rupestral
"Well, I thought it was clever," Rupert said. He
pursed his lips, stared into his Scotch on the rocks for a moment, and
then continued. "And so did she. Certainly at first. I mean, it
was too perfect. My name is Rupert Stein and hers is Ani Lithgow.
Stein and Lith - the rock theme was on a silver platter,
as it were. But I'll get back to the silver in a moment. I mean, there
was silver in the rings, but the silver in the rupiah - oh, well,
hm." He paused and had a drink.
"Rings," I said, prompting him out of his intermittent
funk.
"Yes," he said, "when I gave her the engagement
ring, I had rupestral engraved inside. A nice anagram,
Rupert S., A.L. I said as I gave it to her, 'I've taken a lichen
to you.'"
He was lucky he'd met a suitably inclined word taster to become
affianced to. Abstruse puns aren't usually thought of as romantic. But
he knew that she knew that rupestral meant "growing on
rocks," from Latin rupes "rock." And because she
was a word freak, she would have had the taste of pest in the
word but would not have felt it apposite in this case. Or not
initially.
"I suppose it had a nice rock on it," I said.
"Oh, a good stone," he said. "But a rolling stone
gathers no moss, as Ani later pointed out. Anyway, I bought it as a
set with the wedding ring, which I also had engraved:
rupestrian. Because when you're married it's carved in stone. And
another great anagram: Rupert S., Ani."
"Of course, rupestral also means 'carved in stone' or
'written on stone,'" I said.
"Yes," Rupert said, "they both do. We actually
thought of cave paintings as a decorative motif for the
wedding."
"We?" I raised an eyebrow.
"Well," he said, "perhaps I more than she. Anyway,
she thought it would be better to theme with the blue dresses that she
was having for the bridesmaids."
"Blue," I said. "Aniline die?"
"It was her way of reminding me that two can play the name
game."
"It occurs to me," I said, "that planning wedding
details around puns on your names - especially competing puns -
may be -"
He cut me off. "A rocky start? How original of you." He
drank a bit more of his Scotch. The ice clinked. "I mean,
obviously we were focused a bit too much on ourselves, I on me, she on
her. The name thing was symptom more than cause. But maybe if I had
eased it up a bit, not gone the extra step."
"All this rock punning is a bit much, anyway, given that
Rupert has nothing to do with rocks," I observed.
"Well, it comes from Germanic roots for 'bright fame' or
'famous fame.'" He rolled his eyes. "Not worth the effort. I
suppose if I has been given the more standard version of the name,
Robert, this might not have come to pass as it did. But it did.
And it was really the invitations that were the cause of the rupture."
He paused for a moment and winced.
"I suppose Ani wanted papyrus," I said.
"Which we agreed on," he confirmed, "overlooking
the fact that the papyrus of Ani was an Egyptian Book of the Dead. I
guess there might have been a curse of the mummy. But mainly of
her mummy, who didn't think so highly of me. But it was the seal
that sealed my doom."
"On the invitations?" I said.
"Yes," he said, "the idea was for the seal to have
the impression of a coin in the sealing wax. You know,
rupography."
Yes, as it happened, I did know rupography - taking an
impression of a coin or medal in sealing wax. From Greek rhupos
"sealing wax" plus the usual ography. "That was
a problem?" I asked.
"It was the coin," he replied. "I guess I should
have gone with a rupee, but I didn't like the pee. So I wanted
it to be a rupiah, which is the unit of money of -"
"Indonesia," I said, nodding. Come on, man, I
know that!
"Well, as it happens, the rupiah isn't worth a whole lot. A
hundredth of a cent. You can't even really get a one-rupiah coin.
Which is what I wanted, not 25 or 100 rupiahs or whatever. Anyway,
rupiah may, like rupee, come via Urdu from the Sanskrit for
'wrought silver,' but their low-value coins are aluminum. So I decided
to go to a silversmith and get a fake coin made, with a ring to make
it easy to hold. This wasn't a cheap thing to do, you
know."
I was trying not to say that the money might have been better
invested otherwise. Wordplay isn't just cheap, it's free, for heaven's
sake.
"So we had the invitations printed up on papyrus. And Ani
thought it would be nice to have the seal done with a grey dog on it,
which is the family seal of the Lithgows. I suppose I didn't need to
mention to her that 'grey dog' was folk etymology and that
Lithgow really comes from 'damp hollow.' Things got a bit damp and
my words began to ring hollow after that..."
"Relations got a bit rupellary?" I said.
(Rupellary means "rocky.")
"Where there were any at all," he replied,
making sure I heard the any-Ani pun. "And then I took it
upon myself to seal the invitations all myself, as a surprise to her,
with this fake coin. But I hadn't inspected it closely enough. You may
find it hard to believe, but I don't read backwards print so well. And
I just didn't really stop and look at the seal as I was making it. I
really thought they all said rupiah." He pronounced the
[h] at the end clearly.
A pause ensued.
"And when I showed her what I had done, her mother was there
too. And her mother is a dermatologist."
Another pause. I was thinking. Then my eyes grew wide.
"Ohhhhh nnoooooooo," I said.
There's no delicate way to explain this, really. Rupia -
no h - is the name of a nasty skin condition that shows up in
advanced syphilis and involves crusted pustules. And what he was
telling me was that his invitations had blobs of sealing wax on them
stamped with this word.
"At that juncture, Ani pointed out to me that rhupos,
aside from meaning 'sealing wax,' also means 'dirt' or 'filth.' And
her mother, who doesn't like puns much, nonetheless indulged in a play
on my name and eruption."
He finished his Scotch and looked over his shoulder towards the
bar, the imminent source of his next. He turned back and made one more
observation, drily: "Those who are joined by the pun shall be
severed by the pun."
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