Why Rockstown?

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9 Responses

  1. Beaked says:

    Hi All!

    I read CatFoodDispenser’s comment… I have to tell you I agree almost everything in the way she explained.

    1. Albert left the apartment without a trace
    When he got back his memories he realised he can’t be nor a friend nor a guardian anymore, because he loves her. If he just simply wanted to be her guardian as before he hadn’t a reason to vanish and leave the life they lived together as friends. The only reason he felt he have to leave is the romantic love he felt towards Candy – the feeling he found incompatible with his role as the head of the Ardley clan.

    2. Their relationship as a ‘father’ and ‘daughter’
    For the first read I thought the last letters are written after Candy and Albert are got together as a couple. But I read them again, and now I think that all of their letters in the book are written before they found out they love each other with romantic feelings. They mentioned many times the ‘adoptive father’ and ‘adoptive daughter’ thing as a funny fact, and Albert wrote at least two times he don’t like if he seems an old guy next to Candy. In my read these are proofs they wanted to know the reactions of each other about the age gap and the ‘doughter-father’ relationship.

    3. Rockstown
    I’m sure that Albert wanted to check Candy’s feelings. Let us don’t forget the fact he read Candy’s diary she left to him on her college room table. He knows everything about her feelings, the secret meetings, the vacation in Scotland … and the kiss. He knows that Terry is the reason she healed from the mourning of Anthony. He simply wanted to know that Candy’s soul healed after their love and their broke up.
    Albert is a sensitive man (as he mentioned it himself), I’m sure he couldn’t have start a relationship with Candy if she loved Terry.

    4. Terry’s letter
    I think it’s the last letter by chronologically, maybe the only one that written after Candy and Albert became a couple. I think Terry’s letter is a try to get a new beginning for their relationship. ‘For me nothing has changed.’ – he wrote, and I’m sure he still loves Candy as much as the last time they met. It’s the last letter before the Epilogue, which is the part of the book where everything is about Albert, so I’m sure it’s a ‘farewell’, a letter that never answered. If we check back the last letter that Candy wrote and never sent to Terry, she closed it with ‘P.S. Terry…I loved you.’. Not ‘love’ but ‘loved’!
    If Terry were Anohito, and Candy had answered that last letter, I’m sure she would took it in her treasure box. The fact there isn’t an answer in the treasure box means to me there was no answer…

    I have many more thoughts about the whole novel but I feel I wrote a bit much right now….
    Sorry for my English, I’m not a native speaker, and many times I cannot find the words with the perfect meaning. 🙂

    • Ms Puddle says:

      Hello Beaked! Nice to meet you here. Welcome to my blog 🤗

      Yes I agree with you. It’s clear that Albert could not simply resume his guardian role when he remembered his legal relationship with Candy. Poor guy! If he could do that he would have taken Candy home to Ardlays with him. After all, he quit his dishwashing job and began working with Georges again.

      About the letters, I think you meant the letters in the CCFS epilogue? I think both were aware that they were more than friends and had strong feelings for each other, so Albert decided to reveal his last secret to Candy. Other than Anthony, Albert was the only guy who knew that Prince on the Hill was her first love in her life. If he had no romantic feelings for her he would have kept this a secret forever.

      About their mentioning of adoptive father or adopted daughter, she was just teasing him out of impatience and/or disappointment that he had been too busy to spend time with her (her birthday wish) — even after she had come all the way to Chicago for her birthday. 😉

      Yes, I also think Candy wanted to gauge his reactions. Albert did explicitly indicate his displeasure — apparently he didn’t want to be her adoptive father or guardian.

      It’s true that Albert had read Candy’s diary, but I doubted he sent her to Rockstown to test her feelings. Subconsciously he might, but it was very risky. What if she reunited with Terry and returned to New York with him?

      About Terry’s letter, there are lots of theories out there, but I also think that Candy had not replied, or she would have mentioned it while talking about Terry’s clippings in her jewellery box.

      Thanks again for writing to me. 😊 No worries about your English. I can understand you without a problem, my friend 😉

      • Beaked says:

        Sending Candy to Rockstown was really a risky step from Albert. But we know how much Albert loved her… and he respected her independency more than everyone. (He shows it many times in the novel and the manga too.)
        I think Albert would rather accepted if Candy chose Terry after Rockstown than she stayed with him but loving Terry deep in her heart. So I still think that it was a test by him to see how Candy really feels.
        And what would happened if Candy chose Terry? Maybe Albert never tell her he is the Prince of the Hill, and he lives his live alone as the head of the Ardley clan, a succesful businessman, and he support Candy like a real uncle. (I’m happy with the real, much more happy end of the story. 😉 )

        The timeline is a tricky thing in CCFS. 🙂 I’m planning to draw a timeline with the events and the letters of the novel as I see them in order. I’m sure there are many ways, and maybe all of them are right in some ways.

