Thanks.”

“Be more careful on those things. You’ll break your neck,” she called after me.

I returned to my cohorts with my prize and was cheered. Tommy declared his lighter got some smoke after a few more tries, but he was more than happy to use the grandma’s lighter. He tossed the metal contraption in the corner.

“Why’d you do that?” I asked.

“The thing don’t work. Why bother?”

That evening I discovered I enjoyed the bubble gum cigarettes over the real ones and that the grownups who were supposed to be watching us had no clue we were off on our own. Our smoke blended into the thick haze and no one was the wiser. Not even when each of us coughed up a lung trying to be cool.

Honestly, it wasn’t such a memorable night, just one of many going around the oblong rink over and over. Smashing into the sidewalls instead of learning to stop with the rubber thing on the toes. Grabbing hands ands and spinning until the centrifugal force was so great our shirts blew into parachutes behind us and letting go so we’d zoom off, not caring who or what we collided with on the way.

In fact, I probably wouldn’t even remember that night if the place didn’t burn down. The arson investigation determined there was a gas leak and a spark. I asked how they knew and was given a long explanation that didn’t stick beyond the sentence “there was a gas line that ran to the concession stands from behind the lockers.” My mind immediately went to the small metal lighter with the flip top and exposed wheel lying on the ground in the corner. By the lockers. Where anyone could have picked it up and checked for a flame. When I relayed this information to the others, Tommy paled a shade and we all found something else to do fast. We never spoke about it again.

Maybe Tommy didn’t actually burn the place down, but to a pre-teen the whole thing was too coincidental. I know now it wasn’t very probable, but the scenario in my head was possible. As an adult with internet access to all sorts of public reports, I still haven’t typed in a search that would satisfy my 50 some odd year old curiosity. The four of us are still friends in the Facebook sort of way and I’m sure if I mentioned the Skate Scene memories would spark.

But I’ve seen the havoc a spark can wreak. Adding fuel to the fire just isn’t my style.

P.S. I returned the lighter to the grandma. I’m not a thief. Just a possible accomplice to arson.

Comet

The one drop of blood on her tongue sung of life and promise. Metallic, yes, but rich in all the components of the universe. Channeling the energy from her palate to her hands, she molded the air into a tight ball the pulsed with every heartbeat. “Life from life,” she said, and drew a shape in her mind. Once the lines were crisp and vibrant, the sphere of air between her palms sparked a pale blue. She added the warmth of red and stretched the violet light, pulling here and tucking there, until the outline in her mind filled the space before her. Shifting to hold the image from another angle, she expanded it once again, giving the shape some heft. A swipe and the memory of velvet teased the light into sleek fur. The tail would have to be long to balance its weight and wide paws to grip the firm earth when she ran. Yes, it would be a her, unless it told her otherwise once it became aware.

Amara sat back and considered her new friend. A little more blue deepened the fur into something resembling the night sky. A smile crossed her face as she dragged the tips of her fingers through it to add some streaks of silver like comets peeking through the atmosphere. “Comet,” she spoke aloud.

Comet trembled, filling out with muscle and bone, and shook into existence. Blinking, she revealed sapphire eyes streaked with thin lines of other jewel colors. Amara may have created the bodies, but the eyes are always their own, as they must be. Every Creature should be afforded their own outlook on the world they inhabit.

Amara didn’t intend to create another cat-like Creature, but there was something to their gracefulness that appealed and therefore crept into every project. Comet stretched and stepped, testing the mobility of her new self. She turned her jeweled eyes to Amara and blinked her approval.

“Welcome,” Amara said and presented her hands, palms out and fingers down, as was the customary greeting of their world. Comet’s instincts were on the mark, and she placed her front paws on Amara’s hands. The mannerisms of each Creator were often shared with their projects. Comet would be polite, yet defiant, and cunning, but naïve. Gentle until the time for kindness passes. Always until then.

And the time always came.

The Desk

Annie sat on her grandpa’s lap, taking comfort in the sweet scent of pipe tobacco. Grandpa was an artist, not by trade but in his heart. Annie didn’t know if he ever took formal lessons. She didn’t care. She loved to lean against the soft, tobacco-scented cotton of his shirt and listen to the sounds of his breath and heartbeat while he sketched blue jays and cardinals on the creamy paper.

 “Gently. With tiny strokes,” her grandpa would say while guiding her hand with the paintbrush. Together they filled in the brown of a branch a blue jay perched upon.

 “See how the branch isn’t smooth?” he pointed out. “That’s why the tiny strokes. Each stroke changes the color. Trees don’t have just one type of brown.”

 His voice was rough, as if the words brushed against his short mustache as they passed his lips. Annie didn’t know gravelly sounds came from a lifetime of smoking and working underground in the tunnels. Not even after he died from cancer.

 The secretary desk where they painted together sits in Annie’s study today. Its hinges creak and its pigeonholes store unpaid bills and peripherals for the tiny machines her creative grandpa could have never imagined. But across the top, nestled against the base of a banker’s lamp, is a worn pallet of watercolors. Each well displays the bare base metal with a halo of color around it. The brush has dried into a delicate point, stiff with the last color dipped.

 With her eyes closed, she can conjure the scent of her grandfather, gone from the world in body, but never in spirit.

/

Danny settled on the flattest slab of stone he could find and his surroundings stilled in reverence of the moment. Instead of bowing his head, he held it high. 

No. Not Danny.

Daniel.

The name rolled off his tongue in a whisper. It would get easier.

He didn’t doubt it, but he wondered how it would feel. Would the uncertainty morph into confidence at a snail’s pace? He didn’t want to complete his transformation unnoticed, but blaring trumpets were rare. 

Only tragedies loved fanfare.

Daniel was determined.  This would be good. It might be bumpy for a while, but faith was a requirement.

With a deep breath, he stood and headed for the wooden bridge.  Its boards moaned a greeting and wished him luck.

He touched white linen at his throat, sending a prayer through the material to strengthen his voice and the words to be carried. There would be time to calm his nerves before the congregation files in.

The vestibule smelled of candle wax, frankincense, and lemon.  The nave echoed his shuffling. 

No.  That wouldn’t do.

He lifted his feet in a proper walk.  The clicking twitched a smile and the swish of the cassock brought it full.

At the tabernacle, he genuflected and paused on one knee to give thanks for his new station.

Daniel, not Danny, was ready.

/