A Notion of Pelicans
A Notion of Pelicans
A Notion of Pelicans
by
Donna Salli
Copyright © 2016 Donna Salli
Represented by Blue Cottage Agency
www.BlueCottageAgency.com
Cover design by Riverplace
www.Riverplacepress.com
ISBN: 978-1-68201-035-8
All rights reserved.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
First edition: September 2016
Printed in the United States of America.
Published by
North Star Press of St. Cloud, Inc.
P.O. Box 451
St. Cloud, MN 56302
northstarpress.com
For Bruce
“Tell all the Truth but tell it slant—”
– Emily Dickinson
Contents
Lavinia Hoope Hansen
Getting Where They Need to Go
Serena Cross
Closer
Lucinda Talbot
Mirrored in the Sky
Claire Collier
All This
Antonia Sprague-Heller
Light
Acknowledgments
Pelican Church: The “Family”
Lavinia Hoope Hansen
The North Shore of Lake Superior, late 1800s
Lavinia Hansen had a notion. It dropped oddly out of the sky one warm afternoon as she sat alone in a high clearing above the lake. From a distance, she was a small figure seated at the center of a ring of bluffs. Up close, she was a petite and lively woman who watched with curious awe as, along the shore to the north, the shelf-like front edge of a thunderstorm moved out from land and across the water. The storm did not surprise her. All day the weather had been ripe—the morning bright and calm, mid-day sultry. It was toward dinnertime when the storm front moved in. Low to the horizon, gunmetal gray on its underside, the cloud trailed smoke and was coming in hard—gray replacing blue from north to west across the horizon.
Even among the modern women of her acquaintance, Lavinia was intrepid. She was as comfortable on the musky windfall cedar beneath her as she would be in a parlor. Her hair, graying mahogany, was caught up in a bun. Strands were fallen, heavy with heat. She pushed them back without thought and scribbled a line into a small ledger, then closed the book. Her brow furrowed. Why doesn’t he return? Her husband, Henry, had gone off walking and could be anywhere beneath the leafy canopy, which stretched newly green down the long slope to the lake. Lavinia hadn’t wanted him to go. He had promised he’d be brief, but she knew. This was their first look at the land as owners, and Henry, being Henry, would forget. He’d be distracted. They hadn’t quarreled, but Lavinia knew they’d not parted well.
The thought stayed with her as she waited, impatiently— then, chiding herself, patiently—then impatiently again. The first hour had become a second, and her impatience turned to worry. Where was he? She scanned the clearing’s edge. No one. Nothing. The line of brush and tree curved unbroken.
She expelled a slow breath and shifted her attention back to the storm. As it neared, the light of day was changing, becoming at once sharp and muted, the broad face of the bay stippled with highlight and shadow. Lavinia, too, was distracted. Eyes drawn to the play of light and texture below, her hand patted at her skirt pocket. There. The hard circle of her watch. She withdrew the hand, turned her eyes again to the tree line. They were eyes expressive and dark, like the eyes of an animal.
A push of wind, cool, as abrupt as if a door had opened, set the sugar maples that bordered the clearing to lifting their palms then bringing them, shuddering, down. The sound of branches sifting wind rose, fell, rose higher around her. With each pulse, Lavinia felt growing urgency.
Suddenly, in the midst of it, she heard her name. “Vinia.”
Her mind leapt. Vinia. Only he called her that, only Henry. She turned to where she’d heard his voice, listened for the cracking of brush and watched for his long stride to step him clear of the undergrowth, axe hefted to a shoulder, revolver safely tucked away.
