by Susan A. Eames
camomile tea
The
first time I saw Jodie she was twirling on John's lawn. Her hair was long. Her
feet were bare. Her dress was flimsy. A throwback from the 1960's, she looked
like one of those girls dipping and swaying on the grass at Woodstock.
I stood
watching her, in a trance. John came up behind me.
'Don't
be fooled, Steve,' he said. 'She's a fruitcake.'
But
Jodie beguiled me.
I moved
slowly with her because I sensed she could be easily scared off by the wrong
approach. By the end of John's party I had made enough progress to become her
fledgling friend. Jodie told me she was an artist and invited me to her
cottage.
'I made
these.' Jodie showed me dream catchers, delicate and ethereal. 'I adore the idea
of capturing dreams. Don't you, Steve?' She gave me a dimpled smile.
I nodded
sagely and told her, 'yes.'
'That's
my Spirit Spinner.' Jodie pointed to a contraption in the garden. We went
outside to examine her spinner: a filigreed wire basket suspended from a tree
branch by thin chains.
'It
allows my spirit to dance freely on the astral plane when I sleep,' said Jodie.
She lightly touched the basket and it spun softly as if caught on a breeze.
'Did you
make this too, Jodie?'
'No, I
bought it from a Wise Woman.'
'I see.'
I was
privately mad with the self-professed 'wise woman' who had fooled her into
parting with money. But Jodie was young and sweet and who was I to dispel her
beliefs? So I accepted her naivety and said nothing more.
Despite
my physical attraction to her, Jodie and I never became romantically attached.
Certainly I was in love with her, but I knew our relationship would change if we
shared a bed. Jodie possessed a magic I didn't want to destroy.
Instead,
our friendship strengthened until we were bound to each other by something
greater than carnal pleasures.
When
Jodie became sick my world splintered. There was nothing I could do except stay
with her until the end.
Her
Spirit Spinner is in my garden now. I let myself believe that Jodie is out
there, dancing freely on the astral plane.
About the author
Susan A. Eames left England over twenty five years ago to explore the world and
dive its oceans. She has had travel articles and short fiction published on
three continents. After several fascinating years living in Fiji she has
relocated to West Cork in Ireland.
Susan
blogs at: http://susan-a-eamestravelfictionandphotos.blogspot.ie
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