by Terry Griggs
THE DISCOVERY OF HONEY
Also by Terry Griggs:
Quickening (1990)
The Lusty Man (1995)
Rogues’ Wedding (2002)
Thought You Were Dead (2009)
Children’s Books:
Cat’s Eye Corner (2000)
Invisible Ink (2006)
The Silver Door (2004)
Nieve (2010)
The Discovery
of Honey
TERRY GRIGGS
BIBLIOASIS
WINDSOR, ONTARIO
Copyright © Terry Griggs, 2017
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher or a licence from The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). For an Access Copyright licence, visit www.accesscopyright.ca or call toll free to 1-800-893-5777.
FIRST EDITION
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Griggs, Terry, author
The discovery of honey / Terry Griggs.
Short stories.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-77196-149-3 (softcover).--ISBN 978-1-77196-150-9 (ebook)
I. Title.
PS8563.R5365D58 2017 C813’.54 C2016-907968-6
C2016-907969-4
Edited by Daniel Wells
Copy-edited by Allana Amlin
Typeset by Chris Andrechek
Cover designed by David Drummond
Published with the generous assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council. Biblioasis also acknowledges the support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit.
For John Metcalf
The Discovery of Honey
My parents were married in a high wind that was conceived in the tropics and born in a jet stream. As it crawled up the coast, playing with flags and sailboats, teething on cliffs and peninsulas, it matured into a lusty and vigorous gale. A product of incompatible air currents—polar and equatorial, with a trace of African simoom ancestry—it blew like a bastard, sweeping suddenly into the orchard where the wedding ceremony was proceeding at a lazy, mid-August, sun-sodden pace. My mother had scarcely breathed her consent to the marriage contract, exhaling a nervous and wavering “I do,” when this wind arrived unannounced and uninvited, twirled the bees in their hives, flung Billy Murphy’s dress up over her head, and gobbled up my mother’s faint wafer-thin words in a roar. My father, who had himself that very second agreed to the whole ball of marital wax, for better or for worse, turned to his bride in surprise and gagged as the wind socked her veil into his open mouth.
Though inaudible, Reverend Cowley struggled on with the service, his pronouncement that my parents were “man and wife,” the real clincher in most ceremonies, whirled up unheeded into the sky and yoked two gulls that were surfing on the turbulence. Immature Spartans and Paula Reds began to rain down from the trees and pummel the wedding guests, also beset by their best clothes—suits and silks that billowed hideously or slapped smartly. A charge of gate-crashing goats arrived, escapees from a damaged pen, keen to mingle with the guests and check out the windfalls. The wind raked its long fingers through my mother’s hair until her demure, tidily tucked chignon, clean as a comma, became a cursive writing in the air. The translation: Exalted mess. My father turned again to speak to his gorgon-headed wife and was felled by a falling branch. Her French lace veil wrenched free from his clamped teeth and tore off across the fields like a spirit called home.
My grandmother, Albertha Pinkham, stood in the storm’s eye like a plum preserve in a glass jar. As she watched her airborne chickens scud past served like volleyballs, some spiked to the ground, she pursed her lips, thinking, When you turn a church upside down and dump the contents of a wedding into your backyard, what do you expect? Her daughter, soft in the head after having read too many bride magazines, had insisted on being married in a natural and idyllic setting. Which goes to show how much work she had ever done in the orchard. Everything had to be just-so, countless niggling details nailed into place, and now those details had risen, chaotic and dangerous, in a stinging blinding swarm.
A woman’s hat whizzed by Albertha’s nose. She wished her own would take a ride, a mother-of-the-bride, fruit-and-flower festooned, caricature of a hat. “Why not sew on a couple of tarts,” Uncle Clyde had suggested, “some fox heads, fuzzy dice.” (“Dry up, Clyde.”) Albertha had witnessed her share of weddings over the years, but this one surely took the cake. Jumping Jesus, she then remembered, the cake! and tore off to the rescue, a swirling eddy of purple chiffon.
