Garlicky
There was once a grand
garden. It grew all manner of vegetables and herbs and the family that ate of
it were always well fed.
One fall the smallest of
small heads of garlic had been left in the ground. No one noticed it, or if
they did, they decided it was much too small to consider.
The weather turned
unseasonably warm and the little garlic did as any other would do under the
circumstances: it started to grow.
A thin green blade fought its
way out of the soil and took its share of sunlight. Because the days grew
shorter it didn't get all it needed and instead of growing it went to sleep.
Snow covered it and kept it safe through the winter. In the spring when the sun
warmed it enough to wake up it began to grow.
When it came time to plant
the garden the woman of the house, who loved her garden and took great pride in
it, found the shoot standing well above the soil.
"I can't imagine how you
got here," she said. "But you're here all the same and you look fine
and healthy. I suppose one wild garlic is fine. I'll plant your kin in the row
with you."
All the newly planted toes
grew and grew. But instead of getting bigger the fall garlic stopped.
When the woman saw this she
pulled it out. "Not much point having you take food from your brothers and
sisters. Off to the compost pile with you."
"No ma'am, please. Put
me in your kitchen. I can serve you more than any of the others. Give me a
chance."
"The wonder!" said
the woman. "A talking garlic."
"My winter outdoors has
done wonders for my flavour. Put me in a stew whole and see. It won't take
long, I promise."
"Surely you are the very
Devil talking to me."
"Not the Devil, ma'am.
Garlicky," and he bowed as much as a garlic could.
She brushed away the dirt and
held it to her nose. Her eyes watered and her nose ran.
"You have some life in
you, Devil or no."
And she brought it in the
house. She made a pot of soup from the bones of an old rooster who'd crowed his
last that very morning.
As it simmered in the pot Garlicky,
who was hanging from a nail near the stove said, "Put me whole for just a
moment and I'll add the most toothsome flavour to this old crower."
She did so and it was the
best, most garlicky soup the family had ever had.
"This is wonderful,
wife. You've grown the best garlic ever. I hope to have this again and
again."
She smiled at the compliment
and said she'd do what she could.
The fall garlic stayed on the
wall near the stove. Every time the woman needed some spicing for a dish Garlicky
offered itself for the job. Each time it did it cautioned her, "Only for a
moment."
In dish after dish it worked
its magic until one day the husband said, "It's not as flavoured as I
like. Are we out of garlic?"
"No, husband. I do as I
always do."
"Impossible. I can hardly
taste it. Use more next time."
A few days later as she
prepared a venison stew the garlic again offered itself and gave its usual
caution.
"I must be under a spell
to think you talk to me, garlic. And even worse that I obey. But my husband can
no longer taste you. I need to keep you in longer."
"No. No. You must not.
Only a few moments, ma'am. If I stay in longer I will die."
"Nonsense." She
reached for the garlic, but only grabbed a bit of its papery covering as it ran
from her outstretched hand. It ran and rolled. It jumped on the cat's back and
rode it out the door. When the cat stopped to scratch it away Garlicky jumped
off and ran into the bush not daring to stop until it was deep in the trees.
It threw itself down on the
ground at the side of a game path. It was far away from the only life it had
ever known, and it was all alone.
Happy noises of a family
grateful for the good flavour of food were replaced by twitters and snorts and
the rhythmic pounding of wing beats drawing closer and closer.
A strong billed robber bird
parked beside the bulb. "You look tasty."
"Oh, I am," said
the garlic and then wondered if bragging was such a good idea.
The bird plucked the garlic
off the ground and secured its bill around it. At first Garlicky struggled to
get out, but when the bird soared past the tops of the tall pines it stopped.
It was much too far to the ground.
The bird, heading for a landing,
squeezed its bill tighter.
"Ouch."
"Yuck," said the
bird as a bit of fresh garlic juice landed on its tongue.
The garlic rolled out of the
bird's mouth and landed on soft moss. It rolled back and forth until it got
enough momentum to move and then it ran and ran.
"Raaaaak," cried
the bird. "Get away from me. You're awful."
"I'm wonderful," said
Garlicky, relieved to learn the bird wasn't coming after it.
It ran and ran until it came
to the edge of the forest and then rolled in some tall grass to hide while it
rested.
"This will never
do," said Garlicky after he'd rested. "I must find a warm kitchen and
make myself useful."
It rolled out of the grass
just as a dog and his boy ran by. The dog stopped for a sniff and cocked his
head at it.
"Whatcha got there,
Hounder?
"Stinky." The boy
curled his nose at it and then shoved it in his pocket.
Later when he came home he
presented his mom with it. "I found it out by the trees. It stinks, but it
looks okay."
"I'll throw a toe in the
soup tonight."
"No," screamed the
garlic, drawing his toes in as close as he could.
"Fancy that. A talking
garlic," said the woman. "What do you suggest? Tossing you in
whole?"
"Oh, yes, please,"
said the garlic. "But just for a moment, mind. It'll be all you need. I
promise."
And it came to be that Garlicky
seasoned many a dish for its new family until one day they couldn't taste it
anymore.
"It must be getting
old," the woman mused. "I'll chop up a toe and leave it in."
Garlicky screamed and tried
to get away, but the woman was too fast for it.
It screamed again when she
snapped off one of its cloves and turned its head when she chopped it and threw
it in the soup.
The garlic sat on the
counter, crying bitterly over the loss of its clove.
"You don't know what
you've done, human. You don't know."
"I know my soup will be
tasty, garlic. No more out of you." And she carried it to the fridge and
set it among the carrots and onions.
Time passed and many more
meals were made. One by one the cloves were snapped off and chopped and the
garlic cried.
Eventually only one toe
remained.
"Hmmm. This won't be
nearly garlicky enough," said the woman.
The last clove said in a
small, fractured voice, "It's your own fault. If you'd left me whole you'd
have plenty. Plant me in your garden. I'll grow a bit now. The winter will
harden me and then next spring when I grow big you can use me whole in your
cooking again. I promise."
The women brought the clove
up to her eyes for a closer look.
"You've got a point, but
that doesn't help me today."
She ignored the screams as
she chopped up the final toe and tossed it in the stewpot.
"This isn't nearly as
spicy as you usually make," said her husband. "Are we out of
garlic?"
The woman dipped the ladle
into the pot and scraped the last bit of stew into it.
She put it on her plate and then
brought a forkful up to her mouth ignoring the small, shrill scream that came
with it.
"We are now."
9 comments:
Oh, how so many of us think we know better than to do what we are told.
So true, Messymimi.
Poor garlicky! What adventures he had though. Well done.
Thanks, Reb.
Oh dear, I just crushed up some garlic for soup. Ouch!
Very cute story, but sorry for poor Garlicky!
Oh, that was wonderful! I loved the escape by bird.
Mary Anne in Kentucky
Crabby, good to know Garlicky had someone on his side.
Thanks so much, Mary Anne.
Another good one, Leah.
You know you've done well when you've made people feel sorry for garlic!
Thanks, Bag Lady.
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