The two women sat at the table in the breakfast nook becoming acquainted
over their morning coffee while a diapered baby sat in a playpen
watching them intently. He appeared to be a little less than a year old
and was the very picture of a sweet, innocent babe. The tot picked up a
baby bottle lying on the floor of the playpen, put the nipple into his
mouth and began to nurse without ever taking his eyes from the two
women.
"So..," the first woman said, "you had the house built and moved in.
That was what,...six months ago?"
"About that, I think," replied the second woman. She looked at the
calendar hanging on the wall. "Let's see, Colin and I will have been
here six months next week. We like it up here, even though it's so far
from town. I would have preferred to be a little closer to town. Still,
I moved to the country to have privacy and I've found it. You're my
closest neighbor and you're at least a half mile away from me."
"Two miles," said her neighbor succinctly "It's two miles from my house
to yours. Although my property line does start about three-quarters of a
mile from your house."
The woman reached over and put her hand on her neighbor's arm and said,
"Well, it's close enough to be neighbors and far enough away to be good
neighbors." They both chuckled at that.
"I wanted to ask you Peggy, it can be frightening for a young woman
living out here alone without a man. I haven't seen anyone other than
you and Colin living here. Are you widowed or divorced?", said her
neighbor.
Peggy shook her head and said, "Neither, I'm married, but don't expect
to see a man around here, Maureen."
"I'm sorry, Peggy. I didn't mean to open any old wounds. I shouldn't
have asked. It's none of my business, really," said Maureen.
"No, it's okay. It's just....It's just that I don't want the story to
get around. It's one of the reasons we moved out here. I'd rather not
have everyone know about the private details of my life." She looked
into Maureen's eyes and said, "I can tell you, I think. It seems like
we've known each other all our lives. After what you told me about your
ex-husband, I think you'd understand," said Peggy.
Maureen's expression became serious and she said, "Honey, whatever's
happened to you or whatever you've done, you can tell me. I can keep a
secret. The Hill Country's full of people with secrets. You're not the
only one."
"Well,..." Peggy began, "It's a long story. I don't know if you have the
time. It might take all morning."
Maureen patted Peggy's hand and said, "Honey, I have all the time in the
world. Don't worry about that, I always have time to listen to a
friend."
Peggy hesitated, "It's not that I think you would tell anyone. It's just
that I don't think you would believe me. The story is ...well....it's
just a little too strange for anyone to believe. You had to be there."
Maureen smiled and said, "Why don't you let me be the judge of that,
honey."
Peggy nodded and pointed to an antique oil lamp on the mantle. "It all
started with that lamp about nine months ago. You see, my
great-grandfather was an archeologist specializing in the Hebrew culture
of the Solomonic period. He led an expedition to Saudi Arabia to find
evidence that Solomon's empire had extended deep into what is now Saudi
Arabia.
He found some ruins, a temple complex I believe, that he thought marked
the southernmost border of Solomon's empire. His theory wasn't very well
received. The archeological community was pretty uniform in their
opinion of his discovery. He was wrong, dead wrong. At least that's what
they thought. My great-grandfather never got a chance to show any of his
evidence. The temple complex was Egyptian, period. Case closed. His
funding dried up and he was forced to abandon the dig.
He came home and retired from the university in disgust. He never spoke
of it again. My great-grandmother had died early in my grandfather's
life, while my great-grandfather was on a dig. My grandfather was raised
by my great-grand-aunt. My grandfather never forgave his father for his
mother's death. He believed his father had killed his mother by leaving
her at home to raise his two children while he went off for a year or
two at a time on digs. When my great-grandfather died, my grandfather
packed everything in a steamer trunk (That's the one sitting by the wall
next to the fireplace.) and put it in the hay loft of the horsebarn. My
father died when I was ten and I went to live with my grandmother and
grandfather. My grandmother died when I was nineteen, while I was away
at college. It was cancer, I think. Grandfather wouldn't tell me what
she died of. After I got my masters and finished graduate school, I went
to work.