The wedding photographer meanwhile took twenty-four exposures of Billy Murphy hopping around in her frothy, champagne-pink underwear. She was frantically trying to gain control of the dress that had enveloped the top half of her like a bud that refused to bloom. (Worse, the undies were lacy with nibbles, as they were the edible kind and Billy hadn’t been able to resist sampling them.) Her face was flaming—a scarlet pistil sealed in a periwinkle prison—as she conjured up the next social column in the town paper… and the maid of honour wore (wink, wink) an appetizer! The edible undies had been intended as a joke, a private post-reception one for her boyfriend Douggie, and not some self-immolating farce dished out for everyone’s consumption.
The photographer was more entranced than titillated. He had no idea that it was physiologically possible for legs to blush. He had planned on taking some candid shots and a few arty double-exposed ones, but this wedding was like a circus with people running every which way, dodging flying debris, slipping and skidding on apples, hurtling into one another, their faces contorted as they shouted into the wind. Fleeting moments simply streaked by, hell-bent, stripped of sentimentality, too elusive to be captured on film. Although he did get a picture of the ring boy punching some other kid on the head, one of the best man wiping a sticky goo off his face with the tail of his tux, the flower girl spinning and spinning like a dust devil, a woman dancing with a goat, and several shots of his own hair, the unsprung crest of which kept flopping over the lens.
Unfortunately, he ran out of film and failed to document the thrilling and, I’m told, totally unexpected moment that Cousin Tony leapt out of a tree and grabbed Mother. Tony was a shy, stammering boy from a long braided line of cousinage, so retiring he seemed at times to recede into the obscuring folds of his own shadow. Well, this very Tony wrapped his arms around Mother, clasping her in a passionate embrace, and planted a prolonged kiss animate with hunger on her astonished lips. In the taxonomy of kisses a beaut, a stunner, top of the line. Unleashed, our no longer paralytically timid cousin cut a surprisingly dashing figure, his shrinking-violet nature in full and healthy bloom as he sank his eager rooting hands deep into the bustle of Mother’s gown.
A buzz of shock ran through the wedding party. An appalled murmur snaked among the guests like a lighted fuse until someone exploded with Did you ever!?
But their outrage fizzled quickly, extinguished by the blanketing force of the wind, a renewed trumpeting blast that shook the trees fiercely and slammed the sky into the ground. Everyone took to their heels and fled, and the bullying wind tore after them, pushing and shoving, hounding them, pounding their backs and breathing its warm blustering breath down their necks.
The wedding refugees assembled in the barn, dishevelled, shaken, some laughing and joki
ng, already putting the wind into words, siphoning off and savouring their share of the adventure. In that hushed, hay-scented sanctuary the storming bucking wind was corralled into story and tamed, told over and over like an animal taught to perform tricks. What had raged unfettered outside was within tempered and turned into so much hot air.
The mood among the guests had grown more relaxed and carefree. The awkwardness and constraint they had felt in their Sunday clothes and cinched belts and beauty-parlour hair had, like many of the things attached to the wedding, blown away. Everybody was mussed and rumpled, mauled by the tempest, ties pulled askew, shirts untucked, stockings twisted. (Marg Petty’s knees had burst like bald heads through her new pantyhose and she didn’t give a damn.) The veneer had blown off the occasion, as had the last shred of magic that had clung tenaciously to the ceremony. The enchanting vision of married life that had floated momentarily above them in the honeyed light of the orchard had descended on the dissenting voice of the wind into a form more familiar and homely.
Uncle Clyde fondly recalled that fight he’d had with Auntie Viv on their first anniversary, the one where she hurled a slab of raw veal at him that caught him on the chin and wrapped around his face like a mask, and she said, “How d’ya like yer scallopini, Meathead?” And there she was, dear heart, stumbling through the barn door with her blonde wig shoved under one arm and apples skewered on the spikes of her high heels. Marriage in their hands, as in the wind’s hands, had been a gloriously malleable, earthy, and surprising thing.
