Katani's Jamaican Holiday (7 page)

“You should come to American and open up a Jamaican patty factory!” I told Selvin in between bites. “You’d make a fortune.”

Selvin smiled but answered emphatically, “Jamaica is the place for me. Why would I want to be cold?” He had a point.

We delivered boxes of Banana Bliss to a few of the luxury hotels along the coast. It was fun carrying the trays into the fancy resorts. Some of them had little carts you could ride around in. I wished I could just run down to the beach and stay, but Selvin said I should be patient. “That’s a lot to ask, Selvin, when you have come all the way from Boston, where it is so freezing cold, icicles grow off your nose!” I giggled.

Finally we arrived at a big hotel where Selvin said he usually got a large order. When we drove into the delivery area, Olivia and I couldn’t believe our eyes. There was a Mr. Biggs Better Banana Bread van unloading on the ramp!

“Uh-oh!” Selvin exclaimed. “Trouble!”

Olivia and I quickly got out of the van and followed Selvin. Two men in elaborate chef’s hats were carrying trays of banana bread into the kitchen area. They looked very dramatic, as if they were in a play or something, I had to admit, the way they presented themselves was very impressive. Suddenly, I felt a major stab of concern for Nana’s Banana Bliss. Mr. Biggs’s group was pretty fancy.

“What’s this?’ Selvin asked the man who was receiving the bread.

“Hey, Selvin!” the man exclaimed. He was genuinely surprised to see Selvin. “We heard that Faith was sick and the business closed. No more Banana Bliss.”

“Who could tell you that, Mr P?” Selvin asked.

Mr. P looked around embarrassed. He really didn’t have to answer. It was obvious.

“So, you dealing with Mr. Biggs now?”

“Well, he offered us free samples, and we’re trying it.”

Aunt Faith and Grandma were going to be devastated. I could just imagine their faces.

“Okay,” Selvin retorted. “Can’t fight free samples. But I’m telling you, you’ll be sorry. Your guests are going to notice the difference.”

“Ah, well”—he turned to us—“they’ll learn. No better-tasting thing than Banana Bliss.” He winked at Olivia and me. “Come on, girls. I arranged with my friend for you to take a swim with the dolphins. Let me take you over to the main entrance. I’ll try to get the rest of these breads sold to some other places while you have some fun. I should be back in about an hour or so. All right?”

“Hold up. Did he just say
dolphins
?!” I exclaimed.

“Yes!” Olivia said happily.

The BSG would never believe this.

CHAPTER
7
Dancing with the Dolphins

To: Maeve, Isabel, Avery, Charlotte
From: Katani
Subject: Dolphins!!!!

OK, BSG—I am sending this from one of the most beautiful resorts in all of the Caribbean. My cousin Selvin’s friend works here and she said I could use her computer to send an e-mail—nice lady. Yes! Well, get ready for this: I just met up with some dolphins. Yup, the Kgirl became a regular nature girl. It was like I was in that old movie we liked—the one about the dolphins that talked. You remember, Maeve? From the moment I sat in the golf cart that took us down to the beach, it was like there was someone saying, “Roll camera!” I was the star (sorry, Maeve!), with my
cousin Olivia as my sidekick. Avery, you would have loved it!

So check this movie out: As Olivia and I ride through fan-tabulous grounds with fancy cottages and people dressed in resort wear, the camera pans to show royal palm trees and gentle waterways with spouts of water shooting into the air. With my equally fan-tabulous Tuscan gold tankini and big, white-rimmed sunglasses, I’m just where I belong. Enjoying the sun, I notice the perfect blue Caribbean sky with a white jet trail disappearing in the distance. No snow and ice here. THIS PLACE IS TO DIE FOR!

P.S. This has to be a BSG meeting place someday—you know, like once a year, when we’re all grown up, we all fly in from wherever we live and meet up for a week of total bliss (like Banana Bliss, get it?) in the Jamaican sun.

Let me continue with my movie: OK, you can’t see my eyes behind my cool designer sunglasses (I got them at Filene’s Basement for five dollars—righteous bargain, huh?), but my eyes are wide open, recording everything to my memory. We pass a man pruning a
tree, and he waves and smiles. We wave. The driver calls out to him, “All right, Bushy?” “Yes, I!” comes the answer. (Did I tell you people talk way differently here? I’ll explain it when I get home.)

