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Monday, December 16, 2013

Chapter 6: Providence - The Tale of the Tamrins

Happy Monday everyone! Because I recognize that you are probably pretty busy preparing for Christmas, this week will only be a short chapter to keep your escape options open, but also so not to overwhelm you with too heavy a read.

Chapter 6: A Chance
“I am so sorry, Reverend, that you had to witness whatever that was between Mr. Higley and me,” Ms. Grace quickly apologized as she and Mr. Tamrin stood in the open doorway of the schoolhouse. She was simply damning Mr. Higley in her thoughts for possibly ruining her chances of being courted by and courting the reverend.
The reverend allowed a moment more of the crickets’ songs to pass before he swallowed heavily. “It’s alright, Ms. Grace,” he looked down shamefully at his ringless hand and he briefly imagined it remaining that way. “Even as a reverend I understand attraction and romance.”
“No, no, it was nothing like that at all!” Ms. Grace assured. Her eyes were filled with a genuine pleading to the man she admired most. “Mr. Higley cornered me. I want nothing to do with him. I think it was only by the grace of God that you walked in when you did. You saved me, actually. I swear on my life that I have no interest in him.”
The reverend’s heart lightened, but he did not give himself too much hope for this matter. He too had heard the rumors that Mr. Higley found interest in Ms. Grace. However, on second thought, he had never heard anything regarding her interest in the spoiled boy. “So you mean that you are not engaged romantically to Mr. Higley?”
The way the question was posed drew a slip of hesitation from Ms. Grace. The reverend sounded so hopeful. She bashfully turned her face away, hoping that the shade from the cooler outside air would mask her blushing cheeks. Ms. Grace softly answered, “No. There is no understanding between Mr. Higley and myself.” She looked back to the reverend – it was a shame that her eyes could not properly see that he was forcing his own expression from turning into a smile. “I was wondering the second before you came in as to how many Hail Marys I would have to say in order to redeem myself for somehow misleading Mr. Higley into the thought that I found him even in the slightest bit interesting.”
This was fabulous news to the reverend. His face erupted in a smile that he could not control. Her words were almost like a choir from Seraphim, for it meant that he stood a chance, a chance at last! Mr. Tamrin’s countenance simply glowed even in the shade from the night. He cleared his throat nervously then answered Ms. Grace’s question, “I think it’d be something around two-dozen Hail Marys, at least.”
The vampires who followed the reverend and who hid as shadows on the side of the schoolhouse could not have been more delighted for their dear reverend friend.
Ms. Grace returned her sight to the sweet reverend and they both shared the same expression: their faces were alight with utter hope, but only the vampires hiding around the corner of Ms. Grace's house could fully see it.


~*~*~

As a head's up, dear readers, I will not be posting a chapter next week. I will be in El Paso to celebrate the Christmas season with my family, so have a marvelous holiday and merry Christmas!

Your humble author,
S. Faxon

Monday, December 9, 2013

Chapter 5: The Tale of the Tamrins

The Christmas season is in full bloom! If you're a San Diego native, you're probably familiar with the OB Christmas tree, if not, every year, the Ocean Beach community puts up a Charlie Brown tree to mark the season. Below is an image of the OB Christmas tree:


I watched the OB Christmas Parade and I strolled the roads of Balboa Park's December Nights (also known as Christmas on the Prado). And now I'm ready to curl up with my cup of coco to read a lovely story.

