We just thought we'd slip out for a last-minute almond parfait
and a Basque Cheesecake
I went out in the Orchard this afternoon. Where the bare twigs of the apple trees were stark against the steel gray of the solstice sky.
The apple trees were empty. All the leaves gone. And at first you think they're as near dead as a living thing can be.
Except you look slightly more closely, and they're not. Next year's buds are there already. The small leaf buds, of course. But also the chubby flower buds are already there. The tiny signs, in the winter darkness, of the pink and white glories of spring, and the rich, glorious fruit of late summer and autumn.
The promises are all there.
Those apple buds will go through the winter cold, to a quick glance dead. This child will go through the death of a cross until he rises in the spring. And now our old world still waits. And the buds of new life wait. And wait, till the Sun of Righteousness will shine and bring new life back into this world.
There's an old hymn that calls Jesus Christ the Apple Tree. He's the one who reverses that old curse of the fruit tree at Eden. The new Adam who faced temptation. The one on whom we feed to receive eternal life.
He came to earth and broke the power of death. He will come again to make all things new.
But for now, he's just a baby in a manger. We start our story at the beginning. And we will follow him through his life, once again.
Imagining Kirsty, halfway through her 60s, writing songs about how the Government have short-changed the Waspi women after saying they'd support them.
And she was thoroughly let down by the system.
It's pouring with rain, so we won't be dancing the Mambo de la Luna.
Not in these shoes.