Lavinia, too, carried a firearm. She glanced at the long barrel next to her, leaning against the cedar, and the earthy scents of the clearing were cut through by the smell of morning bacon in the pan, of wood smoke and the faint odors of snow melt and first green shoots outside the open cabin door. They were smells from the first spring of her marriage. She’d been at the stove, turning bacon, when her ear caught a vibration. She glanced at Henry, who looked up from the table. Their eyes locked, and the vibration became sound, the heavy gallop of something winter-starved, drawn down the hill path to the meat curling and snapping in her pan. She watched Henry’s slow leap for the gun where it stood against the wall an arm’s reach from the bed, heard the gun’s roar, felt her nostrils sear with hot powder, and then, the heavy stench of the bear as it thudded across the threshold. Blood ran swoosh rush swoosh in her ears.
The memory was dispelled by a low moan of thunder.
Lavinia scanned the tree line. It was far past that spring. She’d only imagined the voice. No one was there. She passed her hand over the skirt pocket again.
Lavinia knew—she was not like her husband. Henry had eyes for distance. She saw the particular. Earlier, she’d examined the clearing, back and forth, had collected every detail and written them into the book. She closed her eyes and listened to the wind in the trees, its tug at her ears. In her mind she saw a picture—in this place, a white house, green shutters, and she herself picking peonies beside a picket fence. Huge whites, vibrant pinks, drooping on the stem, like infants in her arms.
A beating of wings, a nearing din, brought the moment to an end.
Her eyes opened, her head tilted back. Above her, against a sky gossamer blue, a flight of birds was assembling. Large and white, powerful, they merged into a turning circle above her head. Her breath caught. The birds formed a rotating crown—a moment later, seemed pearls on a string. One snip, and they might be flung off and away. Lavinia had never seen such birds— only their feathers in ladies’ hats, their images in books—and if she had, she wouldn’t have expected an exhibition like this.
Short of leg, bright orange of beak, the birds were pelicans. Careening overhead, they rode a draft that swirled and dipped. The great wings, ten feet from tip to black-fringed tip, turned in slow arcs. The pebbly voices called rhythmically out. Each bird cast down at Lavinia one comprehending eye, and as they wheeled above her, eyes flickering and turning, she was cut free from the earth and lifted up into a living web.
In the southern sky, more pelicans appeared. As if on cue, three birds in a tight V-shape, a blazing arrowhead, spun in and melded with the circle, just as, like a single entity, the others began to peel off and disappear above the trees. Disarray erupted overhead as the circle unraveled and thinned. Seven eyes, flickering overhead—four, three—until the last strange cries of the pelicans wove away beyond the treetops.
Lavinia stared into the empty sky. Within her, a glimmer was rising, something remembered. As she waited for it to assume a shape, she raised a hand to her lips, counted, without counting, each breath. At last, the glimmer became sense. The pelican, the bird that loves . . . As if they had some purpose, as if they knew my name. . . . Where is he? Why doesn’t he come back? She pulled from her pocket the cool, reassuring watch, a gift, a keepsake, wrapped it momentarily around with her fingers and opened it. Quarter past four. She ran a finger across the inscription:
Lavinia Hoope
Confirmation Day
“Neither the day
>
nor the hour.”
It was then that she had her notion—the word she would use for the rest of her life—a notion, delivered of pelicans, that this plat of ground on the breathing rim of the lake was hallowed. Closing her watch, a decisive snap, she rose and began to search. She wanted a mark, a token, and she combed the near parts of the clearing—under the prickly blackberry bush, around each rock and windfall, in the shifting shadow of the ash. Only when rain began to fall did she give up. She tucked beneath the root ball of a downed aspen and hugged her knees to her chest. Not a trace of pelican had she found, not the smallest feather, not a hint of scat. But she didn’t keep her vigil there alone. As she waited for Henry, a circle of feathered angels moved unseen overhead, they kept watch with her. They were part of her now, the pelicans—heavenly messengers, raspy of voice, with eyes that flitted and turned, inside and above her head.
Eyes that were free, and intense.
Eyes obliging, wild, joyful.
Getting Where They Need to Go
The town was quieting, the day winding down.