Chapter 5: The Man Named Brian Higley
Whilst the reverend and the school teacher shared a humble meal the man named Brian Higley dressed for what he knew was sure to be a night of success. He slicked back his fluffy sand colored hair and straightened his white color. His large round blue eyes took their time to evaluate whether or not the white shirt looked well against his skin tanned by the frequent touches of the summer sun. With a nod of his head, the man named Brian Higley confirmed his own initial suspicion that his good looks and charming straight-toothed smile were sure to knock anyone dead.
Mr. Higley tended to be distracted, but tonight he made absolutely every precaution to ensure that he would be ready for his date. The fine young woman he had his shimmering eyes settled upon was sure to realize that she belonged with him the moment he stepped over her threshold tonight. She simply had to, he reasoned. She was an erudite – surely she would know a prince charming when he came to sweep her off her feet.
Stepping out onto the stoop of the only inn in town that his grandparents had built, Mr. Higley figured that he fancied himself a walk before he abated his lonely nights. Mr. Higley headed off on this refreshingly cool evening. His shined black shoes made their way casually down the main artery of Providence. The walk took him past the town hall where the town-accountant’s daughter did not fail to see the young man. Mr. Higley was too pompously high on his cloud of hope to have seen the wanting eyes of the girl as he passed and as she pressed her hands to the window for a better look at the lad. However, the girl was unfortunately too transparent with her heart, so Mr. Higley failed to see her or to care. Mr. Higley was the type who saw only those who averted their eyes from his brimming confidence and dashing good looks. It was the challenge to change this aversion which brought passion to his deeds. And it was for this reason that Mr. Higley found tonight to be the fortuitous date on which that dark haired vixen Ms. Grace would bow from her aversions to forever be his bride.
However, Ms. Grace’s current passions formed a bastion that left her blind to the intentions of any other men. In fact, if Mr. Higley had only seen the way she smiled and laughed with the town’s reverend he would surely have turned green with envy. Lord knows what his young, bellicose heart would have done. Whatever the consequences of that encounter would be the reverend and the school teacher were blissfully ignorant to the possibilities.
Ms. Grace shared with Mr. Tamrin the trials of her day, not excluding the impossible bickering between the Davis’ and the Thomas’ and her being completely covered in chalk. Mr. Tamrin listened intently with a softly delighted expression on his face. He loved to hear Ms. Grace speak. The stress and the anxiety he had remaining from the earlier chat with the vampires vanished because of the sudden and unexpected appearance of the earth-bound angel at his door.
“What would you do about this, Mr. Tamrin?” Ms. Grace asked in reference to the habitual issues of the dairy families that were hacked-out in her classroom. “I mean, what can I do? Should I even try?”
Mr. Tamrin sighed as he leaned back more comfortably in the soft padded backrest of his kitchen table’s bench. He shrugged then said, “I think that you did the best thing possible by threatening to bar the reentrance to your schoolhouse if they do not behave, but you will have to stand by that threat if they become rambunctious again.” Mr. Tamrin shifted again then added, “I’ll talk to their parents. And maybe I’ll promise to sick Mrs. Huff on them as a messenger from heaven if they dare to disobey you.”
“Oh lord, a fate worse than death, Reverend,” Ms. Grace retorted. Thanks to the alcohol her tongue was rolling smoothly, her cheeks felt warm and she could not be more comfortable speaking to the man she cared for very much. “Let’s refrain from unleashing the hounds until those families wage war in church or something like that...” she scoffed to think that Mrs. Huff could be referred to as something sent directly from heaven.
For the umpteenth time that evening the reverend and the school teacher exchanged a look of bashful admiring. Ms. Grace sighed reverentially and her eyes fell upon the empty plate of her company. The meal had been very good, humble, but filling and tasty. “Did you like it?” Ms. Grace asked Mr. Tamrin, “The dinner, I mean.”
“Yep, you are a very good cook, Ms. Grace. I especially liked those sweet potato muffins you made for last week’s gathering after church. I could have eaten the whole basket myself.” His complement made Ms. Grace blush – now that she knew this, she would certainly make more for him. Even though the meal left his stomach a tad on the hungry side, it had been very tasty. The meal was perfectly sized for the small body of Ms. Grace, but Mr. Tamrin was a very tall man and were he not a reverend sworn against gluttony he could easily have eaten another three or four of the pockets Ms. Grace brought. The reverend looked to the bowl of fruit on the window sill of the nook. “I bought a couple apples yesterday and I’m not sure that I can eat them all before they spoil. So if you’d like please, help yourself.” Truly though the reverend knew that he could easily eat the fruit before noon tomorrow. However, he was so nervous from Ms. Grace’s presence that he was having a bit of a difficult time speaking calmly or keeping himself from babbling. He already felt small for rambling on the queerest tangents tonight.
Ms. Grace stared at the beautiful, vibrant red skins of the apples– they were rather tempting. “Oh, why not?” she said with a smile, temporarily forgetting that very soon she would have a class to teach.
At that very schoolhouse where in no less than seven minutes, Ms. Grace would be expected to commence her class for the adults, the man named Brian Higley and a circle of others gathered. Beneath the glow of two hanging lanterns several members of Ms. Grace’s class chatted about the day, mostly about the potential expansions their class was rumored to take.
It was not at all like Ms. Grace to be late and nor was it like her to not be in her small home before class, so her tardiness and absence was rather unusual. The majority of the students waited patiently for Ms. Grace to return from wherever it was she was presently held, but the man named Brian Higley anxiously kept his eye on the light-less window of the teacher’s home, hoping that he would be the first to catch a glimpse of her shadow.
“My, aren’t you the snazzy walker tonight, Mr. Higley,” Mr. Dawning from the common store said as he came to Mr. Higley’s side.
Mr. Higley smiled, his perfectly straight teeth lit up the immediate area from their reflection in the lanterns. “Thank you, good sir,” Mr. Higley shook Mr. Dawning’s calloused hand. “Just thought I’d look sharp for such an evening.”
“Oh, aye, sir, indeed, it is fine out,” Mr. Dawning agreed with a look to the star filled sky above. “Such a relief from the day, eh? And those stars! That’s the brightest I’ve seen ‘em all summer.”
“Don’t be so sure, Mr. Dawning,” Mrs. Quintort said as she joined the men in their conversation. “August had some gorgeous nights.”
