Cindyella
Cindyella
Cindyella
Once upon a time, in New York City, la grande mela, there was a teen-age
girl named Cindy Ella whose widowed father had, after a humble beginning, made a great
was a sharp man with few friends and the joy of his life was his
the time, was capable of short interchanges, and bore the marks of her
wore costumes and the taxes were equally charming. The new step-mother
mother was a Professor of Art History, and her not so beautiful, but
Australian newspaperman who also had tax issues. It had not enough
staff and much of the original plumbing, for this reason not quite
enough water, unless one counted a muddy mosquito swamp that had been,
in prouder and more hostile times, a moat.
The father worked hard avoiding taxes and at a new found interest in
market potential.
Cindy was having a difficult time adjusting. She spent much time in her
room, trying new lipstick colors and watching for pimples. She so tried
the patience of the local International School, that even the promise
of a new soccer stadium could not keep her enrolled. The stepmother, to
correct her appalling laziness, and instill some idea of accountability, assigned her some light
household tasks. Since general provisioning was done by a servant at a mega-supermarket upon
whose board sat the heir apparent to the crown, Edmund Hapsburg-Hoehellenzern-Valois-Hanover-
Savoy-Rothschild, Cindy was charged with the purchase of the wonderful local cheeses (mostly
sheepmilk) and sausages the town market offered on Tuesdays. She was also assigned the task of
collecting ashes for the rose garden from the baronial fireplace. The stepmother used the ashes to
"Oh, Daddy, it's so dreadful here," complained the beautiful Cindy to her father.
castle that the father spoke to the stepmother about the wisdom, after
"Not exactly," said the Art History Professor who had her own views on the growing Mannerist
collection.
The father offered his daughter dancing lessons and a beautiful horse
and membership in the local Polo club and a Masaratti on the day she
was old enough to drive. But nothing improved the humor of the girt
"rape." The magistrate would have locked the young man away until well
past the end of the Polo season. But happily, he owed the accused's
York, the Grand Duke and Duchess returned from Tampa, and all the court
threw itself into the consolations of Old World culture. There were to
The Palace was decorated with banners, the market place strewn with
an engraved elaborate card bearing the goat and zebra heraldry of the
"Absolutely?"
"A Ball," Cindy trilled over her eggs, "how wonderful, when is it?"
"Tuesday a week," the stepmother said.
"But its not for you, lucky girl," the stepmother said.
woman, her eyes narrowed and ominous. Cindy turned to her father in
frenzied appeal.
"But why can't she go?" the father asked in a voice that had intimidated
years.
"No," said Cognition, "the smart people will find a way not to go."
"But, oh, daddy, dancing and champagne and caviar."
"For this lot more likely punch and low fat foods," said Animal
Behavior.
But father had lost interest and was surrounding a kipper. Cindy
shrugged. She would have a dress and shoes made locally. Just in case.
II
The big night came. The father sat in the study sipping Bourbon, wearing
a pre-nuptial red dinner jacket and paisley pants which had led his
wife to think on her blessings and the difficulties of times before the
marriage. She and her daughters had not prepared much for the event.
The stepmother had seen a coiffeur who had advised what should be worn
" More Fifth Avenue than Soho," summarized the mother to her daughters.
Cindy was put to use. In a frenzy of last minute concern, student papers
and research put aside, the ladies asked her fashion advice, for the
loan of stockings, and for help with unwilling zippers. Although she
was thanked profusely for each service and congratulated on being young
and beautiful enough not to go the Academy Ball, she took the
preparations very badly. She was in her foulest mood as the unwilling
celebrants walked out the door. The Masaratti was in the shop. She had
"Damn it," she cried to the high ceiling and tapestry of the Great Hall
and ran, sobbing to her room. She lay on her bed dreaming of the Ball
opportunity was too great too miss. The gardener had a Volkswagen. The
she dressed and chose her spectacular hand made velvet (verre is
velvet) shoes.
"Why?"
When she arrived, the Academy was ablaze with light and ashake with
white heads and large medals with ladies baggy, perhaps, but coutured
to the limit. Cindy parked the Volkswagen down the block and walked to
the Academy. She was not questioned at the door. The Footmen assumed,
entering the Academy that night. She was in a ballroom complete with
platform for their Highnesses. Except for an odd smell of moth balls,
it was a setting from a story ballet. It was just as she had dreamed
it. She saw her step-sisters talking with a young man. He was golden
Both sisters winced. They both thought his uniform was a costume from a
Lehar operetta they had seen in New York. There was a silence while
thought of something sporty, along the lines of, "what is your favorite
game?"
walked disinterestedly around the room. The two sisters looked to the
ceiling and went to seek the comfort of the punch. Cindy tracked the
whose dress stopped about 6 centimeters above her belly button and
They danced together, speaking no more. They had already revealed the
depths of their souls. Cindy and the Princeling were in each other's
intermittent contact. They were of one heart and mind. Like Cindy, the
Prince had had limited success with his academic career. There was a
not bad session with Para-psychologists at Duke, but all the rest was
The young couple floated enraptured, inscribing wider and wider circles
until they had forced the tentative, older, weaker couples from the
floor. These lined the sides, glad to be safe, and formed an audience
to the first moments of true love. Cindy's family did not recognize
her. Her father, drunk and bored, was not watching closely. The charm
visiting Physicist from Bologna who was trying to explain to them about
'strings.' The stepmother was having a truly good time chatting with an
"Oh, oh," Cindy muttered. She ran from the Princeling's arms out of the
"Stay," the Princeling called after her, "you won't turn into a
pumpkin."
Cindy did not hear these bon mots as she ran down the street, losing her
out. He took no notice of the old Volkswagen that coughed down the
block, stripping its gears and not using its directional signal at the
corner. But he saw the shoe in the street. He walked to it, picked it
up and pressed it to his heart. Around him all nature seemed silently
"I have found my own true love," the Princeling said next morning over
eggs.
"Is she from a great family?" the wise Grand Duchess said to her son.
The Duke listened carefully. He had long wondered why his passive
subjects, with this Heir in sight, did not stage a violent revolution
and had considered raising taxes sharply to foment one, it being his
view that all the revolutions he had ever heard about were ultimately
about taxes,
"I only asked," she said, "that you live out of the country."
The Duchy was searched high and low for the beauty who had lost her shoe
but won the Princeling's heart. He went to a Council meeting with the
of attention.
The Heir appeared on the Six O'clock News. He read a poem by Browning
from cue cards, held up the shoe and beseeched his lost love to call
one of three numbers that flashed upon the screen. Cindy called the
Cindy's father, his attention now caught, was proud of his sweet
daughter.
"I always knew you would turn up well in the end," he said.
"I denounce the throne for the woman I love," announced the Princeling
from the balcony of the Palace. The applause and cheering of the
voted by the King's Council, causing a modest raise in the taxes. The
but not quite as much as the cost of removing them from the castle. The
lasting about 90 minutes in which the Chief of Police hurt his toe. The
first act of Parlement was to reduce taxes and revoke the allowance of
Cindy and her Princeling. They were never heard from again. But it is
emotion, and given the dividends from the super-market, that they lived