Letters and Tops
Your Uncle Emiel will be arriving today, boys
Father at breakfast
gave them all a stern look over
a steaming spoonful of porridge
I want no trouble from you
Yes, father
Willem?
The jerk of a head, eyes wide
spoon halted mid-scrape
Yes, father?
Are we to have a repeat of your disgraceful behavior as Mevrouw van Braam was a guest in this house?
No
No father
A slight flush rising
guilty eyes quickly lowered and trained on the porridge bowl
Jacob
was unsure of precisely what Willem had done
but it had not escaped the
all-seeing eye of their father
not for one moment
Did father know about the night-sound, too?
I hope not. Your uncle is a naval officer, unused to disrespectful, childish behavior. Remember that, or the rod will remember your backsides.
Yes, father
That goes for all of you.
Yes, father
Mother said nothing
a thin napkin
patting her lips
Uncle Emiel
Mother's brother was
the man who posted letters from places with
names difficult to pronounce, letters
she never read aloud in the dusk of the evening
like she sometimes read aloud from
the thick-paged, heavy Bible
The small, white letters with dark brown seals were for silent
reading and for keeping tied together
with a smooth green ribbon
in a special box
Uncle Emiel was something for Mother alone
In the monotone days of summer
Jacob
had spent much time playing near the juniper bushes
making up stories and games with twigs and sticks
that he collected
gave names to
This one was Mijnheer Long Neck, that one Mevrouw Giggles
The rougher games of his older brothers
which often ended in torn breeches, claps about the ears
he ignored
preferring his own company and the friends sticks and leaves became
He was a strange boy
that's what the housemaid had said to the washerwoman
as they had stood chatting over the low wall at the side
of the cobbled stable yard
The washerwoman had been smoking a short, fat-bellied pipe and
Jacob
had wanted to see it more closely
A strange boy, she had said
He wondered what that meant
Now that the rainy days of autumn had settled in
Jacob played inside, losing himself for hours
in the spinning of his wooden top
Occasionally one of his brothers would kick it under
a sideboard or a bed
to make Jacob cry
but Jacob would only stare at the offender
slowly get up
retrieve his top
and continue playing
And it was his top he was playing with
when Uncle Emiel arrived in the black, swaying carriage
the drizzle of late morning making
the sky look like the grey, down stuffings
pulled
from a pillow
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