I rose from the water and dressed slowly. I wondered what to do next. I am alone, in the woods, without food. But not without wits. And with a manifestation of the goddess in the guise of an enchanted doll. Which, I suppose, is really a symbol of my own strength and cleverness.
I started walking, choosing to follow the sun.
At the end of the day I came to a crossroads. There, the White Knight of Baba Yaga, waited, his horse pawing the ground impatiently, snorting and huffing. The knight remained seated calmly. I could feel his gaze from behind his visor. My face grew warm with a blush.
At the crossroads was also my little wagon, pulled by Jenny. I met her deep eyes, she nodded her head, “Yes, you may choose” said her gesture.
My eyes lingered on the romantic hero on his horse. Part of me thrilled to go with the White Knight. I could feel myself being pulled up behind him in the saddle, clasping my arms around his armor, listening to his heart beat through the metal, reverberating with the pounding hooves. Where would he take me? What adventure would that choice bring? Would my dreams come true?
I laughed gently inside myself. I had chosen the knight before, as a young woman, a young bride, believing love would bring me my hearts desire. In a way, it had. But I am older now, and my heart’s desire, my dreams are no longer tied to love, to marriage, or family. I do not know what they are; I only know what they are not.
Confident I waked to my Jenny. I stroked her long forehead, and nuzzled into her neck. I clambered up on the seats and flicked the reins. Behind me I heard the thunder of hooves, fading quickly in the direction of the sun, my road went south.
Around the bend, waiting for me, was Lucia and a handsome man holding her hand, Michael, the grandson of Lavengro, Chieftain of the Gypsies.
Jenny halted, turned her head to watch me leap from the driver’s bench and fly to Lucia. She gave a soft bray, a donkey laugh.
I held Lucia tightly, cried, laughed, and kissed her head and cheeks and hands. Dear friend, dearest friend, sister, daughter, Light and guide. Such joy! Nothing down the road not taken could surpass this.
Michael I knew little of, meeting him briefly during my stay at his Grandfather’s camp. Clearly he is beloved to Lucia, and therefore, beloved by me. Together we climbed aboard my wagon and continued south.
I did not note where we were going. I was too excited to ask or even to care! At evening we camped by a spring. I gathered sticks with Lucia and helped her prepare bannock for our dinner. We cooked them on the rocks by the fire and ate them with windfall apples and pears we gathered along the way.
The evening was crisp. It was delight to be wrapped in a shawl, toes toasted by the fire, a cup of tea warming my hands. Michael played his guitar. The music of his strumming, the crickets, and the night birds created a symphony of peace. Soon Lucia and I were helping each other stumble sleepily to the wagon. We curled under the blankets and slept deeply.
Lucia and I made more bannock and tea to break fast. Michael was fishing, so we curried Jenny, braiding her mane with ribbons and bells. When Michael returned we fried the fish, broke camp, and were on our way again.
Lucia and I spun wool while Michael drove. He sang as he guided our Jenny. Before too long I was singing along, at least the choruses. Such passed fair weathered autumn days.
Other days were windy and cold. Those days we walked alongside the wagon huddled in our cloaks to stay warm. On raining days we rigged a tarp off the side of the wagon nearest the little porcelain stove. Here our Jenny stood in relative comfort, her ribbons and bells bedraggled. But better than her contemporaries on the moors, as Michael pointed out.
The wildest days we spent inside, cramped and cozy, the little wagon home. I cherished these rainy days as much as the fair. It was then I caught up in this journal on all the happenings of the past months. I am grateful to Mnemosyne for helping me remember everything with such clarity.
Time passes so quickly to the rhythm and melody of gypsy travel. By noon, ten days from the crossroads, we arrived at the gates of a great city.
“Welcome to Cyberia, the City of
Ladies,” sang Michael.
“I have never heard of this place,” I responded, more than a little in awe of the beautiful and formidable gates.
“Not surprising. Very few know of it. Fewer still can find it. And fewer still stay.”
Comfortable enough to tease I asked Michael if he had stayed in the City of
Ladies.
“Of course! Men are welcome here, if they are gentlemen. Women are not welcome if they are not ladies.”
“What makes a lady? What makes a gentleman?”
Michael flashed a grin. “That is the question. What is the answer?”
One worded flashed in my mind, as brilliant as Michael’s smile – integrity. Nine letters, four syllables and a world of meaning.
Long ago I made four lists: the foolish man, the foolish woman, the wise man, and the wise woman. I jotted down the characteristics of each as found in the Biblical book of Proverbs. The foolish man and the foolish woman shared the same characteristics, as did the wise man and the wise woman. The one word that summed up the fools was ‘self indulgent’. The word which summed up the wise was ‘integrity.’