We stop in front of a stand that says “Dolphin Lagoon,” and we are welcomed like royalty by the attendant, who says we are just in time for the next program. Olivia shouts, “Look!” In the lagoon, two humongous dolphins rise from the water, curve in the air, and dive back in, just like in the real movie. If only you were here, Ave! These things looked ginormous. Much bigger in person. Trust me on that.

Continuing on with Katani’s Jamaican Holiday, the movie: “Cut! Cut!” the director shouts. The star def needed a break. I have to decide, am I really going into the water to swim with those huge creatures? They must be at least fifteen feet tall. I look over at Olivia. She’s super excited. There’s a huge grin on her face, but she wants to be a vet, so this must be great for her. Me? You all know how I like to be in control, and these dolphins look like they might like to be in charge too.

So the attendant says, “Hurry, girls! You don’t want to miss a moment of this program.” We head toward the beach, strip to our swimsuits, rub on the suntan lotion, and put on the life jackets.

I take a deep breath as Olivia and I hold hands and we all enter the water, led by three attendants. There is one in a kayak rowing out to a stand in the water. That’s where we’re headed. My knees are shaking.

We are in an enclosed part of the beach, surrounded by rocks and mesh, which is the dolphins’ home. The water is rippling from a light breeze, and believe me, you need that breeze because the sun is now right over our heads. There are three seagulls sitting on the rocks, checking out the whole scene and probably waiting for a tidbit or two.

Olivia and I wade out toward the stand where there are two trainers waiting for us. Soon it gets too deep for walking, so we start swimming out to where the dolphins, Bruno and Miguel, are already playing with one of the trainers. Oh, yeah, here’s what I’m thinking: There better not be any sharks in here!

The trainer waves his hands and the dolphins are off, like circus performers, jumping out of the water in perfect unison, two or three times. Before we’re all finished exclaiming and clapping, Bruno and Miguel are back at the stand, collecting their reward. The trainer waves his hands again, and this time they walk backward on the water. You almost can’t believe they can do such a thing.

“Cut!” the director shouts again. Oops! Our heroine (me, the Kgirl!) is afraid to get close to the dolphins. These creatures are very frisky, and you can’t tell from one moment to the next where they might be!

“It’s okay.” One of the trainers notices me slinking behind Olivia, who is very brave and can’t wait to touch these little darlings. “They are quite friendly, and we are in total control.” Olivia takes my hand to reassure me as I tread water.

The rest is like a total dream sequence. I touch the dolphins (rubbery feeling); I hold on to their fins and ride with them a short distance (Eeeek!); I allow myself to be kissed (my first kiss and it’s by a dolphin—ha-ha); AND then I, Katani Ida Summers, dance with the dolphins.

At the trainer’s instructions, we hold our hands in the air and turn around in the water as if we are dancing while he beats on a pan and the dolphins dance around with us, making their little high-pitched squeak sounds. Fear Factor is over. I’m having an incredible time! All of a sudden the trainer starts to sing, and those dolphins sing along
with him, just like they’re in a band (a squeaky/screamy kind of band) or something. Then comes the big finale.

I watch as one of the trainers takes one of the group apart, holds him steady, and—oh, my gosh! The man is flying out of the water, pushed by the dolphins, and then, they just let him down near the water’s edge. I want to clap and shake all at the same time.

Olivia goes next. She grins like a madwoman as she goes flying through the water. Then it’s my turn. “Don’t be afraid. Put your feet behind you. Lift your hands in the air,” the trainer tells me, and whoosh! Two snouts have connected with the bottom of my feet (it tickles!), and the dolphins are pushing me through the water, my body and hands in the air. So this is what it feels like to be Superwoman and fly! “Cut and print”—this scene is in my memory forever.

So what do you think, BSG? Ready for a trip to Jamaica? Oops, I gotta go now—Selvin and Olivia are waiting. But have I got pictures!

Just as I was finishing up my e-mail, Olivia came into the office with Selvin’s friend and handed me a cold pineapple
punch, which I slurped down quickly. “I have to get Selvin to bring me back here again!” she exclaimed. I hadn’t seen her get so excited about anything since I’d been here.

