This story was edited by JerryJonesAfrique.
Rather, an incoherent, sloppy piece of work was made into a story by this amazing editor.
Much love,
BeautifulLiars.
PS. This is my first ever submission, be kind.
*****
Now that my mind is a whirlwind of emotions, sometimes I wonder if I had imagined it all. When I lay in bed at night, a part of my mind whispers that it was all in my head. So I decide, before I lose my mind, I would chronicle this beautiful disaster; as a proof that it wasn't mere solipsism.
Or maybe it was, the line is barely discernible in my head.
I was a fresher in college, and had barely been in the university hostel a month; slowly adapting to the groove of living with people I had never known in my life.
We had been cooped in the hostel in the evenings for the first month as dictated by the college; so almost all the girls decided to go out on the weekend we were finally allowed outside after 7 pm.
Although some girls had house parties to attend, most made a beeline for a tiny eatery five minutes walk from our campus. This particular café had apparently been serving as a makeshift bar for nineteen year olds' year after year.
I was surrounded by my classmates tapping away on their phones or making rapid phone calls to their boyfriends, or boyfriends-to-bes as we approached the sturdy brick house with a glow sign in squiggly cursive blinking invitingly at the end of the road.
The front of the building was painted a simple green, with frosted windows and a plain wooden door. As a girl pushed it open, a tinkling chime greeted us, along with the welcoming smell of brewing coffee and alcohol.
The café was decorated with old vinyl records that covered the walls on each end, from the ceiling hanging yellow lamps served as the only source of illumination. Facing the door, at the back of the room stood a counter of polished wood with scattered bar stools, and bottles of assorted drinks stacked on shelves, lining the wall behind it. One side of the room was closed off for the staff. The other side partitioned with a silver curtain, behind which was a tiny lounge- with woofers fixed into walls, hazy blue-red lights and the unmistakable clouds of hookah.
A perky throb of local, popular music wafted out from the speakers. I couldn't place the song, but its beat seemed in time with the optimistic air surrounding the girls.
Most of the girls in my pack moved towards the lounging boys who were pretending to be men. Almost everybody knew someone. We have Facebook to thank for that.
I don't have an account. I am not adept at swimming in the pond of subtleties that is socializing.
I swerved towards the bar, barely giving the half-men in low-hung denims and over-styled hairdos a glance. To be fair, they wouldn't glance back anyway.
Maybe I'd have a G&T and go back to my room. Least I could do is get a little drunk. Not that I was a charming drunk; but then there wasn't anyone I had to impress now, did I?
As I stood waiting for my turn, It dawned on me that I had missed this more than I had realised. Wistfully, I recalled how two of my best friends and I would drink till we passed out at the end of every semester. The crazy night ins, where we didn't have to bother about anything, only three of us and an endless flow of booze.
It was the only thing that had pulled us through the ten-hours-a-day study schedule we had to follow every single day of our sorry school lives.
I missed having a room to myself too. I tried not to remember my comfortable room at home. At least the dormitory would be blessedly empty tonight, given that most of the coy, flirtatious, tight-assed girls cooing around the just mentioned boys were from my department anyway.
I had ordered my pallid drink, and was watching the bored bartender mix it with his back to me, when I caught the reflection of a boy in the martini glasses shelved behind the counter.
I turned my head, taking him in with half-bored interest. Sitting by himself on a corner stool before the gleaming bar counter, playing with the rim of his unimpressive mug of beer, his seat and his self absorbed appearance made most people miss him at a cursory glance
He was sitting right under a yellow lamp, his dirty-blonde curls set off in the golden ambiance. He was dressed in a simple round-neck t-shirt and denims that thankfully did not have half his ass hanging out. I could see a simple leather belt peeking from under his shirt. One of his feet was planted casually on the leg of the adjacent stool; his finger was continuously rimming the mug of frothy liquid gold as he lifted his head to look right at me.
For a full minute I remained still, holding his gaze with the same lazy boredom, pretending to be the master at stare-downs in bars, just a flash of interest running through me as gave me a smile- uncertain, but a full winning smile.
Just then, the bartender, a man in his late thirties, with the unmistakable beer paunch and receding hairline that belied a midlife crisis, knocked my drink on the table harder than strictly necessary.
I flinched at the sudden action, tearing my gaze away from the stranger to give the bar man a requisite dirty look, but he was gone.
Rolling my eyes, I picked up the glass, turned and started walking over to where my smiling stranger was sitting. The smile got bigger.
I raised my glass to him, sipping the bitter drink with a little grimace.
"Cole" he said, offering his palm. I took it, not offering a name in return. His hand was firm and large, it enveloped my hand completely.
I looked down at our conjoined fingers, He had calluses on the side of his thumb, a part of my brain registered that he probably played the piano. His grip was tight but light-making me wonder if he knew martial arts.
My mind was screaming at me to stop staring at his hand like a psycho with limb-fetish and say something.
Anything.
I was so not good at conversations.
"You're not from around here," I observed aloud.
No shit.
He didn't seem to mind my nail-on-the-head approach to communication though.
"No, but neither are you." He gave me his affable, self-conscious smile. "This is my second year at the University. My usual Friday place is closed down this week."
I wondered briefly why he was indulging my awkward attempts at talking, while my mouth rambled on.
"Beer is a rare choice for Friday nights. Men usually pick something stronger." - I swirled the oily liquid in my hand. I had low tolerance, I'd be sloshed by my fourth drink.