I'm posting this earlier than usual, and more than usual, because we are off to Yorkshire to help our daughter's family out.
Our baby grandson, Arran, is in the hospital with a collapsed lung, and is in an oxygen tent, with all sorts of tubes going in him. He is very ill. So, although I know that most of you are not involved in religion, any positive vibes you might send his way would be appreciated. I don't know if praying helps, but I don't know that it doesn't, so I have been doing a lot of it.
September 26, 1910
After our sumptuous evening meal, although I could eat only a small portion of the food we were served, we went to the telephone corner of the ladies' lounge once more.
“What number do you require?”
“Please could I have 446?”
“Your number is ringing.”
Again it seemed to go on and on, but finally someone did answer. Someone who was out of breath and could hardly speak.
“Hello,” she said.
I went through the first part of my prepared talk again, mentally bracing myself for yet another failure.
“You must be our cousin then,” she said.
“You mean you really are related to Sydney and Coralinn Clinton?”
“Yes, they were my parents. Oh, this is so exciting! We didn’t know we had any relatives called Temple. How are we related?”
“My father Mark was your mother’s brother. I think she must have been his favorite sister because he named my sister after her. She is called Cora Sue Kellogg.”
“Oh, you’re Cora Sue’s sister. I remember now that she said she had a sister somewhere out East. But she doesn’t live here with us anymore.”
“Do you know where she lives now?”
“No, I don’t. But it is silly, us doing this talking over the phone. Can you and your mother-in-law come and join us for supper on Saturday? I’m sorry I can’t make it earlier than that but one or the other of us is out the rest of this week. We have very busy lives - whist groups, reading groups, church groups, music groups - and it would be a shame if you couldn’t meet all of us.”
“Yes, that would be fine. We will see you on Saturday. What sort of time?”
“Oh, we eat at six on the dot, but come over earlier and we can have a chin wag before the meal.”
“You'll have to give me the address.”
“Oh, silly me. I somehow thought that because you had our phone number you would have had our address too. It’s 5 Cherry Creek Road. And where are you staying?”
“At the Brown Palace Hotel.”
“Oh, you must be rich, then. Sorry, I didn’t mean to say that. It just came out. Anyway, from there, you would go west along 17th Ave East, then left on Colorado Boulevard, and right at East 3rd Avenue, and then left again at Cook St. Our house is yellow, and has quite a big porch. You can’t miss it. But perhaps it would be easier if you took a taxi. It is about two miles. I don’t know how old you are or anything.”
“Yes,” I laughed, “I think we are both sufficiently old and rich to be able to justify taking a cab to come to see you. But it will be useful to have the directions anyway, to tell the driver.”
“I can’t wait to tell my sisters. What is your first name again?”
“Mattie - short for Martha. And my mother-in-law is Kate Temple.”
“I am Ruth. I’m the youngest. I was only a teenager when your sister was staying with us. My other sisters are Carrie, who is the oldest - named after our mother.”
“I remember meeting some of Aunt Cora’s children when you still lived in Wisconsin. I was born in 1864 so that makes me 46.”
“Oh, I am much younger than you then. I was born in 1880. Carrie is 51, Jessie is 45, about the same age as you, as is Minnie, who is 46. She is a widow but as her kids left home, she came to live with us. None of the rest of us have been married.”
“I am so looking forward to meeting you all. It is so nice to have relatives. I have so few, and have lost contact with nearly all that I do have.”
“We’ll see you on Saturday then. And I will get the others to put their thinking caps on to see if they can come up with any clues as to where Cora Sue might have gone.”
“Thank you so much. I can’t tell you how important it is for me to find my sister again. I haven’t heard a word from her since 1900. You don’t think she died do you?”
“Certainly not. Don’t even think like that. We will find her for you, one way or the other. That’s what relatives are for.”
“Goodbye Ruth, and thank you again. See you Saturday.”
Chapter 13
September 26, 1910
Thursday morning we spent walking around the town, seeing the various landmarks, and just enjoying the wonderful scenery and weather. The 26 square blocks of Lower Downtown is where we were told to explore, not that we intended to do anywhere near that amount of walking.
Denver brags of a mild, dry climate, with an average of 300 days of sunshine a year – the sixth sunniest city in the US. We were told that the temperature today is to get as high as 64º - very pleasant for the time of year. We were told to drink lots of water because of being unaccustomed to the high altitude. They said, enjoy the blue sky; there is less water vapor in the air so the sky really is bluer.
For lunch we went to a restaurant called the Buckhorn Exchange. It caught my eye because it mentioned Buffalo Bill in the advertisement in the window.
What a revelation when we went inside. It has hundreds of stuffed animal heads on the walls. We sat down and ordered, and then I asked the waiter why all the heads were there.
“The founder of this restaurant is called Shorty Zietz, and he was a one-time member of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. Buffalo Bill frequently came to eat here and so did President Teddy Roosevelt Maybe you ladies would like to order Buffalo Bill’s favorite cocktail,” he said teasingly.
“A Stone Fence,” I said.
“No, but what made you say that?” he asked.
“I met him, way back in 1883 when he was first starting out with his Wild West show. I did an interview for a newspaper about his show.”
