Hello Everyone!
Back to stories from the trip. While I was driving across Nevada, the Magic 8 Ball pointed me to a cemetery in Winnemucca. It may seem weird, but I've always liked the history of such places. I spent some time wandering around this graveyard, happy to be out of the car, and pleased with the silence. I came across this headstone and snapped a photo. Though the girl had died in 1912, it looked as if someone in the area still brings gifts to her. And, on a long car trip, as there isn't much else to do but think, I came up with a story for her.
And, for those of you who love details...the little black bird really did guide me to her headstone. He was
very insistent. And, he was the beginning of a bird theme that lasted the entire trip. I'll share more of those stories later. But, for now, here's the first draft of the story I wrote for Colin.
Colin was holding the prism up to the window when his Aunt Kat called from downstairs. He liked how the light refracted through it, bright colors separating out of the sunlight and sparkling around the room.
“Hey, Sleepyhead, do you want to swing by and say good-bye to Alice before we head to the airport?” she asked.
“Sure!” he called back and scrambled over the pile of stuff he had accumulated during the month he spent with his aunt. His mother jokingly complained that he was always more exhausted after vacationing with Kat than he was before he began his school “breaks.” Kat did have a habit of packing each day with so many fun things to do that Colin needed some extra shut-eye when he got back home to his parents.
Just yesterday they had gone to the Science Museum downtown and met up with Aqualina Mallea and her daughter, Alice. Colin really liked spending time with Alice. She was his age, really cool, and they had a lot of the same hobbies. They ran all over the museum playing with the hands-on exhibits like the sand pendulums, and they loved the rock and mineral testing lab. At the end of the day, she bought a Gyroscope, and Colin grabbed a hand-held flexible prism to take home with him.
He tucked the prism into his pocket and trampled down the stairs to find his aunt waiting with an armload of flowers. He couldn’t even see her face over the bouquet of sunflowers and another bunch of white flowers he didn’t recognize. They filled the room with a very sweet scent.
Colin tossed his backpack over his shoulder and took the huge bouquets from Kat. “Where are we going with these? And, what are the white ones?”
She smiled mysteriously. “If the big orange and yellow ones are sunflowers, what do you think the little white ones might be?”
“Um, moonflowers?” he asked, half-jokingly.
“Right you are, kidlet!” she said, ruffling his hair. “Let’s go! We’ve got a stop to make before we hit the airport. And, your mother will never forgive me if I make you miss your plane. She misses you a lot, you know!”
When they pulled into the drive at the cemetery, suddenly the flowers made sense to Colin. His aunt took beautifying the area very seriously and was always dropping off flowers at various gravesites. It didn’t even seem weird to Colin anymore, and he liked feeling the history and hush in the older parts of the cemetery.
He scrambled out of the car, carrying the moonflowers with him, while his aunt grabbed the sunflowers and held their faces up to the sun. Colin thought it was cool how whole fields of sunflowers turned and followed the sun in its daily trek across the sky.
Kat headed out across the well-groomed grounds to the older part of the graveyard. It was covered in stones instead of the bright green lawn that marked the newer parts. Black birds of all sizes always greeted them when they arrived at the border of the stone walkway. One bird hopped along just in front of Colin. It seemed to be leading him to a certain headstone. Colin shook his head.
“That can’t be,” he thought.
“It’s just a bird.” But, whenever Colin veered in a different direction, the bird chastised him loudly and hopped around in front of him, squawking until Colin followed again.
The bird landed on a short grey headstone that they had approached from behind. Colin walked around the front of the gravestone and saw an old straw hat resting against the marble. It had been bleached by the sun and flattened by the torrential downpours unleashed by the summer afternoon thunderstorms. Colin smiled. The bird seemed to want something pretty placed near the hat. As he leaned down and began to place the white moonflowers on the ground he heard Aqualina’s voice hailing his aunt.
That’s right! Kat had promised him he could say good-bye to Alice before boarding the plane. Aqualina and Alice must have agreed to meet them here since he didn’t have much time to catch his flight.
He stood up, still holding the flowers and waved at Aqualina. She was striding across the grounds toward them, her waist-length dark hair flying behind her. Her skin had been burnished by the sun and she had the darkest eyes Colin had ever seen. His aunt had told him that Aqualina was of Basque heritage and her ancestors had been among the first sheep-herders that had come west and settled the area. She walked up and hugged Colin and Kat, who handed her the armload of sunflowers.
“She is always so warm to the touch,” Colin thought to himself.
“Kat, these are my favorites! Thank you for the sunflowers!” Aqualina said.
“To help you find your way home again, just in case.” Kat said softly, smiling at her friend.
Colin looked around for Alice. He was confused. Maybe she had to finish her piano lesson before she could join them? He asked Aqualina if that was the case. She looked quickly at Kat, who nodded.
“Colin, we think you’re old enough to handle this now,” the raven-haired woman said to him.
