Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Author: Scott (Page 86 of 104)

Day 58: the watchmaker (part 3)

“I don’t understand,” the man said, eyes wide, mouth open, lost in the winds of the market. He rolled other words around on his tongue, in his head, but nothing else sounded intelligent. He waited while the watchmaker looked at him. The two men sat there, neither wanting to make the first, wrong move.

The watchmaker was, at first, overwhelmed. He was unsure where to begin, how to explain a lifetime of a confidences to a man he had only known a half hour. The watchmaker felt a feeling he had not often experienced; doubt. He was unsure of his role, uneasy at being thrust into the middle of a story he did not know the ending of.

“Have you ever heard of the recipe?” the watchmaker asked, testing the waters. He searched the man’s eyes for recognition. There was none. The watchmaker let out a little sigh. This was going to be an uphill battle.

“It does make sense,” the watchmaker mumbled. “The Morse, the recipe, and all on the final night market of the season.” He looked up at the man. “You are the messenger of the revolution.”

“I am…I am not,” the man stammered. “I’m just a delivery man. I usually deliver food. Today, I delivered a watch. I am not a revolutionary.”

“You will be,” the watchmaker said, with sudden force. “You’ll have to be. If I am to reveal the recipe to you, as the message on the watch tells me, then it has already begun.”

“What is this recipe?” asked the man. He was still fearful, still confused, but the watchmaker’s confidence in him had given him a jolt. He was suddenly curious about the recipe, wanted to know this secret that had been trusted to him.

“The recipe is a map. It is a hidden series of landmarks spread throughout the city.” The watchmaker rose from his chair and went to one of the many file cabinets scattered around the workshop, taking a small keyring from his pocket.

“It leads to a building. A bit of a…hideout, if you will. It was constructed after the Great War, as a bit of a…ah! Here it is.”

The watchmaker finished flipping through the series of colored folders he had in the cabinet, and pulled out a solid yellow one. He glanced inside quickly, confirmed his selection, and returned to the man. He slid the folder across the surface of his workdesk, and the man reached for it.

“Ah, not yet, my friend,” said the watchmaker, pulling back on the folder slightly. “Just a few more important things. First, these papers are still a recipe. The answers are not spelled out – getting to the hideout will still require a bit of thinking on your part. But, they would not have sent you if you were not the right person for this.”

The man nodded, understanding. The watchmaker released his hold on the folder, and the man instinctively placed his hands on top. “Second, there will be others at the hideout. You may arrive before them, they may arrive before you. These others – you must trust them. There cannot be dissension among you. There must not.”

The two shared one final moment of silence, this one filled with mutual respect and the smallest sliver of hope. “Now go,” commanded the watchmaker, standing up from his chair. The man arose at once, secreting the folder into the darkness inside of his jacket. He wondered whether he should shake the watchmaker’s hand, wondered what the proper protocol was. But the watchmaker had already turned away, was looking in the cabinets along the back wall of his workshop.

The man left, as silently as he could, although the small bells attached to the top of the door announced his departure. The watchmaker’s eyes were still focused on his cabinets, where among his many tins of tea, he spied what he was looking for: a small vial, with a small handwritten label that read, “For When My Work is Done.”

Slowly, he pulled it out of the cabinet, closed the door, and twisted open the small cap. “Godspeed, Leonard Kinsman,” he said, softly, and emptied the contents into his mouth.

“Godspeed.”

Day 57: shakespearean comedies rewritten as tweets

A Midsummer Night’s Dream
fairies are fighting and four young horndogs are wandering around the forest. oh, and there’s a bad actor who turns into an ass!

Much Ado About Nothing
claudio wants hero so don pedro helps, but the real story is about benedick and beatrice and how they hate each other, but not really.

Taming of the Shrew
this got remade into 10 Things I Hate About You, so just watch that. except the play within a play part, which isn’t in the movie.

The Tempest
i don’t remember too much about this play, except that it wasn’t all that funny and had magic in it. and a crazy guy named Caliban.

Twelfth Night
shipwreck! girl dresses as guy for lovelorn king but ends up falling for him. her undead twin brother arrives. mass confusion and weddings.

The Merchant of Venice
unfunny courtroom drama concerning jewish people and pounds of meat. there’s cross-dressing in this one as well.

Pericles
did you even know shakespeare wrote this? all i know is that, from the title, pericles is the prince of tyre.

Day 56: the watchmaker (part 2)

As the man set down his teacup, a small smile crept over his face.  While the workshop was not warm, it did not have the blistering autumn winds that howled down the outdoor market alley, funneled and focused by the concentration of booths on either side.  And the tea was good, soothing, comforting.

The watchmaker was still bent over the timepiece, his hands making adjustments that resulted in tiny movements at the ends of his calipers and tweezers and other small instruments of the trade.

The man looked down at his cup, nearly empty, and gazed at the pattern of leaves on the bottom.

“It looks like you might be mistaken.  I may require another cup.”  The man’s voice was chiding, not aggressive, and the watchmaker looked up amused.  His eyes twinkled for a second before he trust his head down onto the timepiece, finding its voice, its song.

From this position, he spoke plainly to the man.  “I am not often mistaken, and it’ll take a trickier watch than this.”  He lifted his head and, in a final triumphant move, snapped the back onto the watch.

Tick.  Tick.  Tick.  Tick.

The ticking still seemed irregular but it was undoubtedly louder.

“Do you hear it?” the watchmaker asked.  The two men sat in silence for a half minute or so, the watchmaker looking eagerly at the larger man who’s face was crinkled in concentration.  Finally, the man shook his head.  No, he didn’t hear it.

“Ah, well, it’s a bit archaic.  Not used much anymore because it takes such a long time to say anything.  But it’s telling me right now that your name is Leonard Kinsman.  And that I’m to give you…”

The watchmaker trailed off, his face turning to confusion.  He looked down at the watch, then back at the man.  “That can’t be right,” he blurted.  He immediately looked ashamed at having said it, as if he had stepped outside the bounds of his purpose in this exchange.

“Do you know why you came to me?” he finally asked, after an awkward silence.  The other man was glad to have a question to answer, glad that he had not needed to provide words to fill the silence.

“No.  I was just told that I had to deliver this watch to you, and only you.  And that you would tell me what to do next.”  Even this brief sentence exhausted the man, and a look of fear began to enter his face.  He had so little knowledge and so little experience in these matters – or in most matters, for that matter – that he had felt lost every step of the way.

He had trouble finding the market alley, even though it was one of the busiest streets in the city.  He had not wanted to attract attention by asking other shopkeepers about the watchmaker, so he had wandered around aimlessly, looking for the telltale sign hanging above the workshop window.  He had been told that time – expecting that which the watch he carried told – was unimportant, but he was now worried that he had come too late, too early, too on-time.

The watchmaker, with more experience than he wanted, understood the man’s fear and said, “There’s no need to worry.  It’s just that…”  He trailed off again and thought.  “It’s just that you’ve become a very important man.”

Day 55: facts

We received 5/7th of our dining room set this past Saturday. I’ve put a photo of it at the bottom of this post.

There is way too much television on our DVR.

The watchmaker is a 3-part story that is a setup for bigger things to come.

Katie and I did in fact watch part of the Lifetime movie by Nora Roberts that starred Claire from Lost.

My fantasy baseball team’s batters can’t seem to make much contact with the ball so far.

We’re watching an episode of The Amazing Race called Gorilla? Gorilla? Gorilla?

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