“So what is in a Stone Fence then?”
“Vodka, lemon and cider.”
“This one is bourbon and apple juice.”
“I expect he had lots of favorite drinks,” said Kate.
“I’ll just have a plain apple juice,” I said.
“Me, too,” added Kate.
“Well have a look at the menu and try something different,” he said. “Buffalo Bill would be proud of you, if he thought you ate a buffalo steak.”
We laughed as he went away and we perused the menu. It is really quite a place. There are guns, historic photos and Old West mementos on the walls, while the tables feature red-checkered tablecloths. The menu has buffalo, elk, quail and even rattlesnake.
“Try Rocky Mountain Oysters, which are deep fried bull's testicles,” our waiter said as he walked back.
“No, thank you,” we both said without a shadow of doubt.
Feeling we had to get into the spirit of the occasion, Kate ordered quail and I said I would like a small portion of elk. We both opted for fried potatoes and a salad - which they said they would try to rustle up. Obviously not something normally asked for here. But they did their best with some grated carrot and raisins, and we thoroughly enjoyed our meal.
Afterwards we walked by a very interesting tall building. We asked a passerby what it was and were told it was the D and F Clock tower - part of the Daniels and Fisher department store, but based on a 2/3 replica of the Campanile of St. Marks in Venice.
I had already taken my six pictures from my Brownie camera - some on the train and some when we first arrived. I spotted what might be a useful shop along the road. The Duhem Brothers Photography Studio. We went inside, and I asked to have my current film processed, and bought another two cameras - one for me and one for Kate.
“It will take a few days for these to get done,” the man said.
“We will check back next Monday if that is convenient,” I said.
“Oh, we will make sure to have them done by then.”
I also bought some postcards and sent one to Franklin and another to Frankie.
We then remembered that we had a date for tea at the hotel at 3, so we hurried home to change and rest a bit before we met the other Clintons.
Chapter 14
It was quarter to three when we returned to the lobby but my instinct told me that our friends had already arrived. A couple stood by the door. He had a huge cowboy hat on, and she was dressed in a very fancy dress - and very much over done up for the occasion.
I walked over to them.
“Hello. I wonder if you are Mr. Clinton? I am Mrs. Mattie Temple.”
“Yes, Ma’am,” he said, finally taking off his cowboy hat, but he promptly put it back on again, and Mrs. Clinton didn’t seem to see anything wrong with that.
“My name is Walter and this here is my wife Isobella.”
“How do you do,” I said to her. “Please let me present my mother-in-law, Mrs. Kate Temple.”
Isobella sort of half curtsied, as if we were royalty, and I had to stifle a giggle.
“It was so kind of you to be so helpful and friendly with us on the phone yesterday,” I said, “and we have good news. We managed to contact my cousins last night.”
Walter looked crestfallen. “Oh, that's good. Only we thought of all sorts of ways you might have traced Mrs. Cora Clinton that was the wife of Sydney, but now I suppose you don’t even want to know.”
“It is her daughters that we talked to last night. She died apparently in Los Angeles, as you said, but they wanted to move back here to be near their roots. They said there was no city quite like Denver.”
I made up that last bit, but I wanted to try to lift Walter’s mood again and thought that mentioning how nice his city was might do the trick.
“Now why don’t we all go into the lobby and have tea,” said Kate.
She ushered them to the very impressive atrium lobby where tea was about to be served. The pianist and harpist were audible in the background. There were about 10 tables also waiting this occasion. A waitress dressed in black with a white frilly apron and headdress showed us to a table for four. Walter sat down heavily, still not removing his hat.
Our waitress smiled as she provided us each with a menu. She didn’t seem at all concerned about the inappropriateness of our guest’s apparel.
Kate ordered English Twinnings tea, listed on the menu as their specialty, and I asked for a cup of hot water with lemon. We asked for a selection of scones, tea pastries and tea sandwiches for us all to share.
“I’d really like a beer,” said Walter.
“Shh, you can’t have that here,” said Isobella, almost the first words we had heard from her.
The waitress smiled.
“Certainly sir. Coors beers, made here in Denver, are available.”
“And the wife drinks sherry,” he added.
“Certainly madam,” said the waitress. “Sweet or dry?”
“Sweet,” she said, somewhat relieved that the ordering process was now over.
Above our heads and over to the right was a photograph of Teddy Roosevelt when he was President and had come to stay here at the hotel. I thought this might be a good time for me to tell them about my experiences in Medora. I made it as exciting as I could and I could see that I had been right in knowing how to entertain them. Nothing like a murder by a royal Frenchman to get their interest.
“And so he got off scot free, that Frenchie, did he?” asked Isobella.
“Well, yes, he did. There was a third trial some years after we had been there, and it went on a long time but he was acquitted at that trial too.”
“And he and Teddy Roosevelt were friends, then were they?”
“Well, they both ranched in the same town at the same time, but I don’t think you could exactly say they were friends.”
“What is it like, that place?”
“Sort of like I think the Grand Canyon must be, although I have never been there. But, from the pictures I have seen of it, the Badlands look just like a miniature version of it. Beautiful and strange hills in all sorts of shades of red, and just very wild and wonderful.”