On the raised strip of concrete out front at the convenience store, a cluster of teens drank Diet Coke, they laughed, and blew smoke. Tendrils rolled along the plate-glass window, dissipated into haze. Between exhalations, the kids jostled one another or looked fixedly into the distance. Their eyes were caught occasionally by the headlines of announcements hanging in the window. The unembellished MEETINGS OF THE COUNTY BOARD, 1995. In a swirling script, FALL BAKE SALE, from St. John’s Episcopal. A balloon-bordered CHILDREN’S STORY HOUR, Saturdays at the library. Side by side on the same horizontal sheet with, in up-tempo script, ESL CLASSES, MONDAY NIGHT. And, right beside the door, the announcement no one in town needed, FISH FRY, RAIN OR SHINE, FRIDAYS AT THE VFW. The store’s neon lights had come on, and the kids looked washed-out under them. It was windy, an autumn wind, but their coats were unzipped.
The main street was bustling, folks getting where they needed to. Some walking, some in cars or vans, some in pickups—it was a small town. The young mother strapping her toddler into a car seat, the white-haired gent settling his wife into the passenger seat and easing shut the door, the new mechanic at the Ford dealership stepping up into her shiny F-150—all were glad they didn’t have to drive the traffic of some city. This was peace. Something they would not give up. Many were born here. But more and more had come from somewhere and managed to make a place for themselves.
The door of an aluminum-sided building slid up and an ambulance, looking from above like a child’s toy, rolled out. It turned on its lights, merged into the street, and raced across town. Heads turned, vehicles moved to the curb as it passed— the siren wailed, strobed lights popped like old-style flashbulbs against the approaching night.
On the rim of bluff above town, backlit by the last hint of twilight, the wind vane on the peaked roof of a church turned in fits and starts. A storm was coming, but it was still at a distance. Along the northern margin of town, and to the east, the lake stretched. On a far point a lighthouse shone, misleadingly small.
Above it all, unaffected by time, flew the pelican.
Serena Cross
The chill outside lifted mid-morning, just before ten.
By ten fifteen, the day had gone to hell. But before we go there, let me say the morning started out like any other. I slipped into my nubbly-but-soft red chamois jacket, descended the narrow back stairs of the parsonage, and crossed the church grounds to the cemetery. There’s something about a cemetery I love, and about this one, especially. In the sunshine this morning, the clutch of worn and fusty headstones rose brightly out of a crazy quilt of leaves. Mostly maple—feverish red, calm yellow— with a smattering of oak—crisply, patiently brown. As I sat there, thinking, looking out over the lake and running leaves through my fingertips, the world was kept at bay by the wrought-iron fence that wraps the perimeter.
My favorite marker is Lavinia’s. I could describe it with my eyes closed or even find it in the dark. The stone is light-colored granite in a protective iron casing. Some family member—I like the idea of a blacksmithing nephew—must have added that more recent touch. From the top of the casing, long since oxidized black, projects a cross, a cross empty and lying on its side. On the stone itself, a lamb in weathered outline sleeps. Its carved front legs fold daintily beneath its chest, and it floats above a four-line inscription:
Lavinia Hoope Hansen
Wife of Henry
October 13, 1848
May 10, 1932
Today is her birthday.
She’s been gone more than sixty years. But when I sit beside her grave, I feel her. I hear her quiet breathing, see her lips quiver suddenly into talk. There’s no one left to tend her gravesite, so though we’ve had frost, I brought flowers, the chrysanthemums that were so cheery on the shelf above the sink. The mums were in an applesauce jar. To keep them upright, I spaded a hole to drop them in. The soil was cold and hard, but I felt like working it with my hands, so I did. The rhythm of my fingers, the pleasure of moving and loosening and breaking apart, was calming and satisfying. I was alone, wholly private in my thoughts, and I felt good. Somehow I knew Lavinia Hoope Hansen would like yellow mums on an October morning.
As well as anyone.