“Indeed, ma’am, that it did,” Mr. Higley agreed as he gave the woman a polite bow of his head. “But tonight seems to have a bit more magic to its glow.” The charmer gave the woman a wink of his eye which she received with a delighted chuckle.
“Magic is a good word for it,” Mrs. Quintort agreed. She had always been impressed by Mr. Higley’s romanticism and darling face. However, the lad was about twelve years too young for her, but then of course there was also that husband-thing that bound her from indulging in his company. For her for now like so many others in this town the man named Brian Higley was a nice thing to look at, but nothing more. Mrs. Quintort cleared her throat to ask, “Where do you think Ms. Grace could be? Rather odd of her to not already be in there waiting for us, isn’t it?”
“Aye, she’s surely deliberately tyrin’ to mess with our minds before our exam,” Mr. Dawning postulated, rubbing his hands together to stay off the cool night air from his fingers. “It’s a wonder where she could be?”
Mr. Higley had forgotten all about the exam tonight. He failed to study the material from the past two weeks due to his business in other more pressing matters, such as finding excuses to not help his mum run the inn. He knew that he was doomed to fail this test tonight and that his mother would kill him because of so bad a grade, but with a second thought, Mr. Higley excused the worry. He rationalized that his good looks and charming countenance would undoubtedly win him over a good enough grade to satisfy the overbearing whims of his overly controlling mother.
At that precise moment Ms. Grace was finishing her last bites from the delectable apple while still sitting in the kitchen of the beekeeper.
“That was superb,” Ms. Grace announced, complimenting the reverend’s choice in fruits. “I cannot remember another summer that has consistently produced such marvelous fruits.”
Nodding to agree, the reverend confirmed, “Yes, it has been some time.”
“Time? Oh, my lord, time!” Ms. Grace panicked, popping up from the table as the singular word reminded her of her duties. “What time do you have?”
But Mr. Tamrin was not one to carry a pocket watch and nor was he a man who had a clock readily available in his home. The man felt awful for not being able to report to his company the information that she desired. However, Ms. Grace was so scattered that she had forgotten the pocket watch in her own pocket. Shaking her head at her own misguided thoughts, the school teacher removed the shining piece only to see that she was already a full six minutes past due in her class.
“Forgive me, reverend, that I must rush out like this, I am terribly late and I am never late, so I’m sure my students probably think I died or something,” Ms. Grace quickly muttered as she ran to the kitchen’s door.
“And we certainly can’t have that rumor out in the town by break of dawn tomorrow, can we?” Mr. Tamrin asked, his simple sentiment soothing Ms. Grace in an instant.
“No, we can’t,” Ms. Grace distantly replied, lost from a look to his eyes that she could only see as a handsome blur. 
The charming reverend walked to the side of Ms. Grace and he kindly pushed the door open for her. A minute more of maintaining the intimate stare passed before Mr. Tamrin nervously cleared his throat to say, “If it is alright with you, Ms. Grace, perhaps I could come by after your class so that we may actually discuss our plans, seeing as how we seemed to have skipped that tonight. I’ll also bring by a couple of books I have that you may enjoy for the purposes of this class.”
“That’s fine with me,” Ms. Grace replied. “I suppose I’ll see you then.” With a silent nod from the reverend, Ms. Grace partially floated through the garden and out onto the path. However, once she passed the sanctuary of the bees and once she was sure that the reverend could no longer see her, Ms. Grace took off running towards her schoolhouse.
The vampires still hiding in the garden exchanged a confused look, for neither could understand why their dear reverend took no effort to chase her. But then of course they also had no idea why she left, so they were entirely and literally in the dark.
Out of breath and exhausted from her run Ms. Grace arrived at her schoolhouse to be greeted with numerous questions from her worried students.
“I’m fine, really, I’m fine,” she persisted as she walked past Brian Higley without specifically noticing him. “I was at the reverend’s plotting the course that I am sure you all have heard of already. I simply lost track of time.” Something she had never done before.
Class then proceeded normally enough for everyone save for Ms. Grace and the man named Brian Higley. While her students diligently worked on their multi-subject quiz Ms. Grace stared absently over her class as in her mind she reenacted dinner with the reverend. While his classmates scratched the tips of their quills into their journals, scribbling out brief essays on history or science, Mr. Higley kept his eyes ever focused on the lovely teacher sitting behind her desk. Sure, he should have been jotting out answers to the questions written in chalk on the blackboard behind Ms. Grace, but no. He simply found her too interesting tonight. He was entrapped with the glow she wore so finely– he wrongly assumed that she could instinctively sense the fate-filled magic that soon would forever bind them as one. Oh, the very thought made his heart double its speed. Ms. Grace was such a good catch – she was of good breeding, intelligent, and though somewhat short, her dark eyes and dark hair simply captured Mr. Higley past conceivably normal levels of distraction. From his seat in the back Mr. Higley went so far with his distractions to trace his eyes past the point on Ms. Grace’s person where no true gentleman of Providence would dare look prior to wedlock. But how could he help himself? He was attracted to the delightful promise that Ms. Grace’s well shaped body provided. And that bun she always kept so tight at the back of her head! He wanted nothing more than to help let down her hair.
The time allotted for the quizzes ended. Ms. Grace’s students all turned in their booklets to the front of class. She thanked each one of her students as they did as told. Her sprightly mood at the moment and the “good behavior” of her students during class, warranted in her heart reason to excuse the class a whole ten minutes earlier than usual. Being simply thrilled from this expedited class meeting, the students all quickly filed out into the night.
Save one.
Ms. Grace was too busy erasing the blackboard of the questions for the quiz to have noticed that Mr. Higley remained. He watched the long sweeping strokes of her arm holding the chalk eraser and how her entire body moved with the sweeps. He watched her ever so greedily.
Finding her chores to be satisfactorily complete, Ms. Grace patted her hands clean of the chalk. She turned, subconsciously expecting to find no one in her classroom. To her start, there leaning on the front center desk was Mr. Higley looking as arrogant to her as ever. “Is there something I may help you with, Mr. Higley?” Ms. Grace asked. She absolutely did not want to have any involvement with this man. Clearing her throat Ms. Grace awkwardly continued in attempt to break Mr. Higley’s awkwardly intensive stare, “I could not help to notice that your journal’s section for tonight is entirely blank, Mr. Higley. Is there something that you wish to tell me?”
