|
Campion
accidentally bumped into Bridget
running to escape his other
sister, Nora, twelve, whose
stocking cap he had pulled off.
"Moronic!" Bridget
charitably asserted.
"Christopher
Columbus!" Nora had just
portrayed Jo in their school
play, Little Women.
"Give me that!" The
little woman punched Campion,
retrieving her hat.
With
the seven younger, of our ten
children, I was taking our
annual Christmas walk to
Crestwood mall to see the
decorations and have lunch. Then
it's off to St. Patrick's
bookstore, down the road, to
visit their chapel and be
reminded of what Christmas is
really about.
Cold
and menacing, the clouds spit
icy pellets. I struggled to
straighten the wheels of
two-year-old Paddy's machine on
the slippery sidewalk. I call
the stroller a machine. If it's
not human, it's a bothersome
machine.
This
morning, while pulling wet
towels out of one machine and
throwing them into another, a
third machine rang. I answered.
"This is First Security. Do
you have an alarm system?"
Sales calls.
"A pit bull, and a
magnum!" I snapped, hanging
up.
Discombobulated, I pulled the
wet towels out of the dryer,
threw them BACK into the washer
and stood, conflicted, trying to
figure out what I just did.
The machine rang again and
started blathering. One of my
psychologist husband's patients
was leaving a message on another
machine.
"Mom!! Campion wiped his
bottom with the shower
curtain!!" Bridget tattled.
"WHAT?!!" I shouted,
answering the phone.
"Hello?"
A woman.
"This is Mrs. Flanigan."
I said, grabbing a roll of
toilet paper from the hall
closet.
"I'm one of Dr.'s patients
and I need help."
"For God's sake, use TOILET
PAPER!" I threw the roll at
Campion.
"I do." She said.
"Not you. I'm sorry. What's
the matter?" I asked.
"I'm depressed..."
"You're depressed." I
interrupted. "St.
Hyginus,
I gotta kid, who just used my
new cloth shower curtain as
toilet paper and it's the first
curtain I've bought in 15
years..."
The phone went dead. I guess the
thought of buying a new shower
curtain, once every 15 years,
was too much.
"It
is!!" Screamed six year old
James jumping on Jack, nine.
Gregor, our fifteen year-old
son, slid over to pry them
apart.
"Uncle Moms, a vowel is
long in a word if the word ends
with a violent e." James
had taken to calling me Uncle
Moms.
"A silent e." I
corrected.
"A violent e!" James
insisted.
"Fine." Sometimes it's
better to settle for an e that's
violent and a child that's
silent.
The
wind whipped us across the busy
intersection of Watson and
Sappington, into the mall's
parking lot. Machine wheels were
spinning everywhere scaling icy
inclines.
One woman, talking on a machine,
in her Mommy McChine, probably
going to McDonalds, drove
dangerously close, fishtailing.
"Wow, did you see
that?" Campion cried.
"I almost got hit by that
car! I practically risked my
life to kill myself!!"
Sleeting harder and darker than
God's pockets, we slid into a
store door, ready to enter the
pink, plastic, perky world... of
Mall.
"May
I help you?" A saleswoman
slithered from behind a rack,
nervous about children's hands
molesting her merchandise.
"We're just blazing a trail
to the mall." I said,
making friendly conversation.
"The wind-chill factor must
be 10 below."
"Are these all your
children?" She coiled.
"Why yes."
I beamed.
"Yes, they are."
"Isn't that a bit
irresponsible?" She struck!
"Irresponsible?"
I
froze. "Oh, no, dear, I'm
not irresponsible. I'm
irresistible."
Taking
hold of Paddy's machine, I
kicked the locked wheels,
ordered the children to line up,
and marched out of her den down
the desert of tiled floor.
As merchandise parted like the
Red Sea, I led my people towards
the promised land... the New
Canaan... the Mt. Sinai of all
Mt. Sinais! The land of milk...
and money... the Mall!
It
was a winter wonderland.
Each shop entrance had a green
Christmas tree covered in cherry
red bows and silvery tinsel.
From the mall ceiling hung
evergreen ropes decked with gold
and blue balls.
Strolling down the corridor the
children delighted in the shop
windows.
One displayed snowy hills dotted
in black firs surrounding a
frozen pond with children
ice-skating.
Another, an early 20th century
parlor, had family members
gathered round an upright piano
singing..."Grandma Got Run
Over By A Reindeer"??!!
"Is nothing sacred?"
I
exclaimed.
Pulling them away, I spotted
Gregor at a different window. We
joined him.
It was a lingerie shop,
displaying ...leopard push-ups,
leopard panties, leopard
nighties. Just like that first
Christmas, "... and there
were shepherds tending their
leopards..." !
