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Bringing It Back
by
Youngblood
Brasket
"What shall I bring you from Paris?", he had asked.
I didn't even have to think about that one. "Something from the Earth,"
I said. "A twig, a leaf, a rock ... something from the Earth."
That was weeks ago. Tonight he sits beside me on the couch, a faraway
look in his eye, serving up his treasures. There is a poster from Tournee
du Chat Noir that he snitched from somewhere along le Rive Gauche. It is
a fine poster featuring a truly cool black cat with the most enormous gold
eyes.
"Look, ma petite Pussoise," I say to my long-time companion, now
curled in a ball on top of his jacket, "it is a picture of you!" I think
she twitched a whisker but I could have been mistaken.
He pulls the next offering from his bag. It's a Metro ticket he purchased
to travel to Le Pere Lachaise, the famous Parisian cemetary where Jim
Morrison, Gertrude Stein, Isadora Duncan and other notables are buried.
There is also a map of Le Pere Lachaise, the very one he carried as he found
his way around the grounds. I can see him so easily in my mind's eye, long
brown tresses flowing from beneath the jaunty beret, heavy black overcoat
flapping in the winter wind, the dark goatee, looking very French Oui,
oui. I am not surprised that he was stopped by tourists at every turn,
asking, "Do you speak English?"
Who'da thunk it ... Lightnin Lewie Brasket performing live and in
person nightly on the Champs Elysees? Certainly not him. Not in his wildest
dreams. But sometimes even our wildest dreams come true, and the thought
that it had actually happened for him was something he was still trying
to come to grips with, after the fact, as if it was only a dream from which
he might wake at any moment.
As he speaks, relaying his adventures, visions of Lightnin in Paris
become more and more vivid in my mind. They draw breath and speak to me,
sprout wings and soar through the ether searching for a place to manifest.
He talks of Julie and Michelle and Philippe, his newfound friends
from across the water. He talks of the teeming masses filling the Champs
Elysees. He laughs, his eyes sparkle, he wistfully muses about running
away to Paris to live the life of the artiste, all the while his mind churning
on the wife and the children. He felt at home in Paris, he says. At last,
the hapless puzzle piece embraces its missing niche. A niche now so remote
in retrospect, so unattainable, so gossamer in its substance. Ah, c'est
la vie; au pays des aveugles les borgnes sont rois.
And now, s'il vous plait, le piece de resistance!
From the cymbal bag he draws forth his final tribute. It is wrapped
in two plastic bags which he very carefully and methodically removes,
revealing a pair of white cotton socks rolled into a ball.
"It was the only way I knew to bring this back through Customs,"
he says, anticipating the question in my eyes.
He unrolls one of the socks, holds it upside down over a piece of
paper, and gently taps it with his finger. Tiny bits of soil and rock patter
onto the paper.
"Something from the Earth," he says proudly. "Little pieces of the
Earth, as a matter of fact, from Chopin's gravesite."
My face is alight with joy. He knows, indeed, the surest route to
my heart. I kiss him soundly. He hugs me tight.
"I must have walked a hundred miles over there," he says. "And I
thought of you for many a step, wishing you could have been there to see
it with me."
Then together we move the precious cargo from the paper into a crystal
dish where it shall remain for posterity, or until someone sorting my
apartment after my death thinks, "Huh, dirt in a dish," and wipes it clean.
"Bon soir", I say as he departs for home and family. "Bon soir and
merci, mon ami."
youngblood
          
Youngblood Brasket is a storyteller who shares her home, with cats
Harmony and Bandon, a rabbit, a field mouse and various creatures of the
forest on the Texas Gulf Coast. Her varied background includes freelancework
in petrochem, the oil patch, trucking, and construction. Youngblood has
also tried her hand as a rigger helper, ironworker, demolition technician,
roadie for a Rhythm & Blues band, and as a member of the aerospace
industry, where she still works today.
Youngblood's Web Pages
http://www.io.com/~stargazr
http://www.io.com/~stargazr/mach25
Art from the
WebMuseum ~ Paris
Entitled: Love
Artist: Klimt,Gustav
The work of the Austrian painter and illustrator Gustav Klimt,
b. July
14, 1862, d. Feb. 6, 1918, founder of the school of painting known as
the Vienna Sezession, embodies the high-keyed erotic, psychological,
and aesthetic preoccupations of turn-of-the-century Vienna's dazzling
intellectual world.
          
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