The man named Brian Higley smirked a smile that some would regard as charming, but Ms. Grace found it to be unnerving. She started to slip off her cloud that the reverend founded in her heart. Mr. Higley removed himself from his post and he approached Ms. Grace. The teacher felt mildly intimidated. She sat at her desk, hoping that the security of the table would serve as a bulwark for whatever Mr. Higley and his creepily large eyes had in store.
Mr. Higley partially sat on Ms. Grace’s desk, leaning his whole body so heavily on the table that he actually managed to push the desk slightly into the teacher’s stomach. Ms. Grace refrained from scooting her wooden chair back for comfort’s sake because she wanted to hold her ground.
“Ms. Grace,” Mr. Higley started, using what he believed to be his most suave tone. (However, Ms. Grace thought that it made him sound like a prat.) “Do you realize that there are only three and a half weeks until the Fall Festival?” he asked rhetorically. “How time flies. Anyway, you know how there is always the Apple March? Well, I could not help to think that it would be kind of nice if you and I were partners at the event.”
Ms. Grace stared with a critical indifference at Mr. Higley. Her memory was running back to last October's Fall Festival in order to recount the rules of the game he took such effort recount. From what she could recall the Apple March was an intimate sort of game that was usually done with the town’s newest couples as a bonding ceremony. “Isn’t that for couples?” Ms. Grace asked semi-naively, hoping that was not the arena to which she was being led.
Mr. Higley did not answer her question. He only gave Ms. Grace a devilish smile. The rather pompous prat twiddled his thumbs with annoyingly well-kept finger nails. “Ms. Grace, it’s been a while since I noticed the potentiality for something great between us. When we were kids, I always thought very highly of you.” (Ms. Grace doubted this; she could very distinctly remember Mr. Higley shoving her over a tree root when they were seven-years-old, only then for him to lie to the teacher about what happened when asked.) “And then when your parents died, I don’t know if you know this, but I asked my mother if she would take you into our home.” (Ms. Grace also doubted this because Mr. Higley had always been a very selfish, self-centered individual as long as she could remember and Mrs. Higley hated her very being. Ms. Grace also did not appreciate his bringing up the fact that her parents were gone, which still brought her great pain.) “I just thought that you would like to know that for many years I have had an eye for you.”
The school teacher continued to stare at this bloke, fearing that this would become a very long winded and rather useless speech.
Mr. Higley stood from the desk and he slowly began to pace the length of the front of the class. He held his hands behind him and he leaned slightly forward as though he was teaching a class. “Ms. Grace,” he eventually continued, though admittedly Ms. Grace was paying very little attention. “There comes a time in everyone’s life when they realize that what they have simply is not enough. Even kings, even our recently coroneted King Darneīl surely will someday come to the conclusion that something is missing in his life. Now, some men may look for years and years until they find what they are looking for and others, after their search, may decide that they are better off in wanting.” Mr. Higley stopped his pacing and returned to the desk. “Can you guess which one of these men I am?”
Ms. Grace could only hope that Mr. Higley was the former case, but she knew that under the present circumstance this probably would not be the appropriate fit. “The first?” she uneasily dared to answer.
Mr. Higley smiled as though he was withholding a great and ridiculous secret. “No, he answered, “I am neither.” (Ms. Grace began to wonder if she could sneak out without Mr. Higley noticing, but she doubted the abilities of her furtive prowess.) “I have only just realized what I am missing, but with my revelation the answer came like lightning to thunder.” (Ms. Grace could not understand the incorrect lightning-thunder simile, but she wasted no energy with any false attempts to rationalize his nonsense.) “I brought up that example because, Ms. Grace, you are the first model.”
“Oh, really?” Ms. Grace asked, quite surprised that Mr. Higley managed to turn this back to her. “I had no idea that I was ‘searching’ at all.” Truth be told, Ms. Grace had actually already found and had been found, she just did not know the full truth of the matter yet.
“Yes, that’s my point,” Mr. Higley continued. He removed himself from the desk, circling around it to corner Ms. Grace in her chair. Mr. Higley latched onto the arm rests of her seat and turned the chair so that she directly faced him. The school teacher was looking nervous. She shifted herself as far back in the seat as possible even with Mr. Higley narrowing downward for her. “Ms. Grace, you have been looking for a man to bring you out from your cave of lonely ignorance and into the bright world of knowing.”
“Excuse me?” Ms. Grace sharply asked, for she was no longer entertained.
“You know what I mean, Ms. Grace,” Mr. Higley said suggestively, slowly lowering himself ever forward. “You’ve been waiting to take a mate because you’ve been waiting for the right man to come along.” He was a mere inches away from her face. The back rest of the seat would permit Ms. Grace to sink back no more. “You’ve come to that first incredible step, Ms. Grace,” he whispered, honing in on her lips. Mr. Higley was but a breath away. Ms. Grace could feel the heat of his face burning against hers. “And when you reach the next peak, what man’s name are you going to call?”
“THANE!” Ms. Grace shouted as she shoved Mr. Higley away the second she saw the reverend enter the classroom.
Though he did not show it the reverend was absolutely devastated, regardless that for the first time in his life, Ms. Grace had said his first name. “I-I can come back later,” Mr. Tamrin quickly stuttered hoping at least to have one moment to recover himself after so shocking a scene. He immediately began to leave.
“NO! No, no, that will not be necessary. Mr. Higley was just leaving,” Ms. Grace firmly commanded as she leapt from her chair to shove Mr. Higley out of her schoolhouse.
Mr. Higley was nearly literally carried out by Ms. Grace. The arrogant man gave the reverend a look so smug and so full of himself that Mr. Tamrin wished to throttle the fool. Mr. Higley did not notice the burning eyes of jealousy the reverend glared at him, for the thrill of almost claiming Ms. Grace was blindingly invigorating. Besides, Mr. Higley knew this town; with the reverend as his witness, surely by vespers tomorrow the whole town would be talking about what he perceived to be Ms. Grace’s agreement to his proposal.
~*~*~
Whatever will happen between Ms. Grace and Mr. Tamrin? Guess you'll have to tune in next week to see if anything comes of the plot by Mr. Higley!
Until then, your humble author,
S. Faxon