“You’ve never done this?” I asked with surprise.

“No. I always thought this was just tourist stuff. It’s a good thing you came.”

I thanked Selvin’s friend for allowing me to use her computer, and Olivia and I went outside for the golf cart to take us back to the kitchen, where Selvin was waiting.

When we got back to the front of the hotel, Selvin was waiting in the parking lot for us. I couldn’t help it. I rushed over and gave him a thank-you hug. This had been one of the best days of my life. The sun was out, the water was blue, and I had gone dancing with dolphins.

CHAPTER
8
A Daring Idea

C
ousin Cecil informed us that church started at nine o’clock sharp on Sunday morning, but we all had to be there very early because Olivia’s youth group would be leading the service.

Back in Brookline, we don’t dress fancy for church, so I figured my miniskirt with the little black and green circles on it and the matching top with spaghetti straps would be hot but cool, if you know what I mean. At home I get a lot of compliments when I wear that outfit. Even my dad likes it, and Isabel recently pronounced it “very groovy.” I was twirling around, examining the swirling circles in the mirror, when Olivia came from the bathroom and saw me.

“Er, Katani…,” she began. From the expression on her face I knew something was up. “Do you have anything a little longer?” she asked.

“Huh?” What was she talking about?

“The church sisters…they don’t approve of too-short dresses in church. If you were a tourist, it might be okay, but since you are family…”

“Church sisters? What?!” I exclaimed.

“Sister Lyn…she’ll be giving you the scrutiny eye, and then everybody turns to look at you—it can be quite embarrassing, Katani.” Olivia sounded very apologetic, but I could feel my temper rising. “Sister Lyn is kinda old; some of the sisters say she may be even ninety-five. She’s been in the church forever, so they just let her do what she wants,” Olivia explained with a shrug of her shoulders.

I stared at my cousin with my hands on my hips and set her straight. “Olivia, I know this is your church and everything, but I have to wear what I think is best. I’m all about my style groove and I can’t go by what other people think. You know what I mean?” I wanted Olivia to understand that I didn’t mean to be disrespectful or anything. It’s just that a girl has to have her standards.

But Olivia wasn’t listening to me. She was looking behind me at the door. I stared back at Olivia, but I just knew Grandma Ruby was standing right behind me.

“Olivia, honey,” Grandma said in a very polite voice, “can you please give Katani and me a few minutes alone?” Olivia gave me one of those sympathy looks—the kind that says,
Sorry, can’t help you out
.

Okay. So, after a lengthy discussion with Grandma Ruby about respecting the customs of Jamaica, I had to rethink my whole outfit. Lucky for me I had also brought my blue dress with cap sleeves and a flared skirt that ended just a bit below my knees. Of course, I then had to change my shoes—it was all so totally annoying. I really wanted to wear the miniskirt, but that was that.

Olivia came back in wearing a pretty plaid skirt with pleats starting below her hips. I had the perfect top for her, in the exact coral shade of one of the colors in the plaid. When I
showed her, she happily switched the shirts. I love it when I can help someone make a snazzy outfit.

Olivia was so excited about her new outfit that she hugged me. “Oh!” she shouted suddenly, pulling back from me and looking like a lightbulb had just gone on over her head. “There is a necklace in my mom’s jewelry box that would be just right to go with this.”

She left the room for a bit and came back looking flushed. “Good thing my dad wasn’t in his room so I could sneak it out.”

“Should you?” I asked. Now I was the one who was nervous. What if her dad found out? I didn’t think Cousin Cecil would be real chill about something like that.

“He won’t allow me to wear Mom’s jewelry. He says I am too young, but I think it’s that he doesn’t want to see anyone wearing her things. My mom would want me to look pretty. I mean, look, Katani, see how beautiful it looks with this shirt.”

She was right about it being the perfect accessory. The necklace was handmade from small, flat, very smooth multi-colored stones intermixed with delicate seashells. Olivia said that her grandfather had made it especially for her mom. He had spent a lot of time looking for the perfect stones and shells. Her mother had cherished it. “Really, Katani, I’m sure that my mother would want me to wear it,” Olivia reassured me. I could see that although it couldn’t be considered super expensive—I mean, it wasn’t made of diamonds or anything—the necklace was a treasure. And I guessed that it had a lot of sentimental value, like it was priceless to the family.

