Under The
White House Apple Tree
Never ask too many questions when
the man you're going to marry throws you on the bed in the middle of
a hot August afternoon and makes love to you so intensely your ears
ring.
"Jakobek, you sweet, reckless boy,"
I teased breathlessly, wrapped in his naked arms with my t-shirt up
around my neck and my denim skirt somewhere across the room on a
dresser carved with apples. "You nearly walked in on me and my
wedding dress. Our wedding dress, to be technical about it. I
just finished packing it. It's bad luck for you to see the wedding
dress, ya know. Especially one packed in ten tons of tissue paper to
keep it from wrinkling. I didn't have a wedding dress for my first
marriage, so I don't want this one to look anything short of
perfect--you know when we get to Washington tomorrow
Edwina will snort at me if the dress is wrinkled--I can just hear her
calling for all her toadies to come running--‘Please, someone,
please come take this abominably wrinkled gown of Hush's and prepare
it properly.'" I waved a hand at the chaotic bedroom. "And
just look at the rest of the mess I'm workin' through.
Suitcases strewn everywhere. . .I've got so much more packing to do,
and I've still got to call Davis and Eddie to see when they're
leavin' Boston and to find out if little Eddie Hush is still teethin'.
. ."
"Ssssh," Jakobek said hoarsely,
pulled my head back from his shoulder, and kissed me hard.
I rose up on one elbow, frowning,
took a long look at the grim set of his face and, stopped breathing.
"What's wrong?"
"I just got word from Al's
advisors. Mostafa bin Ottma has kidnapped a Saudi prince." He
hesitated, meeting my worried eyes with dark, quiet resolve. "He
wants ten million Euros or he'll send the prince home one piece at a
time. If he kills the prince, there could be another war."
Mostafa was a warlord in one of
those Middle Eastern countries where the old tribes were more
powerful than the modern government. For him, kidnapping rich folk
from the neighboring countries was a lucrative hobby. To distract
myself from what Jakobek was really trying to tell me, I sat up in
bed and said ferociously, "Tell Al to aim a missile right up
Mostafa's--"
"I have to go over there."
The world stopping
turning. My worst fear came true. I put a hand to my throat. Breathe. Stay calm. "You're retired.
Why you?"
"I'm the only westerner Mostafa
trusts. I saved his life about ten years ago, when he was still
fighting on our side. He considers me a. . .kind of friend."
Jakobek's mouth curved in a grim smile on the last word. The smile
faded as he looked up at me. I was deciding whether to cry or scream
or tie him to the bed long enough for me to call Al and tell him
that my future husband, his nephew, the man I loved dearly and would
marry in less than a week in the grand East Room of the White House,
was not going over to some godforsaken desert hellhole to
risk his life negotiating with some crazy Osama bin Wanna-be.
Of course, Jakobek shouldn't have
to listen to whiny crap like that. So I just said, "I'm not gettin'
married without you."
"Good. I won't let you."
"Promise me you'll stay safe,
Jakobek."
"I swear to you. With any luck,
I'll be back in time for the rehearsal dinner."
With any luck.
He got up and pulled on his khakis.
I wrapped myself in an apple-print silk robe and sat miserably
beside him on the king-sized bed we'd bought a few months before--our
first furniture purchase as a couple. Outside the windows of my big
farmhouse, the apple orchards of Sweet Hush Farms were beginning to
ripen for autumn. We had only a few weeks to get married, go on a
Hawaiian honeymoon, and come back to Chocinaw County before fall
apple season started. Now, we had only a few hours to spend what
might be the rest of our lives together. "When are you leaving?" I
asked, my throat on fire.
"As soon as a military
helicopter gets here."
I sagged. He put an
arm around me, and I put my head on his shoulder. I cried. I
couldn't help it.
"I'll meet you at the
altar," he whispered.
"If you don't," I
managed to say, "I'll hunt Mostafa down like an egg-sucking dog and
bury what's left of him under my apple trees as fertilizer."