Casualties were counted, the most regrettable of which was the wedding lunch, the fancy squares, cookies, and crustless sandwiches so prettily arranged on decorated tables in the backyard, that the wind had scooped up and tossed high into the sky like confetti. A fundamentalist church group picnicking miles away were the beneficiaries. There they sat in mid-grace, motionless and open-mouthed, as a swiftly approaching cloud of canapés and dainties arrived, hovered briefly overhead, then hailed down on them and into their capacious laps. In truth, they were less astounded by the miraculous arrival of the food than at the Lord’s choice of pinwheels, pink bread, and the heathen caper.
The wedding cake had also gone missing in action. Before Albertha could save it, her fabulous confection met in a head-on collision with Buckwheat, Clyde’s skewbald horse, and exploded into a thousand irretrievable servings. Running berserk after being stung by a hornet, Buckwheat not only shattered the cake into a sugary blizzard, but puréed the Big Boy tomatoes in the garden and danced like Silver on the wedding presents, flattening the flatware and reducing the porcelain to a much finer gift.
Among the human injuries: one goose egg and a fat lip. The goose egg was balanced on my father’s head, laid in the hairline inlet near his temple when that falling branch had clobbered him, and the fat lip belonged to Lyle Sizer. Young Bobby, the ring bearer, was responsible for that one. Excitement had already stretched Bobby’s nerves to the limit when the wind had come streaking through the orchard to pluck at those taut nerves, and flick his stick-out ears, and ruffle that neatly slicked hair. Then Lyle had appeared, turfed out of a ditch it looked like, shaggy with burs and beggar’s ticks and smelling of marsh gas. A burly kid, Lyle loomed over Bobby, his fleshy arm extended, and, with more delicacy than anyone imagined him capable of, he plucked the wedding ring off the satin pillow held in Bobby’s trembling hands. He took it as though it were being served to him, a priceless sweet, a gilded crystal-rich candy… and then he crammed it in his mouth.
“For sure, it’s a stumper,” Bobby would marvel years later. “Lyle Sizer ate my aunt’s wedding ring. Swallowed’er down in one big gulp and smiled like a pig afterwards.” Bobby’s older brothers had always advised him that a man should resort to violence only in extreme circumstances, and in Bobby’s six years he had never met a circumstance more extreme than this. That smile got smeared the whole length of Lyle’s face, which, to Bobby’s dismay, only inflated it to one outsized with satisfaction.
“Don’t fret,” Mrs. Sizer said later to my mother in the barn, “we’ll have that ring back to you in a day or two.” She was so offhand about it, you’d think ring-swallowing some routine nuptial practice in the Sizer clan, some purifying intestinal ritual. Mother was too dazed by that point to care anyway. Everything else had gone wrong, so it hardly mattered that her precious ring was churning in the acidic spin cycle of Lyle Sizer’s gut, or that she had reaped the first sizzling kiss of her married life from another man. Assuming that she was married. She gave my father a skeptical look, and said (her mouth a crushed, fiery smear), “Are we hitched, or what?”
“Shit, darlin’,” was all Father could say. All he could say because he’d forgotten her name, a name that only hours before he had applied like a garnish to almost everything he said. Usually, if he could work Mother into a conversation, he did. She was the verbal stowaway in his talk of trucks and tractor engines and outboards. His tongue had made love to every syllable of her delectable long-limbed name that now escaped him, that had slipped behind a concealing screen, that had withdrawn into a befuddling darkness, and he couldn’t for the life of him see who she was.
Reverend Cowley walked up to them, a congratulatory hand extended to Father. “Morrie,” he said, “you hit the ground flatter than pee on a plate. You all right?”
Father motioned him closer and asked, nodding in Mother’s direction, “What’s her name again?”
“Hah!” the Reverend barked, and flung his arm around father’s shoulder. “Why, I guess it’s music to your ears, son. Let me introduce you to Mrs. Morland Young.”
