Summertime was always my favorite time of year; warm days of bright sunlight seemingly dragging on and on until evening settled its cloak of purple and golden shadow upon the land as if to smother the heat of the day in its balmy folds. Today, however, I hardly notice the sharp smell of eucalyptus and the mustiness of hot dust in the air. I shield my eyes with my left hand while my right clutches tightly around the thick bundle of books balanced precariously upon my hip as I hurry to the first class of the day. Yes, I am going back to school. Well, sort of! After Cynthia's death I did lose the plot for a while, wallowing deep in my own grief. Or was that guilt? My head droops on that thought and I develop a sudden deep interest in my own two feet, encased in their dust covered shoes, as they rhythmically move the rest of me towards the dull red building in the centre of the square.
Four months ago it had been raining. A wet spring day, cold as winter and pouring down while the countryside showed through in splendor of verdant fields tessellated with blotches of violet and yellow as they rolled away towards the foothills. Cynthia sat beside me with her head tipped back against the headrest her breasts jutting forward, and slightly upward, as they strained against the cobalt-colored fabric of her blouse. I glanced at her finely defined face, the face of a Greek goddess. Her hair, jet black, hung freely about her shoulders and over the back of the seat. She had her eyes closed, but I could picture them. Deep hazel brown, glowing with her special zest for life, shining with intelligence. I turned my attention back to the road, peering through the windscreen.
The continuous downpour distorted my view as I looked past the wipers swishing hypnotically back and forth, and fixed my gaze on the black strip of bitumen that snaked before me. White lines flickered at me, vanishing to my right one after the other like tracer bullets in the dark. Ahead the gloom was deepening and I knew it was time to light up, but my eyes were so heavy. Somewhere in my mind I knew I should reach out for the switch and ... Of course the headlights returned daylight to the world, but I wasn't driving any more. I stood under the new day in a field of dandelions, soaking up the sunlight. Cynthia stood a distance away and she was calling to me, but her words got lost in the light breeze that blew gently from the east. Something was troubling me and I knew that Cynthia was trying to tell me what it was. I strained to hear her words, as they became clearer with every repetition. Then the world twisted itself inside out. Cynthia screamed so loudly that my eyes snapped open. My hands froze on the wheel as my foot plunged onto the brake, but the car was off the road, on its side and, at that moment I knew I was going to roll...
God it is hard to forget! I can still see Cynthia's face, her eyes staring at me through a mask of blood. Mindlessly I tried to pull the car from her body, pinned under the roof, but even though I was virtually uninjured I hadn't the strength to move the twisted hulk of metal that was squeezing the life from her. Even as I strained and watched I saw her mouth moving to call my name as the light faded from those hazel brown eyes I loved so much.
Someone is shouting my name. The horror of the crash dissipates, like a thought balloon dispelling in a cartoon, and I lift my head to see Raymond Brewster waving his podgy hand at me. His fat buttocks waggle obscenely as he hobbles towards me in what he thinks is a light jog. His face beams, glistening with sweat, his shirt showing the first signs of perspiration stains under each arm. He pulls up a few feet away and reaches to help me with my books. They are, by now, surrendering to the tug of gravity and threatening to spill onto the hot bitumen.
"How's things?" he manages to say between huge gasps for air. "I mean, well..." He looks puzzled for a moment and a meaty left hand flaps before his face as he anxiously tries to mime 'that thing' that happened to me.
"Yeah. Getting by, Ray. You know how it is."
Bulldust! He doesn't know how it is. He hasn't experienced killing his beloved due to his own incompetence. Ray shrugs as my books tumble neatly into his outstretched right hand.
"Sure. I guess..." and like a magician's trick the books stack up, tucking neatly under his arm as he falls into step beside me.