Within a few years, I found a man and fell in love with him. We dated
for a year, then we got married. The first few years were good, but we
were poor. After a few years our marriage palled, my husband was a good
man but he believed that the man should rule the household. (Yes, I am
that old! Just wait until you've heard the whole story, then you'll
understand!) When he found out I couldn't have any children all the joy
seemed to go out of our marriage. He blamed me for not having a family.
We couldn't adopt, we didn't have enough money. I know he was upset the
he couldn't provide enough money for us to adopt. Even with me working
there wasn't enough money.
He became authoritarian and tried to control every aspect of our lives.
He seemed to think if he watched every penny, there would be enough
money. But it didn't help. Then my grandfather died. We had some hope
for awhile that his estate would help us out of the hole we were in, but
that didn't pan out. My grandfather hadn't paid his taxes on the ranch
for years. When he died, the county wanted full payment, with interest,
immediately. We sold the ranch at auction.
After the backtaxes and the funeral expenses were paid, there was
nothing. Well, almost nothing. All that was left was my grandfather's
old clothes, the household furniture, his wedding ring and the old
steamer truck with no key. I didn't want to break the lock and there
wasn't enough money to pay a locksmith, so the trunk just sat there. We
kept some of the furniture and gave the rest of the furniture and the
old clothes to charity. I put my grandfather's wedding ring in my
jewelry box for sentimental reasons, it wasn't worth selling.
My husband became morose, all he could think about was the mistakes he
had made in his life. He seemed to think that if he could start over, he
would have done better. I tried to tell him that I loved him and that it
didn't matter to me that we weren't rich, but he wouldn't listen. He
would sit for hours going over everything he had done in his life. He
kept talking about the mistakes he had made. Sometimes I thought he
secretly believed our marriage was one of his mistakes.
His authoritarianism became unbearable; he treated me like a little
girl. Once in a while, he would blow up over the smallest things, then
brood and pout for days afterward. It was like living with a
superannuated five-year old. I would have divorced him if there had been
enough money.
Strangely, though, I still loved him. I guess not being able to have a
baby had hit me pretty hard. I knew our poverty wasn't his fault. I
wanted to hold him and tell him it was okay, that everything would be
all right. I still wanted to take care of him. I tried to think of
everything I could to raise some money.
After a while, I got to thinking about the steamer. I thought maybe
there might be something valuable inside. If I found something, he might
feel better. I went to the library and got a book on locksmithing. I
read that the trunk has what's called a warded post-type lock and can be
easily picked. I went to the hobby shop and bought some music wire and
cut a small piece, then bent the end into a key shape. I waited until my
husband was taking a nap (I wanted it to be a surprise) and tried to
open the lock.
It took me about an hour to pick the lock. When I opened the trunk it
was filled with my great-grandfather's journals and a collection of
loose bronze artifacts. I decided the artifacts might be valuable to a
collector so I decided to clean them up. I knew better than to use metal
cleaner or chemicals on them, but I figured that plain old water and a
soft cloth was safe.
Since the lamp looked like it was the oldest piece, it was probably the
most valuable. I left it for last. If I damaged any pieces I wanted the
damaged piece to be the least valuable in the collection. I washed the
lamp in warm water and let it dry in the kitchen drainboard. (This is
where the story gets strange!) When it dried, I tried to buff out the
green patina with the cloth. All of a sudden the damn thing started
hissing at me. I dropped it on the floor; I guess I thought there was
some vicious insect inside. The lid, which had been corroded in place,
popped off and rolled on the floor in circles. Then a green gas started
coming out of the lamp. It was horrible; it smelled like something had
been dead a week.
I screamed for my husband and woke him up. He stumbled out of the
bedroom and found me in the kitchen, knee-deep in a reeking green fog.
He shouted at me and demanded to know what I had done. The mist gathered
itself up in the center of the kitchen and formed itself into a
tallcolumn, then began swirling around. My husband panicked and tried to
drag me from the kitchen. I couldn't leave, I was fascinated. It looked
like I had a miniature tornado in my kitchen. (Really, I'm not making
this up. It really happened!) When the tornado took the shape of a man,
my husband froze. I mean he couldn't move. He was absolutely terrified.
