I stopped stirring a bowl of brownie batter and ripped open the envelope.
“Now, wait a minute,” Oletta said, propping her hands on her hips. “You can’t just stop stirring the brownies like that. They got to be mixed real good.”
I pulled out a kitchen chair and plopped down at the table. “I did.”
She shook her head, gave the batter a few quick stirs, and shot me a look that said,
Oh, no, you didn’t.
I unfolded the letter and read:
Dearest CeeCee,
You’ll never believe what has happened. I called a realty company to sell my house. When the agent came to see it, he bought it as a wedding gift for his daughter and her new husband.
I’m taking the bus and moving to Kissimmee, Florida, to live with my cousin Adele. I called your aunt Tallulah and asked if I could stop by and see you for a few days, and she invited me to stay for as long as I wanted. So I’ve decided to come for two weeks.
I can’t wait to see you.
All my love,
Mrs. O
I jumped from my chair and yelped, “Oh, my gosh!”
Oletta jolted. “You about scared me to death. What are you all whipped up about?”
“Mrs. Odell is coming to Savannah.” I pressed her letter to my chest and danced in a circle.
On the morning of Mrs. Odell’s arrival, I woke to the steady growl of a lawnmower. When I came down the stairs and stepped into the second-floor hallway, Oletta was making the bed in one of the guest rooms. The faint scent of lavender linen water—lavishly sprinkled on the sheets at the time they were ironed—floated in the upstairs hallway like a half-remembered dream.
“Good morning,” I said, walking in to help her.
“Well, if it ain’t Miz Lazybones. It’s half past nine.”
Knowing how much it annoyed her if I wasn’t dressed and ready for breakfast by eight-thirty, I looked at her sheepishly. “I’m sorry, Oletta.”
“That’s okay. Give me a minute to finish up, and I’ll make you some French toast.”
“Thanks, but I’m not very hungry. I think I’ll just have some fruit.” I tucked a pillow into its case and fluffed it up. “I can’t wait to see Mrs. Odell. It feels like I haven’t seen her in years.”
“That’s how it is when you love someone. I’m sure she’s as excited as you are.”
After straightening the coverlet, we headed down the stairs.
While I sat at the kitchen table and peeled an orange, I looked out the window and watched Aunt Tootie. She was bent over with her rear to the sky, cutting flowers. The vision took me back to the memories I had of Mrs. Odell working in her garden, and the thought of seeing my old friend in just a few hours made me so happy I thought I’d burst.
We arrived at the terminal a half hour before Mrs. Odell’s bus was scheduled to arrive, Aunt Tootie in a soft yellow linen dress and a straw hat and me in a periwinkle blue sundress and white, ballet-style leather shoes. From a bench by a window we sat and watched weary travelers waiting for their suitcases to be pulled from the bellies of buses that were lined up in the parking lot.
I was so excited, I kept banging my knees together. “How will we know which bus is hers?” I asked.
“I believe her bus number is eighty-three.” Aunt Tootie pulled a paper from her handbag and squinted. “Yes, that’s it. Eighty-three.” She slipped the paper back inside her handbag and patted my knee. “Guess what, sugar? I’ve got a special event planned for Thursday. Several of my friends are opening their gardens in honor of Gertrude’s visit. Isn’t that sweet of them? We’ll start with a luncheon at our house, then we’ll visit the other gardens and finish up at Thelma Rae’s for desserts and refreshments.”
“Look! I think she’s here.” I jumped from the bench and ran to the window as a bus rolled into the parking lot. “She is! It’s bus number eighty-three.”
Aunt Tootie stood. “All right, let’s go out. But don’t run toward the bus. Just wait till everyone gets off.”
“Okay,” I said, tugging at her arm.
A handful of tired-looking travelers climbed off the bus, gathered their suitcases, and headed for the terminal, but Mrs. Odell wasn’t among them. “Oh, dear, I wonder what happened,” my aunt said. “I’d better go in and see if I made a mistake when I wrote down the information.”