We met in the fourth grade and have been friends ever since, only losing contact while Ray did his time in 'Nam; a conflict that I happily avoided by being naturally unable to win a lottery of any kind. He returned a different man, morose and moody, given to heavy drinking binges that eventually led to his weight problem. Now he hardly drinks at all and the black moods rarely visit him as time wears away the demons in his soul. Will time wear away my demon? Cynthia! My beloved Cynthia. Twisted and broken like a discarded 'Barbie' doll. Dead because I couldn't stay awake behind the wheel.
"You're miles away, Brad. What's eating you?"
I start and my eyes swim back into focus. My face feels stiff while my teeth ache, so tightly am I clenching them. Forcing myself to relax, I try a weak smile.
"Sorry, Ray. Guess I'm stressed out about this back to school thing. You know, wrong side of forty and sitting in a classroom."
He nods slowly and looks toward the building that we have now nearly reached.
"Yeah. No big deal though. Millions doing it."
I can read the sign over the door now as a stream of people moves into the building.
"ADULT EDUCATION CENTRE: Second Chance College."
Second chance? For me perhaps, but for Cynthia? Where is her second chance?
At least the classrooms are air-conditioned. I can still remember when I was a youngster going to school. In those days we sat in wooden buildings without heating or cooling. During summer you stewed in your own sweat while in winter you froze your buns off. Little wonder most of the kids could not concentrate on their lessons. It was like attending torture classes. Well, things sure have changed. In here it is pleasantly cool, the seats made of molded plastic with a slip-on cushion while the blackboard is now a white board upon which the teacher writes with something that looks like a Texta color pen. I didn't get a seat near Ray. He hasn't forgotten the old trick of below average students and has buried himself up the back, in a corner, where a teacher would need binoculars and a sector map to find him. Me? I just 'plonk' into a middle row seat, near the aisle so that I can stretch my legs out if I get cramped.
The class consists of about forty students, aged between nineteen and sixty-nine, here to study art, sketching and drawing. Ray deposits my books on one corner of the table as he heads for the back seat he so favors. In front of me is a large sketchpad, the kind with the cartridge paper that lends itself so well to charcoal and graphite drawing. I hold a thin stick of charcoal in my hand, waving it a few centimetres above the first white page, contemplating on whether it would be ill mannered to doodle while waiting for the teacher to arrive.
I joined this class to try and put my life together again. Art is a subject that has always interested me. Over the years my self-taught skills have molded me into an above average sketcher and painter, skills that I am hoping to polish to professional standards by this course. Dust motes dance in a beam of sunlight that falls across my desk and the cartridge paper reflects it into my eyes in a blinding white luminescence. Squinting against this glare I become conscious that my hand is guiding the charcoal across the page. Black lines swirl, cross and converge into a profile. An eye forms, then another. Wide, beautiful eyes in midnight black, glistening with life above a perfectly formed nose that tilts ever so slightly. The lips are full and turned up in a wistful smile. Charcoal hair cascades around the features and my hand trembles as it guides the stick around the beauty of her face, shading, darkening; bringing life to her. A tear splashes onto the faintly smiling lips and the smile vanishes in a watery explosion that washes the charcoal into sooty chaos. My stylus snaps with an audible crack as I stare in horror at the blood welling from the ruined mouth and nostrils. Blood on her face! No! In panic I lift my head, staring wildly around the room at the people who are totally oblivious of me as they chatter to old and newly found friends. My heart calms and I glance again at Cynthia's face seeing now that the blood is only my own tear-drop tinted inky black by the dissolved charcoal. Cynthia! Even in charcoal I let you die! Is there no reprieve?
Finally the murmur in the classroom dies into silence as the door opens. A breath of loveliness walks into the room. She would be in her early thirties with a halo of honey blonde hair that catches the sunlight, reflecting it in a haze of gold. As she reaches the centre of the room she stops and turns cornflower blue eyes upon the students. Her perfect lips are full; a hint of a smile curving them as her gaze sweeps the room.
"My name is Samantha Howdane. I am your tutor for the semester."