Vicki Lane's Blog, page 67
January 27, 2024
Tubby
More pictures from the long-forgotten stash. This is Tubby--my mother's dog when he was a girl. His name was familiar to me, mainly as a cautionary tale: poor Tubby contracted rabies--or hydrophobia as it was called back then--and had to be put down. And my grandmother had to have the dreaded series of shots in the belly that was the standard back then. I don't remember being told that she was bitten--just contact with the dog's saliva would have been enough.
This picture, presumably my mother's work--was it made after his death as a memorial? The fact that it, as well as these other pictures, was saved suggests a sad fondness.
Tubby must have been a nice dog --to be trusted with a rabbit as in the picture below.
But what a horrifying experience the rabies must have been. My grandparents never has another dog--until my grandfather developed a bond with John's and my beagle/spaniel mix who he cared for while we were in Europe for three months. When we returned, he would drive the 45 minute trip to our house outside Tampa, just to take Juno for a ride. And he always brought treats.
Finally, after we adopted two German Shepherd pups, we gave Juno to my grandfather and she settled in to a life of walks and constant spoiling.
January 26, 2024
The Flower Girl
1949
When I wassix, Dolly, my Great Aunt Mamie’s youngest, was getting married and Ba (mymaternal grandmother and Dolly’s aunt) and I rode the train from Tampa to Troy,Alabama. I was to be the flower girl and Ba, using her treadle Singer sewingmachine, had made me a dress of rosebud -sprinkled white satin with asweetheart neckline and puffed sleeves.
The trainride was enormously exciting—we had one of those little private compartmentswith (oh joy) a bed that let down from above the window. And making our shakyway along the rattling corridor to the dining car and its white tablecloths waslittle short of magic.
In Troy,Aunt Mamie’s house was overflowing with family and Ba and I were given a bed inthe attic, next to the big attic fan through whose opening we could hear thebuzz of activity below. (Many years later, when Ba was in her nineties,bedridden after a stroke, she kept saying that there was a wedding going ondownstairs.)
I remembernothing of the wedding but recall that at the reception I hung out with thering bearer, a little boy named Rusty. Was his hair dark red? I think so. Therewas a fella playing the piano and I asked him to play Home on the Range—myfavorite song at the time.
Over fiftyyears later, I had a letter from Dolly. She was facing terminal cancer and wasusing her time to contact everyone who’d ever been important in her life. Idon’t think I’d seen her since the wedding, but she thanked me lovingly for thepart I’d played on one of the happiest days of her life.
January 25, 2024
Foggy, Foggy
Rain and fog and more rain.
These pictures were taken at noon, as I returned from the grocery store. But it's not cold!
January 24, 2024
Josie Gets a Surprise and Loses a Tooth
Monday was a snow day and I stayed with Meema and Grumpy. I organized the two shelves where lots of my games and art supplies and craft stuff is (under the castle people.) I found some things I hadn't played with in a long time like this coloring book Sandy gave me. When I was little, I just scribble in it but Meema wiped away the scribbles and now I am good at staying in the lines mostly.
This is another fun thing. I stick jewels on this see through plastic, going by the pattern underneath.
See, it can stick on the window!
Of course I had to spend some time with the babies. Octalia is a very good babysitter.
Also I practiced flying. I am practicing so I can be a super-hero kindergarten teacher. I will wear a pretty pink dress and a blue cape. If villains come to my school, I will fight them with a green sword. I will win and the class will say YAY!
That was on Monday. We went back to school on Tuesday and on Wednesday, Meema picked me up. When we got back, there was a surprise waiting! Aunt Fay, who is Grumpy's sister, sent me Blackbeard to go with my Castle People!!!
I have been wanting another pirate so Captain Hook wouldn't be lonely. Now Captain Hook and Blackbeard can sword fight. (It is just for fun and they don't get hurt. They actually are friends.)
And guess what! I lost a front tooth. It has been wiggly for a long time. Daddy took this picture.
January 23, 2024
Looking East: Evening Light
January 22, 2024
At Last!
This beauty, a gift from Claui's folks, has been on our dining table since Thanksgiving. This bulb has made two stems and is finally flowering!
The other bulb in the planter is just now venturing a cautious green tongue out of the brown bulb. Odd that the two are on such different schedules. But, all the longer to enjoy them!
January 21, 2024
A Strange Novel
This novel, set at an elite English prep school and told from two points of view: one of the long-time masters, deeply entrenched in and loyal to the school, and the child of the school's porter/handyman, an outsider longing to be a part of the gilded youth who attend the school.
The novel resonated with me on several levels. I once taught at a prep school (though it was in no way as grandiose as this one and the inter-faculty scheming nothing like.) I also understood the porter's child sense of an outsider looking at an unattainable world. For several years I met classes with the Great Smokies Writing Program at The Asheville School--an expensive and elite boarding school with a glorious campus. At first I found myself wanting to grab every passing student and ask if they knew how fortunate they were to be there.
But this book. I found myself reading compulsively, caught up in the twists and turns of academic plotting, a most likeable teacher, and the wiles of an exceedingly clever child.
And then, about midway through, I began to feel a little sickened--as one might having gobbled down unwholesome food. I should have been warned by a blurb that compared the book to Patricia Highsmith's The Talented Mr. Ripley. Mr. Ripley gave me that same sense of queasiness--not from gratuitous sex or violence but from the pervasive amorality of the main character.
Nevertheless, I persevered. Events were tumbling together and the answers to several questions seemed close at hand. And then there was the most amazing twist--so amazing that I'm going to have to go back and look for any clues that might have hinted at this outcome.
I marvel at the intricacy of the plotting. Quite an interesting novel! Available as an ebook for 1.99
Addendum: I did go back--not precisely a re-read, but paging through paying attention to certain names to see how the deception was managed.
Brilliantly, that's how. I found my appreciation for the novel growing--to the point that I am tempted to download its sequel.
January 20, 2024
Brrrrrr!
January 19, 2024
Heading to the Single Digits
Big deal, my Canadian friends are saying. But weather this cold tests all our systems and keeps us on edge. Will we lose power? Will the pipes freeze? How long will the road to our house stay icy?
As of Friday noon, we have power and the water is still running. John has left his truck at the lower place, and the Kubota utility vehicle, with chains, can make it to our house. We have plenty of food and wood, should the power go out.
This, too, shall pass.
January 18, 2024
Mystery Photos from the Past
More snaps from the same cache, but this time there were no labels. I just liked these without knowing who these people were. This natty little boy caught my eye. Is that a banana tree in the background?
My mother and a friend? Could be. But I like the picture for its randomness and the two pelicans--a kind of an art film feeling to it.
This is such an unexpected pose--I wish I knew who the happy baby was. And how I admire the fond mother's ability to hunker!
A scooter (?) built for two. Again, it could be my mother. Or not. She's very serious, whoever she was.


