FOR WHOM THE BELLE TOLD
~ By Absolutely*Kate 
Is a great moment of all time notably spectacular at the exact instance it occurs, or does memorable enrichment glean its merits through gilded legend? That is the question.  Well, one of the questions that daunted New Year's Eve's festivities  for Stanley and Wanda before the clocktower of 1949 struck life forward.
He  was remembering how time flew in the U. S. Army Air Corps in 1945,  seemingly a million miles away, across an ocean of thought and a litany  of letters from the cat's meow of a dandy dame now clutching her warm  grip over the pinstriped arm of his best suit jacket . . . and his  heart. Her gloved hand tightened against the possibility of a slipslide  as they crossed the icy parking lot. He liked how this night felt. Being  reached for, being clung to, wearing his best suit jacket and looking  forward . . . to possibilities. They'd get inside before midnight.  They'd make it. Then he was going to ask her.
She  was recalling for whom the belle told what she was asked to believe in  1946. Colette Broussard had held nothing back when she blew into the  windy city. She was certain that either Stanley or his Chicago squadron  buddy Chuck was the not so proud papa of her scrawny, whimpering Giselle  and she wanted more than nylons and au chocolat for her  troubles, as she called them. Wanda listened without judgement across  the Kresge dime-store perfume counter the taller, slimmer, more elegant  femme fatale leaned her decolletage over. Wanda listened without  interrupting the tale of a dark rainy night and a farmhouse and pilots  down in a field and a welcome bowl of  soup alongside friendly fire. Very friendly,  it seemed from the veracity wriggling against the older woman's  shoulder, mewling for her bottle. The story had plot, climax and  credence but not a happy ending. 
When Tom, Mr Kresge's eldest son, sent wary glances Wanda's way, she squared her shoulder pads, bared her bravado, and shooed the mad mademoiselle from her scents'ory department, hissing swiftly though, "Why? Why tell - Me?". She'd not seen nor heard tale of the woman, the babe, the story, again. She'd not noticed the column-inch near the bottom of page 14 of the Trib two days later, mentioning the crash of the Nash and the Studebaker with casualties at Lake and Clark Streets.
When Tom, Mr Kresge's eldest son, sent wary glances Wanda's way, she squared her shoulder pads, bared her bravado, and shooed the mad mademoiselle from her scents'ory department, hissing swiftly though, "Why? Why tell - Me?". She'd not seen nor heard tale of the woman, the babe, the story, again. She'd not noticed the column-inch near the bottom of page 14 of the Trib two days later, mentioning the crash of the Nash and the Studebaker with casualties at Lake and Clark Streets.
~ ~ ~
The 40's were something, alright, Stanley  mused. History marked in time and temps. The Depression ended and so  did the Big One he went through, WWII. The Cold War was changing the  climate and some skinny blue-eyed kid from Hoboken was rising his  stardom on every hep radio's horizon. Everyone who was anyone in their  set of chums had seen and was keen on Casablanca at the  picture-show, and romance was warming the climate too. Yes, this  world-changing decade was ending and folks were beginning to watch life  happen on a television set. He'd read in the Sunday Tribune that  over 125,000 American homes now had one firmly nestled into a corner of  their living rooms. Why, if Wanda looked up into his eyes and smiled a 'Yes Stanley',  they could look into building one of those little homes in the new  suburbs like Edison Park and have their own GE to come home to. Life  could be good, life could be a dream in the 1950's with the right little  lady to love and cherish and create the American dream with. 
The 40's were sure somethin' swell,  Wanda mused, knowing what it was like to wait for an overseas man's  kisses to come true and his promises to take hold. She knew Stanley was a  swell catch and liked how safe she felt holding onto his dapper suit  coat arm, and his soft enchanting gaze. She knew she was walking right  into the dream, the big one ~ a night as fine and festive as Chicago's  swankiest supperclub, The Chez Paree, could entice. She was one lucky  gal on one dapper New Year's Eve headed into a brand new decade . . . of  possibilities. The Chez was where headliners of the day came to play ~  Durante and Lady Day, the Andrews Sisters and Nat King Cole  -- Gosh  it was cold, cold and slippery on this thin ice. The Chez Paree was up  ahead. It would feel good to get inside, feel warm, excited, safe,  delighted. Safe enough to ask him, before midnight. She should.
(c) 2010 ~ Author Absolutely*Kate, 
another AT THE BIJOU premiere
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| Time futures us. ~ Pic ala andoreamon | 
~ Absolutely*Kate and our fine staff of renown
 AT THE BIJOU 
  wish you hearty prosperities
 from dream-themes into the brave new year!
May your JOY be full.
Holiday Noir by Absolutely*Kate follows,
a challenge dared in a crimewriting spree
 joining the daunting scene over at DO SOME DAMAGE ~


 
 