The mist solidified into a green-skinned, seven-foot tall, muscular
humanoid with Semitic facial features and naked except for a tight
little white loincloth. It stretched, smiled and then it spoke;
"Ahh........After seven thousand years I am free again. Who art thou
mortal, that thou hast freed me? I would reward thee for thine deed.,"
he boomed down at me.
"Me?," I asked, "I'm nobody. You want to talk to my husband!"
The genie laughed and said, "No milady, it is thee I wouldst to speak
to, for it is thee who freed me from the accursed lamp. What is your
desire? I am not great among genies, but I will attempt to fulfill thine
wishes. Dost thou wish to be wealthy?"
"Wealthy?," asked my husband, suddenly awakening from his trance. "You
can make me wealthy?"
The genie turned, cast a baleful eye on my husband and said, "I spoke
not to thee, son-of-slime. Interrupt me not whilst I bargain with the
lady. Else thou fash me unduly and I smite thee!" My husband quailed and
slipped behind me.
"Some protector he is, hiding behind his wife!", I thought.
"Bargain?," I queried.
"Yes, milady, a bargain. Thou hast done me a service and honor requires
that the debt be repaid. What wouldst thou have me do?'
My husband nudged me in the back and whispered "wealth!"
The genie glared at him severely and said, "Silence, worm!"
I told him, "My husband wishes for me to ask for wealth and I would like
to please him. Could I ask for that for the both of us and still ask for
something myself?"
The genie smiled and said, "Thy generosity does thee credit, milady.
What dost thou wish for thyself?"
"I would like to have a baby," I said.
The genie frowned sadly and said, "If it is thy wish to be with child,
then I cannot fulfill thine desire milady. Some fates are written in the
heavens. Prithee Milady, choose another wish."
I tried again, "My husband has said he would like to be young again so
that he could live his life over and not make mistakes. Is that possible
to do that while keeping all his memories and mental skills?"
The genie chuckled and said, "No, milady. It is not possible to live
without making mistakes, else I would not have spent seven thousand
years in a lamp. However, it is possible for ye to be younger, perhaps
twenty- three years old, and retain all your mental abilities and
memories. However, thy wish Milady would be subject to some conditions."
"And what are these conditions?," I asked.
"First I would remind Milady, that although thy wish is to please thy
husband, my bargain is not with him, and therefore he cannot receive the
greatest benefit! I will grant ye both the boons of wealth and youth on
this condition; that thy husband shall be youthened into a babe for a
minimum of one-quarter of his life. I have grown tired of the sound of
his voice and it pleases me that this should be so. Three days after I
have granted thy desires, he will change into a babe. After three months
have passed thou mayst but utter a magic word I shall reveal to thee and
he shall be restored to an age of twenty-three. After nine more months
have passed he will again youthen into a babe. After spending three
months as a babe thou may utter the magic word again and restore him as
before. This shall repeat for a period of one hundred and fifty years,
after which the two of ye will instantly die and vanish into dust. Would
this satisfy thee?"
"Well...I guess...I guess if it's okay with my husband.......I mean I'm
not the one who will be a baby."
The genie nodded and said to her husband, "What dost thou say,
oh-misbegotten-son-of-a-diseased-camel? Remember, these wishes were
thine and not thy gracious wife's. Speak and quickly, lest I forget the
courtesy due to thy wife and disembowel thee on the spot! I have decided
that she shall have the babe she desires. Since thou hast not provided a
babe for Milady to cherish and love, then for three months out of every
year of your worthless life, thou shalt be her babe! Think well, oh
scion-of- serpents. Hast thou been good to your wife? For one-quarter of
every year, she will be thy mother. She will be able to return any ill
you have done her ten-fold. Thou will be utterly in her power. Dost thou
trust her absolutely?
For it is on her word and hers alone that thou shalt be returned from
infancy. An she chooses to remain silent, thou shalt remain a babe."
My husband looked at me and told the genie, "My wife's a child who is
incapable of living for any length of time without my supervision. I'm
confident that she will return me to my rightful place."
