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1 Last Magpie flame Novel Cover 30-09-21.jpg

Chairs



Huron Drive
Spring Grove
Chain O’Lakes
Illinois

2018

‘Maggie? Have you borrowed my chair? You know… the one I tuck under the shade at the back. I don’t mind if you have… I just need to…’
‘Whoa, Maybelline. Backtrack a minute.’ Maggie put the phone on speaker and picked up her teacup. ‘What chair?’
‘The old rattan one. We poked some of the loose strands back in last summer.’
‘Maybelline Watson… where are you? That was…’ Maggie counted summers loosely in her head then guessed three more. ‘…eight years ago if it was a day. You still got that old thing?’
‘No.’
‘Then what you going on about it for?’
‘I did have it. Until this morning.’
‘Is that ‘this morning’ as in ‘this morning’, or as in sometime during the last eight years?’
‘Maggie. Don’t be terrible to me…’
‘Get off it, Maybelline, this is Reality Hall. Sympathy House is over the way.’
‘Do you have to be so abrasive?’
‘How long you known me, Maybelline Watson?
‘Thanks… I’m sure. Only I do wonder…’
‘About what?’
‘Well… when I moved in, Louise over the way was your friend.’
‘So?’
‘So… I only came over after Sam died and I don’t remember the last time you spoke about Louise. I hope I haven’t… you know… driven a wedge…’
‘You wouldn’t make much of a wedge, Maybelline. But the drift began a way before that.’
‘Oh… I’m glad to hear that, Maggie.’
‘What? That I’m losing friends?’
‘No, I didn’t mean it that way. I just…’
‘Maybelline? The reset button?’
‘I don’t know what you… Oh.’  
‘So, okay, when did this chair go missing… and there can’t have been much of it left anyway.’
‘I told you… this morning.’
‘You see it yesterday?’
‘Sat in it.’
‘That’s pretty conclusive.’
‘Maggie. You agreed with me. That’s not like you at all. I’m coming right over.’

Maggie lit the gas, dropped the kettle on the stove and waited while it sang. Slipping on her cardigan and muffling her feet with an old pair of slippers, she crept slowly out to her porch door.
Maybelline Watson, her neighbor from down the road apiece, lay sideways along the wooden glider, skinny old legs overlapping under a full skirt, one foot tracing the floor as the seat swung.
‘Maybee!’
Maybelline’s eyes sparked open wide. ‘Oh, Maggie. I made it. I thought for a moment there I was going to faint. Did I hear the kettle?’
‘It won’t be a minute, May.’
‘Did I also hear the cookie jar?’
‘I guess not, May.’
‘Oh…’
Maggie levered Maybelline upright in the glider and went back inside. She kicked around a few things in the kitchen, slid oddments into drawers that had jammed open, put cups and saucers on a tray along with a jar of sliced lemon then wet the inside of the cups with a long shot of clear vodka while she waited for the Earl Grey to settle out.
‘Inside or outside, Maybelline?’
Maybelline settled more comfortably into the cushion. ‘Oh. Outside, I think.’ She swayed into the pattern of the glider’s swing… sashaying… remembering what that meant with a giggle.
‘What you laughing at, May?’
‘I was just remembering.’
‘Go for it while you got it, Maybelline.’
‘I was remembering what it was like to leave the Theater after a show. Those beaus waiting outside in the foyer lights… just to watch me walk…’
‘They not get enough from looking up your skirt while you was on stage?’   
‘You can be so crude, Maggie Gray… Oh God! Cookies! Thought you said…’
‘Nope. Just said you didn’t hear ’em.’
‘I thought you’d given up…’
‘Given up looking in the cupboard is what I did.’
‘Well, I wouldn’t know what I’d hear these days. Didn’t hear a thing last night when the chair went.’
‘You think burglars should blow a horn, Maybelline?’
Maybelline eyed the cookie jar, pretending to shake the worry out of her crisp, grey hair, but secretly glad that the chair had at last gone… glad that she no longer had to pretend to be keeping it for if Sam came back, which she knew he wouldn’t, having planted him six feet deep going on fifteen years ago.
Maggie dropped the cookie jar into her lap. ‘Take it with you when you go.’
‘Maggie. I couldn’t. You must have had it years?’
‘Yeah, and look at me.’
‘You look fine! A couple of pounds here and there that’s all…’
‘Once upon a time the wind blew right through me.’
‘Maggie Gray. Don’t josh with me. You always been… kind of… solid… ever since I known you.’
‘You think size zero is thin? We could’ve shown these supermodels a thing.’
Maybelline sat up straight, a childlike caul descending over her. ‘You have pictures? I can see them?’
‘No, May. It’s the memories they bring I don’t want.’
‘Can I hear them? Please?’
‘No, May.’
‘You gave me the cookies…’
‘I’m keeping the memories. I can’t get fat on what once was.’
‘Don’t know ’bout that. Sam got fat on what once was a pig. I had to pay extra for the plot.’
Maggie slid herself into the full depth of the glider and lifted her feet from the floor.
‘Maybelline Watson! It’s not right to speak ill of the dead.’
‘You mean the pig… right?’
Maybelline’s hand found its way into the cookies time and again. Maggie’s feet swung the glider back and forth until the laughter dried from their eyes.
‘Oh God, Maybelline. The man’s twice the fun now he’s dead. Do you remember…’
Maybelline’s hand took her arm. ‘Perhaps I don’t want to, either.’
‘Okay… we don’t have to go there.’ Maggie placed her cup and saucer on the little side table, topping it up from the pot. ‘By the way, have you seen a yellow plastic dustpan and broom anywhere?’
Maybelline looked quickly over to the corner to find the rickety broom and rusty pan that had always lived there. ‘When did you lose them?’
‘This morning.’
‘Is that ‘this morning’ as in…’
‘Maybelline Watson, that cookie jar looks kind of heavy, I think you should…’
Maybelline clutched it to her gaunt chest. ‘No! It’s mine now! You gave it!’
‘Well, when you get fat you can always blame me.’
‘I do so hope so, but I promised myself to eat only the broken ones.’ Maybelline cramped the lid firmly on then gave the jar a violent shake. ‘Say, Maggie… this dustpan and broom… are you sure you had one?’
‘Sure, Maybelline. Came by post. Bright yellow… plastic… couldn’t miss it.’
Maybelline tightened her grip on the cookie jar. ‘You surprise me some days, Maggie.’
‘Huh?’
‘Thought you had more taste than that…’

