Farsail 3
We have met Felicia Baxter before, but we do not yet know her well. She is concerned with things like lineage, not for the purpose of rank or belief in destiny, but because she is fastidious. She would prefer to know who each person’s parents and grandparents were in the same way that she would prefer to know everyone’s food allergies, birthdays, heights. There is a filing cabinet in her mind and she does not want it collecting dust.
So: Felicia herself. Born a very small baby, learned to walk late, to talk early. From a rich family, to the extent that wealth exists in Farsail. Had a few private tutors, learned well, studied engineering but didn’t like it so switched to peer mediation, economics, and civics. Is indeed the great-granddaughter of the illustrious Griphook Baxter, whose barometric innovations prevent all flooding. When a storm comes, the rivers are drained commensurately into the aquifer. Then rain comes, runoff occurs, and the water level returns, right up to each bridge.
She is allergic to walnuts, but not fatally. Also dogs, which are, in Farsail, rather exotic pets. She keeps plants. Many plants.
Each morning she wakes up with the sun, springs out of bed, and does her stretches and affirmations. She reminds herself of her purpose. First her life’s purpose, which she revises along with her living will, then her year’s purpose, then a fresh purpose for the day. This year her purpose is to amplify the best ideas she hears from others. Today her purpose is to be good company to herself and others.
Her lifetime purpose is rather private, although her ex-husband still remembers its last version.
Felicia is once married, once divorced. She married late in life. They had similar values. They found each other attractive. They discussed everything openly, honestly, at the first opportunity. Dated for a few years before marrying, but not too long
All the same, it didn’t work. So.
She’d go to a brothel now and again - there are a lot of good options for people who want men - but she can’t stand the idea of people knowing she’d done it. Being happy for her, feeling sorry for her, whatever it was. Can’t stand it. So she thinks big thoughts and takes long walks and waters her plants. Mediates as necessary, sees her friends in scheduled bursts, remembers birthdays and generates relevant gifts.
She’s very good at feeling good, Felicia Baxter is. She usually does. She’s a good cook, and she falls asleep at the same time every night. Has ten different aphorisms to tell herself, when she thinks of being old, and death. They usually work.
Without her, she is quite confident, the Council would be worse off. And so would Farsail be, and so the world.
Plus her plants.
And plus it’s Beatrice Featherknell’s birthday tomorrow, who needs a new skillet.
And plus there’s Joseph’s legislation to consider. Should she talk to him before next week? She’s afraid he’ll make all three of his proposals too extensive, and they’ll all be voted down. He doesn’t think strategically, that boy, but she knows he’s got a heart.
But no. It’s his mistake to make, or not. He’s young. He’ll learn.
Three things she’s thankful for, whispered to the ceiling, before she goes to sleep each night. Like clockwork.
“My heart kept beating,” she whispers, when she can’t think of anything else. That one’s more sincere than it used to be. More and more each year.