I nodded at the genie and he said, "So let it be written in the heavens
that I have dealt fairly with this daughter of Eve. I have granted her
desires, both spoken and unspoken. It is done."
The genie laughed again and handed me a envelope; inside was a Texas
lottery ticket, a list of stock/commodity buy and sell dates, a
horoscope for each stock and instructions.
The genie grinned broadly at me and said, "Seven thousand years ago I
would have caused a caravan loaded with silver to have appeared at thine
village gate. I believe that thou shalt find this method easier to
explain to thine rulers. When the stock brokers ask how thou hast
ascertained the correct stocks, give them the horoscopes. They will
think thee mad, but will not suspect thee of illegal trading. Within
three days thou shall have all that thou hast wished for, milady," he
said and whispered a word into my ear, then he vanished.
That same night, all six numbers on the ticket were drawn in the
lottery. I was the only winner. Overnight we were worth forty-three
million dollars. I followed the instructions and took a small part of
the winnings and invested it in stocks and commodities with specific
buy/sell orders for three months. At the end of that period, we were
worth one-hundred million dollars. I hired an architect, had the house
built and moved in.
Although I didn't realize it at the time, the genie had granted all my
wishes, even my wish for a baby of my own!", said Peggy looking over at
Colin with a smile.
Colin returned her smile with a childish grin of his own, he clearly
adored Peggy. She turned back to her friend and said, "That's it,
Maureen.
That's our story."
Maureen looked at the baby in the playpen and watched as he absently put
his right hand next to his face, put his thumb in his mouth and started
sucking. "Do you mean that that's your husband in the playpen? That's
him?" demanded Maureen incredulously.
She stared at the tot in the playpen and watched as drool rolled down
his chin and dripped off, ran down his stomach and into the top of his
diaper. He returned her stare with an intelligent gaze of his own.
Maureen would have had a hard time believing Peggy's story except for
that damnable comprehending look in his eyes.
"That's him," Peggy assured her.
"And he understands everything we've been saying?," Maureen asked. Peggy
nodded agreement.
"There's something I don't understand. The builder seemed to have built
this house in a hurry. If I remember right, it only took about three
months. Is that right?," Maureen asked.
"That's right, This house was built with three shifts of carpenters and
laborers. They worked on it twenty-four hours a day. It cost about
double the amount it normally would have. It only took fifteen weeks to
construct this house. I was in a hurry to get out of town into a house
with some privacy."
Maureen looked puzzled, "The genie said that he would be a baby
one-quarter of the year and he had to start the year being a baby, is
that right?"
Peggy nodded.
"But you said that you won the lottery and invested that took three
months, building your house took three months and you've been here six
months. That's a total of one year, minus the four weeks, or one month,
that you were short. He should still be an adult. What happened?"
Peggy laughed and said, "Oh that! Well, after I won the lottery,
remembered what he had said about me being a child. His off-hand insults
made me so mad! I was tired of his superior attitude and petty dictates.
I decided I didn't like being treated like a little girl. I have a
masters degree and am perfectly capable of handling my affairs. He's the
one who acted like a child! He moped about, pouted, and threw tantrums
when we were poor. And when the chance came to tell the genie what we
needed, he hid behind me like a small child hiding behind his Mommy. If
it wasn't for me, we'd still be living in poverty! I started thinking
what life would be like when he returned to adulthood. He really was
much too difficult to deal with as an adult. I didn't think I could put
up with his autocratic paternalism again."
Peggy leaned over close to Maureen and said in a conspiratorial voice,
"So I never said the magic word!"
She laughed gaily and said, "I'm happy with him just the way he is! I
have no intention of ever changing him back. He'll be the baby I've
always wanted! I've been so happy since we won the lottery that I've
barely noticed the passage of time. The months have just flown by for
me. I don't think poor little Colin can keep track of time. Life for
Colin has become an endless stream of baby bottles, feedings and diaper
changes. I'm sure Colin hasn't realized that the three months were up
ages ago."
Sitting in the middle of his playpen, the betrayed infant who had been
carefully listening to his mother/wife screwed up his face and began to
cry.
Finis coronat infans