*
"Those things do
not resemble silk magnolia blossoms," Edwina Jacobs yelled up at
a scared-looking decorator arranging huge flower sprays above the
windows of the State Dining Room. "They look like wilted white
carnations from the flower department at some tacky Walter-Mart!"
"That's
Wal-Mart,
ma'am" an assistant whispered loudly.
"Walter Mart.
Wal-mart. Whatever. Take them down. Take them all down
and call the floral designer and have her replace those horrible
carnation-like monstrosities with real magnolias. The theme of my
nephew's wedding to Hush Thackery is Welcoming The Southern
Sophisticate, not Howdy Do, It's The Hillbilly Hoedown."
"You know, Edwina," I
said behind her, standing in the doorway among piles of luggage and
an escort of Secret Service agents, "sometimes you sound just like
Mrs. Howell on Gilligan's Island."
She pivoted on one
perfect mauve pump with military precision, a blonde dynamo but with
eyes as red-rimmed as mine. She and Al were just as worried about
Jakobek as I was. And she would put on just as tough a front. "Well,
well. Glad you could make it the White House for your wedding-week
festivities, Hush. I was afraid you'd be on a plane to the Middle
East this morning, armed with a deer rifle and a rotten apple to
throw at Mostafa bin Ottma."
I strode to her,
leaned down close, and whispered tightly. "If I thought I could find
him before he got his hands on Jakobek, I'd be headed his way with
an apple-shaped grenade."
Her stern look
softened. She thrust an arm through mine and whispered so her staff
couldn't hear. "I'd be right behind you. I'm worried sick." For just
a second we stood there with our heads bowed together in silent
prayer, her short and blonde and dressed like a lavender-suited Avon
lady, me tall and redheaded and rumpled in jeans and red linen
blazer.
Then both I and Edwina
drew back, sniffing and wiping our eyes and pretending we disliked
each other. She grimaced. "If we cry we'll only wilt these so-called
magnolias even more."
"Agreed," I said
hoarsely. I forced myself to look at the flower arrangements. "But
these look great to me."
"That's because you
have no taste." She tugged me by the arm, and we walked out of the
ornate formal dining room. We headed down one of the White House's
typically grand halls with a small army of people behind us, most of
them toting my luggage and Edwina's rejected flowers. "We'll have
your debut dinner in the State Dining Room tonight, to introduce you
to Washington society and to our major campaign fundraisers," Edwina
said crisply. "The next evening you'll attend a small reception
hosted by the Vice President and his wife, where they'll introduce
you to our top allies in Congress. The evening after that
you'll be presented to a select group of friendly media. Did I
mention the luncheon we've scheduled with Barbara Walters? And the
tea with the editor of Vanity Fair? Barbara wants to
interview you on 20/20 and the VF editor is planning a feature on
you and Jakobek."
I picked my jaw up off
the floor. I hadn't slept in twenty-four hours since watching
Jakobek climb onto a military helicopter and disappear into the
summer sky, and all I wanted to do was sit on a balcony all week,
facing east, the Middle East, and waiting for him to come back. "I'm
supposed to make all those appearances alone? How exactly do you
plan to explain Jakobek not being here? That he's turned into The
Invisible Man?"
"The White House Press
Secretary has informed everyone that Nicholas is observing a quaint
wedding-week custom hailing from his and Al's Polish heritage. He's
secluding himself from his bride until the wedding day." Edwina
paused. "He's on a fishing trip. Somewhere very remote. The South
Pacific. Or the Australian outback."
I gaped at her. The
woman had more gall than a gallbladder. "Then tell everybody that
I'm also observing a custom from my heritage--a mountaineer
custom of sitting on the front porch with a shotgun on my lap, ready
to shoot anybody who tries to talk to me."
"Sorry. No deal."
"You can't
parade me around Washington like a prize poodle, as if nothing's
wrong."
