Joan Leotta
By Sharon Waller Knutson
Joan Leotta, poet, photographer, fiction and nonfiction writer and story performer, shares short fiction stories about Christmas and New Year’s Eve and Day and a photo she took on New Year’s Eve.
“I’ve been fascinated by words since childhood…before I could read, I scribbled on colored paper and then tried to read my creations to anyone who would sit by me.
“Photography came about later, in college, when I realized I could tell stories with a camera. Stage work developed in grade school…on rainy days I would jump on the auditorium stage, tell jokes poached from television. Bob Hope and the like…and retell fairy tales to the ten or so who would gather to listen.
“I admit to having a storytelling show featuring child guests on cable tv in the 1980s and a couple of one woman photo shows before surrendering my Nikon to my son. I kept the pen, the computer, and the penchant for stage work. Photos are now a lot less formally done…by me that is.”
Christmas Stocking Surprise
Chaos surrounded Christmas’ approach last year. My husband, Vince, was suffering recurring bouts of sinus infection. Our daughter Vicky was driving to Myrtle Beach from Washington, D.C. but her beau, Jim Willis was not able to take a vacation from his job in London. Even worse, Vicki’s last call portended a breakup. “Dating for two years, Mom, and he still avoids marriage talk.”
The one bright spot was that my sister-in-law, Graziella, a long-time widow, had agreed to move closer to us in the new year and had agreed to spend Christmas with us while she looked for a place. Since our family held onto the elaborate Italian Seven Fishes for Christmas Eve, her help was most welcome.
A Christmas morning, stockings filled with small surprises are also an annual tradition. I still had things to buy for everyone’s stockings.
A few days before Christmas, Jim called from London to speak with Vince. Vince listened, mumbled, and then handed the phone to me.
Jim’s voice was shaky. “I just asked for Vince’s permission to marry Vicky. He said yes. Can you put something in Vicky’s stocking for me?”
I was thrilled and puzzled. “Sure.”
“Great! I’d like you to put her engagement ring in the toe of the stocking, but the even bigger favor is that I need you to go to Charleston to pick it up. The ring is a family heirloom and my grandmother, the one who lives in Charleston has it. I know it’s a bit of a drive from Myrtle Beach, but can you get it?”
He explained further. “I plan to phone in my proposal on Christmas morning, so I want her to find the ring along with a note I’ll email to you.”
“Of course, I can go! Charleston is only a 2.5-hour drive away. I’ll call your grandma and arrange a good day to swoop down for the ring.”
Jim was thrilled. As I was considering the best time to go, I heard a car in the driveway. “Helloooooo” Graziella called from the back door.
I told her about everything.
“Please let me go to Charleston for you!”
I had to admit, sending Graziella on this errand made my life easier than if I tried to go myself. I had more shopping to do, more soup to make for poor Vince.
We called Jim’s Grandmother. “Tomorrow works for me,” she said.
The following morning, about two hours after Graziella left our house in her ancient Ford Fiesta, my phone rang. “Now don’t worry,” Graziella began, “I wasn’t hurt…”
I let myself breathe again.
“Front end of the car is a mess. I’m going to stay in a motel near dealership that’s fixing it. I called Jim’s Grandma and rescheduled. I’m about an hour out of Charleston.”
I channeled my anxiety into baking additional cookies. The following afternoon, Graziella called again. “Dealer had to order a part. Don’t worry. The manager is taking me to pick up Vicky’s ring today, so I’ll be ready to leave from the motel tomorrow morning. Bonus is that I’m closer to home, so even though I’ll be traveling on Christmas Eve, I’ll be there early enough to help.”
More cookies. Vicky arrived that afternoon. “Where’s Aunt Graziella?”
“Visiting a friend near Charleston. She’ll be back tomorrow before we sit down for the Seven Fishes.”
Early the next morning, Graziella texted: “On my way home!”
Vicky wandered into the kitchen for some coffee. “Was that Auntie Graz?”
I nodded. “Yes—she should be here in about an hour.”
While Vicky helped me prepare our calamari sopra linguini, she confided more worries about Jim. “I spoke to him yesterday and he seemed unconcerned about missing Christmas with us.”
