Father Ryan is the new priest in Orchardville, battling a secret, sinful addiction to Donkey Kong.
"On Wednesday nights, he donned sporty sunglasses, hid his clerical collar beneath his black windbreaker, and rode his bicycle to Moose Hill Arcade. Donkey Kong called to Ryan like a primal scream from her dark corner in the dingy arcade: 'Feed me your quarters, my son, and I shall feed your basest desires, and make you whole again! This is my promise to you!' Little did Ryan know that another princess--a perky, blonde, nineteen-year-old mango-picker with unusually large feet and bubble-gum breath named Daphne Lewellyn--urgently required his skillful touch even more than Donkey Kong's beautiful, hapless victim."
Daphne's parents, the Orchardville major and judge, want only the best for their daughter. "Daphne spat on the Harvard application and wiped her shapely rear-end with the Yale admissions guide her mother had obtained for her. 'I love picking mangoes, Mother! It is my passion and my destiny! Take your ivy-league hogwash and shove it where the sun don't shine! I'm going to the orchard now, and I shan't return until my fingernails are stained orange and my back aches for the comfort of my firm mattress! Fare thee well!'"
Forty chapters later, a dreadful blizzard forces Father Ryan to ditch his bicycle and seek shelter in the mango orchard. "When Ryan first beheld young Daphne, bundled in her fluorescent-orange parka, bent over a bucket of ripe, fragrant mangoes in the swirling, blinding, raging snow, he blinked his eyes in disbelief. Who was this angel, picking mangoes in a snowstorm? He noticed that her hands were bare, and longed to caress her slender wrists, longed to lick all the sticky, sweet mango juice off her luscious fingers. 'It's her,' he thought, shuddering, 'the one I've been waiting for; the one who shall rip my heart to shreds with her mango-stained fingernails! I must run away before she sees me. But where shall I hide? I cannot take my eyes off of her. I must flee. But I cannot move. My toes are frozen. I must call out to her. But I can't disturb her. She's so gorgeous and young and forbidden. I must turn around and leave her to her mangoes. But I cannot. I cannot!'"
Thankfully, Daphne spots Father Ryan cowering behind a mango tree, and hauls him into a metal shed to tend to his frostbitten toes. When they speak to one another for the first time, it is nothing short of magical:
Daphne smoothed Ryan's damp, wavy brown hair, and said, "I hope your toes don't have to be amputated. This is the worst frostbite I've ever seen."
"I don't care how many parts of my body have to be amputated," Ryan fervently whispered. "I would've stood in that blizzard for hours, just to watch you twisting those mangoes ever so gently, popping them off the branches like dried-up zits."
Daphne smiled shyly. "No one has ever noticed how I...how I soothe each mango before I remove it from its mother tree. I feel as though you have seen into my soul. I'm...I'm a little embarrassed, Mr., uh...What's your name, my darling?"
Ryan closed his eyes and moaned, "I can't tell you my name!"
"But, why not?" Daphne caressed his cool cheek.
"I am not meant to be with you!" Ryan cried, extricating himself from her soft arms. "Pretend we never met. I must leave you now."
Daphne blocked the exit. "No. You're going to stay here, and you're going to tell me who you are. And then I'm going to show you who I am. Show you in a way I've never shown anyone else!"
"No!" Ryan backed away from the fluorescent-orange temptress, trying to ignore her curving red mouth, her clown-sized feet.
Daphne unzipped her parka. Ryan shielded his eyes.
"I keep my own set of mangoes finely-tuned, wouldn't you agree, Mr. Whoever?" She cackled, and grabbed Ryan's hands.
Her touch made Ryan giggle like a schoolboy. "I'm a priest," he wheezed.
"Not anymore," Daphne said, jamming her tongue into his ear.
(I can't reprint the rest of the scene here. It gets a little too graphic and messy. Needless to say, an obscene number of mangoes are involved.)
Father Ryan survives--barely. And Daphne decides that mango-picking is a nice hobby, but that Harvard is where she really belongs. They write to each other, of course--long letters stained with mango juice and tears--but they never see each other again...
I would like to thank Ms. Grebo for granting me permission to share these excerpts with you.
Published by Maria Roth
I love popcorn, cashews, cheesecake, Jane Austen, my husband and children, and Conan O'Brien. Why should you be jealous of me? I am double-jointed in both thumbs, I live in Kansas, I'm tall, and I'm modest... View profile
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10 Comments
Post a CommentSome more PV love for you!
"Feed me your quarters, my son" is the best line ever written in a romance novel. As you frightening Americans say: AWESOME!
I am wondering if there is symbolism in your work. Mangos in Alaska?
It almost seems real.
Wow, Too funny!
Funny stuff!
I loved "her 59th and final unpublished novel" ...Unfortunately, a writer like that would probably get published!
that is quite the picture, picking mangoes in a blizzard!
Popping mangoes off branches like zits? Ha- I love it!
Thank Ms Grebo for me, the moments she were able to provide you with were truly magical!