"St. Sexburga!" I
cried, smacking Gregor.
"Let's eat!"
That
should be safe.
Atop
Mt. Escalator, we descended
towards the fertile food court,
flooded with manna!
"Disgusting!" Jack
pointed.
Tucked in a corner of the food
court, were teenagers locked in
a passionate embrace.
Reaching the foothills, we
surged... like a herd of turtles.
"St. Nymphodora...move!"
I pleaded, pushing them away
from Sodom and Gomorrah. They
stared, hoping to see... some
"morrah".
"What are they doing?"
Jack asked as I shoved everyone
to a table.
"Eatin' supper before they
say grace!!" Now that's sex
education.
"That guy must really be
insane!" Campion pointed at
another boy walking by with an
earring protruding from above
his eyebrow. "He's got a
pierced ear on his
forehead!"
"Lucy!" Paddy cried.
"Lucy" was what Paddy
called soda.
Lifting him from the stroller, I
plopped down on a chair,
standing him on my lap. I
grabbed his outstretched arms as
he chanted, "Lucy,
Lucy..." His sweet little
chubby face, framed in brown
curls, cheered me. I sang...
"Venus
de Milo was noted for her
charms.
But strictly between us,
you're cuter than Venus,
And once more, you've got
arms!"
"Mo-THER!"
Bridget was embarrassed.
"Okay. Tell me what you
want." Handing Paddy to
Nora, I solicited Gregor to help
carry the trays piled with lunch
and "Lucies".
"Grace, kids." I
announced, back at the table.
"Awww, Mom." They
complained.
I prayed an Irish blessing
that's been in my family since
God was a boy... "Father,
Son, Holy Ghost, who eats the
fastest, gets the most!!"
"MO-ther!" They
yelled, and dug in.
The
aroma of fresh sesame seed buns
and cheeseburgers covered in
mayonnaise dripping down the
sides of their mouths onto the
table warmed my heart... I didn't
have to clean it up! Golden,
salt-studded french fries
scooping up red tomatoey ketchup
splattering all over brought a
smile to my face... I didn't have
to clean that up either! Pinch
my toes and call me a jelly
donut... it just doesn't get any
better than this!
"Hey,
what's with the putor?"
Gregor asked. "It's taking
forever to load, these
days."
"Load? Who's gotta'
load?" I sniffed, leaning
towards Paddy. He wasn't there.
"Where's Paddy?"
I
asked.
"Christopher Columbus...
he's talking about
the computer!" Nora
complained.
I was no
Marmee! The only thing
Marmee and I would have had in
common, after a couple of kids,
were that we both had
"floppy-discs", I
thought clutching the front of
my blouse, looking for Paddy.
"Okay, Little-Miss-Woman, I
know all about 'downloading'.
I've been changing 'downloadings'
for 20 years and it's been a
long 'hard-drive'!"
I wiped
my mouth with a napkin.
"Kids, where is
Paddy?" I crushed the
napkin in my fist.
"Dunno." Gregor
shrugged stealing a french fry
from Jack.
"Get your own fries, you
pimple-face-a-phobic!"
Brotherly love.
"What?" I
threw my eyes around the food
court, frantic. "Where is
Paddy? He was here a minute
ago." I screamed his name
backing up and knocking over my
chair.
"Paddy!!"
I shouted
again. "Lord, help
me!" I prayed like a sinner
in a cyclone. My child was no
where to be seen. I began
spitting out orders.
"Nora, run up to the other
end, Gregor, go down by the
doors to the parking lot. Jack
run into the bathrooms, I'll
check the escalator. Bridget
stay here with Campion and James
in case Paddy comes back!"
Tears
welled up in my eyes. I ran to
the escalator hoping to see
Paddy going up the stairs.
"Paddy!!" I screamed.
I turned back to the food court
and shouted his name again.
"Paddy... Paddy!!"
My
heart was beating hard and fast.
I cupped my hands in front of my
mouth to help throw my voice
farther.
"Paddy!!"
Nothing. All
I could hear was a whooshing in
my ears.
Everything seemed muffled, even
my own voice. This must be what
it's like to drown. My throat
tightened. "Paddy!"
I
dropped my face into my hands.
"Oh Lord, help me, please
help me."
"Trouble?"
A man spoke.
I looked up Mt. Escalator. There
was a mall security guard
gliding down.
He was at least 6' 4" tall
but his navy baseball cap,
monogrammed with a sky blue,
"Security" above the
bill, made him look taller. His
navy cap matched his trousers
and his shirt matched the sky
blue threads of the word
"Security". His eyes
were the same shade of light
blue as his shirt but with an
aged look. He couldn't have been
more than 35 and his after-shave
had an unusual scent... vanilla.