Edwina stopped like a
train hitting a wall, jerking me to a stop beside her. "Now listen
to me," she said in a low voice. "Al and I would like nothing better
than to spend this week in a dark room at the Pentagon watching
satellite images and hearing constant updates on Nicholas's
whereabouts and safety. But we have a country to run. Next year is
an election year, Hush. Every public move we make is crucial to
building Al's poll numbers. You have become a very popular
attraction in our politcal carnival, Hush. I hate to admit it, but
you're an asset. You are part of our image now, like it or not, and
just as we have to do our duty--and just as Nicholas is doing his
duty--you must do your duty, too. Nicholas would want you to carry
on."
She got me with that
one. I stared at her for a long second. "Just tell this prize poodle
when to bark," I said grimly.
*
That night Smooch and
I huddled in pajamas on the Lincoln bed in the Lincoln bedroom,
looking up at a portrait of President Lincoln. At least, I was
looking. Smooch held a palm-sized video camera to one eye, filming
everything. "I'm makin' a video diary of our week in the White
House," she had announced. "To put on the Sweet Hush Farms website."
Always the marketing whiz.
I hugged my knees and
forced myself to nibble salted Sweet Hush apple slices. My head
buzzed with fear, my eyes burned with tears, and my mind was
thousands of miles away, with Jakobek. Somewhere, in an unfriendly
desert, it was a broiling hot day.
And he might already
be hurt. Or worse.
*
"Glory to Allah! Death
to infidels! Do you have any cigars on you, Colonel?"
Mostafa's chief
lieutenant, Orda, pulled his French sunglasses down, waved an
automatic rifle in my face, and peered at me as if he might shoot me
just for not carrying any stogies. Around us, thirty of Mostafa's
armed soldiers fiddled with the triggers of their guns and squinted
in the swirling sand. The sand stuck to the sweat on my face. I felt
like human sandpaper.
"I know what Mostafa
likes. I brought him the best." I pulled a packet of hand-rolled
Cuban cigars from the vest of my desert camos. "Sorry for the
blood," I deadpanned. "I dripped." A gash throbbed above my left
ear, my lip seeped blood, the knuckles on both fists felt like raw
meat, and one cheekbone ached. Before Orda had decided I was who I
said I was, I and a few of his men had gone a few rounds. I was
proud to note that they looked worse than I did.
Orda grabbed the
packet of cigars, sniffed them, said "Ahhhhh," in appreciation, then
poked me with his rifle. "Let's go."
Our sweaty, sandy
little gang headed through craggy rock formations and sand dunes,
toward a cave entrance. About the time we reached it Mostafa burst
out. He wore desert camos, a pristine white headdress, and a
diamond-encrusted Rolex. Look up ‘crazy, freakin' rich' in a
dictionary and you'd see his picture. His hobbies included managing
his multi-million-dollar investment portfolio, smoking cigars,
playing Dungeons and Dragons on his computers, watching Jeopardy
on satellite TV, planting bombs, kidnapping VIP's, and collecting
his enemies' sawed-off ears in large crystal jars of formaldehyde.
"Jakobek!" he yelled,
smiling, then grabbed my hand and pumped it. "So they sent you to
talk me out of auctioning off pieces of my prize Saudi? Or are you
here to assassinate me? Or to lead your army friends to me so I can
be captured and shown on American TV? Maybe I could get interviewed
in my prison cell by Dan Rather? Huh?"
"I think Tom Brokaw
was hoping for a chance at you. But his ratings suck."
He laughed and slapped
me on the back. "Where are my cigars?" Orda handed them over. "Hmmm.
Wonderful. Colonel, you remembered. How sweet."
"What are old friends
for?"
Mostafa laughed harder
but his eyes were like a shark's. "Maybe," he said, touching a
finger to my ear, "I won't add you to my collection. But then again,
maybe I will."
He grinned and waved
me inside. With Orda's gun in my back I followed him into the cave.