He looked over at Kat, who smiled encouragingly. His arms were still full of the moonflowers and he was startled when the black bird hopped a little closer, almost as if trying to overhear the secret.
Aqualina continued, “I know you’ve always wondered why Alice looks so different from me, but you’ve been too polite to ask. Your parents certainly did raise you well. I’m tall and dark haired, but she’s as pale-skinned as the moon, blonde and light-eyed. You probably assumed that I adopted her at some point, which is partially true. I was alone a long time and was getting terribly lonely; I knew that a child would bring me so much joy, but I am unable to have my own,” she sighed. “Why don’t you walk around and look at the front of the gravestone? I think it will help me explain this.”
He quietly did as she asked, the hair standing up on the back of his neck. He knelt and read the name and dates on the front of the stone. The little bird cast eyed him from the top of the stone.
Alice J Tregaskis
Died Oct. 28, 1912
Age 14 yrs
7 ms 21 ds“Oh, so this is where you got her name?” asked Colin.
His aunt Kat stepped forward. “Well, yes, in a way that’s exactly what Aqualina is saying. But, there’s more to it than that.” She took the flowers gently from Colin’s hands and laid them next to the straw hat. “When she found out she couldn’t have children, Aqualina was able to use some very old magic and harnessed the power of the moon to bring her a child. So, a few days a month, when the moon is full, Alice follows the scent of the moonflowers and comes to spend time here, with her ‘mother.’ The rest of the month, there isn’t enough moonlight to help her transform.”
Colin sat down quickly. A weak,
“What?” was all he could manage. The bird hopped down quietly to sit on his knee. Colin didn’t know what to believe. He always knew his aunt was a little crazy, but this was too much! Bringing back a girl who’d been dead for nearly a hundred years. His friend, Alice?? She was as full of energy and life as he was. It didn’t make any sense. It just couldn’t be!
But, he looked at the hat. It did kind of resemble a hat he’d seen Alice wear. Of course, this one was a lot lighter in color and the flower on the front was more than slightly mangled. He reached for it and turned it over gingerly in his hands. The white flower did sort of resemble a dried version of the moonflowers in the bouquet he had brought.
“Those are her favorite flowers,” said Aqualina kindly, gesturing toward the moonflowers. “And, she’ll be thrilled you stopped by to say good-bye until your next visit.”
“She can hear me?” he asked, his mind boggling at the thought.
“Of course, she’s merely in a different place right now. But, she can hear you. And, she wanted you to know that she had fun at the museum with you yesterday,” said his aunt. Colin just shook his head slowly, his eyes stinging a little; he’d forgotten to blink. Aqualina extended her hand to him and helped him off the ground, dislodging the bird, but it didn’t seem too agitated.
“Maybe this will help. Follow me,” she said to him. He trailed along after her, his hand in her warm grasp. The sunflowers bounced along in her other hand. She stopped in front of another gravestone and gestured for him to read. “Don’t be alarmed,” she said quietly, before stepping away.
Aqualina Mallea
Beloved Matriarch
Born: August 7, 1836
Died: May 16, 1875Colin blinked and looked at the women standing behind him. “Aunt Kat, when were you born? I don’t think I could handle it if we have to go look at another gravestone today!” he grumped.
She laughed and pulled him into a hug, “I was born a year before your mother, kidlet. I am exactly what and who you think I am. I’m not nearly as awesome as Aqualina and Alice. They’ve got all the cool magic…or I guess in Aqualina’s case, the warm magic.” Aqualina grinned at her.
“Care to let me in on the joke?” Colin asked, his voice just a little prickly. And, all things considered, he thought he was handling all the madness very well!
“Well, we told you that Aqualina is able to use to magic of the moon to bring Alice back once a month,” said Kat. “She also uses the magic and power of the sun to assume the form you see before you now. She’s been doing that since 1875.”
Colin was dying of curiosity in spite of himself. “Is that why you’re always so warm, and why you like sunflowers and why you’re so much darker skinned than Alice?” the questions tumbled out of him.
“Yes, little one,” answered Aqualina. “I am able to use the light and heat of the sun every day to become who you see. When the sun goes down, I get tired, like you, and sometimes I get lost in the dark and need to use the sunflowers to find my way back. Your aunt kindly provides them for me. She’s even been known to come looking for me when I’ve been gone too long. But those are stories for another day. I think you need to get back to a normal life for a while. This will make more sense in time.”
Kat looked at her watch and sucked in a quick breath, “Crap! We’re going to be late to the airport. Your mom’s going to kill me!”
Colin sat down and leaned back carefully against Aqualina’s headstone. “I’ve just learned that I’m hanging out in a graveyard with a ghost, a crazy cat lady, and my best friend in this town actually died over a hundred years ago, and you’re worried about me missing my flight? Really, Aunt Kat, you’re too much!”
He pulled the prism out of his pocket and held it up to the sun. The rainbows scattered over the little group while the black bird hopped after a particularly bright shard of violet light.
“Mom and Dad are never going to believe this!” he thought, smiling to himself.