Read One Year in Coal Harbor Online
Authors: Polly Horvath
Dan Sneild was across the way, sitting with Miss Clarice.
“What’s
he
doing here?” I whispered to Ked, who just shrugged.
Uncle Jack came in at the last second and squeezed in next to me.
“I thought you weren’t coming,” I whispered to him.
“I had to. I got a letter asking me to do something. It’s not going to make your mom happy.”
And then the mayor tapped the table with his gavel and we had to be quiet. At first it was very boring, with requests for dull things like stop signs and the removal of stop signs. It seemed to be a big concern where drivers should and should not stop. There was a contingent who wanted a series of stop signs put on the road that runs parallel to the beach because a lot of children and dogs like to run in that area and people use it as a speed course.
“Someday some child is going to get hit,” said a woman indignantly.
“Or even worse, a
dog
!” said another woman passionately.
This occasioned a moment’s silence while people tried to figure out if they’d heard right.
Then there was the usual uprising from the cat people, who didn’t think cat safety got enough consideration, and there was even a budgie lover who spoke up, but nobody took her seriously. Finally, things appeared to be back on track. I always found these discussions like new fires. They fizz up and look really scary, like they might flame right out of control, but eventually they settle down to a quiet crackling hiss and then burn themselves down to embers.
This fire had appeared to die down and we were listening to the mayor raise the issue of parking meters when someone stood up and yelled, “ANIMAL HATERS!” and the mayor, who is a nice man, broke into a visible sweat.
It was for just such moments that we all came to the meetings. The topics under discussion often seemed largely beside the point. The point was to have an opinion and make sure everyone heard it. It seemed to me particularly necessary for people who lived alone and didn’t have the benefit of someone always available on whom to force their views. They were always the most vocal. I pointed this out to Ked and he thought a minute and said, “Do they need to shout most because they have no one at home to shout at or do they have no one at home because they like to shout so much?”
I would like to point out that this was a fine point
Eleanor would
never
have come up with and it required some thinking through. By the time I had finished, the mayor had moved things from parking and pets to the “Honeycut Project,” as he called it.
“It’s been suggested to me that instead of overwhelming Miss Honeycut with a raft of letters, we unite to write her with
one
plan for the use of the money. That way the project will be chosen not so much by her but by a majority of
us
. Does that make sense?” asked the mayor.
There was a quiet buzz that seemed mostly favorable to this idea. It made sense to me. Who knows what strange notion Miss Honeycut would support if left to her own devices? She might choose the budgie lady’s idea of starting a budgie sanctuary. We didn’t want her blowing half a million pounds on
birds
.
The mayor got out a sheet of paper and began to read all the various ideas people had had since Miss Honeycut’s letter had been published in the newspaper. Then people stood up to plead their cases. My mother made a stirring speech about Fishermen’s Aid. A less stirring speech was made by the Hacky Sack kids.
Eleanor’s mom stood up and said, “What do you people think you’re doing, coming into town with your Rastafarian hair and wanting the money for some big global project that has nothing to do with Coal Harbor and just stirs up trouble?”
“Now, I don’t want you folks to stand up and start
arguing and, uh, shouting and such,” said the mayor, wiping his forehead again when the usual twittering on the old-lady bench and a restless stirring in general had begun. “We have plenty of time to choose a cause, as this selection process has just begun.”
That’s when Uncle Jack stood up.
“Well, I’m afraid I have news that is going to eliminate the need for such a process, Eric.” (That’s the mayor’s name.) “I’m sorry I didn’t have time to get this on the agenda but I only got the letter today. As some of you know, Miss Honeycut and I were friends.”
There was some sniggering in the audience. A lot of people were aware that Miss Honeycut had set her cap at Uncle Jack in a kind of sad and desperate way. He ignored the sniggering, although he turned slightly redder, but it was hard to detect unless you knew him well because Uncle Jack was always pretty red. He was so full of life that he glowed from within.
“Anyhow, I guess that’s why she appointed this task to me. She has made me her agent over here. And it seems”—he cleared his throat—“that’s she’s
already
decided on a project.”