 

MAGPIE

Maggie dangled her legs over the edge of the porch, the soles of her feet brushing the tips of grass that spurted along the rim of the flower patch. Out by the street a small yellow flatbed truck drove slowly past. Three children walked across the entrance to her yard, two carrying schoolbooks and one with a violin case tucked under her arm. Maggie watched the tops of their heads float above the fence towards the corner where they would be picked up by the school bus. She envied them the certainty she hoped their small lives would have.
Ben next door rolled his car to the slope of his drive and began to wash it.
‘Hey, Ben.’
‘Hey, Maggie.’
‘Electricity gone off again?’
‘Nope. Just felt like washing tin. It’s a nice day.’
‘Not like you to notice.’
‘Well… yes… okay. I guess since I took that computer course I’ve been a little absorbed.’
‘Buried, Ben. Some would say buried.’
‘Yes, Maggie, I guess you would.’
‘So what exhumed you? The sunshine… or Louise?’
The yellow flatbed drove slowly past in the opposite direction. Ben paused to watch as it hesitated a moment, then picked up the hose and chased drying soap off the roof of the car.
‘Neither, Maggie.’
‘So what was it?’
‘A virus.’
‘Had your Flu jab?’
‘Yes… but…’
‘Should be okay then.’

In the shed at the bottom of the yard, Maggie set out a row of earthenware pots. She shook a handful of gravel into the bottom of each, lined them with potting compost and carefully pressed in a Geranium seedling.
She pushed the rusting bike back in, closed the door and turned around to pick up her old dustpan and broom. They were gone, but the new yellow ones were leaning against a corner of the porch. She picked them up. They were clean as a whistle.
She used them to sweep the edge of the yard then spaced out the pots where the seedlings would get the best of the sun from early to noon.
Overnight, half the pots disappeared.