I put one hand over my vest pocket, where only one possession
mattered to me. My photo of Hush, the one I'd started carrying long
before I had any hope she could love a tough-ass like me.
She would always be
with me, even if I never made it back home.
*
"They call this the
‘Red Room?'" I said under my breath, as one of Edwina's social
secretaries led Smooch and me toward yet another of the White
House's formal public rooms. "From the pictures I saw in the guide
book, they ought to call it the 'Old New Orleans Bordello Room.'"
Even with the video
cam still plugged to her right eye, Smooch gasped at my irreverence.
"There's red twill satin on the walls! And the chandelier is French!
And all the furniture is early 1800's French and it's covered in red
silk upholstery!"
"What furniture?"
We halted in amazement
as the secretary finished opening the room's mile-high doors. The
room had been cleared of its antiques. Instead, huge tables covered
in red silk were piled with mountains of strange and wonderful and
just plain weird items.
"Your wedding gifts
from around the world," the secretary intoned solemnly. "We've
recorded them all for the thank-you notes. The original cards are
attached to each."
Smooch picked up an
elaborately carved tribal mask. "Colonel Jakobek," she read aloud,
"I will always owe you for the lives of my children. May the rain
gods bless your fruit." Smooch stared at me. "This is from Chief
Something-or-other. In a jungle country I never heard of." She
hoisted a solid-gold turtle the size of her head, turned it over,
and, puffing from the weight, read the card taped to its bottom.
"This one's in Spanish. 'For the lives of my people, even gold is
not enough to thank you.' Wow. He really has been all
over the world doing heroic things no one can talk about."
"I never doubted
that." Oh, Jakobek, I added, my heart breaking. You've
saved the world enough times. Now save yourself and come back home
to me and our Hollow. I turned my back to Smooch and dabbed my
eyes with the sleeve of my jacket. I had dutifully turned myself
into an Edwina clone, dressing in a pale silk dress-suit with a
pearl choker. I had gone to the parties, the luncheons, the
interviews. But I wanted to put on my jeans and one of Jakobek's
soft flannel shirts, sit in the middle of all these presents, and
bawl.
"Assessing your loot,
I see." Edwina swept into the room.
I would have poked her
with a jewel-covered samurai sword sent by the Japanese emperor, but
Al strode in right behind her, looking somber and Presidential in a
dark suit. He grabbed me in a hug. "We just got word that the plan
is working and Nick's been picked up by Mostafa's men--he's alive but
we don't know where they've taken him."
I latched my hands in
Al's jacket and looked up at him urgently. "He's alive. Just keep
tellin' me he's alive."
"I will. I promise
you."
"Sis!" My brother's voice boomed across the room. Logan,
Lucille, and Puppy rushed in. They'd just arrived from Georgia. We
shared hugs all around. When I knelt down to let Puppy fling her
arms around me, the bubblegum scent of her little-girl perfume
reeled inside my head and headed for my stomach like liquid
dynamite. "Back away, honey, Auntie Hush is going to spew." I turned
aside and gagged.
"Not on the heirloom
rugs!" Edwina ordered.
Too late.
A few minutes later,
as everyone fussed over me, I sat dizzily on an antique chair with
an ice pack clamped to my forehead. Smooch knelt in front of me,
dabbing my face with a wet cloth. "Hush, you've been urping a lot,
lately. Yesterday, today--and last week your stomach was upset,
too--maybe you should see a doctor."
"I already have. I
planned to tell Jakobek before we came here for the wedding. But
then he got the call about Mostafa--"
"Oh. . .my. . .god,"
Edwina said. "The forty-year-old apple tree and the
forty-four-year-old bee have pulled off a miracle of pollination."
I looked up into the
stunned faces around me, and nodded. "Jakobek and I are pregnant."
*
"Mother," Davis said
in a lecturing tone, but smiled. "How will we explain to Eddie Hush
that your baby is her aunt or uncle?"
"Just use Southern
tradition. We'll tell her to call it ‘Cousin.'"