My husband, Richard, is pastor at Pelican Church, Lavinia’s church, which makes me the pastor’s wife. It’s an unofficial role, but it’s as demanding as anything Richard deals with. We’ve been here seven years. Richard’s first calls were to churches in Wisconsin, then South Dakota. We’d honeymooned at a ma-and-pa resort on the North Shore of Lake Superior. Our cabin had low water pressure—the shower spurted and dribbled and reduced us to laughing tears when we tried to take a first shower together. But the view of the lake was so mind-blowing, we didn’t care. When the call came for Pelican, it felt like it would be a second honeymoon—the lake, the pretty little church. Richard loves little churches, so like families, with their eccentric casts of characters. I was in need of a honeymoon. It’s hard to do what we do. This glaze moves into people’s eyes when they find out Richard is a pastor—the shutters go up. I’d like to thread my finger through their top buttonhole, give it a yank, and say, “You think we’re milquetoast? Got nothing worth hearing? Well, stick around.”
I wonder what people would say if they knew that my confidante, the one I go to, is dead, long before I was born. I hate to say this, but . . . the living . . . well, they’re so much work. Take my women’s fellowship group. Now, I love those women, each so different, such a life force, but . . . good God, what a garden of roses and thorns.
There are two women’s groups, actually. The one I’m part of is married ladies and widows—the singles started their own group. We meet in the church library. It’s so comfy and warm in there and smells like old books. We mostly just be together and talk, around food, of course—it’s a church, there’s always something yummy. We talk mothering, which is hard, and what it means to be married—harder yet—and, of course, we talk about faith. Don’t get me started on how hard that one is. Most of our women have jobs and will make it to an event but not the regular meeting. At our last gathering it was the core group, mostly older. We got onto how our days fly by and we don’t have time to pee or do our hair, let alone be aware of—well, what we should be aware of. We fall into bed at night not having spoken a meaningful word, some days hardly thinking one.
Now, having said that, before the meeting I had been thinking a lot about something, and I’d come to the meeting with an idea. I was watching for the right moment to bring it up, then my friend Toni got on a roll. She’s an academic—she loves an elaborate plan. She hijacked the discussion. It was all I could do not to snort. Pastors’ wives aren’t supposed to snort. I was just about to say, “I’ve been thinking,” when Judy Holsapple said, “When I was young, I was going to do so much. I did do so much. I know I should pay more mind to what’s going on with me, but . . . I’m tired.”
Bea Markowski laughed a little
half-laugh. “Tired,” she repeated, “I know tired.” Bea does know. She’s caring for a husband with dementia.
Anna Stuart was there. Anna is the biggest sweetheart, and she had this pained look. She said, “It seems like things get harder, they get faster, all the time. I don’t like to turn on the evening news, and I think sometimes I should cancel the newspaper. I don’t, of course—you know I wouldn’t—but add it to everything going on in my life, and my head spins.” She leaned toward Bea and patted her hand. “Does your head spin?”
“Ice,” Naomi Kinnunen said. “You need ice.”
Naomi’s lifelong friend, Bugs Fletcher, was out of town, so Naomi and Mabel Gunderson were a pair. They’d been having a long side conversation—first about the time someone taped the communion pitcher shut on Jack Grange, Richard’s predecessor, then about the perils of piecrust. Naomi’s comment about ice was so amusingly timed, we all burst out laughing. Naomi said, even louder now that she had an audience, “I had to tell Elizabeth—I said to her, ‘Use ice water.’ Poor woman. Her crusts are dreadful.”
“You are so right,” Mabel said.
Everyone knew who they were talking about, and some of the ladies started tittering. Then Lucy Talbot let fly. “Your head only spins, Anna? I spend my days with a tornado in my head— going a hundred directions at once.” Lucy is . . . well . . . that person who makes folks head for the door.
Anna’s head visibly spun, just a little. She’s used to Lucy.
Mabel was still talking piecrust. “Did you tell her,” she said, “about not rolling a crust more than once? Someone needs to talk to her about that, too,” and then she said, seamlessly, “Lucy, I don’t know how you do everything you do. When do you sleep?”