Claudia hung back at the entrance to the lecture theatre, as was her practice. She had learned to wait until the auditorium was nearly full before looking for a seat; if she couldn't find an appropriate seat to squeeze into at the rear of the hall, she could always sit in the aisle. This time a stack of folding chairs against the back wall provided overflow seating. Claudia perched herself at the end of the makeshift row and settled into the Friday's Eclectics lecture: Romance and Erotica as Literature.
There were a surprising number of boys—well, men—in attendance. Claudia tried to become as inconspicuous as possible, which was difficult given her size. She was especially uncomfortable in the presence of guys, but what could she do; she was enrolled at a co-ed campus.
"Ah, 'scuse me?" a rather high-pitched male voice whispered gently, "Could you, maybe, pass me one of those chairs?"
Claudia's head snapped around, and her eyes were captured by a soft gaze beaming beside her. A huge face smiled at her, and its smile rolled across fold after fold as its owner nodded toward the stack of chairs against the wall. Something in his look caught Claudia off guard. She hesitated and stuttered and fumbled before grabbing another collapsible seat and swinging it across her lap to give to him. "Here," she mumbled, confused by her own confusion. She shuffled herself, ostensibly to make room for him, in a subtle, if unconscious, invitation to sit next to her.
He seemed as ill at ease as she felt, but he took the chair with a whispered, "Thank you kindly," and graciously accepted her unspoken invitation by unfolding the seat right next to her, at the aisle's edge. He settled himself onto the chair with a smoothness belying his size. The chair creaked its complaints in unison with Claudia's. Claudia stared at him until he gave her a puzzled smile and turned his attention toward the podium. Embarrassed, she returned his smile sheepishly, and quickly pointed her eyes back to the front of the hall, but her concentration was in turmoil; she couldn't understand the speaker. Several times, during the lecture she turned to catch her neighbour looking at her, wide-eyed—admiringly, perhaps?
"Please finish," she silently urged the lecturer, suddenly uneasy. "I don't want to be here any more. Let me out of this place." She let her eyes wander back toward the stranger on her left. She wanted to escape something—escape or something. "I really can't squeeze by him," Claudia complained to herself. "This is so embarrassing." And she puzzled, "But why? Why do I feel embarrassed?" She surreptitiously appraised him once again. "He probably weighs even more than me. He's way over three hundred." He caught her look and smiled, again. Claudia felt her face flush; her heart seemed to stumble—stumble or dance.
The lecture finally ended and the audience rose, almost as one, to leave. Claudia stayed seated and tried to calm herself. "Oh, God. Why do I feel so odd? Am I having an attack or something?" She kept her eyes aimed forward and deliberately slowed her breathing. "Jesus, I'm panting like I've just been up stairs or something."
"Are you all right?"
The voice beside her startled her. It was quiet, with the same sort of stretched, elevated pitch she recognized in her own, and filled with concern. "Yes," she answered, immediately regretting the brusque tone. "Thank you." Deliberately steeling herself, she turned to face him. There was empathy—compassion in his eyes. "I'm fine, thanks; just..." She stopped. "Just what?" she considered wordlessly, "Just taken by surprise? Just experiencing inexplicable feelings of confusion? Just wanting to get away from you? Just wanting to talk with you?"
"Okay, then," he concluded, saving her. "By the way, I'm Arnold." He smiled a disarming smile and awkwardly offered a Pillsbury hand.
"Claudia," Claudia replied, taking his hand. His shake was sincere and gentle. He didn't try to squeeze his way down to the bone like so many men she had met. "There's no reluctance in his touch," she observed, letting her hand linger in his just a bit longer than usual. She wanted to say something else, but nothing came. The hall was emptying, steadily.
There was something pleasant, warm and encouraging in his gaze as Arnold continued to look Claudia in the eyes. "Er -would you like to—uh—go for coffee or something—to the caff' or somewhere if you've—ah—got time?" He sounded rather unsure of himself. A touch of strength returned to her liquefied body.
"Sure," she assented with all the nonchalance she could summon while her mind shouted, "YESSSS!"
She had never felt this way before. She wondered what it meant, although somewhere in her head—or her heart—she knew that she knew; she just wasn't going to let herself get any hopes up yet. "Don't hatchet your Counts before they chicken," she warned herself.
"Is SUB all right?" Arnold asked, as they left the hall; side by side but without any danger of physical contact.
"I guess," Claudia replied, suddenly succumbing to a profound apathy. She wondered what she had agreed to and steeled herself for disappointment. "Just get it over with," she thought. She had developed, through the lonely years of her young adulthood, a fine sense of social pessimism; but if Arnold noticed, he didn't show it.
"Well, what did you think of the lecture?" he asked enthusiastically, looking at her expectantly.
"Actually, I couldn't really follow what he was getting at," she admitted, still trying to carry it off with a bit of nonchalance. "I s'pose I was a bit preoccupied."
"I don't think anyone could really follow him. He wasn't a very good speaker."
"No..."
Entering the cafeteria of the Student Union Building, they headed, as of one mind, to a back corner, to secure a table against the wall, more or less out of sight and generally off the main thoroughfare. Depositing their book bags, they smiled sheepishly, as if they had just shared some obtuse secret—as, perhaps, they unconsciously had.
Arnold stammered as he repeated himself, "Uh—coffee?" He wanted to say something else but was suddenly tongue-tied. Claudia saved him, this time, by boldly putting her hand on his arm.
"Thanks," she gasped. She felt lightheaded. Still touching his elbow, she was amazed at her own audacity. Quite suddenly she understood the "emotional roller-coaster" metaphor, as her own feelings raced, once again, out of a trough towards yet another peak. "I'll come with you," she heard herself almost coo, "Maybe we can get a bite of something, too." There was something warm and strange tickling her; something unfamiliar and unrecognizable swirling in an electric current through her. She was scared and enchanted, terrified yet enthralled; but mostly confused.
Grabbing a tray, they floated along the line in a haze; not saying anything; stifling unbidden giggles. Trailing a fine mist of giddy fog they arrived back at the table and sat opposite one another. Arnold could only meet Claudia's intense, glazed gaze for a few moments before he dropped his eyes. "Here we are," he stuttered, picking up a plate. Something was happening here, but he apparently had no idea what it was, either. "Pecan pie for you;" his lifted his eyes from the pie and as he met her gaze a touch of fright glimmered in his face; still he surprised them both by adding, "my dear."
It was ridiculous, he thought, he had only just met this girl—this woman—basically less than an hour ago. Why had he called her 'my dear'? "And your coffee." He was almost embarrassed at the great pretense he made of passing her the mug—almost, but somehow not quite. It was all right. It didn't make any sense, but it was right nonetheless.