Just then the bus driver climbed back onto the bus. My heart rolled over as I watched him help Mrs. Odell down the steps, one slow movement at a time. I waved my arms and called out, “Mrs. Odell. Mrs. Odell!”
When she looked up and saw me, she smiled the smile I had loved for all my life. I took off running and made a beeline across the parking lot. Mrs. Odell opened her arms, and I soared right into them. I buried my face in her shoulder and breathed her in. She smelled of freshly ironed cotton, exactly as I remembered.
“Oh, it’s good to hold my little pal again. I’ve missed you so much, Cecelia.”
Hardly believing this moment was real, I leaned back to look at her face. A runaway tear traveled along Mrs. Odell’s chin. It ran down her neck and disappeared behind the slightly frayed collar of her thin cotton dress—a dress that surely began its life long before I was born.
The first few days of Mrs. Odell’s stay in Savannah were fi lled with morning sightseeing tours followed by lunches out on the back porch. One afternoon three friends of Aunt Tootie’s stopped by to meet Mrs. Odell. The first was Estelle Trent, whom I’d met, and coming up the walk right behind her were two women I didn’t recognize. Aunt Tootie introduced them as Agnes White and Lottie Donahue, both members of the Historic Savannah Foundation. All three ladies arrived with gifts in hand: Estelle with a vase of fresh-cut flowers, Agnes with a jar of homemade jam with a ribbon tied around the top, and Lottie with a loaf of bread, still fragrant with yeast and warm from the oven.
As I watched all the comings and goings and listened to the charming “Welcome to Savannah’s” and the heartfelt “I’m so pleased to meet you’s” that dripped like honey from these women’s lips, I realized that Southern hospitality not only came from the heart but was a practiced social art that had been passed down from one generation to the next—like fine silverware or china. Southerners had a way of doing things that made you feel special, and Mrs. Odell soaked in every drop of the kindness.
The luncheon Aunt Tootie had arranged was a huge success, and before beginning the garden tour, Mrs. Odell was presented with an official Ladies of Savannah Garden Club hat. The hat, which was the size of a turkey platter and crafted from finely woven straw, had a cluster of white silk flowers pinned to the garden club’s signature pink-grosgrain band. All the women clapped when Mrs. Odell put it on her head, and to see Mrs. Odell wear that hat as she strolled through the lush private gardens, well, my heart puffed up like a cherry popover is all I can say.
Mrs. Odell liked the hat so much she took to wearing it every day. And once, when I walked by her room just before bed, I saw her sitting on the chair reading a magazine, wearing a nightgown with the hat on her head. Her feet were propped on a footstool, and stuck to the sole of one of her slippers was a price tag that read: SALE 75¢.
It was an image I would carry with me for the rest of my life.
One afternoon while Aunt Tootie and Mrs. Odell were sitting in the living room talking, I wandered to the back porch to read for a while. When I stepped out the door, I was startled when something flew in front of my face. I jumped back to see a huge dusty cobweb hanging from the porch ceiling like an old fishing net.
From the pantry I gathered a broom and stepstool. While brushing the web away, I heard music weaving through the tree branches. I smiled to myself and wondered if one of Miz Goodpepper’s plants was feeling poorly.
A few minutes later Miz Goodpepper appeared on the far side of the patio. She was wearing a long, fi lmy white cocoon of a dress. The fabric was so gauzy I could see the shadowed outline of her body beneath. As I watched her approach, I felt that same magnetic pull and strange fascination I had experienced when I first laid eyes on her.
“Hello, darling,” she said, smiling her ever-knowing, catlike smile as she climbed the steps. “What are you doing?”
“Cleaning cobwebs.”
Her eyes widened. “You’re not killing any spiders, are you?”
“No, ma’am,” I said, stepping down from the stool.
“Good. Spiders are such wonderful, misunderstood creatures. It’s terrible how they’ve been demonized over the years. Did I ever introduce you to Matilda?”
“Who’s that?”
