Souvenir
by Mara Buck
This
seemed a sudden thing, yet she remembered nothing before. She was trapped
inside a snowglobe and certainly not of her own making. A cozy globe. At least the
outside world saw it as such. “Look at the tiny lady, sweetie. She’s in her own
little world. Shake it and watch the pretty snow.”
Still, she was real, truly she was. She
knew she was. Real and breathing but nevertheless trapped inside a glass curio,
showered by flakes of translucent mica, a world where nothing changed, a
trinket on a shelf. She had somehow become a whimsy, a curiosity. She was
displeased. She was worth more than that. Whenever had she been born to such an
existence? She could only remember
today.
First she needed a name for herself. Anyone
who was anyone had a name. She thought there might be words hidden beneath the
shellacked wooden base; however, being inside, she naturally couldn’t see them.
That much she could understand, despite what appeared to be a temporary memory
deficit. Fortunately, a decal banner was pasted on the outside of the globe
directly at her feet, and if she squinted and the light fell exactly right, she
could barely make out the remaining letters, for decals are fragile things and
some of this one had eroded away.
She was an upper-class elegant young lady
dressed in her velvet costume (surely anyone could see that!) so she reasoned
that if she could think, she must be educated enough to read, and yes, she
happily found herself capable of transposing the remaining backward letters
into some semblance of a word. LAVIN_A_
RETNIW RINEVUOS. She chose the first six letters as her name. “Lavina.” It
sounded exactly right when she whispered it aloud; it rolled around the inside
of her globe and returned to her ears quite nicely. “Lavina. My name is
Lavina.”
Lavina thought she remembered being young.
(But wasn’t she young here in her globe?) A time of running in green summers,
stretching her legs, laughing with friends, clothed in other than winter
leggings and an ermine muff, skipping through some small town (did it have a
name?) rather than poised on her tiny ice pond, the forever dancer. She
remembered (she knew she did!) and she vowed she would reclaim her life outside
the globe, although with each remembrance there was, of course, increasingly
more to be remembered.
If she craned her neck ever so slightly,
just so, she could see the neighbors who shared her shelf. To her immediate
right stood a carved wooden couple. Swiss or German they appeared from their
dress and, true to stereotype, they were stoic and kept to themselves in
Teutonic indifference. Under her breath, Lavina muttered, “Snobs,” and deemed their
painted costumes to be in rather garish taste. They themselves were outside the
globe, yet made no attempt to escape the shelf, which was most odd when you
thought about it.
Lavina could in truth not move her neck
more than a hairsbreadth. Still, by rolling her eyes to the left, she was able
to glimpse a Buddha made of porcelain, painted quite exquisitely in pastel
harmonies. “He must be a new neighbor,” she reasoned. “Surely I would have
remembered someone so grand.”
He beamed such a benign, welcoming smile
that Lavina tried to call, “Yoo, hoo. Hello,” but her voice stayed echoing
inside her globe. The Buddha did in fact nod his head, up and down, up and down
ever so slightly, so she was pleased by his reassurance, and whenever she
remembered he was there, she called, “Yoo hoo,” and he nodded, and somehow she
felt a sense of accomplishment in the communication, certain that he treasured
their friendship as well.
The drapes in the room where the shelf
was, where Lavina was, seemed perpetually drawn, so it was difficult to peer very
far into the dusk, and Lavina was concerned she might need glasses. When the maid came in to dust her off, and to
dust her neighbors as well, the drapes were opened for a brief period and the
light was blinding. Then they were closed again, and there didn’t appear to be
any pattern to it that Lavina could remember. Had it always been this dark? She
tried to recall other times of darkness, but she considered her vision must be
fine because she was young and the young have no use for glasses. The young
race laughing through grassy fields, cherry juice staining their lips.
Having nothing better to do with her time,
she planned a marvelous escape. “I will learn to move and I will rock the globe
and push it off the shelf and I will run away when it breaks!” Or, “Some clumsy
maid will break this silly trinket when dusting, and I shall become a
parachutist accomplishing a perfect landing from this perch down to the floor.”
Or, the best plan thus far, “That wretched boy in the white coat who always
shakes me so hard that my eyes spin will throw the globe as if it were a real
snowball, and it will of course shatter upon impact, and I shall be free.”
So many plans whirled through her
ermine-hatted little head that at times she felt it was she who made the mica
flakes shudder with her thoughts. Perhaps an errant earthquake would tremble
this unnamed (or unremembered) spot in Maine and shake this building to its core.
Why not a tsunami wending its way up the river—or were those only near the
ocean? Maybe a wayward cat’s tail would sweep her onto the floor; it flickered
through her memory that she so much preferred dogs to cats, though she lost the
thread of the logic almost immediately.
So many possibilities, each one
entrancing. Lavina had years to consider them all. And so she remained, forever
in winter, biding her time.
Every day was a day of fresh remembering,
inside the snowglobe.
* * * * *
"Souvenir"
was originally published by Blue Fifth
Review November 2014.
No comments:
Post a Comment