The cottage was
lit with many candles all around; so many candles that I was afraid that the
cottage would burn down in red hot flames before my own eyes. The house
exploded with sounds of laughter and music. The violin, guitar, drums, and
bells. The smell of cinnamon and raisins evaporated from the house. Yumm. I
touched the door handle and twisted it with my left hand since my other hand
was weighed down because of how much cheese I was holding for the Christmas Eve
party I was about to attend. It must have weighed at least fifty tons. I held
the cheese, remembering how my now now dead wife brought and shared cheese with
everyone anytime we went to a party, or a sunrise drop-in. In these small
actions, I feel her presence beside me and guiding me through the way. I rubbed
my chin stubble with my free hand. My straw had was starting to accumulate
sweat. So were my cheap overalls and ten dollar leather shoes. They were
expensive.
As I twisted the
handle to open the door it made a tasch tasch sound, alerting everyone
on the inside that I was about to come in. The door handle was being stubborn
and wasn’t letting me turn in. It was locked from the inside.
I heard shuffled
footsteps coming my way, and I stood waiting for the person on the other side
of me to open the door. I tapped my foot and distracted myself from the growing
ache in my hand. The sky turned purple pink, and the owls started to hoot as
birds began to rest in their nests after their unyielding day. The door finally
opened, and a little old lady with soft-looking brown hair creeped out, peaking
her tiny head out the door. I assumed that she did that to know who was out the
door. I started to introduce myself.
“Hello,” I said. “I’m
Hardy Howell, and I have been tutoring young Jackson." I tried to speak
over the noise-filled background. It annoyed me so much.
“Yes," she
said, “I know who you are. Come in. I’m Corina." Her striking blue eyes
widened in surprise when she saw my bulged stomach. Everyone was always
surprised how a farmer like me, who worked so hard day and night, could be so…
Hefty! The surprising thing was that, even though I was hefty- I was not
strong. My figure in the midst of midnight with the full moon out would be
outlined as a circle, like a soccer ball.
Corina opened the
door for me, and slowly I walked in with great caution. I barely fit through
the tiny door. The cottage immediately felt smaller as I walked in. The music
stopped, and everyone stayed quiet. The musicians were frozen in place and
looked stunned. I looked around the small house. All eyes were on me, hazel,
blue, green, and brown ghostly eyes that were strained and averted away from my
stomach. Pale faces expressed with obvious fear. They were afraid of my rather
large “masculine” figure. Bright blue striking eyes, with slick black hair, and
gruff bushy beard. Chubby tomato colored face, small feet. I naturally looked
like a troll, strolling through the woods for its prey. I was uncomfortable
with so much attention; I wasn’t used to it.
“Hello everyone,”
I said loudly, clearly uncomfortable by their unwavering eyes. I gripped the
straps of my blue overalls tightly. My hands started turning a bluish shade of
pink. My voice echoed into the pin drop silence filled house. A person cleared
a voice; a code that everyone understood. Howdy, stop being rude to our
guest- Andrew Jackson’s tutor. “My audience” understood, and everyone
snapped back and smiles started to spread. A more lively, merry color returned
to the faces and eyes. They now knew I wasn’t a danger. Infact, they obviously
exactly knew who I was. I was Andrew Jackson’s charm. The man who turned the
notorious, temper filled boy to study and think about becoming something in the
future. The incorporeal beings of fear were erased from their faces that later
shone with gratitude and respect.
“I understand that
you all know who I am,” I said, my voice first to speak. “Sorry to scare you
all,” I chimed in a low voice. Pale faces all around the room had blushed.
“Welcome, welcome,”
said the person who cleared their voice earlier. “Come on in. Make yourself at
home and have a tea.” That person's hand smoothly, in one graceful movement,
had gestured to a brown uncomfortable looking chair. Not to seem rude, I sat
down and laid the cheese near my feet. I barely fit into the chair. I had to
wiggle into it so that I could fit. And,
because of this, my attention wavered to the uncomfortable chair instead of
sharing the cheese with the “Jackson Clan.”
“Teresa,” that
person called.
“Yes, Roderick?” a
gentle voice replied. Someone’s voice who I had then assumed, but now knew
belonged to Teresa.
Right then I
guessed that Teresa and Roderick were Andrew’s extended family. Scot-Irish
immigrants who live near the border of North and South Carolina. The rest of
the people here were also part of the large family of Andrew Jackson. The poor
boy lost his siblings and parents at a very young age. He was orphaned, and he
crushed his mother's dreams of being a pedestrian judge before she died. This
was because of his naughty pranks and street fights. His quick temper added to
the list. But poor boy was also lucky. He got a decent inheritance from his
grandfather, but it ran out. Now the only thing the boy could do to save
himself was to finish his studies and get a decent job. And, that’s what Andrew
did. He didn’t get anywhere though. He needed help with it, someone who would
help him understand the law textbooks.
That’s where I
came in. I was a farmer across from him who was very interested in law and
studied law for a while before becoming a farmer. I saw him study outside all
day long with a lot of dedication. I saw him be frustrated because he didn’t
understand anything. That’s when I decided to help him. I walked myself over to
his house and started helping him study. Soon he started becoming better in
school.
