The day started well. We had high hopes for a pleasant daytrip with good food, gorgeous weather, plenteous photo opportunities, and sweet togetherness with loved ones.
I was preparing to dress when my phone rang.
"She's gone!" my weeping mother wailed.
I knew she meant that flights of angels had sung her only sister, my beloved aunt, to her rest.
It was expected, but not so soon.
When it came to my aunt's final days (make that moments) on this earth, somebody (make that several somebodies) in the healthcare profession did not exactly read the tea leaves accurately.
They had "given" Aunt Linda more time than she ended up having with those who loved her.
Perhaps she simply chose not to take it.
But since we believe eternity is but a step from time, a breath beyond a paper-thin wall, it makes little difference now.
She's gone from us but she is present with the Lord. We can live with that as long as He wills.
As for me, after hanging up with my mother I felt faint and unwell. A small but determined cloud of depression slid across the sky and stationed itself directly above me, where it would remain all day.
It sapped me of strength. It seems all I've done for the past several months is go to funerals and the dentist.
The thought of trudging to one more funeral made my teeth hurt along with my heart.
Through my tears I told TG and Erica that we needed to slow the day down a bit so that I could compose myself enough to become presentable.
Have you ever tried to apply pirate eyeliner while crying?
Basically it can't be done.
I called Audrey and Erica called Stephanie. It was decided we'd meet up in Asheville an hour or so later than orginally planned.
TG, Erica, and I ended up leaving the house approximately forty-five minutes past the time previously scheduled.
The trip went okay until we encountered fierce traffic and were delayed another forty-five minutes.
Eventually Asheville was reached. We were the last to arrive. TG dropped Erica and me off when we sighted the rest of our group standing on Lexington Avenue, patiently waiting.
TG was gone briefly to park the car. Shortly after he joined us, somebody said it: "Boca is closed."
"No! Their website is still up!" I might have blurted out.
But they were right: the mouth (that's what boca means in Spanish) was closed. We were obliged to find somewhere else to eat.
I dredged my memory bank for names of restaurants in downtown Asheville. "Let's try Mayfel's," I suggested.
Audrey consulted a map via her iPhone. "It's about four blocks away, on College Street," she said.
We began walking. I met a dog whose name was Clara Belle.
I say Lab-Rottie mix, could use a few extra scoops of kibble. What say you?
Also I saw the prettiest dress in a shop window, and wished I were wearing it. Yes, even with the purple tulle ruffled crinoline and the purple purse, which I felt imbued the costume with unexpected wit.
We were heartbroken when we passed the place where Boca used to be. According to temporary signage, it will soon be a joint named The Local Taco.
I would have named it Loca Taco but that's just me. Crazy.
Presently we stood before the black-and-white-striped awning decorated with fleurs-de-lis, and the red railing encrusted with vintage kitchen implements, that signified our arrival at Mayfel's.
The hostess whose job it was to stand behind an antique pulpit and greet hungry comers was missing, but soon reappeared. She seemed dinstinctly disinterested not only in where we ate but even in whether we ate.
"It will be forty-five minutes and you probably won't get to sit together," she said without preamble or sympathy.
We quasi-declined but then dithered on the sidewalk, sort of watching a surly busker who only stopped playing standards on the trumpet (accompanied by a boom box from which wafted matching elevator music) long enough to upbraid passers-by who he apparently was convinced were staring at him.
"You'll blink first!" He taunted those who looked his way for longer than four point five seconds.
I was afraid to attempt taking his picture. Not really. I am not afraid of taking any picture. I didn't want his picture. So there.
There was a Tupelo Honey Cafe a few doors from Mayfel's. I didn't drive two-plus hours to eat at an overrated chain restaurant but you know what they say: Desperate times.
I walked over and went inside. The hostess was even less engaging than the one at Mayfel's.
"The wait is forty-five minutes and there is absolutely no chance your party will be seated together," she said, tucking her chin to her chest so as to glare at me over her cheaters.
I heard: "We don't care where you eat and we do not push tables together here, for anyone."
Fine, I thought. That's fine. Forty-five seconds from now I will have forgotten you. Make that four point five seconds.
I returned to our hot, hungry party of eight.
"We might as well walk over to Early Girl," I said. Where I was sure the wait would be forty-five minutes.
