DeadManTyping
Really Really Experienced
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2016
- Posts
- 401
"I'm not sure that Jake wants children right now. He's never been much interested in babies or toddlers.”
Gregor was conflicted about Grace’s response to his question about why she and her husband didn’t have any children or -- because they hadn’t been married long -- didn’t simply have one on the way.
Grace’s culture was so different that his. There were only two kinds of Romani women in the Family: those who already had children and those who hadn’t yet had them but soon enough would. Children were more important to his people than even money, though Jake and his kind might not think that possible. Hell, even Marla had a Romani man eagerly waiting to marry her and fill her belly with children once her body and talents no longer served her.
"Jake has dreams.”
Gregor listened to Grace’s description of her husband’s career goals, and he had the same thought that she was having: Grace was living for Jake, not for herself.
When she explained her existence before Jake, Gregor really began to feel for her. It seemed as though she had spent her entire life serving others. She had a love for her siblings, that was obvious. But there was a difference between loving others and slaving away for them.
"I begged Jake for a while to let me bring Sarah and Maudie to our home. He never liked the idea."
“You could bring them here if you wished,” Gregor said without hesitation. His tone was serious and sincere. He smiled to Grace as he waited for her to meet his gaze. “Little’uns fantasize about running away with the circus. We’re like the circus, in a way. Gypsies.”
His smile became a bit more flirtatious … suggestive. “Would you like to be a gypsy, Grace? Run away?”
Gregor almost said Run away with me, but he knew that would sound not just too forward but ridiculous as well. He may have been ready and eager to have Grace in his life, but … well, he was a gypsy! He and his life weren’t the things about which a grown woman like Grace fantasized.
*****************
”Papa."
Jason flinched and spun to find the woman for whose hand he’d just asked standing behind him. His eyes grew and his face went white as she addressed Connie…
"Uncle."
How much of their conversation had Inga heard? Well, it didn’t really matter how much. Fact was, the last thing out of Jason’s mouth had been his asking for her hand.
"Give us a moment, Jason."
“Of course,” Jason said.
He backed a step, half turned, looked between the three, then turned and walked swiftly back toward his home. He glanced back over his shoulder at the trio as Inga addressed them. He wished he could hear what was happening. But surely, Inga would come to him with the gist soon enough
"I have payment if that is what you will demand.”
Papa Don gave his granddaughter his full attention. He had known, of course, that Inga -- like many of the Romani -- had squirreled away a small fortune over the years. Cash was king among the gypsies, just with non-Romani, and ready money was more often than not the best way to take the greatest advantage of spontaneous situations.
It wasn’t really the money situation that concerned Papa Don the most, and as if knowing what was filling his mind, Inga continued…
"And I understand that this is sudden, that it's unusual for a Romani to want to settle down, but he does make me happy. Perhaps more happy than I've been in a long time."
Papa Don was happy to hear that. And while he had had full faith in his granddaughter’s choices in the past, he questioned whether or not she could make such an important decision after such a short time.
“Happiness is fleeting,” Papa Don said cryptically. “You say this man makes you happy … and I believe this may be true. But … to leave the Family … to become a plantă înrădăcinată...”
Despite Papa Don -- and many others in the Family -- having abandoned their First Languages, be they Romanian, German, Greek, or otherwise, there were still certain words and phrases that all the gypsies retained and understood. And rooted like a plant -- this Romani Family’s phrase for people like Jason who were bound to the land, for better or worse, was one of those sayings.
He continued, “Is this truly what you want, child?”
He used the last word to remind Inga that -- compared to him or, even more significantly, to his 18 years more senior Connie -- she was still so young.