I squirmed. Afraid I’d spill secrets I suggested, “Let’s make more cookies.” Graziella came in as we were putting the last tray of gingersnaps into the oven. Graziella slipped me the ring box when Vicki turned her head. I slipped it into my apron pocket until I could duck into my bedroom to put it in the toe of Vicky’s stocking.
I opened the tiny velvet ring box to put in Jim’s note. A sunbeam sparked rainbow reflections from the large center stone of this three-diamond affair. Each gem was an old-fashioned rose cut set in squared prongs in a white gold band. I set it into the toe, then put in her orange, candies, and assorted trinkets.
That evening we ate and laughed our way through caviar, fresh anchovies, smoked oysters, smoked clams, and herring, shrimp, and calamari. Artichokes added a bit of green. After supper, we read Luke 2, opened presents, ate cookies, and drank champagne. After the others went to bed, I set out stockings.
Christmas morning, we dumped out our stockings. We all watched while Vicky opened the velvet box from the stocking’s toe. She gasped and put on Jim’s Grandma’s ring. “He loves me and wants to get married,” Vicky announced.
On cue, her phone chimed. Jim.
Suddenly Graziella’s purse began to sing Bossa Nova. She excused herself and went into the kitchen.
Vince and I retreated to the hall to give Graziella and Vicky privacy. While Vicky was still talking, Graziella closed her phone and walked over to us, smiling. “That was Bill, the dealership manager. He has an appointment here in Myrtle Beach on the 28th and wants to have supper with me.”
***
This year, I’m setting two new places at the Christmas dinner table. One for Jim and one for Bill. Stockings? Well, this year Vicky’s and Jim’s will contain knitted baby slippers (surprise for Jim!) and Graziella’s will hold a diamond ring from Bill.
First appeared on Spillwords
Marsh Point on Edisto Island in South Carolina photo by Joan Leotta
New Year Omen
A camera-heavy crowd gathered on the beach below my deck. I overheard one say, "We're hoping to end the year with a dolphin sighting. She's a rare black dolphin, and not in a pod." Another added," We've seen her here before at twilight feeding time." I walked off the deck away from the crowd, in search of shells.
When I returned to our rental, the crowd was slipping away into the evening, probably off to New Year’s Eve parties. After searing a steak and downing a tall glass of mineral water.
My husband and I watched Times Square from the couch but fell asleep before the ball dropped.
After a while, light seeping through the blinds called me to the window. My husband remained asleep. I am the early bird of the family.
With a fresh cup of coffee in hand I slipped outside in the cool of New Year’s Day on Edisto Island. Sandpipers were skittering along, darting in and out of the marsh grass onto the sand, into the gentle waves. A pelican swooped down across water, scattering the sandpipers. Then, in the still pale light of pre-dawn, a flash of fin on water caught my eye. The up and down in crescent ballerina leaps, her dark gray color, darker still than the gray sky, told me it was the Black Dolphin the others had sought last night.
I shouted out, "halloooooooo."
I think I caught her eye. She shifted course, taking a leap toward me. I thought I saw her smile. Why not? Two loners, together in the morning light, savoring our solitude. I considered seeing her a good omen for my coming year. I wonder what she thought about sighting me.
Dolphin at Dawn -New Year's Day
From the porch of our beach place, I looked out onto a gray sea extending to a gray sky populated with a few dying stars. As a bit of sun tried to slip up through the horizon, a black dolphin slowly, silently bobbed up out of the water. He slipped through the channel, rhythm steady, rocking up then nosing down. As I watched, he moved ever outward from the shore toward that spot of orange on the horizon. Slow, steady, never minding the surrounding hopeless gray of sea and sky. His journey gave me courage for mine in the New Year.
Authors Note: Both pieces were inspired by a trip to Ediston Island, south of Charleston, SC in 2014-2015. “New Year Omen” was published as a poem in Snapdragon and Wilda Morris Blog where it won third prize.
To read poems and biography on Joan:
https://stortellerpoetryreview.blogspot.com/2023/05/storyteller-of-week_12.html