As a child I was constantly admonished to be a ‘lady.’ What was meant was that I not speak until spoken to, agree with what was told to me, obey immediately and cheerfully without question, do any and all menial tasks without prompting, never feel angry, never disagree, and always, always say please and thank you. Above all, never give the neighbors any reason to think our family is anything other than respectable, irreproachable.
Those rules of ladyship created a child primed to be a victim. A safe child to molest. I could not say no, I must do as told. I would not tell. I must obey.
When at last I did tell I was called a liar. Despite the confession of the perpetrator. Despite the photos he took of his crime.
I was the criminal. Whisked away from home and family to foster care. Never to return to the community, except for holiday visits. I do not know what reasons for my disappearance were given to the curious. I know it was not the truth. Whatever was said maintained the image of irreproachable respectability.
Still, the hiding of facts, the denial of truth, did form a cocoon of protection. I was spared the stigma of public humiliation.
But inside myself the stigma burned. The chains of silence bound me to shame. We do not speak of these things, they are so terrible. In my culture chastity was extolled as the noblest virtue, once lost it can be regained, once soiled cannot be cleansed. I viewed myself as damaged goods, worth less.
I accepted gratefully whatever male would have me. We settle for the love we believe we deserve, not for the love we yearn for so desperately in our deepest hearts.
Such are the consequences of being a lady.
Enter Sarah Crewe, The Little Princess. Despite scorn, poverty and abuse, she kept her dignity. Her imagination lifted her above her circumstances. She continued to behave as a princess.
What is a princess but the popular model of a lady? The biographies and autobiographies of the nobility describe their lives much as mine, prisoners of an image defined by public opinion. Like me, they are afraid to be authentic, keeping their true selves hidden behind a proper façade.
What is a lady? What is a gentleman? What means integrity?
The etymology of ‘lady’ is from the Middle English hlfdige a combination of hlaf or bread and dige or kneader of bread. Lady began as word to define one who provided bread, created bread. The word evolved to mean a woman with proprietary rights or a woman in authority. From a woman receiving homage from subservients, the definition expanded to mean a woman receiving homage from a knight or lover. The definition grew to mean wife, fiancé, mistress, and lover. The term includes women of superior social position. In the British tradition of hierarchy it is a title for a marchioness, countess, viscountess, or baroness. It includes the wife of a knight, a member of the peerage, the daughter of a duke, marquis or earl. It is used as a courtesy title for all women, any woman. A woman who has achieved membership in an order of knighthood has earned the title lady. For me, the meaning which is troubles and trips is the lady who is a model of refinement and gentle manners.
Refinement and gentle manners created a gullible victim. I don’t want to be rude or crass; I do want to be strong.
How does ‘lady’ compare to ‘gentleman’? ‘Lord’, the equivalent to lady is hlaf-ward, guardian of bread. Lord is equal to Lady, he keeps safe what she creates, the bread from the oven, the babe from the womb, the door of the home. Original meanings twisted by time, by greed, by hunger for power, for hierarchy.
Gentleman means a man of noble birth, or a man of landed gentry. It also means a man who combines his birth or rank with chivalrous qualities, his conduct conforms to a high standard of propriety. Enigmatically, it means both a man who does not have to work for a living, a term of politeness for any man, and a valet, as in a ‘gentleman’s gentleman’. Like Lady, gentleman can refer to any man with integrity.
Integrity, a noun from the Latin ‘integritas’, ‘integr’, meaning ‘entire’ as in ‘integral’. Part and parcel, bred in the bone, completeness. A firm adherence to moral values, a code of right and wrong, incorruptible, sound. The cornerstone of ladies and gentlemen. “Her integrity enables her to tell the truth, no matter how difficult.” “He demonstrates integrity by taking responsibility for his actions.”
A lady tells the truth, no matter how difficult.
I began to become a lady when I stood tall and told the hard truth. Truth I did not want to face, truth no one wanted to hear. Truth which shattered the family façade. Truth which continues to hurt even now.
I grew as a lady as I learned to commingle truth with honest kindness, gentleness, and compassion.
Integrity demands I admit when I have done wrong. No lying, no hiding, but facing the truth, no matter how much shame I feel. Breaking the silence that protected my family from their shame brought retaliation in the form of vilifying me for all I have ever done wrong. “Well, you did such and such. What makes you better than us?”
The willingness to admit I am wrong, that I sinned, that I hurt others. Admission of guilt is the prerequisite for pardon, for mercy, for grace. It is the requisite for freedom from shame, for peace, for salvation. Saving grace is conditional upon asking for it. One will only ask if one knows one needs it.
Do thy best, and leave the rest for God.
These thoughts competed with the colors, scents, and sounds of Cyberia, the City of
Ladies. Michael led us to an inn, Il Taverna di Muse. Climbing roses covered its wall, open windows let in the warm autumn air and let out laughter, the tinkling of glass, and music. Michael led us inside. He gave our names and business to the innkeeper, a lovely lady.
“Welcome!”