Monday, December 2, 2013

Chapter 4 of Providence: The Tale of the Tamrins

Have you yet consumed all of the turkey-leftovers? I hope that you and your loved ones had a marvelous Thanksgiving!

We've officially entered the holiday season! I'm wearing my Christmas vest and Bella has her lovely Mrs. Claws dress! (Thus so titled by my sister Tiff.)

Mrs. Claws and her tree!
Let's get on to the story!

Chapter 4: In the House of the Beekeeper
The rambling rumors from the town’s spy and the messy mire between the Davis’ and the Thomas’ could not enter the garden of the beekeeper. It was a sacred place. During the warm spring and summer months a persistent gentle hum lulled its way out from the manmade beehive that stood among the large drove of flowers. It could easily be argued that these bees lived within their very own Eden. This garden was their paradise. Every shade of flowers bloomed within the lining of the hip-high white picket fence. This garden that led to the entrance of a warm and welcoming home hosted verbenas, daffodils, lemongrass, daisies, rosemary, roses of several hues, the list went on and on. The scents were lively and refreshing to the humans who strolled past. To the bees, this garden was a delectable café. The honey the beekeeper graciously retrieved from their keep was sweet and thick, golden and appeasing. It was this honey alone that was sold in the local shops, for all of Providence was in agreement that these bees were the best. 
The lauded bees would, however, be naught without their blessed keeper who kept their paradise alive. This man tended to his garden with great care and reverence. For the most part his thoughts would clear as he shifted the moist soil between his fingers and as he listened to the soft humming of the bees. He would spend hours during the week pruning the bright yellow roses, watering the damask daisies, or turning the soil beneath the legumes while his bees merrily worked around him. In his lengthy career of rearing fauna and her helpers, he had never once been stung by his black and yellow comrades. They respected him because he respected them. There was an understanding between the bees and the beekeeper that most mortals and creatures in the world around them could not have established, but this man was different from most. He was an aritoire, a spirit with an inherent sense of nature and its whims. There were times when he could almost directly communicate with the trees in the forest and the birds above. Being an aritoire provide him no powers or prominence. Instead it gave him insight into the weight of a human’s soul and a deeper understanding of the earth’s countless beautiful details.
There were times when the beekeeper would catch himself humming along with the bees as his thoughts strayed absently to the one flower more beautiful than any of his own. It was during these moments when the beekeeper would catch himself, sigh, and remind his heart to let it be.
For the first time in many months, the eyes of the vampires saw the lovely, blooming garden of the beekeeper settled nearly at the end of the western side of town. Yet again the patron and the matron were taken aback by the beauty of the magnificent hues. In the length of their lives they had hardly ever seen so radiant a small field paired with so charming a house. The front of the house with its faded yellow panels and white trim was certainly the most humble and welcoming image coupled by the haunt of bees.
“The garden looks beautiful, Thane,” Lin complimented the reverend.
Reverend Tamrin smiled and blushed, beatified by such a compliment from such judges who had seen the whole world over more than once. “Thank you,” the beekeeper humbly said as he dismounted. “But its beauty is due mostly to the bees.” After a look to the small pink painted house beside his own, the reverend added, “And to Mrs. Keithly’s company, of course.” Mr. Tamrin added tipping the rim of his hat to greet Mrs. Keithly, the seemingly mute widow who sat on her wooden rocking chair all day. The sweet faced eldest member of town smiled merrily back at the reverend as she silently continued to watch the day pass-by from her front porch.
A gentle breeze blew through the garden as Thane and his company proceeded to enter his home. The reverend lingered at the door for a breath. One of his more favored flowers managed to sift its way through the swirl of other floral scents to touch his nose. The reverend deeply inhaled the scent of the tuberoses, the flowers that a dear friend had shared with him to plant in his garden. With one last look to the long, green shoots of the tuberoses planted at the heart of his garden, the beekeeper sighed reverentially before entering his home.
“Is there anyone who helps to look after your neighbor, Thane?” Lin asked as she took a seat on the soft padding of the couch across from the fireplace. “She is what, in her late eighties now?” Lin stopped for a moment to consider if her next comment would be appropriate or not, but what difference would it make if it was not? “I mean, of course, she’s still just a pup compared to us, but she is mortal.”
While Thane removed his light outer jacket to hang it on the stand by the front door, he answered, “Mrs. Keithly is still more than capable of looking after herself. She is deceptively feeble. There is still a heart of gold in her and it’s beating lively. I do keep an eye on her though, of course.” The reverend joined his friends near the fireplace. He took a seat in his own wooden rocking chair, so that he could look properly at both of his companions. “But admittedly more to keep her out of trouble than anything else,” he added with a wink. “I take her flowers, a vase full, every Wednesday morning and she gives me a plate of biscuits or some other baked goods that she bakes herself. I act’ally would not doubt it if she outlives us all.”
The vampires smiled warmly, but neither could hold their attentions on the present conversation while the issues they wished to address lay so heavily on their thoughts. Howard pursed his lips then looked solemnly to Lin. She too wore a similar expression of worry.
“So what is the matter, you two?” Thane asked, cutting to the issue at hand.
Howard answered as he played with the large, flat faced ring on his hand, “Thane, you know Damien, our third?
“Of course,” Thane answered with a shrug. Though it had been some time since he last saw Damien, how could he forget the tall, pale skinned and generally eerie presence of the first vampire he ever met? “What problems is he bringing now?”
The history of Damien, Howard, and Lin was well known by the reverend. The three vampires all came from different lands that stretched beyond all formed borders of the earth. Howard was originally from the isle nation Ruishland in the north, Lin from Tairwan in the east, and Damien was from the farthest habitable lands in the Southern Half. Their vampire parents, those who removed them from their mortal states, brought them to this land with the intention of building their very own vampire nation. However, the elders who brought this clan together held in their hearts wicked intentions to eventually dominate the world in darkness. This was a task that Howard and Lin could not tolerate. A battle of near Biblical proportions erupted among the vampires and somehow, the youth overcame the elders. Lin, Howard, and Damien’s forces vanquished for the good of the earth. Providence was built on the remnants of that ancient battlefield where wolf, vampires and demons hashed out their brutal war. Providence lies on a place where cärabadés, “victory for good,” was taken. However, in the course of time intentions change. The reverend knew that Damien had long since become much like an indolent, rebellious adolescent for Howard and Lin.
