july 2001
“
Last call.”
Edith Holthouse groaned as she looked down at her watch. It was only a quarter ’til eleven but she remembered with a sudden pang that they weren’t in London and things definitely weren’t running on London hours. Honestly, she wasn’t sure how she could have possibly forgotten that she had just spent the evening in Lunt, having successfully convinced Elias — her new
whatever — to join her for the weekend trip home for Lunt’s annual Shakespeare Festival.
Actually, calling it a ‘festival’ was a bit of an overstatement. First, most festivals that celebrated the bard took place in April, around his birthday. But Edith’s parents, the curators of this particular one, felt that a festival in July would have less competition for visitors. Still, the nearly three hundred people they had managed to attract was a pretty impressive turnout. Just some of the various attractions of the festival included: a Shakespeare lookalike contest, staged duels, and a Shakespearean insult contest. But by far the most enjoyable events were the plays.
Herbie and Tillie Holthouse were the directors, producers, stage managers, costumers, and lead actors of a very small, very horrible, but very proud theatre troupe. They had performed Macbeth earlier in the evening, and no amount of information she could have shared with Elias could have prepared him for just how awful everything was going to be. They had created what they called ‘The Round’, their much smaller, shabbier, and less impressive version of the circular Globe Theatre. And for the Festival, they had gone all out.
Edith and Elias had arrived after work that Friday, just in time to catch the opening act of Macbeth. She had correctly assumed that her father would be playing the title role, her mother Lady Macbeth. She had also correctly assumed that The Round would continue their tradition of unlimited wine with ticket purchase. Her last and favorite correct assumption was that she needed to constantly lean in close and explain how things on the stage were progressing, especially when the English got a little out of control.
Needless to say, by the time they were joining the cast and their families at the one village pub, Edith was just the slightest bit intoxicated and regretting her decision to join the party, rather than just going to find a dark corner with Elias. But the acting troupe hadn’t given a sober performance in the past thirty or so years and they certainly didn’t start tonight; they weren’t going to let them back out of the fun that easily.
Edith grinned as she watched him from across the table, trying to figure out which part of the evening was making him the most uncomfortable: the terrible play he hadn’t been warned about, her seventy-year-old father making dirty jokes about her mother to him all while wiggling his eyebrows, the sheer amount of muggles around him, or how Edith had been right when she had convinced him to dress down for the occasion. They had somehow managed to get separated in the kerfuffle for seats and more alcohol and she hardly had the chance to warn Elias about how much of a hugger her mother was or how openly her parents and their friends would insinuate that there was something more going on between them than there already was.
She had never mentioned having an interest in anyone, let alone bring anyone home to meet them and basically, everyone was a fair combination of thrilled and skeptical. But Elias was handling himself well enough, or so it seemed, and Edith had nothing to offer but supportive glances over the rim of her glass and the occasional apologetic shrug in between laughs.
But the last call at the pub, instead of triggering everyone to order another round, merely convinced everyone that it was time to move the party to the Holthouse residence down the lane. Edith jumped at the chance for another beer, however, with the added bonus of a few minutes alone with Elias. “We’ll catch up,” she promised as she gave her mother a small wave goodbye, feeling her cheeks grow warm as she winked and made a crude gesture in return.
Edith brought two beers back to the table, her best attempt at an apology for not fully preparing Elias for the weekend ahead of him. She took the seat next to him this time, scooting it as close as she could possibly get without having to climb on top of him. “I completely understand if you want to go back to London right now,” she said, attempting to be quiet as the volume in the pub had decreased dramatically as all the actors had filed out. “But you should know that you’ll miss out on the cake and ale eating contest tomorrow,” she continued, forgetting that she might have needed to explain the significance of the choice. “And it’s especially brilliant because it’s right after the lookalike contest, so there’s just a dozen Shakespeares eating cake.”
@Elias Dörfler