“But, won’t your dad see it?” I asked.

“I’ll just hide it inside the blouse until afterward, and when we are with the other girls I’ll show it off. Fasten it,
please,” she directed, turning her back to me. “No problem, I’ve done it before.” I wasn’t sure I believed her.

As I fastened the clasp, I totally had a bad feeling about her wearing the necklace. “Olivia, I don’t…,” I started, but Olivia just turned around, admiring herself in the mirror. Then she tucked the necklace inside the collar of the blouse.

“My mom was a teacher,” she said, her face growing sad. “She was quite a bit younger than Dad and very pretty…tall like you and me. He was so sad when she died. Really hasn’t been himself since. That’s why he gets kind of grumpy sometimes.” She paused for a second. “He’s getting better, though. He took me shopping last week, and we had ice cream. It was lovely,” she added with a smile.

With a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach, I followed Olivia out of the room and went looking for Grandma Ruby. “Whoa, Grandma, you rock!” I whistled. “You look absolutely fab!” She was wearing a light brown crocheted vest over a cream cotton shirt with matching crocheted sleeves, a striped skirt in different complementing shades of brown, and brown pumps. I had never seen that outfit. Tall is good for showing off clothes.

“Really,” I added, “you are positively RADIANT.” Now that was all Kelley, exactly as she would have said it. I suddenly felt homesick for my sister Kelley. She’s mildly autistic, and she’s always completely honest. It seems like she knows just what to say to make you feel really happy or sad. Kelley definitely took some getting used to, but she was priceless!

Grandma Ruby gave me one of her
You can’t trick me
looks, but I could see that she was pleased. She reached up to fix the dark brown hat that was perched on her head, tilting it a little to the side so it looked super fashionable. “Do you like my hat?” she asked with a teasing look on her face.

I was tempted to reply, “No, I do not like your hat. Goodbye!” It was an old joke between us from the P. D. Eastman book
Go, Dog. Go!
But I couldn’t. That hat was perfect on her silver hair drawn back into a sleek bun.

When we came out onto the veranda, Cousin Cecil was there waiting. He looked at us and nodded. I could tell he was pleased with the way we all looked, even if he didn’t say so. I grabbed Olivia’s hand and give it a squeeze as Selvin drove up.

“Mama!” he cried, when he saw all of us. We three smiled. It’s nice to know that you’re looking good.

The road to town seemed deserted except for those going to church. There were three churches in the area, Olivia explained, but she thought hers was the best. As we passed the churchgoers I realized that they really were all dressed up, and their skirts fell below the knee. I had to admit my blue dress was much more appropriate than a miniskirt. It seemed like church was a place to show off your best clothes. Some of the women wore hats in styles I had never seen. I had to bite the inside of my mouth to keep from laughing. Those hats were so baaad! One even looked like it had purple batwings coming out from the side.

Like Cousin Cecil, most of the men wore full suits, even though the sun already felt as hot as one of those big ovens in the Bliss Bakery. Selvin wasn’t wearing a jacket, though. I figured that he, like Olivia and me, liked to do his own thing.

We parked the truck at the bakery, and Selvin left us briefly to go into his house for something. Then we started walking up the narrow lane to the church. “It’s not too far,” Selvin promised.

Olivia whispered in my ear, “When a Jamaican tells you somewhere is ‘not too far’ or ‘just around the corner’—watch
out!” Sure enough, the lane was about a mile long, I hoped Grandma’s shoes wouldn’t hurt. She had “very delicate feet,” which she was fond of telling us—a lot. I was glad I had put on comfortable sandals when I’d had to change my outfit.

We passed two small, rundown-looking houses before Olivia told me gleefully that the next house was Ol’ Madda Bird’s home. “Um, who?” I asked, completely bewildered.

Olivia slowed down, grabbed my hand and, lapsing into patois, whispered, “Ole Madda Bird, she blind. She come here long time ago. No one know where she came from, or anything about her.” I felt a chill go up my back.

