“The flea,” that’s what the year-rounders call it, rummaging through tools or bric-a-brac then gossiping all day at their tables in the blistering sun, their faded beach umbrellas barely shading the tarmac. This is what my mother did in New Hampshire Sunday after widowed Sunday, into her eighties. Up at dawn, her wagon packed the night before— by noon, willing to mark down anything not to have to re-wrap and pack the whole kit and caboodle for the sticky hundred mile drive home…. Today, I pick up a teapot, white with a smattering of pink and black and aqua stars, its flawed glaze (a reject from the start), its jaunty asterisks, its moderne form, manufactured in Syracuse in the ’Fifties, pleases me, seven starry cups and five chipped star-studded dinner plates— ordinary optimistic dishes, probably used by one Cape Cod family for decades, only dings and cracks now to tell their homely provenance, their good usage and keep the price down. Not star-struck, my mother would have felt the edges’ roughness with her thumb and found them wanting. It wouldn’t have been the chips— she treasured her miniatures, her broken “minnies”— these just weren’t her thing. But like a ninny— I can make something of this, can’t I?—I buy the lot in her magpie memory, wrapped in old Globes, for what a cappuccino would cost, or a Parisian mystery. |
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