She sat in one of the chairs and crossed her legs. “Matilda’s a beautiful yellow garden spider who’s taken up residence in my jasmine trellis. She’s been with me for two years. I’m enormously fond of her. Last week she spun a new web that spans from the trellis to my statue of Persephone. When the afternoon sun hits it just right, the web looks like lace that’s been made from strands of silver light. You’ll have to come see it. Matilda is a true artist—a highly advanced spirit in the spider kingdom.”
I looked at the dusty cobwebs that covered the broom in my hand, and tried to think of something to say.
“The other day I was playing a violin concerto for my dogwood tree and noticed that Matilda was weaving her web in tune to the music. She never missed a single nuance. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if she reincarnates as a fine musician. I can picture her poised at a grand piano, her nimble fingers blazing through a Mozart sonata. It was such a splendid moment that I believe I had a tiny glimpse at nirvana.”
I leaned against the porch rail. “Did you know there’s a place called nirvana in Idaho?”
“Idaho!” She fell back in the chair, all laughter and legs. “Oh, Cecelia, you never cease to delight me.”
“Well, there is. I brought in the mail the other day, and on the cover of one of Aunt Tootie’s magazines it said there was a place in Idaho called Serenity Gardens. And they have some kind of water garden that’s named Little Nirvana. So I figured that’s where it was.”
“Well, nirvana
is
a place of serenity, but it’s not an external place. It’s a state of perfect calm and acceptance where we join the eternal rhythm. Nirvana represents the final goal of Buddhism.” Miz Goodpepper looked into the sky. “But it takes many, many lifetimes to get there.”
“Well, too bad it’s not in Idaho; then you could go there right away.”
She laughed and shook her head. “Cecelia, you always brighten my day. I wish you’d come over and spend more time with me.”
I picked cobwebs from the broom bristles and flicked them over the porch rail. “I will, after Mrs. Odell goes to Florida.”
“Oh,” she said, rising to her feet, “I got so lost in our conversation, I almost forgot. I have a little something for Gertrude. Is she here?”
I escorted Miz Goodpepper into the house and led her down the hallway to the living room. She reached into the pocket of her dress and pulled out a small narrow box tied with a blue ribbon. “For you, Gertrude.”
Inside was a silver bookmark. Mrs. Odell smoothed her fingers over its surface and smiled. “It’s just beautiful, Thelma. Thank you.”
Miz Goodpepper reclined on the sofa. “When we all got together after the garden tour, Cecelia mentioned how much you loved to read.”
“Yes, I do. But I’ve never had such a lovely bookmark.”
“It’s quite old; my guess is that it was probably made during the1880s.”
“So was I,” Mrs. Odell said with a chuckle.
“I’m fascinated with antiques,” Miz Goodpepper said, bathing in a pool of soft light from the window. “I find there’s a sweet sorrow in objects that have slipped away from their original owners. Years ago I began to collect antique perfume bottles. I’d scour estate sales and antique shops, and every time I’d find one and bring it home, I’d wonder whose fingers had first wrapped around it, what she dreamed about, what she looked like . . . if she was happy.”
There was a thoughtful stillness about Miz Goodpepper as she gazed out the window. “Once, when I was holding one of those beautiful bottles in my hand, I got a fleeting glimpse of the woman who owned it. It was like the fringed edge of a fading dream. Anyway,” she said, fluffing her dress, “when I was browsing through that darling shop over on Tattnall yesterday, I saw the bookmark and thought you might like it.”
“Oh, I do,” Mrs. Odell said, smoothing her fingers over its surface. “I’ll cherish it.”
Not ten minutes after she excused herself and left for home, Miz Hobbs blew in through the back door without so much as knocking. She was wearing a frightful green floral dress, and in her hands she held a gift box of sugar-coated pecans.
“I just hate bein’ the last one to meet your friend,” she said, tugging at her dress, “but I’ve been havin’ such awful headaches lately. The doctor said they’d go away once the swelling in my brain went all the way down.” She laughed and patted my shoulder. “Who knew a brain could swell? Do you suppose I’ll get any smarter?”