Author's Note:- I wish to thank all my readers and fans for their support during these two months. I have received both praise and criticism on my works and I appreciated it all. I had always loved writing ever since I was able to hold a pencil. The past few years had been challenging years for me, and I abandoned quite a bit of my writing. I am very slowly picking it up again. The inspiration for this story started in 2012 and throughout the years had been rewritten and edited, and finally today, I have enough confidence to set it free in the open :)
This story has recurring themes similar to my previous story- Projecting the Wild Man. Beauty Sands is a friend of Ana Pollock. If you had enjoyed it, you would probably enjoy this too (I think :)
*****
This story is dedicated to the one judge I know.
Prologue
Dreamt not of you
Your presence never appears
In my dreams
Yet carried you in my heart
In all boldness of the sun
By moonlight, need no dreams to
Know that you are here.
My name is Beauty, and that is my real given name. It adorns my birth certificate, my driving licence and my resume. My parents were simple idealists. Months before I was conceived, they had already pinned down this name to their future, and if I may stress, yet to be conceived child if it were to be a girl. They had other names in mind like Faith, Hope and Serene. I guess that being teachers they had to use all the English adjectives they could think of.
Or just perhaps they wanted to make up for what they lacked - beauty. Beauty in the form of description was like a handsome man and a pretty woman walking hand in hand. My parents; they were not ugly, yet they were not entirely attractive too. So they should have the foresight that their baby girl would be a replica of the both of them.
When I came to the world though, they somehow thought it fit to name me Beauty. It was fine, really, until I was about thirteen. The kids at school would tease me about my looks. I was no beauty. Since then I had asked everyone I know to call me Bea.
Being a lawyer, I used to work in a law firm. My days at work were hectic then. If you asked me whether I felt pressured and if I had the worst job in the world, I would probably answer in the affirmative. That is if it were during the week. During weekends, when I had sufficient time to relax, I would say I love my job despite the fact that I had a miser for an employer. He was not only a miser; he was also quite a crook.
Everyone in my life calls me Bea except my parents. As simple as Bea is what I would like them to call me. I find myself not such a beauty compared to those film stars I see in magazines. Though I did not like the way Bea sounded, I had to make do with it. It was as though I were a fat, bumble bee. Yet I could not think of any other name which could be abbreviated from the adjective "beauty." So Bea stuck with people, and over time Bea became my name.
So I lived with the name Bea and came to terms with it. Had I had better looks, I would definitely have people calling me Beauty. I was afraid that people would laugh at me if I asked them to call me Beauty. I liked the way it sounded though. I would like to say that I am beautiful inside, if not outside. Yet that it not for me to boast about my own attributes. I was afraid that people would think that I was ego-centric.
I despair on why I could not be called some simple name with no connotations to it; like the way Mary, Jane, Cindy or Melissa sounded and meant - nothing as literal as my name.
...
Now I glanced at my watch. It was already eleven. Joseph was not here yet. I was standing along the busy corridor of the court building in the small town of Rubik. Yes, it does remind you of the Rubik Cube does it not? By the way, everyone in this town is expected to know how to solve the Rubik Cube the same way they say that children at the nearby seaside town are born with fins; expecting them to be good swimmers. Well, we were in close proximity to the sea too, yet the name of our historical town derives from the jagged cliffs at the far edge of town called the Rubik Cliffs which plunge right into the South Sea.
Our court building here houses the Magistrate Courts, the Juvenile Courts and the High Courts. We do not have an Appeal Court nor a Supreme Court given our small population. The nearest ones would be in the city of Rhine, which was two hours away by car from Rubik. The Supreme Court was the highest in the court hierarchy in our country.
Let me tell you a secret. I actually cannot solve the Rubik Cube. I avoided the Rubik Cube at all costs. I also considered myself a barely there lawyer. I worked in the security of my boss's office and barely ventured out to litigate cases in court. Once in a while, I did crave the hustle and bustle of court life.
I looked at familiar faces and the not so familiar faces. The disadvantage of the profession was its superficiality. The advantage was that you got to help people in real time. I would speak of its disadvantage because it affected me more than the nobler counterparts.
There were some people I wanted to make friends with when I was in legal training but unfortunately they did not want to be friends with me. They were polite, to say the least but when I extended my hand in friendship, they made no move towards me not least until I became a full-fledged lawyer. Then they were somewhat friendlier. Though they are now my friends, I am always watching my back should I make a blunder and then am ridiculed at. I accepted it as part and parcel of legal working life.
Still, I must have unwittingly achieved something in order to impress them into friendship. At that time, I was very fiery and optimistic about being a lawyer. I had just jumped the bandwagon of justice. I sought to change the world; make it a better place. ClichΓ© works for me. I was like that.
One person who shared my nobler pursuits was a man called Stoner Corts. He was by then a popular lawyer and was known as the most eligible bachelor in the legal profession, not only in the town of Rubik but in the whole country. I was pleased because the capital city of Rhine was only two hours away from the sleepy hollow of Rubik. He drove down to Rubik often enough and I was pleased whenever he went to the Rubik Bar Society where I was then doing my compulsory legal aid training twice a week.
He went there for work purposes. There was always something which dissatisfied him. He was always brooding like a melancholy composer the likes of Robert Schumann yet loud-mouthed when he wanted to get things done. Oh yes, I did like the heavy romanticism of Schumann. Not easy to appreciate in the beginning, but then it gets understandable and somewhat soothing in all its tremors.
Stoner had a way with everyone including me. I remembered the first time we met. He barged into the large brick house which was essentially the Society headquarters. The former living room was modified to become a cubicle-free office where three desks were arranged. I was at the desk right at the door. I was on my legal aid duty. I had no clients for the day. In fact, I rarely had clients at all. Not many people know about this free service that the Society offered, which was quite a pity.
He looked at the table in the centre where the State Bar secretary was supposed to be seated. Yet on this particular day, old man Phillip Townsend was not there. He went for a dental appointment during office hours. He told me to tell visitors, if any, that he was busy with an important meeting. I acquiesced.
Since I was only a pupil in chambers, I listened to him as he was the Godfather of lawyers in Rubik despite the fact that he was no lawyer himself. He sure acted like one though. He kept the Registry List of all lawyers and he knew what everybody was up to. He could stir things up if he wanted to.
"Where the hell is Phillip?" Stoner yelled.
I remember being surprised. This was a very handsome man. Never mind the yell. Eye candy to brighten up the day was more than welcomed.
He looked like a sculpture of the Renaissance. His features were perfect. His black eyes were oval; not too big nor too small. His nose was a respectable one of average size and shape. His lips were enticing. His hair were the colour of his eyes; pitch black against a tanned complexion. And his skin was just so smooth. I need not say more; he was the prefect specimen of a man.
"He went for an important meeting." I said, catching myself in a breath after studying his beautiful features.
"Who are you?" He asked.
His eyes scanned the table. I was reading a law report on the freedom movement case. I was quite passionate about human rights, so I grabbed this particular book from the library upstairs.
"I'm on duty for legal aid." I said.
"What meeting was it?" Stoner asked.
"I don't know. I'm not his assistant." I said.
"What time will he be back?" Stoner asked further.
In my mind, I could not help but see how ridiculous the situation was. Probably after the dentist had pulled his bad teeth out. Phillip was a chain smoker and he had yellow teeth.
"He did not say." I answered.
Stoner moved towards where I was seated. He asked me to inform Phillip that he dropped by and wanted to discuss important matters concerning the promotion of legal aid. Then he headed towards the door.