“Well, THAT didn’t take long!” my mother cried. “She couldn’t have even gotten my second letter yet.”
“We want a boardwalk!” screamed the little old ladies, banging their canes until someone in front of them said, “SHHH!”
“Don’t you shush me, Young Man Having a Very Bad Hair Day!” cried one of the old ladies, hitting the shusher’s chair with her cane.
The Hacky Sacks looked on in amazement. I don’t think they were used to old ladies outshouting them.
Miss Connon stood up and whispered, “That’s so mean, making fun of someone’s
hair
,” and walked out. I saw her face and I could swear she was starting to cry again. Lately she seemed to cry at the drop of a hat.
One of the Hacky Sacks, who was sitting right in front of me, turned to a boardwalk granny and said, “I know you don’t like my hair but I think your hair is very nice.”
“I do it myself,” the granny whispered to him.
“Really? I’d never guess. I was a hairdresser. I got fired a few months ago. I was giving a woman a perm and I sort of forgot about the time and her hair fell out.”
“Oh my,” said the granny, looking concerned. “That would be worrying. But we all make mistakes, don’t we?”
“That’s not what the owner said.”
“Now, don’t fret, dear,” said the granny. “You’ll find work again.”
“Oh, I know,” he whispered back. “I’m not doing this just because I couldn’t find a job, you know. I really believe in saving the rain forest.”
“Of course you do!” she said, patting him on the knee. There was a pause. “I could hire you to do
my
hair.”
“I wouldn’t if I were you. I think you’re doing a lovely
job yourself. And to be honest, I’m kind of scared I’m going to burn off someone’s hair again.”
“We’ll buy you an egg timer!”
“It’s okay, really,” he said, turning red.
They continued to whisper but I couldn’t hear the rest of their conversation because the level of noise and chaos was escalating.
“Listen, folks!” shouted Uncle Jack over the roar, trying to get matters back on track. “It doesn’t make any difference what you all want because Miss Honeycut has chosen a project that is dear to her heart.”
At this there was an outbreak of groans.
“This money to allocate is Miss Honeycut’s,” Uncle Jack reminded everyone. “And it seems that what she’s decided to do with it is build a park and erect a statue of her father in it.”
At this there was dead silence.
It was broken by one of the fishermen shouting, “We don’t want no stinking park with some statue of some guy we never even met.”
“Yah!” piped up someone else. “What does her father have to do with Coal Harbor?”
“BOARDWALK! BOARDWALK!” yelled a particularly sprightly old lady in a lime-green pantsuit, trying to rally the troops, but they all looked exhausted. One of them looked like she was working on a stroke.
“It’s true her father had nothing to do with Coal Harbor. Except leave us this money—which it would
behoove us to use as Miss Honeycut sees fit. We’ll still get a park. And a, uh, statue. We can, of course, refuse the money.” Uncle Jack paused meaningly.
The room went quiet again.
“But I’m afraid it will do no good to try to persuade her otherwise. I took the liberty of phoning her as soon as I got the letter, explaining that feelings might be not completely unanimously in her corner on this one. But she made it quite plain that this is her intention and she won’t be dissuaded.”
“
Half a million dollars
for a park and a statue?” someone cried. “That’s crazy! We don’t have a piece of land
worth
that much!”
The room erupted into a blend of disappointed voices, bemoaning Miss Honeycut’s lack of sense. Just like the rich, came up again and again. Just like
her
, came up even more often. I felt bad for my mom. She had come to the meeting, certain that she’d convince everyone of the need to give the money to Fishermen’s Aid.
In the midst of this Dan Sneild stood up. “Excuse me. Excuse me, please, folks.” He had to say it quite a few times before the room quieted down and he got everyone’s attention.
“I know a lot of you planned to stop the clear-cut and create some kind of international appeal with Miss Honeycut’s money but I have to tell you, it would do no good. We’ve got no plans to do some big wholesale clear-cut. We don’t do that any longer. You folks are behind the
times. We do a small area. In this case one small mountain, which we will replant afterward because our goal is always sustainable forestry. Now, you all need to help us find a balance between jobs for loggers and the needs of the community. This province was built on logging just the same as fishing. How’d you feel if some environmentalists came into town and closed down the fishing business? I suggest you all bow to the inevitable and remember those loggers are supporting families same as you folks are.”