The police officer stood at the bottom of Ben’s drive. Maggie watched him from the top of her curtains, hoping he would just turn and walk away.
Maybelline’s voice shrilled on the other end of the phone.
‘Maggie? You still there?’
Maggie winced a little, craning her neck so she could see over the rim of the curtain. ‘I’m here, May. I’m just watching Ben in the next yard.’
‘What’s he doing?’
‘Looking…’
‘What at?’
‘Not at… for.’
‘Maggie Gray! Stop trying to be charismatic!’
‘That’s enigmatic, Maybelline.’
‘Anymatic automatic. What’s he doing?’
‘He’s looking for his barbecue.’
‘It’s a little early… but do you think he’ll invite us over?’
‘No, Maybelline. He’s looking for it. It’s missing.’
The officer folded his notebook into his pocket and looked up.
Their eyes met.
Maggie climbed down from the stool, hung up the phone and counted the footsteps out across the yard until she heard the knock. She opened the inner door and left the screen shut. The officer outside was young, somewhere around forty, tall, fading slim, marginally athletic even… and with a warm smile. If it hadn’t been for the uniform, Maggie could have allowed herself to enjoy the strong oval of his face.
He took out his notebook and shook it open in one hand. ‘Mrs… Gray?’
‘Hmm… yes?’
‘Can I talk to you for a minute?’
‘I only have a minute. I’m expecting company.’
‘It won’t take long. Can I come in?’
Maggie picked up her old cardigan from the chair. ‘Wait a minute. I’ll let you in.’
‘We can do it out here if you like? Been years since I sat in one of these old wooden gliders. Mine’s all mold and rust.’
‘No, no, Officer. Come in. Can I make you tea?’
‘That won’t be necessary… but if you’re having some yourself, then…’
He stepped into the room.
With every step he took, Maggie retreated towards the kitchen, never taking her eyes from his boots. ‘Earl Grey? With lemon?’
‘Be real good, Ma’am.’
‘There’s a comfortable chair by the fireplace.’
‘One at the table’s fine, Ma’am.’
‘Sit down, Officer...’
‘Gradzynski, Ma’am.’
Maggie went into the kitchen and heaved a sigh. She rattled cups into saucers using both hands and filled them with tea.
Gradzynski stood up as she brought them through. ‘Here, let me take those off of you.’
Maggie passed the cup she’d poured for him and offered the jar of lemon slices.
‘Sit down, Mrs Gray.’
‘Maggie.’
‘Alright… Maggie. I didn’t mean to frighten you.’
‘I’m not… you didn’t… it’s just that…’ Maggie curled her fingers around the cup, warming a sudden chill from them. Gradzynski spooned two slices of lemon from the jar and slid them into her tea.
‘How’d you know how much lemon I take?’
Gradzynski smiled at the sudden memory her question evoked. ‘Two’s company, three’s a crowd.’
‘Who said that?’
‘My grandmother, bless her soul.’
‘Sounds like a wise woman.’
‘She said that about everything.’
‘You don’t need to be complicated to be wise.’
Gradzynski screwed the lid back on the jar. ‘You’re not related by any chance?’
‘No, I’m too complicated.’
‘Well, in that case I’ll keep this simple. Did you hear anyone out back last night?’
‘No. Why?’
‘Your neighbor had his new barbecue stolen.’
‘What? That old thing? Did he also tell you he hasn’t used it since he bought a computer? And that it has rust holes in the bottom and the coals drop out and scorch his grass. Did he tell you that?’
‘No, he didn’t. But there are other things happening around the neighborhood. Looks like we got ourselves a magpie.’
‘Magpie?’
‘Opportunist thief. Have you had anything taken?’
Maggie thought back to the broom and pan set, then remembered how the new one had come back cleaner than it went and how the old one, much as she’d loved it, as much as one can love an old piece of equipment… well, they’d been worn out… and a few plants?
‘No… not really. Not anything worth a mention.’
‘Any reason why the neighbor might lie about the condition of his barbecue?’
‘So he can get his computer fixed on the insurance, I ’spect.’
Officer Gradzynski put down his cup, smiled at her again in the way that she wished he wouldn’t. ‘What about Mrs Watson?’
Maggie sat up to the table. ‘What about her?’
‘She says she lost a new rattan chair. Said you’d vouch for her.’
‘Hah! She did, did she? Wait ’til I see her.’
‘You saying she hasn’t had her chair stolen?’
‘If you could call it a chair…’
The officer flicked over a page in his notebook. ‘I’d call three hundred dollars some kind of a chair.’
‘Yeah…’ Maggie sat back into the cushions as the vodka beneath the lemon in her teacup kicked through her old veins. ‘…it was some kind of a chair alright.’

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