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Chapter 9
Deet woke early Monday morning, saddened in spirit when
he remembered that his faithful friend of twenty years
was gone. He had spent the day before trying to be
attentive to the children instead of locking himself in
his room as he wanted and wallowing in self misery. He
could detect the siren call of the aroma of freshly
brewed coffee drifting from the kitchen and knew Deidre
was already up and about. He hadn't hired her as a
housekeeper or cook but she quickly let him know that
she'd spent her entire adult life taking care of a man
and children and wasn't about to change her ways. If
that meant coffee would be waiting for him, Deet wasn't
about to argue with her.
Coffee and the bathroom beckoned and he tried to sit up
but found that he was trapped by the bodies of two
children. Jane was snuggled against his right side, her
head using his shoulder as a pillow. Eric was stretched
out along his left, facing away from him but as close as
it was possible to be. He felt something on his feet
and, lifting his head enough to see the end of the bed,
saw that Benji was draped across his feet and being
uncharacteristically quiet.
His brain began to function and he vaguely remembered
Eric and Jane creeping into his room at some ungodly
hour of the night and slipping under the covers with
him, whispering something about wanting to be there in
case he woke up crying about Wolfgang. Their concern
touched his heart and he would have been content to
drift back to sleep but he had a morning erection that
demanded a visit to the bathroom to relieve his bladder.
He eased Jane away from him and climbed over her as
quietly as possible, thanking any good sense he ever had
that he'd started wearing pajamas to bed as soon as Eric
moved in with him ... not that he ever anticipated
waking up with either of the kids in bed with him.
Content in knowing that both of the children were still
asleep, he found an undamaged pair of slippers and
managed to reach the bathroom before his bladder
exploded.
Several moments later he sat across the kitchen table
from Deidre and enjoyed the feel of his first sip of
coffee as it danced across his palate and caressed the
tissues of his throat before it hit his stomach and
bloodstream with a welcome injection of caffeine. It
was his drug of choice.
"I took the liberty of looking at the sticky-notes
decorating your computer screen," Deidre told him when
Deet finally opened his eyes enough for her to sense
that he was awake. "You're scheduled to work with the
Elf Louise Project from nine until one. Eric and Jane
both have separate appointments with Dr. Tran this
afternoon at two and three. You made a notation to call
Mrs. Fuentes between four and five. I don't understand
your notation about the Ronald McDonald House."
"I'm spending this coming Saturday there," Deet mumbled
while he waited for his third sip of coffee to take
effect.
Deidre made a notation on the legal pad in front of
her. "A Mr. Milhauser called half an hour ago. He said
to tell you the judge wants to know about the children's
tutor by tomorrow afternoon. Your accountant called and
said something about knowing where you can buy some ...
Morgans? And if it's alright with you I thought I'd use
some of the Thanksgiving turkey to make a nice
turkey-mushroom soup for lunch."
Deet, now partially awake, wondered when Deidre had
decided to become his personal secretary as well as
chief cook & bottle washer, governess, and nanny.
"Mr. Fuentes called and said I should to tell you to
call him at his office after you've had your third cup
of coffee."
"Manuel can kiss my ass," Deet growled, now finished
with his first cup.
"I feel that is highly unlikely," Deidre replied and
Deet glanced at her to see her smiling.
"Do you know what my schedule looks like the rest of
this week?" Deet asked as he poured his second cup and
added two teaspoons of sugar.
Deidre looked at the notes she'd made from Deet's
stickys. "You have meetings scheduled Wednesday with
the board of directors for two museums. I think
Thursday is reserved for the Conservation Society, but
I'm not sure. You do tend to scribble a bit you know."
"Do I have anything for tomorrow and Friday?"
"Nothing I've noticed."
"Good," Deet finally said, the second cup of coffee
spreading through his veins. "I intend to have the
tutor here tomorrow to test Eric and Jane and make sure
they're ready to start school in January. When that's
finished we're going to put up the Christmas decorations
on the outside of the house. I'll let the Conservation
Society know that this house goes back on the holiday
tour this year. Call Carlos Fuentes this afternoon and
him set things up with the guy who has the Morgans for
Friday morning. John Montgomery's number is on my
computer. Please call him and ask if he can have three
stalls available by the weekend."
Twenty minutes later showered, shaved, and dressed in a
pair of faded jeans, a t-shirt from the local hockey
team the Rampage, and a pair of comfortable loafers,
Deet drank his last cup of coffee and listened to Deidre
as she prepared breakfast for Eric and Jane.