Mother, gazing hellward, noticed that she was missing a shoe, that the ripped hem of her dress was filthy from dragging in the dirt, and that her train had split up the centre like a forked tongue. Her husband, she also noticed, was adorned with an obscene red knob on his forehead and an incredibly stupid expression on his face. A goat trotted up, Albertha’s flamboyant, half-eaten hat in its mouth, and stared at her, golden-eyed and lubricious. She felt a slithering motion in her stomach, as though her innocent prenuptial butterflies had metamorphosed into something reptilian and poisonous. She wondered vaguely if she were going to throw up. A distinct possibility, and she could picture it, a barf bouquet cascading down the front of her dress and spilling onto her one white shoe. Ever since she’d been born, it seemed, people had been telling her that this was going to be her Big Day. And she believed them. But she’d had no idea that it was going to be this big, monstrous, like King Kong on the rampage and her captive in its huge, hairy paw. She stood there thinking of all the preparation and plans, the bone-wearying work, the sleepless nights that had been funnelled into the rapacious maw of this one culminating event in her life, and of just how it had turned on her with sharp teeth and—more disturbing—soft lips.
Outside, the wind continued to howl fortissimo, a robust love song, a manic lullaby that rocked the barn with a mad tempo. In the dusty animal-fragrant gloom within, silver flasks and mickeys began to appear out of dainty purses and suit pockets like vermin out of the woodwork.
Uncle Clyde unearthed a stash of booze from behind some sacks of grain and mixed an improvisational punch in the wheelbarrow. Albertha, who had been raised by drunks and married a drunk and mothered a drunk, allowed the circumscribed edges of her temperance to be tested and had a walloping big slug of Clyde’s mead-thick, throat-scorching brew. The barn did a square dance around her, a dizzying reel, a three-hundred-and-sixty-degree dos-à-dos, before it settled back into place with everyone looking better for the ride, rosier of cheek and more companionable, arms reaching out for one another. All except for Billy Murphy and her boyfriend Douggie, who’d had a knockdown fight in one of the horse stalls and emerged with a matching his-and-hers set of shiners and split lips.
The master of ceremonies, Walter Kidd, rose on an overturned bucket to speak. “I’ve got dickall to say,” he said. Earlier, in the orchard, he’d been sneaking peeks at his writt
en speech when the wind ripped it out of his hands and posted it skyward. Walter himself was sailing higher than a kite. He told a meandering, off-colour yarn about a frog and a duck. “Which fits in here today, folks, with the, ahh… animal motive. Er, motif?” Next he proposed a toast, raising a dipper of hundred-proof in the general direction of the bride and groom, then promptly passed out, reeling off the bucket like a dead man. Everyone applauded heartily. Foot-stomping filled in for the tinkling of glasses, and a marital embrace boisterously demanded. As mother had wandered off somewhere, father turned to his best man and kissed him full on the mouth. “Oh, Morrie,” his best man sighed, “Can’t wait till later.” Hoots and whistles filled the barn up to its beams and hung like high notes on the staff of wheat-coloured light that poured through the cracks in the wall.
The reception in full swing, it only took a bit of native ingenuity to transform the humble goods on hand into what was needed. Someone struck up a musical group, a tub-thumping, pot-banging, lid-smashing orchestra. The “concussion” section, as Clyde called it. Albert Richie found a rusty old saw and made it sing hauntingly, while Auntie Viv, never one to hide her light under a bushel, leapt onto centre stage playing her nose like a Hawaiian guitar. “You want Don Ho,” she said, “you got ’im.”
Spontaneous dancing broke out in several spots and Marg Petty threw herself into the burning heat of it, frugging and twisting and doing the limbo rock until her spine seized up and she couldn’t move. Young Bobby wove among the guests with a basket of winter apples, and Billy Murphy worked the crosscurrent, holding one hand aloft and flat out like a platter. On it she had arranged bite-sized samples of her edible underwear. “Try one,” she urged, while Douggie sat glowering on the sidelines, crunching handfuls of raw rice, his arm cast amorously around a sheep.