"Help me. I can't find my
two-year-old. He was here a
minute ago. We were having lunch
and now he's gone!"
I
squeezed the guard's arms.
"What was he wearing?"
He asked, walking me to our
table. "A navy blue
turtle-neck with a Christmas
bear on it. His pants are green
with striped candy canes. He has
curly brown hair, and calls
soda... 'Lucy'." I sat down
and sobbed.
"It's
okay, Mom." Bridget came
over holding Campion's hand as
James climbed on my lap.
"I'll find him. Stay here
in case he comes back,
understand?" He asked.
I nodded, looking up. He was
gone.
"Let's look in the
lost-in-fountain."
James
suggested.
"That lunch was so good,
I'm sick." Campion
consoled.
"Mom, I told one of the
restaurant workers that Paddy
was lost and he called Mall
Security." Gregor and Jack
arrived back.
"Christopher Columbus, did
you find him?" Nora asked,
sounding more like a timid Beth
than Joe.
"Stay here." I took
Campion and James's hands,
pulling them towards the mall
doors to the parking lot. Paddy
might have wandered out, or
worse, someone had taken him
out. That thought seared my
soul.
Staring
out the glass doors I saw that
the sleet was, now, a curtain of
snow. Pushing them open the cold
caught my breath. I looked to
the right; the cold chapped my
face. I looked to the left; the
cold froze my tears.
"Mom, we're freezing."
Campion and James were
shivering; their heads frosted
white.
"Oh, boys."
I pulled
open the heavy doors and stepped
back in, numb. I couldn't
breathe. Where was my child?
Head,
hanging, I moved towards my
other children, each one
precious, each one a gift
from...
"Lucy!"
Looking up, there was the
guard... with Paddy.
I ran and clutched Paddy to my
heart.
"Where was he?"
I
asked. I smelled vanilla as I
patted the springy curls of his
head.
"Wicks n Sticks, up across
from the escalator."
He
explained. "Nice place.
Candle scents can be soothing
for your soul. Little children
know those things."
"What is your name?"
I
asked.
"Benjamin Dictus. Everyone
calls me Benny." His eyes
sparkled.
"Benny, I can never thank
you enough!" I touched his
arm.
The girls yanked Paddy out of my
arms and I turned away from
Benny to make sure they had a
good hold on him. He would not
get away again. When I turned
back, Benny was gone.
"Pimple-a-phobia."
Jack teased Gregor.
"Buck-tooth-a-phobia."
Gregor held Jack by the forehead
letting him box the air.
"Where did Benny go?"
I looked around.
"Did you find your
child?" Another security
guard showed up.
"Yes! One of your guards
found him! Benjamin Ditka."
I looked past the guard.
"Not Ditka, Mom. That's
Mike Ditka, the old Chicago
Bear's football coach. His name
was Dictus, it's Latin."
Gregor corrected, shoving his
brothers towards our table.
"I'm head of Mall Security.
There aren't any guards named
Dictus working for us."
He
assured.
"He had on a uniform just
like yours... didn't he
kids?" They stared, as if I
was lying like an eyewitness.
"His name was Benjamin
Dictus, and he found my son
upstairs in the Wick n Stick
Shop."
"The Wick n Stick Shop?
Shoot, that store's been closed
since October. The owner was
from out in Hermann and he
drowned in the Missouri River,
last September, trying to save
some little kid."
He
reported.
"justify?!" I shivered.
Hermann,
Missouri is a German settlement,
tucked in the Ozark hills above
the Missouri River. Ninety miles
west of St. Louis, Hermann's
vineyards yield grapes for wines
that rival the Mosel.
"A real hero, that guy. Got
the kid to some fisherman in a
boat, then he got sucked under
by the current... drowned. Real
sad." The guard shook his
head.
"Oh my." I took hold
of Paddy.
"Anywho... glad you found
your boy. Gotta' get back to
work." He left.
The
children and I cleaned up and
put on our coats. The wind was
howling so I tucked the baby
blanket tight around Paddy.
The children ran outside,
throwing their heads back and
sticking out their tongues,
swallowing snowflakes for
dessert.
We trudged through the snow,
reaching the intersection of
Watson and Sappington, and
waited as the traffic lights
turned from Christmas red to
Christmas green.
I veered right, where the backs
of a few justifybutted up
against our subdivision.
"Do we have to make a
visit?" Jack whined.
I grabbed Jack's ear.
"You'll not be turnin' into
some of your relatives, me-boy,
with their '... oh the church is
near but the road is icy; the
bar is far away but I'll walk
carefully.'." I pulled him
into St. Patrick's.