As she told him something of her life he wasn't
surprised at the easy way she had assumed part of his
daily worries. She had been raised in the military, an
Army Colonel's daughter, and had spent most of her
school years in Europe. Her mother was expected, as
were all officers' wives, to assume civic
responsibilities and entertain a great part of the
time. A career military man's advancement depended on
his family's comportment almost as much as his own
abilities. Her father spent the final years of his
military service at the Pentagon in Washington D.C.
where Deidre was introduced to families of great
military and political influence.
She graduated at the top of her class from a prestigious
female university in New England and married an up and
coming young member of the Foreign Service. Her
marriage had been spent following Bill Thompson from one
consular station to another as he began to rise in
position. He'd chosen San Antonio as their permanent
home in the United States because of her Aunt Minnie and
it was where they lived when he was not assigned to an
Embassy or Consulate. His last position was in one of
the world's many hot-spots and he had been returned to
her six months earlier, now forever asleep at the Ft.
Sam Houston National Cemetery.
During the course of her marriage she had been expected
to entertain as many as one hundred guests with no more
than an hour's notice, be gracious at all times and
uphold the official line of the U. S. government on any
political or military decision. She provided a loving
home for Bill, tended to his daily schedule, and raised
her son to be as well adjusted and well educated as
possible.
"So you see," she finally told Deet, "helping you and
the children will seem like a piece of cake. I've
finished grieving and this position is going to fill a
void in my life. I'll still keep my hand in the issues
that concern me, if you don't mind. I have causes I
wasn't able to openly support while Bill was alive
because they were often at odds with the `official
position'."
Deet smiled and said, "Somehow I don't picture you as
the perfect daughter and wife."
Deidre laughed again and replied, "I never said I was a
perfect daughter. I always had a circle of rebellious
friends and my parents would roll over in their graves
if they knew some of the escapades we had. But we were
always careful to never get caught. I've read several
different studies done by sociologists on the adult
lives of military dependents." She smiled. "I think
we're supposed to be a bit odd."
"In what way?" Deet asked.
Deidre laughed. "One theory says we became saints."
"And the other theory?"
"That we're terrible sinners," she answered with a
smile.
"Which theory do you support?" Deet asked.
"The one that hasn't been published yet," she answered,
"that should say we were normal teenagers living in a
rigidly controlled society. We spent the weekends with
our foreign national friends and drank too much because
it was forbidden. We gazed in awe at public swimming
pools where it was common practice to change from street
clothes to bathing suits in the open. The first words
we learned in any foreign language were the curse
words. I can swear profusely in six languages. We
listened to American tourists raise the volume of their
voices as if everyone in the world intuitively knew
English and yelling would finally seep through to that
part of the brain. It was a crazy world and we thrived
on it. We learned patriotism tempered with common
sense. We loved everyone who wasn't an American. We
ate the finest food in the world served in small
restaurants in out of the way places. We marveled at
the history in European architecture and narrow cobbled
streets. We listened to Wagner performed in the Grotto
and Italian operas in Vienna. We were a combination of
the most free and most controlled teenagers America's
ever known. We loved and hated it simultaneously. It
made us different."
"Who's different?" Eric asked as he led Jane to the
kitchen, both of them barely awake.
"Everyone is," Deidre replied as she filled two plates
with drained bacon and pancakes covered with butter and
Vermont maple syrup. "That's what makes the world a
beautiful place."
"I guess so," Eric said as the overwhelming aroma of
breakfast caught his attention."
"I'll be gone most of today," Deet told the children.
"I've got a prior commitment I have to keep. I know you
guys bought Christmas presents last Friday and Deidre
will help you wrap them today. I want the two of you to
go through the boxes I brought down earlier and decide
what you want to use to decorate the front porch and
yard. Eric, you need to decide on a bedroom if you want
me to set up your computer. I'd prefer you to choose
one on the second floor, but the choice is yours. I'll
be moving my room from the parlor back upstairs and I'd
like the two of you to pick out which room I should
use. Any questions?" he asked.
"What you got that's so important?" Jane asked.
"It appears," Deidre provided, "that your dad is going
to be a Christmas elf today."
"No way!" Eric said.
"Way, boy," Deet replied. "I'm a Christmas elf every
year."
"You don't look like no elf," Jane added.
"And just exactly how many elves do you know?" Deet
asked her quite seriously.
"None, but the ones when I could see a TV didn't wear
jeans."
