Back in at the end of January, Demeter's Spicebox, a new project of the always marvelous Cabinet Des Fees, posted guidelines for their new project: stories based on Aarne-Thompson folktale type 711, perhaps better known as the tale of the Good and Ugly Twin. Oh, and the stories had to feature either a cracked teapot or a magical pair of shoes.

I was not that familiar with the tale, but when I reread the version not in Wikipedia , I could see why the editors had chosen it, even if the ending irked me: quite apart from all of the drinking (yay!), it is one of the rare fairy tales with an active, rambunctious heroine. And although I'm not into shoes, I am more than moderately fond of tea.

Something stirred, and Sister and Bones was written in under a day, and is now up at the inaugural issue of Demeter's Spicebox. Also up: Lavanya and Deepika, a lovely story by a writer I'd never heard of before, Shveta Thakrar, but who based just on this has a brilliant writing career in front of her; fortunately for all of us she is working on a novel. I'm very pleased to have been part of the beginning of this project, and very much looking forward to see what wonders Demeter's Spicebox will be bringing us next.
More National Poetry Month.

*************

Like many people, I had a crazy – genuinely crazy – great aunt, and like many of these aunts, she had a story.

She was not actually my great aunt, but my great great aunt, my great grandmother's sister, who at some point in the 1920s had coolly announced, without any notice whatsoever, that she was heading off to be a missionary in China. According to family legend this went badly, with no one understanding or supporting either the missionary or the China part. My grandmother thought that it might have been to exorcise some guilt over the death of another sister, who had died at the age of ten, or perhaps to step out from under the shadow of more talented brothers and sisters. I don't know. In any case, off to China she went, there to work at a mission and pick up a set of china, which happens to be in the house now. It looks to me like pretty cheap stuff, mass produced in the 1930s, but the family took great pride in it – "This china is real China –" and I'm hoping to have it out and cleaned up for occasional tea use by the end of the year because it looks pretty cool and colorful and the tea cups are the delightfully correct size.

Anyway. Things apparently went well enough until the Japanese invasion, where things went haywire. Various family accounts survive, with the general consensus that everyone begged the aunt to leave, like, now. Helen did not leave, not quite yet. Family legend disagrees about why – aunt Ruth, who was in no position to actually know, said that Helen had already lost her mind, and the other aunt Ruth*, also in no position to actually know, said that Helen was completely sane, just hated the rest of the family and didn't want to see them.

But she did flee the communists when they arrived to her part of China, and ended up fleeing China and trying to return back to the United States in the middle of World War II, in about the worst possible time to attempt to cross the Pacific. According to one story, she didn't actually try to cross the Pacific – instead, she went the other way around, across the Indian Ocean and around the edge of Africa and across the Atlantic which honestly could not have been much easier.

Whichever route she took, at some point, she and her shipmates saw a ship burning on the ocean. She told my mother this, saying it was one of the things she most remembered about the war. My mother told me, and the story lingered in my mind.

Once permanently back in the States – she did want to return, but encountered problems with communists – she did lose her mind completely to a seeming combination of dementia and paranoid schizophrenia. She spent the last years of her life convinced that the communists were stalking South Florida in search of her and trying to kill her, and alarmed various people by suddenly shouting "COMMUNIST" or accusing various people of being Chinese spies, and on a few exciting occasions mistaking Cuban exiles for Chinese Communists, which went very badly indeed. She was eventually institutionalized in Dania, in a place that, she told my grandmother, harbored Chinese spies everywhere (no one else appears to agree.) I apparently met her from time to time – we have photos – but despite these stories, she seems to have made no impression upon me whatsoever; I remember her sister, but not her, even though the pictures show all three of us, with me looking sulky and miserable.

Eventually this all simmered into a poem. I was never entirely satisfied with it, but I did send it out, and it was actually accepted for publication at two different journals who both folded before publication (the story of much of my writing career), at which point I decided that it was kinda cursed and withdrew it from circulation, although I've shared it with friends here and there.

Villanelle alert! )
The plan for today was to wake early and head out, camera in hand, for a photo tour of the West Orange Trail, but this flopped, thanks to a) not waking up early and b) a surprising amount of rain, which has drained off to a slow ongoing trickle, with weather websites disputing just what may happen next - more trickling, or the full huge onslaught of flooding downpours that hit last night in raging glory, turning the lake an odd shade of green again.

About this lake, the fourth largest in Florida: for years, it was filled with birds and fish, and was known as one of Florida's best freshwater fishing spots - some of the old houses around here are actually old fishing cabins or winter homes for fish lovers who would flee the rain and heat each year. Later, the lake was surrounded by heavy, but heavy farming, and now, the water is filled with phosphorus, which has been absolutely awesome for algae, and not quite as awesome for, say, oxygen, and thus less awesome for fish. Also, pesticides, turning the place into a Superfund site. It's a remarkably shallow lake, too - never deep, the bottom is now covered with muck from farmwater discharge, and the entire lake averages about 5 to 6 feet in depth. Where once you could look over the side of a boat and see gleaming clear water teeming with fish - well, now you see swirls of blue and green and brown, all hiding what might lie beneath. When I leave, I never quite know what color I'll return to.

None of this has stopped the alligators, who swim back and forth in the shallow depths.

We see signs of hope, on this side of the lake - where orange grove farming wasn't quite as phosphorus and pesticide laden, and where houses and fishing cabins stood instead of farms. Two great grey herons have built a nest right near the complex, and I think a pair of red-winged blackbirds have joined them this year. Flocks of ibises arrive regularly to hungrily gnaw on insects (we could use more ibises), and I've seen more than one hawk and eagle float over the lake, hungrily eying the few fish below. And, of course, the gators.

Today it is shifting between grey and brown. I sometimes imagine that it's whispering tell me your stories, your stories...and imagine that it wants either something dripping with horror or something bright with laughter. Naturally, I'm writing neither just now. The lake is just out of luck.

(Yes, I anthromorphize lakes and trees and such. Doesn't everyone?)

Nothing to do with the above, really, but rooibos chai was meant for rainy days. And I am so not putting too much half-and-half into it, no matter what you may be hearing or thinking.

October 2018

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