        • Ms Puddle says:

          Yes Beaked it’s so true that Albert would not reveal his last secret (being Prince on the Hill) if he knew that Candy still loved Terry. As you said, he was sensitive, and as much as he loved Candy he would rather keep their friendship. The fact that he had decided to let her know he was her “prince” he essentially began courting her.

          About the CCFS timeline, it’s very complicated, and yes there are different theories out there, and perhaps some of them are right in various ways. Yet, one thing remains true — Candy chose her prince at the end. 😉

  2. CatFoodDispenser says:

    Thanks for your wonderful post!

    I too wonder why Albert did the things he did in manga. Why did he leave the apartment and didn’t contact her much? Why didn’t he contact her after Rockstown? Why did he send the package to Candy? Also, why Georges didn’t just call or send telegram to Albert in Lakewood so that Albert could take care of Neil situation secretly? Why did Candy leave Chicago after she found out about Albert’s identity?

    It’s interesting and wonderful to know that there are different thoughts on the events in the story. I also think that Albert was taking the risk of losing Candy to Terry when he sent the package to her. I think he was aware of the possibility, but I’m not sure if it was his whole reason. If Albert wanted Candy to get back together with Terry as a couple, why didn’t he contact her after Rockstown event when he found out the outcome? It’s highly likely that he had bodyguards watching Candy after Neil’s kidnapping incident, and he definitely knew Candy went to Rockstown from what he said to her in Lakewood after reunion in manga. So, if Albert was trying to forget about his feeling for her because he thought Candy couldn’t be happy without Terry, he could’ve contacted her after he found out that Candy didn’t even talk to Terry in Rockstown.

    I wonder why Albert left her and disappeared. He could just get another apartment or a mailing address and keep in touch with her as he did before in London. Or he could tell her the truth of his identity and still keep in touch with her. If he was trying to forget about his feeling for her because of their legal status as adoptive father and daughter, he would’ve left her as soon as he regained his memories. I believe that the main reason he left her was that he was no longer able to maintain his lies, because he loved her and wanted to further their relationship, and lying to her was a big obstacle. He also felt guilty that he lied to her. So he was afraid of her reactions and also what the status change would do to their relationship. I don’t think he was trying to forget or deny his feelings towards her. I think he was just didn’t know how to proceed from there. I also think he was aware that to truly protect her (from abuse from Ardley family) he would have to come out publicly as Granduncle William, and he wasn’t ready to make the big sacrifice yet.

    In other words, Albert was stuck. He could no longer pretend that he was a free spirited wanderer because he didn’t want to lie to her anymore. He couldn’t tell her the truth either because he wasn’t ready for it. He was wooing her very actively after he recovered his memories, until his lies caused a big trouble for Candy. That may explain why he didn’t contact her after Rockstown. After Albert recognized that Candy likely had fallen in love with her, it might have been more difficult for him to tell her his true identity and the fact that he was hiding it from her that would inevitably change their relationship.

    I also think that Georges wouldn’t interfere with Albert’s decision if Albert was trying to forget about Candy. He sent Candy to Lakewood, because it would help Albert in what Albert wanted, but not to reverse his decision. Georges could just call or send telegram to Lakewood, but he didn’t. Why? I think Georges felt that it was important that Candy and Albert meet and talk in person. If Albert was stuck and couldn’t make the next inevitable move, and meanwhile Candy was quickly approaching a marriageable age, and Neil was only the first of many suitors to come, Georges pushed Albert as if saying “you’ve got to move forward or you’ll lose her”, because Georges knew Albert wanted her.