"Ah, and therein lies the problem. You see, the elves
union decided several years ago that it wasn't nice to
expect us to wear horrid red or green tights and those
silly shoes with bells on the toes. And Santa, being
the kind and considerate soul that he is, agreed that we
could wear jeans and t-shirts instead."
"I'd like to be an elf," Eric stated.
"Me, too," Jane added.
"I don't know," Deet said. "I'm going to spend most of
the day wrapping presents for children whose parents
can't afford to buy them anything. Gifts from Santa are
nice, but boys and girls like something from their moms
and dads. And Santa expects all of his elves to spend a
little time every year helping those moms and dads. And
you've got presents of your own to wrap."
"Jeez, Daddy," Eric said, "we can do that anytime. If I
promise to pick my room out as soon as I finish
breakfast, can me and Jane be elves with you?"
"What about picking my room?" Deet asked.
Eric and Jane put their heads together for a minute and
Eric announced, "We want you to have one of the rooms
with a balcony. That way if you ever get a boyfriend we
can sit on your balcony and watch you smooch in the back
yard and decide if we like him or not."
Deet was speechless.
Deidre laughed. "Finish your breakfast and let your dad
go. I need you two to help me put all my things in
place this morning. And you haven't seen all the boxes
you have to go through for Christmas decorations. I
know your dad wants the house to look extra nice this
year and thought we'd run to the library. Did you know
there are books with pictures of this house the way it
looked at Christmas a hundred years ago?"
The children silently weighed their options and finally
decided to concentrate on the house.
"I'll make arrangements for you to be elves next year,"
Deet told them. "Be good for Deidre while I'm gone.
We're going to see Dr. Tran this afternoon. You'll meet
your tutor tomorrow. We'll put up the decorations
outside and then tomorrow evening I'll take you downtown
to the Riverwalk. How would you like to eat dinner
tomorrow night on a boat going down the river?"
Eric and Jane both opened their eyes in wide amazement.
"That sounds rad," Eric said.
Deet held his arms open, inviting the children for a
hug.
"Can I tell you a secret?" Jane whispered into Deet's
ear when she hugged him.
"Of course you can, honey," Deet answered, not quite
sure what to expect.
"I don't want to tell Eric," she continued whispering,
"but I don't think there's really a Santa or elves."
"Then don't tell him," Deet whispered back.
He had a sudden thought and asked them, "What do think
of the idea of being Whos?"
"What's?" Jane asked.
"Not what, who," Deet said, "from the Grinch story.
Every year some friends and I go to the Ronald McDonald
House and spend time with the kids there. We put on a
little play from the Dr. Seuss story. I think we were
short on Whos last year."
He glanced at Deidre who said, "We'll stop at the video
store and get a copy to watch tonight."
"Be sure it's the cartoon," Deet replied. "Boris
Karloff is my favorite Grinch." He added to Jane, "I
want you to pay special attention to Cindy Lou Who when
we watch the video. The lady who usually does her is
getting a little old for the part and we really need a
new Cindy Lou."
Deet relaxed with a cup of hot cocoa and listened to
Boris Karloff's unique voice caress his mind. He had
stopped counting the number of presents he had wrapped
during the day when it reached four hundred. The session
with Dr. Tran seemed to have gone well because Eric and
Jane seemed more at ease with him and each other. The
chosen decorations were in four boxes in the foyer and
everyone helped carry the rest of the boxes back to the
attic. He'd called Manuel, expecting it to be something
of earth shattering importance only to find that his
friend had been thinking about a family dinner on the
river to enjoy the Christmas lights and confirmed that
Manuel would reserve one of the river barges for all of
them.
His call to Consuela dealt with the tutor. He had been
concerned about his choice because the man who most
impressed him turned out to be a distant cousin named
Pieter Musselman.
"I'm not sure how Judge Solari will react to my hiring a
relative," he told Consuela.
"Pete's my first choice," Consuela said. "I'll give
Manuel a letter of recommendation for him to give the
judge. I've known him for years. He's brilliant. He
gave up teaching in the system because he feels he can
have more influence in a one on one setting. He's one
of the more highly sought tutors in town and I'm sure
Judge Solari knows his reputation."
Things were, miraculously, falling into place.
Author's Note:
There are several beautiful old homes in the King
William District. The one I have chosen as my mental
image of the Graschel home is named `The Beauregard
House', an actual Bed and Breakfast Inn. I've driven by
it several times but a picture of it can be found with a
little web-surfing. I was looking for a gay friendly
BnB in town for a friend one evening and found a nice
picture of it among the many when I searched for `King
William District'.
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