Crumbs From the Corner: Adventures in Woolgathering

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Lost Scene



On Christmas Day, Mater and I got acquainted with our respective, shiny new webcams. Now, all of a sudden, she could see me and I could see her; and we had a grand time looking at each another's surroundings- I at the familiar homestead in the darkest, bitterest depths of an Irish winter, and she at the sunlight streaming in the window behind me.
"You've got sunshine," she said, a muffled sob. "Lashings of it! In December!"
"Sorry," I said.
At times the camera worked well, other times hardly at all- the picture frequently got scrambled. When I could again see a clear image of the living room I asked, "What's that on the shelf behind you?"
"A handmade peacock," said Mater. "Would you like to see it up close?"
I said that I would; and over the telephones I distinctly heard Mater stand up to fetch it.
I watched that tiny window for nigh on thirty minutes: Mater, I do declare, never moved from her chair. The peacock remained a dark shadow on the shelf.
"Here it is," Mater said, "I'm waving it at the camera. Can you see it?"
I explained that I still saw her in her original sitting down position; Mater, surprised, said that she had travelled and returned, peacock in hand.
Thus a great debate was struck on the concepts of time and peacocks.
"I can still see you before you fetched the peacock," I said. "The old you."
Mater was perplexed and awed at the singular notion; more so when the minutes dragged on and Mater put the peacock back on the shelf and I was obliged to continually remark that I had not yet seen her stand up to get it. We waited for the moment, fleeting and outwardly innocuous as it might have been, to catch up with us.
But I never did see Mater get the peacock; later on she waggled her fingers and told me she was doing so, and I glimpsed that slight action as she spoke; so the peacock moment had been irrevocably lost somewhere in the middle. But why, and to where had it flown?
Later that evening, when Mater was tucked up in bed and dawn was edging towards Ireland, I wrote her a brief note.
I suggested that she ought to be asleep at the time of writing; unless, I added as an afterthought, she was still busy fetching the peacock.
And somewhere out there- who knows- she just might be.

4 comments:

Pauline said...

That was too funny - and too peculiar! I wonder where that image is? Happy New Year to you!

Phyllis Hunt McGowan said...

Pauline, we may never know. It might show up months from now, surprising us all!

Pappy said...

Ah, the mysteries of modern technology. My cell phone is so old they don't make parts for it anymore. Occasionally it will give me a message several days old and pretend that someone just sent it. I hated to rent digital DVDs and have the picture hang up right at the critical part of the movie. I've noticed digital television does the same thing at times. I suppose it is solar activity. Perhaps on your next visit you can try and find Mater and the Peacock. Pappy

Phyllis Hunt McGowan said...

Texican, and I bet your cell phone works better than most newer ones. It's tough to find a cell phone these days that allows you to make calls. They'll do everything else, even clean your house for you, but the telephone part is bonus.

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