    I read on internet that the author didn’t have complete control of the narrative towards the end of manga, and she thought the relationship between Albert and Candy was sometimes “too easy”. She also wrote that the original manga was intended for preteen girls, so there were restrictions what she could do, while CCFS was for grownups. I think one of the changes for grownups is what Albert said to Candy about “sister vs adult”. I don’t have the Japanese version of it, but I think it’s subtle but very sexy. Also, when Candy reunited with Albert in Lakewood in manga, she accepted the truth so easily and they spent a night together after that! Because the intended audiences of the manga was young girls and Albert, about 28 years old at the end of manga, could be those girls’ fathers’ age, it must’ve been difficult to show that their relationship was more than fraternal. Moreover, Albert was in love with Candy and hiding the feeling while living with her and sharing a bunk bed with her. That would’ve been pretty inappropriate for shojo manga to show it more explicitly. In CCFS, after Albert told Candy about “sister vs adult” thing, Candy didn’t spent a night with him and it’s understandable.

    I believe Candy left Chicago because she needed some time to process the new information about Albert, as Albert feared. It went very easily in manga, but it took several years in CCFS. Albert also seems to be worried about their age difference in CCFS. Imagine if Candy was 17 when she was rescued by Albert in Lakewood and Albert was about 24 with no beard and sunglasses, looking just like an older version of the prince, and Candy wasn’t in love with or never met with Anthony. I’d think she would’ve fallen in love with him right there. But because Candy thought Albert was much older back then, and her tendency to judge people by their appearances, and also Candy was still too young, they both didn’t see each other as their future love interests. So I think the events and time after the reveal of Albert as Granduncle William were necessary for them to deal with the age and status gap and that’s also why Albert wanted to look younger when he confessed that he was the prince on the hill. In CCFS when Albert told her in Lakewood about Rosemary and Vincent Brown, that sounds like he was declaring his determination to overcome obstacles with any cost to be with Candy. That means Candy was aware of difficulties to their relationship, and she showed that by not standing next to Albert in the photo at Miami hotel opening.

    When I think about these points, I’m more and more convinced that Anohito is Albert. I’ve read the arguments favoring Terry, but I don’t think any of them that convincing. Terry definitely wouldn’t inherit a jewelry box from Mrs. Grandchester. It’s highly likely that it was Albert’s mother’s. I don’t know about daffodil thing.. I sew a part of CCFS in Japanese, and it seems like the flowers at St Paul was 水仙 (narcissus), and the ones at Candy’s home in England was ラッパ水仙 (daffodil). If I understand correctly, daffodil is a genus of narcissus but narcissus isn’t necessarily daffodil. For Anohito wanting her to be his side, it also sounds like Albert…who didn’t want to leave Candy and wanted to keep living with her in Chicago? Who couldn’t leave her alone and frequent Pony’s Home after she left Chicago, to the point that he had to invent projects and reasons to visit her? Who wanted her to stand next to him in the photo? Who renovated a room in Chicago mansion so that Candy would want to come to Chicago more often? Who actually searched for her frequently and show up unexpectedly in different places (to take her out to countryside, rescue her after Neil’s incident, console her on the tree)? Also the person who hugged her after listening her story as a stowaway, sounds like Albert. In manga, Stear and Archie told Candy Georges told them that Granduncle William was worried about her. For Georges to tell that to the brothers, Albert must have been very worried. In CCFS Georges told Candy about it in his letter. Shakespeare? Yeah, Albert sent Candy Romeo and Juliet’s costumes, right?

    As I wrote in my previous comment, I think Terry’s letter was to tell Candy that his wish for her to be happy hadn’t changed. In other words, he was giving his blessing for her to find her own happiness. And that concludes Chapter 3 and opens to Epilogue where Albert and Candy talk about finding her own happiness, which Candy says is now.

    As for Candy helping Terry in Rockstown, my take is based on the conversation in manga between Candy and Eleanor Baker. Eleanor told Candy that he must have recognized her presence if he loved Candy. Terry did see Candy even though he thought it was his hallucination. He sensed her presence, because she was actually there and her crying nudged him to come to his senses. As Eleanor said, because he loved her, and it helped him realize that he should return to New York and start over.

    Off topic, but I was thinking about similarity between Candy Candy and Beauty and the Beast. There is a prince in disguise, and his love for the beautiful girl leads him to reclaim his true identity. He also saves her from wolves/lion. He showers her with gifts, nice rooms, dresses, and education/library. When the girl met the prince in disguise the first time, he was living in a rundown but luxurious cottage/castle with unusual housemates. There’s also a villain who wants the girl for himself and wants to harm the prince (Gaston/Neil…LOL). Oh, don’t forget that birds love the beast/Albert, and horses love the girl. Nice bonus…a quirky inventor. I guess the stories are similar because both follow classic love story structure.

    Getting long again. I really enjoyed your article. Looking forward to continue the conversation.