"Merry
Christmas." The nuns
caroled. "May we help
you?"
"We're making a
visit." I kept a hold of
Jack's ear and walked towards
the chapel at the back of the
store.
"Go ahead. Father is saying
Mass."
I whispered, "Okay. We're
not staying for the whole Mass.
Remember... thank God for Mr.
Dictus, and thank God for lunch
and thank..."
Campion interrupted. "Okay,
Mom, we got it." He wiped
his runny nose on the arm of his
coat.
"Blow your nose, boy."
Still holding Jack's ear, I
grabbed Campion's and led them
both towards God. That's called,
"praying" it by ear!
The
children genuflected and entered
a pew. I lingered at the back
with Paddy.
Campion went over to a side
altar with a starched-white
linen cloth. What was he up to?
He took the altar cloth in his
hands, blew his nose, wiped it,
and returned to the pew.
St. Symphorosa and her Seven
Sons, I'm gonna' kill that kid
and tell God the alligators ate
him!
"Dominus vobiscum."
Father prayed, Paddy and I
entered a pew.
"Et cum spiritu tuo."
We answered.
I prayed.
Who was Benjamin
Dictus?
Father
intoned..."Sanctus,
Sanctus, Sanctus, Dominus Deus
Sabaoth... Hosanna in excelsis.
Benedictus qui venit in nomine
Domini..." Holy, holy,
holy, Lord God of
Hosts...Hosanna in the highest.
Blessed is He that comes in the
Name of the Lord...!
One line caught my attention.
"Benedictus qui venit in
nomine Domini... 'Be-ne-dictus'?...'Ben-ny-Dictus'!"
"You're thinking of Mike
Ditka... His name was Dictus,
it's Latin." Gregor had
said.
"Be-ne-dictus"..."blessed"...
it
WAS Latin!
Outside
the wind's shrieked. We needed
to go.
"Merry Christmas!" We
waved to the nuns.
"It's snowing even
harder!" The children
delighted, running towards home.
Outdoor
lights twinkled. Reds, greens,
and sparkling diamonds dotted
icy evergreens flocked with
pillows of white as smoke curled
out of Christmas chimneys.
Running
into an open field, leading to
our backyard, the children
dropped making snow angels.
"Gregor, who do you think
Benny Dictus was?" I
quizzed.
"Doesn't matter, Mom."
He scooped up a mitten of snow.
"'Benedictus' means
'blessed' in Latin and we were
blessed. Latin is
straightforward."
"Gregor, you are truly a
wise guy." How come wise
guys are always in fields?
"So am I!"
Campion
pronounced.
"What?" I asked.
"A wise guy! I know some
Latin, too!" Campion
overheard us. "I told
Father Stanislaw, in catechism
class, some Latin."
He
reported.
"You did?" I
raised my
eyebrows.
Standing erect, legs apart, chin
out, and hands on hips, Campion
declared..."Hasta la
vista...bay-bee!!"
"You idiotic freak of
nature wise guy!"
Bridget
charitably proclaimed.
"That's Spanish!"
"Oh." Campion
shrugged.
"You moronicus!"
Gregor threw his snowball at
Bridget's mouth.
She was speechless. This WAS a
day of miracles!
"Christopher
Columbus! Let's make some hot
chocolate!" Nora shot home
leading the three oldest boys.
"Wait up!"
Bridget
spotted James standing by me.
"Uncle Moms, I love
Paddy." James bent down and
kissed his sleeping brother.
"I hope we get another
baby."
"Yeah, for Christmas!"
Bridget hurrahed, and they ran
home to our raised-ranch with
raised-hopes!
A
sparkle, from the stroller
basket caught my eye. There was
a bottle of wine and vanilla
scented candle in it. I picked
them up.
The bottle read...."EST
AMICITIA IN VINO"..."THERE
IS FRIENDSHIP IN WINE", the
first Latin I ever learned...
being Irish and all.
Underneath that..."Hermann,
Missouri". On the plastic,
wrapped around the candle, was
written, "Wicks n
Sticks".
"Oh...my!"
My grandmother always said,
"To each Saint his
candle." and now... his
bottle of wine!
I
placed the gifts back in the
basket.
The field, blanketed in a white
brocade, topped by a canopy of
clouds, reminded me of that
first field. Paddy reminded me
of that first Child...
There
a darling baby lay,
Pillowed soft upon the hay,
And its mother sung and smiled,
This is Christ the Holy Child.
Heading
towards home, I recited aloud
"...the fields shall be
joyful, and all things that are
therein." And
"therein" the deep
snow, my machine full of love, I
sang as I shoved...
"A Benedictus Christmas to
all, and to all...Hasta la
vista... bay-bee!!!"
|