Lin sighed as she stared into the hearth where one log lay in wait for its fiery doom. “He took our youth out for a flight the other night, which became only a meter less than disastrous for our kind,” she answered quietly. “Had not the majority of them remembered their lessons from you, Thane, I shudder to guess the scope of what could have happened.”
“What did happen?” Thane inquired. It was not often that Howard and Lin were so somber or ambiguous with their words and demeanor, so surely some grave threat existed.
Howard leaned over the coffee table before the couch as he explained; “Damien flew the youths to Horoshone County in Viramont where he led a raid on a town there. Many were disturbed and or killed because of his actions.” Howard paused a moment to try to remember if Lin or himself ever explained the term “disturbed” to the reverend, which meant that an individual was raped or viciously consumed by a vampire. The deeply concerned expression on the reverend’s face told Howard that the reverend had at least a general understanding. “We know this happened because well, we have lived with Damien long enough to be able to detect his antics when they are coming, so we sent our guards of arms to keep watch and sure enough...”
“Damien was practically waging war on those mortals with our youth as his army, no less,” Lin further elaborated. “Had we not sent the Guards, I doubt that a single soul in that town would have been spared. The place they attacked was not that much different from your Providence, Thane.”
“Thank God it was not Providence,” Thane quietly said, yet his heart went out to those people in Viramont who did not deserve to die in such a way. “You know how touchy people around here can be if you are different.” He knew what evils the vampires were capable of performing, for they were not at all that much different from the wickedest crimes of man. The reverend ran his hand over his face before he asked, “Do you know what happened to the town? Surely the survivors will seek some sort of reprieve or revenge. What of Damien? Where is he? What happened to those who followed his pugnaciousness?”
“The town will be the easy part to sort out, comparatively,” Lin answered. “We’re already preparing a diplomatic mission of sorts to address the needs of the people, both financially and emotionally. Because Viramont is much friendlier to our sort, they’ll never know that our peacekeepers are of the same clan as our mischief makers.”
“Now, as for Damien,” Howard started coldly. The vampire matron and patron exchanged a look that was less than a comfort for the reverend. “It’s complicated,” Howard succinctly answered which also further verified to the reverend that something was not right. 
“And this is why we wanted your council, Thane,” Lin informed, the twinge of pleading fell heavily on her words and stared prominently from her shimmering blue and black eyes. “We have the most violent offenders, including Damien, in a chamber of our community that you have never before seen.”
“And nor will you ever, Reverend,” Howard sternly said because he saw the flare of curiosity bloom in the beekeeper’s light brown eyes. “It is not a place for souls as pure as yours. Even with everything you have seen with us, there are still matters that I beg you will never be ready enough to bear.”
“The dark side of damnation,” Lin said reverentially, lightly biting the knuckle of her index finger. “Do not desire to find it, Thane.”
“I do not understand,” the reverend asked. “What else lies down there? What could you possibly be hiding from me after everything that I have already seen?”
“Oh no, not hiding,” Lin quickly corrected, not wanting to offend. “Sweet, innocent reverend, you must understand – because of the evils our kind are inherently drawn to unleashing, Howard and I must govern our youth and family with laws not known to mortals. We must adhere to Vampire Codas if we are to maintain our aristocracy and our relative secrecy successfully.”
“Combat violence with violence in order to maintain our order and peace,” Howard ruefully added, his grumbling words did not sit well with the reverend.
Thane straightened himself in the rocking chair and as he nervously clung to the rails of the seat he asked, “What council then could you need from a mortal like me?” The reverend was used to the matron and the patron coming to him every six months or so with a disaster of epic proportions to discuss with him, but this event seemed dramatic even for them.
Howard sighed then answered, “We realize how terrible our laws are, Reverend, which is why we have come to you.”
“We need your approval, in a sense,” Lin continued. “Ere we pursue justice.”
“You have come to me for approval, but you leave me searching blindfolded for the unknown,” the reverend responded. He was visibly frustrated with the ambiguity. “I will pass no judgment upon such deeds that involve vampire law. That is not my place; I have no jurisdiction or authority over such things. You know this.” The reverend paused again. The room was becoming very warm. He loosened his collar to alleviate some stress from the summer heat. With a sigh the reverend continued calmly, “I cannot pass an interpretation of God’s will unless you tell me as to what it is I am meant to interpret or deny approval.”
Though the vampires wanted nothing more than to protect their Holy figure from as much of their evil as they could, even if it was from themselves, they independently and tacitly came to accept that they would have to utter what mortals were not meant to hear.
Howard stood from the couch to walk to the closest open window in the parlor. While he busied himself closing the windows and the curtains, Lin explained, “You must understand, Reverend, that we are telling you these things because you are our reverend. We would never have told you these things as your friend. We never intended you to know these portions of the Codas, which is why we never let you read any of our documents.”
The room darkened.
Howard had closed out the sun from the room, pulling all the windows shut and all the curtains over the glass. “You must never tell another living soul about the conversation that is to come,” Howard firmly instructed as he checked that the front door was locked, something that the front aperture had never before experienced.
The reverend was becoming rather unnerved, but his expression and demeanor hid his anxiety well. As a man of the church, his ears were used to being singed by the sins of others. Granted, in Providence there was little room for mischief among the gossip, but his demeanor was still well practiced at concealing his true feelings.
Lin waited to speak until the part of the house where they gathered was held in a muted light. The air in the living room already felt incredibly thick; the reverend wondered if the bees ever felt this way in their wooden keeps. This level of secrecy was not something unusual to the reverend with the vampires. There was many a whispered confession or revelation he had received in his years of knowing the Cärabadés. Some were monumental, others were more of light entertainment, but this one certainly seemed of the former category.
Once Howard resumed his seat on the couch, the dark conversation about how the deeds done in the lowest chamber of the Cärabadés commenced.
The quaint yellow house on the outskirts of town maintained its peaceful looking virtue on the outside as the bees continued their summer solstice. On the inside of the house, the reverend went pallid from the removal of his blindfold.