Audrey whipped out her iPhone. "It's right around the corner, on Wall Street," she said.
We began walking. When making the turn onto Wall Street I saw the giant laundry iron and, just beyond it, the landmark Flatiron building.
Forty-five steps more -- give or take -- and we were at Early Girl.
A screen door lets you in, and on bright days it's extra-dark inside until your eyes adjust.
When I could see -- after about forty-five seconds -- what stood before me was an angel.
That's how sweet was the smile, and how kind the eyes, of the Early Girl Eatery hostess.
"Hello and may I help you?" she said in the nicest voice you can imagine. Her tone contained her smile, which had yet to abandon the face it lit.
I told her we were eight, three of them children, one a baby.
She wondered aloud whether we preferred a booster seat or a high chair for the toddler. Clearly she had correctly made the assumption that, this being the day before Father's Day, we wanted to be seated together.
"It will be about forty-five minutes," she told me, but she said it as if, had she possessed the ability, she would have done anything in her power to change it.
I thanked her and told her that was no problem. I went to sit down in a chair provided for waiting customers, and as soon as I did, to my horror I felt sick and began to cry.
All my life I have been at the mercy of my tears which, like the Ghost of Christmas Future, are mercurial, appearing in their own good time.
I've learned to stanch them by pressing my tongue hard against the back of my bottom teeth, and sniffing deeply. Sometimes it works; sometimes it doesn't. This was not one of those times.
My girls were busy with the children. I did not have a tissue in my purse. I saw some napkins at the hostess station and lurched up there to grab one.
The angel's kind eyes met my blurred ones. I explained we'd had a death in our family that morning and that I was feeling sad.
She reached out and hugged me across the counter, and expressed genuine sympathy for our great loss.
I went back to the chair where I had been sitting. Erica appeared beside me.
"It's only going to be five minutes, Mom," she said. "They've already figured out somewhere to seat us."
And they had. The angel and a colleague had put their heads together and decided we needn't wait forty-five minutes to eat. It was after all, by this time nearly two-thirty in the afternoon.
But before she crossed another "t" or dotted another "i" a la Bob Cratchit, the angel brought me an ample quantity of small, square, soft beverage napkins. "For your purse," she said, gifting me with yet another beatific smile.
And she also brought three ice waters in cups with lids and straws, for the children. One of the cups came to me (the baby didn't need his) and I drank so thirstily, you wouldn't believe. It tasted like nectar.
If just a cup of water I place within your hand ... I sang in my mind.
We were seated and our server was a living doll. Even so she might as well have served me sawdust, although I do remember that what I ordered was delicious.
Baby Andrew was given toys to occupy him. Allissa cadged a princess and posed her like a pirate atop the cup of water.
After TG had opened his Father's Day cards, we left Early Girl Eatery. The hostess angel bid us farewell as graciously as she had greeted us.
I looked behind her to spot wings but saw none. Sometimes they are invisible.
Out on the hot bright street once again, we waited for TG to take Stephanie to her car while the other two girls and I waited with the babies.
I crossed the street to make the acquaintance of a dog named Leah.
Leah was of great interest to Baby Andrew while he could observe her at a distance, but when her owner brought her nearer, the boy sort of lost it.
He was all infant indignation and nothing we said could change it.
Leah was truly perplexed at the baby's reaction and had to be consoled. I completely understood.
Then it was time for hugs and kisses all around, as Stephanie headed back to Lenoir with her brood.
Audrey and Erica followed TG and me a few miles away to Riverside Cemetery, where another angel awaited.
I hoped I would see her, anyway. I had after all been promised more than a glimpse.
Alas however, hopes which spring eternal can be dashed in an instant.
Josh, the cemetery caretaker who had promised to "clean her off all the way," had apparently forgotten his promise within forty-five seconds of making it.
Because she was approximately forty-five percent visible.
And it was completey the wrong time of day to be taking her picture anyway, with harsh sun glaring directly on her right side.
I was so tired and hot and sad at this juncture, I could hardly remember how to take a proper picture anyway.
Ah well. I don't imagine she's going anywhere.
But we did go somewhere. TG, Audrey, Erica, and I found a shady place to sit and enjoy a cold drink, and chat awhile before facing the long roads home.
We had to prepare to attend a funeral. I'll tell you about that in a few days.
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Happy Monday ~ xoxo ~ Happy Week
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