She was never sure exactly how the figs arrived that day, but when she got home she found a pile of ripened fruit overflowing from unfamiliar basket on the kitchen table, purple with promise.
No one locked their doors in those days. That said, if a neighbour had something for you they would usually leave it at your door if you were out rather than bringing it inside. Had the figs been left on the doorstep, however, their perfect globes, all swollen with sweetness, would have been ruined by birds and ants and other creatures.
The gift of figs felt extravagant.
She was grateful for them, though a little peturbed — particularly as the days passed and no one in the village mentioned them or asked whether she had enjoyed them. She had been used to receiving small gifts, especially of food, after her husband had passed away. People would prepare a little extra for her when cooking for their families, making sure she was nourished during her grief.
But the gift of figs felt different, and far more intentional.
She pondered who might have left them for her as took one of the velvety figs in her hands and sliced it open to reveal the jewel-toned flesh within. The earthy fragrance of the fruit was intoxicatingly evocative, reminding her of golden evenings in summers long past. The scent transported her to a different time and place, when she had walked long-limbed and barefoot through a clifftop orchard at sunset, wind and salt spray from the ocean below in her hair.
Her heart skipped a beat.
She looked more closely at the basket holding the figs, wondering if it was the same one she had been handed all those years ago…
This has been one of Blue Jai’s Vignettes — where I play with words to provide a pop of fictional colour in your day. If you have enjoyed this post, feel free to click the follow button at the top of the page. I’d also love to hear your comments, or for you to tell me how you would have responded to the picture prompt intsead.