~*~*~
The art of baking helped to calm Ms. Grace’s temper. Good tasting food was an extremely important aspect in her life. She loved to cook. She loved to eat. The love of food came from her parents who were for many years the prominent bakers in town. Just like them, she could bake for hours with a smile ever on her face. Baking was the best remedy to relent her levels of frustration mostly owed to the feuding families in her schoolhouse. In her second class with the older students, the Thomas girl and the Davis lad engaged in an epic competition of out-reading each other as her class read aloud a revision of an ancient play from Baradesh. Primarily done for the sake of her own eyes, Ms. Grace thought it would be a grand idea to have the students act out the readings instead of her reading it to them. Granted, while the vehement reading of the Davis boy and Thomas girl did prove to make the tragedy more engaging for the rest of the students, Ms. Grace doubted that anything of the plot was absorbed.
The smells of the rising meat and vegetable filled pastry filled her small home. Her stomach growled from the provocation from the warm and comforting bouquet of rising flower and cooking pork. Though she knew that the recipe would be absolutely delicious as it had been on all the occasions when she baked it before, Ms. Grace had accidentally made an exceeding amount. She knew that she could never finish the four pockets she made by herself and she certainly could not stand to see the extras go to waste. She determined that they would have to be shared.
With her hands on her hips she stared at the golden, flaky rising crusts baking in the cast iron stove. Naturally, Ms. Grace knew who she wanted to share these pastries with because his name and face reared up in her thoughts daily, hourly even. The thought of sharing a private meal with him did make her smile. The heat from the oven and the September day intensified. Ms. Grace shook her head. She made several attempts to rationalize her sudden appearance at his door with supper in her arms. Ms. Grace tapped her finger to her chin as she continued to imagine the many ways he potentially could greet her – most being highly unlikely, but a heart does tend to glow for hope when it pines.
Spotting something shiny on her bookshelf, Ms. Grace found a way to make her decision. Rushing to the shelf to grab the coin Ms. Grace clutched the hope in her heart like a vice. She was limited on time, for her adult class would be starting in a short couple of hours. A decision would have to be made expediently. With a quick prayer and an assignment to the head and to the tail, Ms. Grace kissed the coin then flicked it up with a kick from her thumb into the hands of fate.
~*~*~
Most of the bees of Providence lingered in the reverend’s yard, yet Ms. Grace did not doubt that the bulk of the town’s butterflies were dancing in her stomach. In her life she had spoken to the reverend at least a thousand times. She never missed his sermons and she attended all of the church’s community activities. Meeting or speaking with him was no new event. She felt so silly walking (more like running) across town with a small basket of food and an imagination that could not be stopped. Her palms were sweaty and she felt on the weak side. Her stresses increased threefold as she passed Mrs. Huff’s house – she could hear the woman rambling madly through the opened windows to whatever guest about the town’s accountant’s daughter who was more than of marrying age at sixteen. Ms. Grace was too excited to ruefully recall her years of being Mrs. Huff’s ward - she was on a mission and she was determined to see it through.
The beekeeper’s garden was in sight. The house looked simply marvelous in the hues of twilight. She could smell the sweet scents singing out from the forest of flowers. It was almost as if the reverend had an inherent niche for nurturing. His sensitivity to the earth and his ever marked gentility made Ms. Grace’s gilded admiration for the man all the more powerful.
As she walked to the side door of the house (it was far too formal for the citizens of Providence to go to the front doors of their neighbors) Ms. Grace thought that she could hear voices coming out from the open windows of the house. Were there already guests? The reverend did keep borders in his spare room every now and then. Would she be intruding? Ms. Grace stopped her forward progression. She was scared, not in a terrified manner, but her nerves overwhelmed her. Should she continue or should she cut and run back to her schoolhouse with her tail between her legs?
A light breeze blew from the west. Ms. Grace felt the gentle, refreshing touch of the wind push against her back, gently swaying her toward the fading white door. Being a profound believer in signs and fate, Ms. Grace inhaled deeply then approached the closed aperture.
She knocked. Too late to run now.
Ms. Grace’s heart felt as though it was about to forcefully remove itself from her chest. She waited for a moment before she heard steps approach the other side of the door. The handle turned and the aperture opened.
The reverend stood rigid. The least likely person he expected stood at the door before him, looking as bright and as radiant as ever regardless of the ware from the heat.
Ms. Grace’s mind went blank. The reverend was not in the jacket vest she had grown so accustom to see him wearing. The white shirt he wore had its long sleeves rolled up to his elbows and its top two buttons were undone. It clung to his body loosely. Even to her blurry eyes he was incredibly attractive.
She could not think.
He too could not string together a single thought.
“Er, hello, Reverend, I, I…” Ms. Grace started awkwardly, “I was cooking and I mistakenly made too much, so I was wondering, sir, if you would want to…share dinner with me?” she felt so stupid rambling like that, but at least her query was out there.
The reverend smiled warmly. Ms. Grace wanted to share a meal with him and she came all of this way to do so. Whether she had come out of the interest of wanting company or something else, the reverend did not care. It was good enough that she was here with him. He had no idea of the nervousness and the happiness swelling within her heart, for he was far too distracted with that of his own.
“We-we could also discuss our class that Mrs. Winford has conscripted us to completing together,” Ms. Grace added as she waited for his answer.
The reverend chuckled, “I suppose we have been compelled to doing that earlier than we intended,” he said with a smile. “Why should we not then do it over dinner?” Mr. Tamrin stepped back to open his home to Ms. Grace.
Ms. Grace was not sure that she could enter because she felt so weak and shaky. However, after a second of thought and a boost of internal drive, Ms. Grace convinced herself forward. On only a couple of occasions prior Ms. Grace had entered the reverend’s house, but never before alone. When her eyes left the scope of her immediate surroundings she realized that they were not alone. Standing in the hallway were two familiar souls.
“Oh excuse me,” Ms. Grace quickly apologized. “I did not realize that you had guests. Perhaps it would be best if I returned at another time?”
That, the reverend could not have, but before he could protest, Lin congenially said, “How do you do, Ms. Grace? It has been some time, yes?”
“Indeed, it has. I am very fine thank you, and how do you and your husband fair?” Ms. Grace sweetly asked. Ms. Grace was one of the only people in Providence to whom the vampire matron and patron were conversationally friendly. The two had long ago been very helpful toward Ms. Grace, which was something that she had never forgotten.