“Teddy shot buffalo, didn’t he? Did you see any buffalo when you were there?”
“Oh, yes, quite a lot, but that was before that big last buffalo hunt that he went on. Lots of Indians went too, including Sitting Bull.”
“Did you know Sitting Bull too?” asked Isobella, starry eyed.
“No, I didn’t meet him, but I met his niece, and lots of other nice Indians. But I heard a lot of stories about him. I think he was quite a good man really.”
“But he killed a lot of white folk.”
“And a lot of white folk killed Indians after taking all their lands from them by trickery.”
“You probably never experienced anything to do with Indians, Ma’am, but they ain’t to be trusted,” said Walter.
“The Indians killed her father,” interjected Kate, “so I guess she does know a bit about them.”
“Really? How did that happen?” said Walter, all agog again.
So I had to go into great detail all about Custer’s Last Stand, and the part my journalist father played in it.
Eventually the tea and other drinks were finished and every last cake and crumb was eaten. With great reluctance, Walter and Isobella got up to leave.
“Please put the bill on our hotel room,” I said to the waitress when she attempted to give it to Walter. Then I reached into my reticule and left a fifty cent piece on the table.
“Hey, don’t you go forgetting your money,” said Isobella as she picked it up and gave it back to me. I decided it was easier to let the matter go rather than try to explain tipping to her. I would make it up to the waitress on another day.
“Well, I am only sorry that we aren’t related to you two nice ladies,” said Walter as he and his wife walked back out of the hotel and into the road. “And I do thank you for a very interesting afternoon. Good luck with those cousins of yours.”
We said thank you for coming, and good bye, and could hardly wait until they had gone around the corner and out of sight before we collapsed into helpless laughter.
“Do you think he wears his hat to bed?” said Kate, breaking up again at the thought of it.
“And I expect he wears it when he has a bath too, that is, if he ever does do that,” I added, and we went back up to our room to have another quick nap before we planned how to spend the rest of our evening.
|
Written by Bottleblondesurfer (5077 comments posted) 15th February 2009 | I think this is progressing very well and I am enjoying it on different levels. The quest side is getting really interesting, especially as they have made some contact with relatives which should help in the search. Also you paint a fascinating picture of place and time with all the wonderful details. I loved the restaurant.. Another interesting point is the characters you create. They are all so colourful and entertaining. The Clintons were beautifully portrayed. I could just imagine them This is really getting into its stride Jean, I'm not a great one for praying but you have my best wishes and and strongest positive vibes for a happy outcome with your grandson. It is amazing what can be done now. My best wishes jane | Thanks very much Jane Written by jean.day (2908 comments posted) 16th February 2009 | and your positive vibes just might have done some good. Arran is out of the oxygen tent - although still on IVs, and he can now be held and fed by his mother. So things are definately on the mend, but we are going there for the week, to help out in anyway we can. I'm glad you are enjoying the story. | Written by petmarj (166 comments posted) 19th February 2009 | Happy to see that Arran is getting better. Best wishes to him and his parents. With you being a grandparent, and being separated from your family (by distance) makes it awkward for you to do more for them. But I am sure you visiting them is a big help. As for Mattie searching out Cora Sue - at least now she appears to be on the right track. Your description of the meal and surroundings at the Brown Palace was excellent. I could imagine Walter with his huge hat, and the comment by Kate that he might never take it off - even in bed. That's some hat. Well written, good story. Best Wishes, Peter. | Thanks Peter Written by jean.day (2908 comments posted) 20th February 2009 | Yes, Arran is back home again - and somehow while he was trapped in his oxygen tent, he learned how to crawl. He obviously needed some quiet time to think the thing through. Yes, Mattie is finally getting somewhere in her quest - but there is still a long way to go. I was so pleased that those Clinton women decided to move back to Denver (in real life) as I couldn't manage to track their brother. | Written by coosh (1156 comments posted) 25th February 2009 | | The details, particularly with the hotel encounter, were a very effective way of "bringing history to life", as it were. Was naturally disappointed they didn't go for the Rocky Mountain bull's testicles, but liked the contrast between the two couples. My best wishes to Arran and family; will catch up again when I get back next week. | Written by Lizzy (970 comments posted) 15th March 2009 | The characters are very well drawn, the Clintons are very good. As Coosh said you have a way of bringing history to life. Glad your grandson is better. Lizzy | Thanks David and Lizzy Written by jean.day (2908 comments posted) 15th March 2009 | | I have had a few relatives who made me cringe with their lack of polite manners in restaurants, so I guess maybe I modelled my Mr. Clinton on them. | Written by Clifftown (701 comments posted) 26th April 2009 | I was so relieved to read on and discover Arran is OK now, Jean (as I had to do before I could enjoy these chapters) - hope everything is moving along well. The story certainly is. I loved your description of the Clintons, especially overdressed Isobella! You've missed your vocation as far as I'm concerned - I wholeheartedly agree with all above about your stories bringing history to life. The conversation with the Clintons highlights this so well. |
Only registered users can rate and write comments. Please login or register. Powered by AkoComment 2.0! |