“Get the tea
please,” Rodrick asserted.
Whoever this was,
I knew he was the head of the “Jackson Clan." What he said was the way
around here. I knew I’d better be on his good side.
“No, No,” I piped
in. “It’s fine honestly. I just dropped in to say hello to all of you, and wish
Andrew a merry Christmas Eve. I should be on my way, actually." I started
to get up, but I was stopped by a thin
but sturdy curt hand. Rodricks. He was a tall, sturdy man with big feet,
while I looked like a muffin from a baker shop; you could tell that Roderick
was an athlete. A very strong, authoritative person. His presence was mean and
nonetheless demanded to be felt in every room that he walked into.
On the other hand,
Teresa, who was currently pouring tea into a blue cup for me, was a gentle
short woman with a brunette bun in her hair who looked like a weasel. A rat.
Someone who would agree to every command, wish and need said by anyone.
Authority or not. A soft spoken person,compassionate, who was loved and hated
equally. She was calm, tranquil, but equally scared. You could find it in her
body language. The way she walked, talked, moved. A very angelic and
hypnotizing shadow that caved into terror and forceful authority. I wondered
how young Jackson lived in this scary household.
Teresa handed me
my tea and quickly scurried off into the kitchen. A few seconds later came a
loud bang ting tong bang of, what I would assume, pots and spoons. I
heard Rodick groan in disapproval. This is not how you show our house hold
off Teresa.
I turned around
with haste, addressed Rodrick and asked him, “Where is the lad? Young Jackson?
I want to see him.”
“You see, Howell,
he is upstairs in his room. All he does is study nowadays.”
“Even on Christmas
Eve?” I asked with sincere curiosity.
“Yes sir-ee,
day and night, dawn to midnight. His nose is always in those law books you
share with him. But he is doing mighty well in the one room classroom. The
school as they say. He has a sense of future now. Thanks to you!” Rodrick said
and smiled. The smile quickly faded. “But, I’m afraid that he is going to be
depressed if he continues like this. He is not a studying machine. So much isn’t
good. He never has fun, does anything like playing a sport, or with other kids
like he used to. I am concerned for him. Studying is good. To a limit, just
like everything else is.” He closed his eyes, then reopened them. They wandered
to the cheese near my feet. I started to remember about why I bought the
cheese.
“Oh yes,” I said, picking
up my cheese. “This is for you, and your family. It’s not nice to drop by
without anything to give you fine folks." I held out the cheese for
Roderick to hold. My hand started to become familiar with the ache of the
cheese. Just as I thought that I was about to drop the cheese, Roddick's rather
strong hand took the cheese away from my hand. His face contorted in a slightly
confused structure. I know, I act like a girl, I thought, I just
wanted to be helpful.
The fireplace lit
the room. Everyone was still, quiet, and listened to our conversation. They
were bored and twiddled their thumbs with boredom, looking at their feet.
“Can I go see
Andrew?” I asked, ruefully. “I haven't seen him all this week, or for the past
month.”
“Yes, you may, he
is upstairs, in the room to the right. You can help yourself up,” Rodrick reported.
“But, before you go- can you please explain why you helped Andrew in the
first place? What does it matter to you if an orphaned boy is struggling?”
Rodrick asked. The question was easy to answer.
“I saw myself in
that boy. I too was notorious, but as I grew up I wanted to study. Not just
become a farmer. I never had the opportunity though. But Andrew does, and I
want him to make the best out of it,” I said.
“Okay. Thanks.”
Roddick's face brightened. “Can I ask you a favor? Can you please tell Andrew
to come down, and lighten up. Have some fun. Tell him we made cinnamon
strawberry cake. His favorite. Please, this is important to all of us,” he
begged. “We want Andrew back, at least for a short while. His witty, short
tempered, clever, young flare. He’s not listening to any of us. Even Evelyn,
his favorite cousin. But, he’ll listen to you. You are his teacher. He respects
you and loves you very much. I’ve honestly tried everything. EVERYTHING. I’ve
yelled at him, grounded him, dragged him outside. But, he never reacts. I
want a REACTION from him. He’s not
angry, he just walks back upstairs. Caves into his room and starts studying.
All of us have tried different things. I beg of you, to get him down. I’m so
worried that he’s depressed. That’s he’s going through something that he won’t
share about. Please get him down."
“I agree. Yes, I
will. Thank you for the tea, Rodrick,” I answered. I wiggled my way out of the
chair, but my behind was stuck in it. With a final try, my whole body was out
of the chair. I heard laughter being stifled. I turned beet red and started
laughing too. I was relieved to be out of the chair. Everyone else turned their heads. Rodrick
included.
I made my way around
the people and climbed upstairs. I kept hitting the wall in a thud thud
rhythm, my feet synchronized with the rhythm. I finally reached the second
floor hallway and walked into the room to the right. The space was small, and I
felt oversized for this house.