“Every day, all she does is sit on her veranda carving birds out of wood. She lives alone except for a little mangy dog that barks every time anybody passes her house.”

“But how does she live?” I asked. “I mean, how does she get money and food and stuff?”

“Somebody comes and takes the birds to sell and brings her supplies and stuff. But nobody in the village really knows much about her,” Olivia continued. “She has some of the birds hanging on the veranda. Wait till you see them. We think she is a witch.”

“Olivia,” I hooted. “There are no such thing as witches, girl.”

Olivia giggled. “I know it, but you know, it’s fun to be afraid sometimes.”

We walked slowly, to let the adults get farther ahead. When we reached the house, which was set back a little way behind a ragged wire fence, Olivia bent down as if she were fixing her shoe, so that I could get a good look at Ol’ Madda Bird. The shabby little wooden house was surrounded by bushes and seemed a little sad. The morning sun had not yet reached it, so it was in shadow. On the veranda were several
wooden birds of different sizes, hanging from the ceiling, like an advertisement: “We like birds at this house.”

Even from this distance I could see that they were very beautiful. Fortunately I had managed to squeeze my camera and my notebook into the fancy purse I was carrying, so I could snap a pic and scribble a quick note.

The birds swayed and spun gently in a little breeze and seemed to be looking around as if they were watching all that went on. I guessed that’s one of the reasons why the children thought Ol’ Madda Bird was a witch and were afraid of her. Me, I could hardly believe that a blind woman could carve so well. I wished that Isabel were here with me now so she could see the beautiful art this old blind woman was creating. Of all the BSG, Isabel would appreciate what it took to make these birds.

Ol’ Madda Bird sat in an old wicker chair on the veranda. Her head was wrapped in a turban, and she wore a shawl around her shoulders even thought it was already about ninety degrees. She was carving on a piece of wood in her hand. She must have sensed that we had stopped and were staring at her, because she raised her head and seemed to
look straight at us through her very dark shades and called out, “Who is it? That you, Olivia?”

My mouth dropped open. How did a blind lady know it was my cousin? Immediately we heard barking, and coming around the house was a small, black and white, scruffy-looking dog.

“Run!” Olivia said, and for the second time in two days I found myself running away from an animal. This vacation was turning out to be way different from what I’d expected—first a banana war, and now an old witch.

We slowed to a walk before we caught up with the adults, who had already entered the churchyard. Cousin Cecil looked at us suspiciously, but Olivia murmured, “I have to go,” and quickly left us to join her group. “Thanks!” I yelled after her. Both Cousin Cecil and Grandma Ruby stared at me like they knew something was up. I just put up my hands and said, “What?” like nothing was wrong.

Alleluia!

In Brookline, we attend the Episcopal church, which they call “Anglican” in Jamaica. Our service is very formal, with everybody sitting and listening politely. Olivia’s church was like a different planet! Everybody stood and swayed while the choir sang a bunch of lively gospel songs. And there was no passion organ here—the music was played on a keyboard, with two guitars and a drum set. This way it seemed more like a concert than a church service! I loved the way the music got everybody moving and singing. The youth choir led some of the singing, and they were really good.
You go, girl!
I thought with pride, watching Olivia do her thing at the center of the group.

I didn’t know any of the songs, so I mostly kept quiet,
but they repeated them several times and since the words were projected on a screen we could all see, Grandma Ruby soon joined in, just like on the veranda at Cousin Cecil’s house. It seemed she was determined to participate in every little bit of this experience of being in Jamaica. I was content with just clapping. I didn’t want to subject anyone to the horribleness of my singing voice. Once, when I was singing at a sleepover back in Boston, my friend Avery grabbed two pillows and clapped them to the sides of her head. It was that bad.

When the pastor welcomed new faces, Selvin nudged me. Grandma was on her feet almost instantaneously, and I slowly rose up next to her, feeling embarrassed. Everybody in the church was staring at us as the pastor introduced us as relatives of the Palmer family. The crowd clapped and murmured about us, and Grandma looked around and smiled graciously. No doubt about it, she was enjoying herself. I could see Olivia grinning at me from the choir, and I tried to stand up straight to make a good impression on everybody. Good thing I was wearing that blue dress.

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