meant.
Glancing down at the card, I saw my name. Not Gale. But Galahad, written in tiny, slanted cursive handwriting in the center. Pulling out the letter, I was not sure if she was messing with me. She teased me for my speech being formal, and yet, her handwriting looked like it was stolen from the eighteenth century.
Dear Galahad,
Hold fast to dreams, Langston Hughes once wrote.
Galahad, I like to dream. If you are going to send flowers, please do not let them wake me. I am thankful for them, anyway, so I am returning the gesture. The flower I sent to you is the Seattle Dahlia. It is the symbol of those who stand strong in his or her sacred values and Seattle itself.
I hope you enjoy your time here.
Odette
“Odette.” I snickered to myself, looking in absolute amusement over the flowers she had sent me.
Was she going to do this every time I sent her flowers? Would we have a flower war? Also, the poem she had taken very much out of context.
Shaking my head, I wanted to send her another letter, but I knew she might not be there, and wanting a response immediately, I took out my phone.
Ralph Waldo Emerson said, ‘The Earth laughs in flowers,’ and I am laughing at yours. —Gale.
She responded instantly. Odette says, if you laugh at my flowers, I will throw away yours.
I roared with laughter, my whole body shaking. Leaning on the couch, I nodded. You quote yourself now? Well, that is at least better than stealing Mr. Hughes's poem and twisting the meaning for your own gain.
Isn’t the beauty of poetry that it is left to the interpretation of the reader?—Odette.
No, the beauty of poetry is the expression of the human heart, which is why I am so touched that you felt the need to not only search for a poem for me but also to send it with flowers. I have never received such a gift. —Gale.
Don’t read too much into it. I was trying to say ‘thank you, but do not send them at sunrise. They woke me up.’ Nothing more. —Odette.
“So, what you are saying is, I may keep sending them, so long as I choose a more convenient time of day? —Gale.
I did not say that. You are infuriating. —Odette
You did not, not say that. And yes, I know. But you are also infuriating. —Gale.
How am I infuriating? —Odette
I grinned, shifting to sit on the couch. How do you vex me? Let me count the ways. One, you vex me in sight. Your face haunts me day and night. Two, you vex me in might. Your wit matches mine fight by fight. Three, the most vexing is how amused you leave me. —Gale.
It was not a very good poem, but I enjoyed sending it to her nevertheless. Because just as I thought, she was struggling with what to say back. I could tell by the way the three dots appeared and disappeared over and over again.
Checkmate.
Write me a poem, sing me a song, tell all the world of my beauty, dance for me from dusk till dawn, and they will say I am lucky to have you. But I will ask, did you love as you wrote, as you sang, as you told, as you danced? —Odette.
I stared at the phone, frozen. Her words were like ice water in my veins and spread a chill from the top of my head to the soles of my feet. I was only joking, and she brought a bomb to a word fight. All the amusement and teasing, she flushed it all out in two sentences so that anything I said in return would feel inadequate. However, I did not want to say nothing in return, either. Unfortunately, she beat me to it, adding:
You do not have to keep flattering me or keep sending flowers, Gale. They are nice. But if you do it too much, I will only think you are pretending and using your playboy moves on me. —Odette
Okay. It was all I could come up with.
She did not reply, and I was a bit grateful because my mind was still reeling. I glanced over at her flowers. She wrote that it was the symbol of those who stood strong in his or her sacred values. That was her for sure.
“Are you all right, sir?” Iskandar asked.
“Did she reject you again?” Wolfgang questioned far too gleefully.
When I shot him a look, he went back into the kitchen. Iskandar, however,