Sitting on my lap, my
beautiful red-headed granddaughter, little Eddie Hush Jacobs, cooed
and smiled a two-teethed smile. Her mother, Eddie, put an arm around
me. "I think it's wonderful news," Eddie said, her voice breaking.
"Nickie will be so happy. He'll be a great father. And he
will
come back safely, Hush. I'm sure of it."
"Of course." I spoke
firmly, confidently. A mother didn't show fear and misery in front
of her children. I slid a protective hand over my abdomen. Not even
the ones still waiting to be born.
*
"Colonel, I'm sorry
you came here on my behalf. I fear our ears are going to share a
place of honor in one of Mostafa's crystal jars."
"As long as we have
all our body parts, your highness, there's still hope." The Saudi
prince and I shared a hard corner of the cave floor, where we were
handcuffed to a mutual post. The battery-powered ceiling lights
didn't do much for our dark corner. I could dimly hear Mostafa's
big-screen television somewhere down one of the cave's tunnels. "I
can tell you this much," I said, "he won't kill us until after he
finishes watching Jeopardy."
The prince sighed. "I
never thought I'd pin my future on Alex Trebek."
Suddenly, silence.
Then the sounds of running feet, headed our way. The prince drew a
sharp breath.
I straightened,
ready. I love you, I said silently, to Hush. My whole
life was worth living for the past year, with you.
Mostafa lunged into
our room, his face furious. He hunched over me, shaking both fists
in my face. "How could you? How could you? Ten years! You
don't call, you don't write, and now, you don't even tell me
you're getting married! I have to hear about it on CNN."
I managed to keep a
neutral expression. "You never even asked me out on a date. How was
I supposed to know you cared?"
He stared at me,
open-mouthed. Then, to my relief, he laughed. Guffawed. Split a seam
in his camos, practically. He grabbed me by the shoulders, shook me,
then planted a cigar-stinking kiss on the top of my head. "Get out
of here! Go home! My wedding gift to you!" He bellowed over one
shoulder, "Orda! Get Jakobek and the prince on the next jet to
Kabul!"
"You're releasing me,
too?" the prince said incredulously.
Mostafa grinned at him
with deadly humor, then made a slicing motion along the side of his
head. "This time. But don't invest in any earrings."
I just sat there
thinking, I've been here three days. If I can get home in three
more, I'll make the ceremony on time. Hush, I promised I'd meet you
at the altar. Don't give up on me. I'm coming home.
*
Our wedding day. Still
no word from, by or about Jakobek. All contact had been lost. A U.S.
special operations team located Mostafa's latest camp in the
mountains, but Mostafa and his men were long gone. The team used
corpse-sniffing dogs to search for shallow graves that might contain
the bodies of Jakobek and the prince. No graves were found, thank
God.
"He's taken them with him," Al told me. "That's a good
sign. They're still alive."
"He's vanished in the
desert, and so has Jakobek," I countered. "Put me on a military
plane right now. I'm going to hunt for Jakobek. From now on, you can
call me ‘Hush of Arabia.'"
Of course, Al just
smiled. Edwina was more blunt. "Put on your wedding dress and shut
up," she ordered. "No one outside this immediate family has any clue
that Nicholas is missing or even why he went overseas in the first
place. That information can not become public, Hush. We're
talking about an international incident. The entire Middle East
could fall into deeper chaos if the world learns about that
kidnapped prince. So we're going to hide the truth until our forces
find Mostafa et al. Even if we have to carry on with your wedding
ceremony right up until the moment you point your gargantuan
size-nine pumps up the aisle and Nicholas isn't there waiting for
you."
"You need to stay away
from the flower arrangements. The fumes off the florist's glue are
making you hallucinate."
"Don't you understand?
The longer we keep the façade going, the better the chance Nicholas
will come home alive!"
She had me, again.
"Then my size nines and I will be there. With bells on."
"Cow bells, most
likely," she sniffed, but her voice wobbled.