    • Ms Puddle says:

      Hello CatFoodDispenser, I’m so sorry I have totally missed your brilliant comment. I mostly agree with what you said 🤗, but since it’s a very long comment with great insights, it’s not easy for me to reply to you here.

      If you don’t mind, I might discuss your points in yet another new post?

    • Ms Puddle says:

      Hi CatFoodDispenser, sorry for the delay. As I mentioned before, you have raised many valid points and questions in your comment, and certainly we have similar sentiments. Regrettably, turns out I don’t have time to write a new post yet, so I’ve changed my mind and decided to respond to your comment one or two topics at a time.

      It’s very interesting you have compared Candy and Albert’s relationship to that of Beauty and the Beast. Guess what? I was told a fanfic writer had thought of writing a fanfic based on this classic story too.

      But unlike Belle, Candy was afraid of the vagabond for only a short while, and despite his suspicious appearance, he gained her trust in no time. Yet, as you said, neither Candy nor Albert regarded each other as potential love interest; but still, at her age, her friendship with the grown-up adult man was a bit unusual. She later discovered that he was like a big brother to her. I must add though, that her feelings for him had apparently evolved ever since then. FYI, this is one of my old posts about this:

      http://mspuddleshaven.com/2014/09/15/love-grew-into-romance/

      Unlike the Beast, Albert just wanted to help the poor orphan girl, and he even went so far to adopt her as his legal daughter. Judging from the manga illustrations, Prince on the Hill was Anthony’s age, which makes more sense to me why Candy could not recognize him years later. For your interest, this is another post,

      https://mspuddleshaven.com/2013/07/18/age-difference-between-candy-and-albert/

    • Ms Puddle says:

      CatFoodDispenser, I mostly agree with your analysis why Albert left the apartment and didn’t contact Candy much afterwards.

      The neighbors had apparently found out that Candy and Albert had pretended to be siblings, and they specifically asked him to move out because they highly suspected he was involved with some gangsters. Candy fiercely defended him and claimed to move out with him. Albert overheard the conversation and sadly decided to move out in secret by leaving a note with lots of money for Candy. In his departure note he indicated he had troubled her enough, which upset her when she later discovered his absence.

      Do you think Albert had to leave the apartment (Candy)? Why or why not?

      Come to think of it, if she was merely a friend or a little sister to him, he could have come clean and/or offered to take her “home” with him. Alternatively, he could at least disclose his recovery and properly bidden her farewell. After all, this was their original agreement; in her eyes he was a vagabond, so he could simply tell her he would leave Chicago and continue traveling around the world, etc.

      In other words, he really did not have to leave her in that tiny apartment, contrary to what was portrayed in the manga.

      But he probably could not bring himself to go on lying to her or speak the truth, just as you said, CatFoodDispenser. He had to act fast before she woke up from her evening nap, and he chose the easy way out — to disappear from her life for now until one day he could make up his mind about what to do with his relationship with her. That also explains why Albert did not contact Candy much after moving out.

      About Georges and his actions due to Neil’s forced engagement, I totally agree with you that he could have easily called or sent a telegram to Lakewood to inform his young boss, but the loyal assistant chose to disobey him. Here, some people might not have paid much attention this was his first disobedient act since he had followed the late William Ardlay to America. We all know that the first time is always the most difficult, so Georges must have struggled for significant moments before breaking the rules. I feel that this was not the original order after the adoption papers were signed — not to bring young Candy to meet with WAA. I have a strong feeling that Georges disobeyed a new order from the boss — Albert’s whereabouts would remain unknown to Candy. Just my two cents 😅

      No doubt Georges was fully aware of what was going on in WAA’s life and his odd relationship with his supposedly adopted daughter. I also think that Albert was stuck in a dilemma — it was time to make the next inevitable move but at the same time he was hesitant (or even reluctant), mainly because he might lose Candy as a friend forever (or she would never forgive him).

      Whether Albert was trying to forget Candy or not after he had moved out, let’s agree to disagree. I feel that he was in an attempt to do it, thus sending her to Rockstown, etc. However, the report he had gathered after the trip must have made him realize that he could no longer stay on the fence. He had to make a move soon, and Georges took this opportunity to push him off the fence, so to speak. I like what you said, CatFoodDispenser, that Georges pushed Albert as if saying “you’ve got to move forward or you’ll lose her”. After all, Georges understood Albert better than anyone (Candy was still in the dark back then). 😉

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