Howard was the one to answer, “We are very well, thank you, Ms. Grace,” but his voice trailed off as he saw Thane who had strategically moved himself behind Ms. Grace. The reverend was mouthing to Howard “STOP-LEAVE-GO” accompanied with a series of hand expressions depicting the same message. Even though indeed his soul was too old to keep track of the year of his birth, Howard could not understand why the reverend was ousting them so soon. However, lucky for the reverend, Lin was there to save the day.
The matron smiled sweetly then said, “There is no need to fuss over us, Ms. Grace, we were actually just leaving.” Lin tugged on Howard’s arm to further the hint.
“To Viramont? So late?” Ms. Grace asked automatically, but in an instant she remembered her private postulations about these two. She and a sparse couple of other Providence townies doubted the legitimacy to the claim that Lin and Howard were of any relation to the reverend.
“We’re not afraid of the dark,” Howard said with a smug smile to the reverend. Of course the patron was offended by being ousted because he wanted to stay and relax. But in his heart he knew that the reverend had a life outside of the Cärabadés and that the latter presently needed him. “We had best be going indeed,” Howard agreed loathly.
The reverend quickly scooted himself around Ms. Grace to see his friends out. Mr. Tamrin whispered to Ms. Grace that he would be right back as he quite literally pushed his friends out from the kitchen, down the hall and out the front door. The three of them heard Ms. Grace politely shout, “It was nice seeing you!”
Lin stopped on the stoop to yell back, “It was lovely seeing you too, dear.”
It was then when Lin and Howard gave their reverend friend teasing impish faces. They both fully understood why the reverend ejected them so early. It was all very obvious to them.
“Get going, the both of you,” the reverend demanded, pointing them down the road. His cheeks were simply burning red. He lingered on the porch for a moment withstanding the ridicule from his friends’ muffled chuckling, so that he would have a moment to collect himself. The reverend inhaled deeply then nervously reentered his home to go to the kitchen. When he entered the brightly painted kitchen there stood Ms. Grace. Her dark hair, blue dress (chalk-free), and radiance suited as a perfect contrast to the light of the room. Simply put, she looked beautiful. “T-um, w-won’t you sit down?” the reverend shakily invited his guest. As Ms. Grace lowered herself awkwardly onto the bench, (internally she was having a quiet nervous breakdown), the reverend realized to his horror that he probably looked awful. “Will you excuse me for a moment more, Ms. Grace?”
“Of course,” she said sweetly, for this would give her a moment to collect herself as well. “It is your home afterall.”
            The reverend quickly muttered that he would be right back as he calmly left the kitchen only to dart to his washroom down the hall. He quietly lit the candle with a shaky hand so that he could properly see himself in the oval mirror. The shadows cast about the small room did little to hide the stubble growing on his chin and cheek, stubble he knew that he would not have time to shave. He shamefully ran his hands over his face that did not presently meet the highbrow standards of Providence, but it would have to do. He dunked his hands into a bowl of clean water to wash the sweat from his neck and face. He was sure that Ms. Grace could hear him fussing in here, but he was in a rush – he did not want to keep her waiting long. Mr. Tamrin sloshed a white towel over his face several times before throwing it to the ground to rush back to the kitchen. Mr. Tamrin popped back into the kitchen looking calm and refreshed.
            “I am sorry to keep you waiting,” Mr. Tamrin apologized. As he came forward he saw that the table was set. Ms. Grace had taken the initiative and the liberty to remove plates from the tray on the nook’s-sill so to serve the food. “Can I offer you something to drink?” Mr. Tamrin asked Ms. Grace, approaching the loosely stocked liquor cabinet, “I’m afraid that all I have is wine and bourbon.”
            Ms. Grace chuckled at the selection of liquor from a reverend’s cabinet. “What? No meade or moonshine? Reverend, I am ashamed,” she scorned with a laugh. “What will you be having?” she asked finding herself to be much more relaxed now that she was settled in his presence…in his home…alone…
Her heart resumed its racing.
The reverend chuckled as well. After the conversation he had earlier with the vampires a bit of bourbon did not sound bad at all, but what sort of impression would it have on Ms. Grace? “I think I’ll have the harder of the two,” he said as though himself not convinced.
Ms. Grace tapped her finger tips on the table top before deciding, “I probably should not because I have to teach class in an hour and a half, but since I will be eating; why not just a small glass of bourbon, if it’s not too much trouble?”
The reverend was actually impressed. “So you really are not at all like Mrs. Huff?” he playfully asked over his shoulder as he went to the cabinet for the glasses. “I mean, she did not influence you too seriously away from ‘the drink that killed her husband and her brother’?” he did his best imitation of Mrs. Huff’s high-pitched and haughty voice, which made Ms. Grace laugh, much to his delight.
In her years with Mrs. Huff she must have heard that line a thousand times over. There had been not a drop of anything stronger than tea in the Huff residence since the death of Mr. Huff sixteen years ago. “You know, my heart really goes out to her brother.” Ms. Grace added. “Poor Aberson, I mean he only lives down the block from her and she treats him like he’s dead. He needs his sister now especially that he is to lose his granddaughter to a gentleman in Portland.” Ms. Grace sighed reverentially because she would also deeply miss her good friend Julia Joyce once the girl officially moved away.
“You look lost, Ms. Grace,” the reverend said as he joined her at the table. “Is there any way that I could bring you home?” the dear man placed Ms. Grace’s glass before her which she gladly accepted.
For a moment, Ms. Grace already felt like she had found her way back because of the cooing sweetness of his voice. “It seems like everyone I know is either married or engaged to be married,” she answered after a moment of running her fingers down the sides of the cup. “I don’t know. It’s strange because I was not here to witness most of the unions of the people in my age group. When I came back three and a half years ago everything had changed.” She continued with more and more strength in her voice as she became increasingly comfortable with the reverend. “Nothing, absolutely nothing changed in Providence for ages, but the day I leave you all, I don’t know, went topsy-turby on me.”
“But of course,” the reverend bantered, “Didn’t you know that the town has been conspiring against you from the very beginning?”
Chuckling, Ms. Grace responded, “Drat, that explains a lot. I should have realized before.”

The pair exchanged a sweet, shy, and bashful expression before the reverend awkwardly cleared his throat to bless the meal before them. Unbeknownst to the reverend and the teacher, the matron and patron lingered in the garden of the beekeeper. They happily listened in on what for sure sounded like the dawning of something wonderful.
~*~*~
See you next week!
Your humble author,
S. Faxon