Flowers like warriors

She was walking towards me like a soldier. So upright with two greatly wrapped packages of flowers clasped within her right arm tightly, an orange Hermès scarf (the signature colour of the maison) hung in loose folds, perfectly aligned to shroud her cashmere kissed neck. 

“Bonjour,” I began with a friendly head tilt…Already she was surprised, ready to stride by this unknown person but she glanced at my Sonia Rykiel bag, a totem from another time and so allowed my gaze as such to settle while I continued in my most carefully articulated French, “Excuse me, but where did you buy those flowers?”

You see, I was in need of such flowers because I was in need of Spring. Hungry for it actually and nothing that I had in my current pharmacy – no music, no spices added to eggs, no charming flirtation would do. 

She again eyed the clues of my outwardly presentation to see what what would do as an introductory phrase. “Well. There is a man who sells these. I think that he as already left his usual spot. On the Place des Corps Saints…”

“Oh, the kind man with the cart?” I exhaled with a bit of a relief. She looked again at my handbag once more.

“Yes.” Pause. “But he must be gone from there by now. If you are lucky you might find him in front of the Rue de la République. Perhaps in front of Sephora.”

I found that latter bit of information a bit dubious or worse, an insult. Something of a worm on a line to an American fish in warm water. But, after a quick merci, I followed the bait to the store (with a gaggle of sparkly face masked adolescents waiting in front due to COVID) but he was not there. Without success and yet curiosity lifted, I continued on towards his usual address. I am not often wrong with my instinctual GPS.

And yet, no. But yet, yes? For out of the corner of my eye (quite literally), I spied a swirl of colour, floral through and through in a side street two steps beyond.

Think of his cart as if it were a very large dining room table, one punctuated with iron vases holding nothing but the most glorious flowers. He is a known figure in Avignon. As he does not have the expense of renting a shop, he can offer so much beauty at a lesser price, all while reeling it around, charming the passerby.

Surprisingly, his cart was pushed up entirely against the entry of a Creole takeaway shop. Reggae was pulsing beyond the counter. He was chatting busily with two other customers, both female, already clutching bouquets. Each were sipping out of tiny plastic cups.

I took a turn around the cart, sizing up the options that were available in equation with my desire. I am a white flower woman usually as they bring me much needed peace but on this day his light pink roses gave me the bisous that I needed them to.

“Can you forgive me for interrupting your coffee break long enough so that I might buy this bouquet?” I offered. I know very well in France, even after all these years, that I might well be met with a very hard refusal. A “non.” 

“You could but as I am not drinking coffee that would be complicated.” He offered this calmly but his two other clients began to giggle.

“It is Ti-punch. Do you you know it?” he asked. Indeed I did, having tasted it in Cayenne in the French Amazon. It brings quite a hit, that spiced rhum. And true, sometimes we need this particular heat now, in some form or the other. A swift kick of feeling to remember and not to forget.

While I declined his offer, I held within me that gesture of kindness as I headed home, roses tucked down-facing under my arm. So big as to be superfluous and slightly preposterous. “These are Liza Minelli roses,” I thought. “End of a long show hardness…yet still here.” Then I hummed a bit from “Cabaret.” It might have been, “Maybe this time.”

The paper rustled, the thorns pricked. There was a barely perceptible waft of the petaled perfume.

Once in the door, I cut the package open and it felt like I was doing the same to my heart. These flowers like warriors, coaxing me forward. Not yet towards hope but just on to the next day when that might seem a little less of an insult to the current state of affairs. A stern statement of pink propaganda propped in an antique vase.

Each morning upon waking I glance over to their shadowy forms in the half dark to see if their heavy heads have fallen. Not yet, not yet, not yet. And so I pull myself up from under the covers to make my coffee. To start the day and so doing, begin again.

You can hear an audio recording of the above post: here.

This seems such an incredibly odd moment as we accept that we have been through an entire year of COVID and that we are the very lucky ones to have survived. For many of us, we are only really beginning to understand the heft of that now. Plus all that we have lost – or no – otherwise.

There are no simple words that can make anything right again save our intentions which may drive us. 

Please, I ask of me and of us all…may we find our way to believe. In such small moments, we strengthen an undeniable truth that there is still good to be found. May we try. 

Soon to come, gently, maybe or not…we can ask what we might have gained.

With all of my love to you. 

Be kind, be safe, be well. Be you.

– Heather

12 comments

  1. I have been looking for flowers. on my walks in the neighborhood, when I travel to the countryside to see my small horse, nothing on the ground, or on the trees. After this awful year I am hoping today will mark a new beginning, I will get my second vaccination and I will seek out flowers, if not in nature in the market to mark the occasion. Darby

  2. So many doors, so many doorways, in and out, coming and going. And yet we think we have been stuck and static all year. Good times a-comin', oh my oh my, bye and bye. We've come this far, we can get the rest of the way.
    A lovely book, recommended by a writer friend: "Wintering", by Katherine May. Message is, it's OK to have fallow periods. Out of those come new beginnings.
    And I was hoping for a picture of the roses. Also hoping we'll be able to travel again this year (not for a while just yet).

  3. Hope springs eternal through your mellow prose, dear Heather. Enjoy the pink roses and when the heads drop … as they must … snip them off and jam them together in a shallow glass bowl. More pleasure to come then. xoxo

  4. P.S. I (and parts of my family have been jonesing around in both Haiti and New Orleans since the 18th century) am sorta delighted/appalled at the notion of a "Creole Take-Away". I can promise you that my VERY southern grandmother and great aunts would all purse their lips and murmur something about one's never knowing how the babies will turn out, so to speak.

    I sorta love this notion of a "Creole take-out"……one just goes there and picks up a Creole to take home? My staunchly Anglo-Catholic grandmother would be horrified.

    I know, i know….I've just let myself in for a scolding…..

    —–david terry

  5. P.S. i just tried to send it by your yahoo mail account. google just blocked it. What shall i do?

    —–david terry

  6. Dear Heather,

    I'll read this posting fter writing this. TO what address should I send the portrait of you and your dogs, sitting high on that Provence hillside? I painted it as a gift for you. I'll send you a private email with it as an attachment. I gather that one can't attach pictures here.

    Do let me know, and i hope you are keeping well.

    All best wishes, as ever,
    David Terry

  7. Such a beautiful post to commemorate one year – is commemorate the right word? Seems celebratory; to mark, maybe. We are still here! Taking things one day at a time, and seeking out the little pleasures to help us get by. And, yes to silver linings! And to making me belt out "Maybe This Time"! : )

  8. Once again, Heather, you have portrayed a poignant story, but at the same time one of hope, reminding us of all the beauty and flavors that still abound. I am currently reading a book that takes place in India, and it seems as if conversations among women can be like a chess game. Your interaction with the well coiffed lady reminded me of that. I adore the photograph of the dormant vine on the stone structure.

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