This is my entry for the 2021 summer contest.
This is unlike any of my other stories, as it is a straight romance.
It is a very long, slow burn love story, in fact, the longest story I've ever written and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did writing it.
Please be tolerant with me about any mistakes. The story's length is too great to ask any of my usual beta readers or even voluntary editors to endure, when they all have their own projects.
If the conversation seems a little staccato to begin with, it's because I am trying to reflect character's early attempts at British Sign Language.
Again, if you can bear with me, as I know I've not followed BSL exactly grammatically, in order to help most readers.
If this doesn't suit you, then please, read my other stories or other contestant's stories.
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Sat at my favourite spot on the grass, I enjoyed watching ducks silently diving and fighting for scraps, sending expanding ripples across the large pond in front of me. The trees that surround the pond waved silently in the breeze, allowing the late spring sun to stream through the leaves above, warming me.
Summer was knocking on the closing door of spring. Wildflowers and weeds had blossomed, speckling colour in the greenery skirting around the pond. Bushes surrounding the pond hung under the weight of their spring growth spurt, with some or their branches dipping into it. The wheat field surrounding the pond is lush green, with tall strands reaching for the sun.
Even before I could walk, I'd visited this pond with mum and dad, then as a little girl and now as a woman. Although I could only hear it for the first six years of my life, before I lost the last of my ability to hear its beauty. It has always been my sanctuary, my happy place. Somewhere I can relax and hide away from the outside world.
I still love to name the ducks, although I've gone through generations of Mrs Puddle-duck over the years of seeing mothers with their chicks. The pond has been my muse for my few novellas and my self-illustrated children's books, giving me my favourite but the smallest of my three incomes. I was sitting thinking over some ideas for a new children's book, whilst pondering on the year ahead.
I watched the latest Mrs Puddle-duck waddle around the pond feeding, hounded by several suitors, or maybe she already had a brood somewhere in the reeds and bushes at the edge of the pond. My mind drifted to the problem at hand. How could I get a tractor cute enough to appeal to children?
A stone flew across in front of me, making me jump in surprise, and struck the water in a small eruption, causing the ducks to scatter in fright. Shocked at this intrusion, I sharply followed the trajectory of the stone off to my right to see a man stood ten steps away, silhouetted by the sun behind him. The strong sunrays sting, forcing me to shield my eyes with a hand as I tried to focus on the dark stranger.
Surprised and a little frightened to have an interloper, a stranger, in my special place. He was tall, with broad shoulders and a muscular physique, standing menacingly with hands-on-hips, shifting his weight from one foot to the other. As a slim, unathletic woman, I couldn't offer any defence against him, should he have tried to overpower me.
No one has ever visited me here except for mum and dad. Dad has a lifelong agreement with the farmer, which allowed me free rein to visit the pond and spinney surrounding it. The pond isn't visible from either the driveway to the farm, nor are there any paths or rights of way to give access. No one has chanced upon it in all my 28 years. Yet this stranger stood before me.
Panicking, I look over my left shoulder across the field and hedgerow, to home safety and any possible help. I could see mum oblivious, focusing on her book whilst sunbathing on the patio. I glanced back at the stranger, terrified; he would step forward, to catch me unawares.
He remained rooted to his original spot. Still unable to see his face or read any emotion with the sun directly behind him, but his shape continued to menace as he shuffled from one leg to the other.
The stranger seemed to realise my dilemma and stepped sideways into the shade of an adjacent beech tree, allowing me to drop my shielding hand and open my eyes.
The stranger lifted his hands off his hips and slowly signed, "Hello, me G. A. R. Y."
This was a pleasant surprise for a stranger to sign off the bat. To spell out his name in full, bode well, but how could he know I was deaf?
No longer squinting against the sun's glare, as my eyes adjusted I realised he was the eldest son of the farmer. I'd only ever glimpsed him at family gatherings, local fetes and fairs, but he'd been away from home for years.
Now able to read his face, he no longer looked threatening, carrying a smile with a kind, rugged face. His shuffling, reflecting nerves, not threatening at all. His handsome looks, strong muscular build and work overalls suggested he works on the farm but also epitomised any historic romance novel's hero.
I sign in response, "Hi G. A. R. Y... Me I. S. L. A."
After spelling my name in full, I repeat it showing him my sign name. I use the third finger of my right hand across my heart on my chest for the `I', followed by the sign for an island.
Gary nodded. Although he already knew my name, he copied my signing. Although deep in thought with his eyes furrowed, he signed, "Island... Why?"
"I. S. L. A... Island in Spanish. My sign name. I, Island."
He nodded and smiled wider as he understood and copied it with a nervous naivety, showing him to be new to signing. Normally, people only learn to sign after they've met me, not before. Either he's picked it up on his travels or he's learned to sign for me because I know no one in his family is deaf.
Gary signing, "Hi, I home from travel. I want meet you."
He blushed and beads of sweat appeared on his brow, but it wasn't that warm in the shade. Why would he still be nervous of me? He's lost any boyish chubbiness from when I last saw him and is now a rugged, muscular, handsome man, slightly taller than I with short blond hair, carrying several days of rough, unkempt stubble.
His strong blue eyes bored into me as if wishing me to understand something he couldn't say. He looked uncomfortable standing there, still dancing from one foot to the other. It was flattering to have a man visit, who seems to have learned to sign for me!
I sign, "G. Sit, okay?" And point to the grass near me.
He nodded, relieved to step closer and sit cross-legged, but still looked nervous.
Gary smiled apologetically and signed, "Sorry I throw stone. You no see me."
I sign back, "Okay. No one has visited me here, ever. You surprised me."
Panic span across Gary's face and he waved his arms to stop me with frustration crossing his eyes.