In the next moment,
she was crying, and so was I. We hugged each other.
Jakobek, where are
you?
*
The prince and I were
in a private jet over the Atlantic Ocean, headed toward Washington.
Mostafa might be a crazy mofo, but he was a smart one. His men had
sky-hopped us all over the Middle East and Europe in a series of
jets owned by an increasingly obscure network of his allies, so our
trip from the cave back to civilization couldn't be traced back to
Mostafa. In the meantime, I still wore my dusty, bloody,
sweat-stained camos, and all I'd had was a spit bath in the jet's
toilet. Add to that two sets of scabby knuckles, a swollen lower
lip, a crusty head gash, a bruise the size of an apple on one cheek,
and enough beard stubble to scrub the chrome off a fender.
The wedding was in two
hours. I needed that much time just to scrape the sand out of
various crevices. "How about radioing the White House now?" I asked
an unfriendly Air-Mostafa flight attendant armed with an Uzi. "We'll
be over the U.S. eastern seaboard soon."
"My orders are ‘No
contact.'" Scowling, he waved the Uzi at me, then at the prince.
"I'll drop you both off at a Washington airport. Then you're on your
own. Make your own calls. For now, shut up, return your trays to
their locked and upright positions, and finish your peanuts."
I looked out the jet's
window. Hush took sacred vows seriously. She'd promised to marry me
for better or worse, and she would. I just hoped I'd get there in
time.
And that she could
stand the smell.
*
Teddy Roosevelt's
daughter was married in the East Room of the White House. So was
Lyndon Johnson's. Lincoln's body lay in state there. So had John
Kennedy's.
I tried not to think
about the funerals.
The huge,
gold-and-white, chandeliered room was filled with flowers, candles,
and several hundred people who had no clue that the groom was
missing and might be dead. About half of Chocinaw County was there.
Gruncle sat on one of the front rows beside Davis and Eddie, holding
Eddie Hush. Nearby, a grim-faced Edwina and her sisters commandeered
a combined Habersham-Jacobs contingent. Al, stony-faced and
listening for any word on Jakobek via a hidden earpiece, sat with
Logan, waiting to step forward as Jakobek's best men. Smooch and
Lucille were the maids of honor. Puppy, grinning in a puffy taffeta
dress, was ready to throw silk apple blossoms in my path.
My own Reverend Betty,
dressed in white robes with an apple-red sash, beamed at everyone
from behind a beautiful altar covered in silk apple blossoms. Her
gospel choir stood on a dais at the right side of the room, singing
an old mountain hymn titled "Fruit of the Valley." When they
stopped, an opera soprano stepped onto a dais at the left side of
the room and began singing a wedding aria in Italian.
I stood in an
anteroom, dressed in the most beautiful wedding gown and veil I'd
ever imagined in my life, clutching a spray of apple branches, my
head bowed, praying and crying. I didn't care about the ceremony,
the wonderful dress, international relations, or Al's re-election
campaign. I only cared that Jakobek had not made it back in time,
and that fact meant he must be badly wounded, imprisoned somewhere,
or dead.
When the soprano
finished yodeling in Italian, I jerked my head up and wiped my eyes.
Mascara came off in gobs. The first, heartwrenching strains of the
wedding march rose from an orchestra. "When they start the wedding
march," Al had said, "I'll walk up to the altar and call it off.
Then I'll explain to the guests. And to the rest of the world."
That was it. The
signal. The last deadline. The game was over. There would be no
wedding. Jakobek was hurt, dying, dead. My heart was breaking.
Suddenly I knew what I
had to do. Jakobek's business was my business. I was the one who had
to stand up for him, proudly, honorably, bravely. I wrapped my arms
around the spray of apple branches and headed for the door that
would lead me up the aisle to announce that I planned to turn over
every grain of sand from Istanbul to Riyad until I found Jakobek,
dead or alive. At first, everyone's attention remained focused on
the front of the room, where Al leapt out of his seat and began
running toward the altar. But as I careened into the giant room
heads started turning my way, too. Al saw me and began waving his
long, lanky arms then jabbing a finger at his earpiece. I stopped,
put a hand over my heart, and danced from one foot to the other. The
orchestra squeaked to a stunned stop. Apparently, the President was
showing off a new dance or having a public conniption fit. And so
was I.