Pindrop silence
followed me. I wondered if the people downstairs were dead. Or maybe they were
just eavesdropping. I knocked on Andrew's door and turned the door handle. I
was hit by a wave of heat and sadness. The room was dark gray with one lamp. I
looked over my shoulder and wondered if I was the wrong room. Perhaps a
person passed away in this room. Then I saw that there was a desk with a
lonely looking Andrew on it. A bed and a tiny open window were the only other
furniture in the room. The lamp barely lit the room up. I closed the door and
leaned on it. Again, I felt slightly oversized. A small breeze of cool air blew
through the window and made the fire wave side to side.
“Hello, Andrew?” I
asked. “I heard you are studying a lot.” I smiled a bit. Andrew turned around.
His eyes expressed sadness behind his beaming face with one eyebrow raised. I
heard murmurs downstairs, and the murmurs turned to noisy laughter. The noise
down stairs started back up again. Music, talking, laughter. The family was
back to normal. It must be the cinnamon cake.
“Yes,” he said and
sighed. A great deep sigh, like he was a tired old lady with no hope. His voice
had dropped a few octaves, making it hollow and low.
“Come on, Andrew,”
I said as I lightened up my tone.“Studying is not everything. You got to have
some fun. Your family is missing you. Evelyn too. They have some cinnamon cake
made. Just get out of this studying shell. Have some fun, be a 15-year-old
again. Not depressed like an old lady.”
“No, I just have to
finish this essay for English. Give me a few hours,” he said as anger crept
into his voice. He turned his hunched back back around. Silence filled the room
and made it feel emptier than it was. By then, we lost our momentum in our
conversation. I tried to get it back. The wind blew again, Woosh. Andrew
and my hair blew in the breeze.
“No, Andrew!” I
hissed, vexed. “Listen to me now. I mean it.” Andrew turned around. “If you
hand in your work late, it’s okay. I will personally write a note to the
teacher so that he can excuse you. I am asking you to lighten up for just a few
hours. That’s all. Spend time with your family. Eat some cake. Just a few
hours. Believe me. You need it. You deserve it. And, this is coming from a
person who encouraged you to study. Too much of something isn’t good. You’re
going to be sick. I can tell. This stress of studying is affecting you in such
a huge, negative way," I said.
“How do you know,
and why do you care even?” Andrew asked. I just stared at him; I was stunned.
At least his
temper was coming back, I thought. I walked further into the room and sat on
his bed. The bed creaked under my hefty
weight. Hands on my knees and back hunched forward, I waited for him to think
about his actions. I stared him down until his brows furrowed and he sighed
again. “I’m sorry. I shouldn't have said that. I know why you care; you told
me. And, you aren’t even making me study. So, I shouldn't be rebelling,” he
said, weary with resignation and guilt. A muscle in his cheeks twitched and hid
a smile. I once told him that he would never apologize because his ego would
get bruised, but he just did. I smiled too, knowing that our conflict was
solved. I looked at the window; it was dark already. I knew I had to leave.
Soon!
“Apology accepted.
Now let’s get down there,” I said hurriedly. “Apology accepted,” something my
daughter used to say.
I pointed at the
door. He hadn’t moved. “No,” he whined like a little baby. I dragged him out of
his chair and down the stairs by his elbow with great struggle. He was very
stubborn. He pulled back toward his room and caught me off guard. His book and
door were left open. At that point, I didn’t care; I wanted to see him enjoy
his life. We were stuck in the hallway and had not moved anywhere.
“Don’t be a baby,”
I said with mega seriousness. He stared at me hard and tried to solve his
dilemma. I could see the work that happened in his brain, in his recently
stormy eyes. I waited again, arms locked into his. I waited for him to make a
decision. After a few minutes his concentrated eyes loosened their stare and
tenseness, and I realized he made a decision. I tugged once more at his hand,
and I was able to move him. Silently, I rejoiced and pulled him down the
stairs. I kept hitting the wall, but I didn’t care.
When we reached
the end of the stairs, the musicians stopped playing, and all the people
started cheering. I lightly pushed Andrew near them, and they embraced him. I
stood near the corner of the wall, enjoying the view. I was happy to see this
family happy. Mine died a few years ago, but the pain remained. My heart and
stomach was filled. And I saw the boy I loved so much give a break and enjoy
himself. Just like I should’ve done a long time ago. He was with his family,
doing what a normal 15-year-old boy does on Christmas Eve. I then smiled to
myself and left without a word. No one noticed me, like they did before. No one
heard me, but I knew Andrew did. I knew Andrew noticed. He looked thankful, and
we shared a smile. I was thankful too for knowing such great people.
Quietly I left,
walking into the endless night with no aim, smiling. I finally stopped
stressing about my past and let go. The full moon was in full view, along with
a few owls and bats. I didn’t have to hurry out of the house after all. I had nothing
to do anyway. Awestruck, I looked around, seeing the beautiful nature that
surrounded me.
-Vibha Thirunellayi Gopalakrishnan
i like the story but i feel like other words could have been used instead of whined like baby i feel like it should have been whined like a child
ReplyDeletei actually have nothing to complain about i just felt like some words could have been changed to fit the age and personality of the character