Well, I think he was doing okay until he told us to bow to the inevitable. About half the room erupted in angry cries and the other half, myself included, were stunned silent to find out that Dan Sneild worked for the logging company. A lot of us hadn’t thought he was in town for any reason other than to win Miss Bowzer and talk Miss Clarice into selling the B and B. Now I understood why Miss Bowzer wasn’t at the meeting. She could hardly protest the clear-cut being arranged by her
fiancé-to-be
.
“Oh, this is terrible,” I said to Ked. But he didn’t understand what I was talking about.
“No, it’s demolition derby!” he said, his eyes sparkling as he looked from one hysterical contingent to the next. I could see his point. One dread-head had just beaned Eleanor’s mom with his Hacky Sack. It had made a little dent in her tightly curled perm but otherwise didn’t seem to have injured her. I thought he had crossed a line and felt bad for her until she got up and poured some cold tea on him. “Are these meetings always like this?”
“Well, people in Coal Harbor have strong feelings,” I said proudly. “But I thought you didn’t like altercations.”
“I don’t mind them as long as they’re not about me. This is weirdly balletic, like a good hockey game,” said Ked.
It
was
kind of lovely in its anarchy. It was a kind of ballet of desires. People wanted different things and there was something
nice
about wanting them and the noise and movement all swirling around those things.
“Miss Bowzer knows what Dan Sneild does for a living,” I said to Uncle Jack. “She must!
That’s
why she won’t sign the petition.”
“She’ll sign,” he said, and his eyes twinkled as he sat there implacably, as unruffled and unrufflable as always. He even looked passively on as Dan Sneild made a long speech about how the company was ecosensitive, using a lot of technical terms that I could tell no one understood. I figured that was probably Dan Sneild’s intention. What he was probably saying in technospeak was, And then we plan to uproot and get rid of every last living thing on planet Earth.
Now would be a fine time for Uncle Jack to get up and punch Dan Sneild right in the nose. He could do it under the pretense of being ecosensitive himself. Everyone would approve. If Eleanor’s mother could go around throwing tea on people, I’m sure no one would fault Uncle Jack for a jealous punch or two. But no, he just sat there calmly as Dan Sneild went on to say that even Miss
Clarice, whose property
faced
the mountain, wasn’t going to protest it. “But perhaps it would have more weight coming from her,” he said. Then Miss Clarice stood up and talked about how she had such faith that Blondet and Blondet was going to replant and make a new forest and log sensitively and responsibly, at which point one of the grannies dropped her knitting, stood up and shouted, “THIS IS CRAP!”
Mrs. Henderson, whom I knew to be quiet and well-mannered, started repeating “crap” like a chant. She was either finding a new freedom of speech in her old age or she had developed Tourette’s.
Eleanor’s mom put her hands over Eleanor’s ears, which must have been very embarrassing for Eleanor and also useless, as the damage was done.
“Why didn’t you tell the mayor first thing about Miss Honeycut’s letter?” I asked Uncle Jack.
“I wanted to hear how people wanted to spend the money,” said Uncle Jack, winking. “As a developer, you never know what kind of knowledge will be useful.”
The mayor started banging his gavel. You could see huge wet rings under his arms. Some of the kids started balling up pieces of paper and throwing them, just for the fun of it. Some of the protesters burst into a chorus of “We Shall Overcome” and some others linked their arms and started swaying and singing, and in general people enjoyed themselves in whatever fashion took their fancy.
Finally the mayor seemed to give up, declared the meeting over and walked out. Which meant that effectively there was no meeting left, just a lot of people screaming at each other. So those of us not inclined to hand-to-hand combat or ululation put on our coats and left.
Evie, Bert, Ked and Uncle Jack all came to our house for the postmortem.
I took Ked into the kitchen and showed him how to make cinnamon toast. “The trick is to put lots of melted butter on the toast and then to make sure the cinnamon sugar melts into the butter.” I demonstrated. “We could put this in our cookbook. Or do you think it’s too easy?”