Chapter 1 - My Proposition for Him
The storm that night was one which stayed with me till today. It was not that I consciously willed myself to remember the sights, sounds and scents of what I had borne witness to, but it rather had its own way with me, especially each time the sky of dusk brings forth rain. The memory comes unnoticed; in fact it somewhat comforts me that it slowly creeps upon me without awareness of thoughts. Suddenly I feel it in its entirety; as fresh as dew like it all happened yesterday. I see him look at me with a perceptible gaze in his eyes; and I see myself as he sees me. Then I unwittingly awaken to profound sensations as unbridled as the storm which kept on raging on that night.
The storm unraveled into something which changed my life completely the same way he had been a force of nature himself. He was like the wind which blew formless; frenzied in intensity from mild pleasantry to torridly unpalatable. He pulled me towards him in aloofness. Yet he was like the breeze which pacified me into languid awareness; his warm breath against my skin was deeply soothing. Leaning against him, I had been thinking as I always had been; yet my thoughts were splinted into fragments of what was and what was not. I had felt so much that I could not possibly been thinking straight. All I knew was that he was going to be the undoing of me if I failed to see the wood for the trees.
Although I had borne witness to many storms after this, this one storm was one which I replayed on nights when the sudden saturated feeling of everything before and after grips me; it was as if the spark of life had re-entered me for the second time. It ignited me with a frenzy and a fervour so desirous that it must have come from the divine. My senses, bearing no volition of its own, become more acute than they ever were before. I remember the sequence of events that uneventful night vividly. It now unfurls before me and I see him again in my memories.
I had been so sure of my motives yet unable to hold back his effect on me. I had never been in such close proximity to a stranger before. Therefore I had been alert. Perhaps in spite of it, I was able to let myself go off-guard as I had thoroughly reasoned out that I had nothing more to lose. Not an ounce of professionalism or scrambling to adhere to what was considered proper behaviour. I justified my actions as a matter of urgency in the spur of the moment. I pacified myself that it was the time constraints which dictated my actions for I was due to leave the continent soon. My flight was in three days and if I wanted something in my life to change, it would have to be done now. No more procrastinations because I was afraid of the consequences of my actions yet mostly I had been afraid of his reaction.
I saw hailstones pelt through all sides of the pavilion hazardously and mercilessly. I was quite sure that we both had our fair share of nasty bruises. The roof of the pavilion initially afforded some protection by vertically shielding our heads. I thought that it must have been quite some miracle that throughout my travels here, I had been fortunate enough never to be caught in the middle of a hailstorm. Except today, when I had gone out of nature's course to engage him for a lie which we would both lead. It was perhaps a sign from above that this was going against all that I had stood for and if I possessed so much as a coherent thought, I had better turn back before it was too late.
It had been too late. Just then, the angle of the wind started to breach into our personal space. Thereupon hailstones hit us from all angles. The rain had ceased to matter when all I felt were the invasion of blunt and sharp fragments of hailstones on my body. Although I had tried my best to tolerate the numbing pain; it was not easy to keep still like that with pelting stones all over. My body winced and shook at the haphazard pelting. Every time I winced, I felt his arms move around my back tighter. He adjusted his movements to mirror mine.
"Do not be afraid." He said as he bent down, in barely a whisper into my ear.
His unusually large palms had started stroking my back, as if to comfort me but I was sure it had been more an attempt to keep me still in his grasp. I wondered how he felt and mostly I wondered if he was indeed afraid despite telling me not to be.
I was not sure what to do in this situation. The nearest building was at least a kilometer away, and that meant going through the oak tree lane and the narrow alleys before reaching the historic old town again. I was not even sure if there were street lights paving the straight path, but I took comfort in the fact that I knew it was straight so I need not have relied on sight but rather by instinct.
We were both fortunate that we had coats on. My face was buried in his chest and was spared most of the pelting but any fool would know that that the hailstones had hit his face much harder as he towered above me and because he shielded me in his iron-grip embrace. I had ceased to support myself on my wobbly legs. He took my weight against his body. Alas I thought I was stronger than that.
Abruptly and with enormous effort, I unlatched myself from his iron-grip; feeling a multitude of emotions. Perhaps he should not have shielded me. I had sworn to myself that I would never be a nuisance to anyone. Even the slightest inconvenience and reliance on others made me feel uneasy.
My sudden change of movement caused him to react swiftly. He roughly cupped my face with both his calloused palms. I shook in fear. Amber eyes dark against my brown ones, I stared at him; terrified.
"I'm not going to stand here like nothing has happened." He said, looking straight into my eyes and speaking a little louder now.
I was becoming a burden he did not want.
The sound of hailstones hitting all surfaces was too loud for normal conversation. It took a while for me to literally grasp his words. Still I could not comprehend what he meant by those words.
Was he talking about the storm or about me invading his personal space? Should I thank him for having shielded me from the hailstones?
I tried to say something but I could only manage a hushed yes. My voice had failed me. He observed me tentatively but he did not wait for my answer.
Instead I watched incredulously with my mouth agape as his fingers deftly unbuttoned his coat again. When he was done, he glared at me for a second. Hard amber eyes struck mine. His lips parted to say something but upon noticing my bewilderment, he decided against it, for in the swiftest of moves he calculatedly flung the coat over me.
My surroundings immediately became pitch black. Darkness and emptiness engulfed me. For a split-second, I panicked. Was this some form of assault? If this was an assault, perhaps it was just as well that I do not see what he was going to do to me. Ignorance was bliss.
I dared not breathe and make so much a movement as a wriggle under his coat. The next minute was an excruciatingly long one before he finally spoke; or rather yelled at me.
"Stay here while I try to break into this goddamned church." He yelled; pausing between breaths.
His breathing was unsteady and there was a tense notch in his voice.
Stay here, he said. So he must have needed me conscious and alive. He was not going to hurt me then, at least not until we broke into the goddamned church, in his own words. I hoped that if the all-encompassing God was listening, his not so subtle choice of words would be forgiven.
As my mind worked ninety to the dozen about what was happening, I suddenly understood what he was trying to do for me with his bulky coat. A heavy realization dawned upon me and my spirit, long dormant, awakened from its slumber. I felt touched.
The hailstones were no longer pelting my face and head. I had been sheltered even more, and he, even less.
I lifted the bulkiness of the coat which covered me; grabbing his calloused and scarred hands towards me.
"No, I want to help you break in." I yelled.
Yet I did not know what help I could provide. I hardly thought myself useful when it came to committing acts of vandalism but I did want to do something. It was justified by virtue of necessity, I told myself.
The amber and gold streaks in his eyes shone tenfold as he nodded. With his hand grasped in mine, he led the way and together we ran out of the pavilion. He made a quick grab of my long forgotten briefcase which was on the ground. Instantaneously it prompted me to remember his worn backpack, and I momentarily released my grasp on his to retrieve it from the bench. All throughout, his coat functioned as a sort of makeshift roof, protecting and shielding me from the hailstones.
When I turned towards him, I saw that he was already beckoning me towards to the ribbed vaults of the church. We ran together to one of the wooden side doors at the end of the long passageway. The huge uneven stone tiles were slippery with ice; causing us to trip over each other a few times. Fortunately we were able to hold each other up right up to the side doors.
Through my blurred vision, I saw that there was an old rusty lock on the high wooden doors. No windows; just doors. Handing over my briefcase to me, he pulled at the old lock with all the strength he could muster.
"I have a paperclip." I said.
My voice came out husky from the cold and the running. I shoved the bulky coat back into his arms.