Silence--horrified
silence--filled the East Room.
Al laughed and yelled
at me, "Head for the South Lawn! The Marines have him and he'll be
here in about sixty seconds by helicopter!"
I dropped my bouquet,
hiked my skirt, kicked off my pumps, and ran for the front doors.
*
God bless cell phones
and jar heads. Marines, that is. The moment I'd gotten my hands on a
baggage handler's phone on the tarmac at Reagan, I'd put a message
through to the White House. Since the Marines handle the President's
flights to and from the White House grounds, they sent one of their
big choppers. Before long I was climbing the stairs into one
whirlybird while the prince waved goodbye from the steps of a second
one. "I own a casino in Atlantic City," the prince yelled. "Bring
your new wife! My treat! Anytime!"
I gave him a thumbs up
and ducked inside the chopper. A Marine captain barked, "Sir!
Deoderant, Sir!" and sprayed me with cologne.
Then we headed for the
White House.
*
It took Al, Logan, and
a Marine from the honor guard to hold me back long enough for the
big helicopter's blades to stop turning. By the time the door opened
and the steps were lowered I was off and running, with most of the
wedding guests behind me. Judging from the way Jakobek launched
himself out the helicopter's door, he hadn't been much easier to
hold back.
I bit back a sob at
how he looked, but after he smiled at me, nothing else mattered. We
were in each other's arms a second later. He picked me up while I
kissed every hurt spot on his face and then some. He kissed me for a
full minute then looked at me with tears in his eyes, but smiling.
"I had a lousy
bachelor's party," he said.
I laughed, cried, and
nuzzled lipstick all over his beard stubble.
When we finally turned
to face several hundred wedding guests, a teary, smiling, but
sardonic Edwina stood at the front of the crowd, her arms crossed
over her chest. "My perfectly planned wedding is a shambles, you
know. What do you intend to do about it?"
The Rev. Betty stepped
up. "I recall you two plantin' an apple tree on that knoll over
yonder, last winter. I say there's no better place to hold a
ceremony than right there, right now."
I looked at Jakobek.
He looked at me.
"Yes," we said
together.
*
Hawaii. Land of
pineapples, tropical jungle, private resort villas where
Presidential influence gets a nephew and his new bride the five-star
treatment, and sand. Lots of sand, on beautiful beaches.
"I think I'll stay
right here for the week," Jakobek said lazily, in our huge, canopied
bed overlooking a water garden. "I don't like sand, right now."
I curled, naked, along
his side. "I don't care if we ever set foot outside this room."
He pulled me closer.
We lay quietly, nuzzling each other, me being careful to avoid the
bruises and cuts. "You need to heal," I said. "You'll need your
strength. You're a married man. You have a lot of chores to do,
now."
Jakobek turned me onto
my back and looked down at me somberly. "I know Mother Nature may
not be on our side, and we agreed that it'd be a miracle for us to
have a baby at our ages, but by God--" his voice became tinged with
humor, beneath his serious eyes--"since we're not leaving this room
for the week, we might as well concentrate on seeing if we can make
a miracle."
I reached up, and
cupped his face in my hands. "It's been a week for miracles, and so.
. .Jakobek. . .you bee charmer. . .Mother Nature is already on our
side. She was on our side when you left for the Middle East. I was
just waiting until you came back, to tell you."
He studied my
expression with a bewildered look, then realized what I was saying.
I watched in soft awe as a very different kind of healing spread
across his damaged face, from the inside out.
"It's good to be alive
with you and our baby," he whispered.
I smiled.
Miracles do happen.
Copyright © 2006
Deborah Smith