An excerpt from “Trouble and Strife,” by Johanne Levesque
Friday, December 12th, 1930 (Bridge day)
I love Fridays. Today
happens to be an unseasonably mild day in December and I take advantage of
it. I hang the rugs over the clothesline
to beat the dust out of them. Friday is
the day that I tidy up the house. I rush
to do so before 10 a.m. as it’s also the day I host the bridge game. It’s an easy day for me as I never cook
dinner; I always get fish and chips from a local restaurant.
I place a
dark blue linen cloth on the kitchen table.
For a centrepiece, I choose a flat mirror plateau holding green grapes
and tawny pears.
Wilma is
the first guest to arrive. She has
short, deeply set wavy red hair worn to the chin and a fair complexion spotted
with freckles. I hug Wilma’s diminutive
body then I take her coat and the tiny sandwiches she has brought. We sit on the edge of the sofa sipping tea.
“You haven’t
cleared your sidewalk. Lawrence says
that the city will charge you two cents per food front if it’s not cleared,”
she says as she twirls her hair like a little girl. She talks like a little girl too. Everything she says is regurgitated from what
her husband told her. Sometimes I would
like to shake her and ask her what she really thinks, but I fear she would have
nothing to say…
“I know,
but Eugene has been so busy lately. To
tell you the truth I’m glad. If the city
charges us, it gives work to the unemployed.
I think it’s a great idea. Eugene
doesn’t agree of course, but it’s up to him.”
Phyllis is
the next one to arrive. Her dress is
slim, simple and elegant, the hemline well below the knee. She looks and acts like a pillar of virtue. I personally find her quite boring. Her long hair is wrapped in a bun at the base
of her neck, which accentuates her impeccable posture. She has brought chocolate cake.
Wilma looks
at her watch, then looks at me with those beautiful, penetrating green eyes of
hers. “Eleanor always arrives late. It’s very insensitive of her,” she says as
she twirls her hair.
It is
uncharacteristic of Wilma to complain.
She is usually so very calm and composed, but some things bother her and
tardiness is one of them. In fact,
Eleanor has many faults that Wilma cannot tolerate—especially her lack of tact
and her poor choice of language, but she is willing to overlook each one of
them when they play bridge because Eleanor is her partner and she always
outwits the opposing team.
After we
drink a second cup of tea, Eleanor finally arrives wearing an azure blue silk
velvet turban with a rhinestone pin in the front and a matching blue
dress. Her eyebrows are plucked to a
fine line and drawn in with a pencil.
She’s the only woman in the group who colours her hair. She always looks immaculately groomed and
elegant. She’s also the only woman in
the group with no children.
She is a
woman of leisure who has travelled the world over. Her calendar is full of hair appointments,
manicures, massages and lunches. Gerald
is a very successful lawyer, and she came into the marriage with a hefty
inheritance.
Her face is
flushed, “Sorry I’m late, ladies. Gerald
is such a dimwit, he forgot today’s Friday and I had to call him to come pick
me up.” She gives me a bottle of
sherry. “For you, my dear,” she says as
she kisses the air by my cheeks, so as not to mess up her makeup.
She never
brings homemade goodies. She told Gerald
when she married him, “If you think you have wed a cook, you are quite
wrong. Our wedding, my dear, only means
more business for the delicatessen.”
I thank her
as I hang up her coat. We all sit down
at the card table…
If you liked this excerpt from Trouble and Strife, you can buy the book at any of the following links:
Austin Macauley Publishers™ (my publisher)
Amazon.ca
Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
Barnes & Noble
Indigo
Walmart
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