"Excuse me?" She asked, crossing her hands in front of a visibly full bosom.
Suddenly, the world around me seemed to cave in. I realised this was the first time I had walked up to a stranger and initiated any form of communication. Being shy had never really prepared me for such a situation before.
Also, I had never noticed that about her before. Her bosom. Despite being covered in a sweater, I could see an ample bosom well-hid behind her sweater.
In my defence, I had not known her for long. So noticing her bosom was not on my priority list as I remember being transfixed by her general being.
And then, my mind raced again. She was wearing a black cardigan that looked as if it had seen better days. Her form-fitting blue jeans, though faded, seemed to exude a freshness as if to showcase her well-off roots. Her face, radiant yet tired, hid behind a curtain of flawless skin that would have made my dermatologist proud. Her cute button nose was somehow sculpted in tandem with her narrow ears.
Somewhere, in the distance the wind-chimes played a symphony orchestrated by the faithless breeze that decided not to blow over me as a bead of sweat formed above my brow and drowned out my thoughts for a few fleeting moments.
And again, my mind went into overdrive. How did she know that I was working on a presentation? Had I left my laptop on? But even then she was all the way over here, how could she have known what I had been doing in that corner I loved, one that granted me unfettered access to complete privacy?
While I was thinking of this, my eyes landed on her deep brown eyes. Her eyes were quite enigmatic. They were nothing special; but they had a calming effect on me. They made me feel oddly at ease. They emoted a pain and a loss that betrayed a hint of effervescence. The kind of eyes that make you want to share more of yourself with a reassurance that your secret is safe with the beholder of those eyes.
"How on earth did you know that I had been working on a presentation?" Was all I could blurt out while my mind was working at lightening speed on the other questions that were burning my brain.
"Honestly, that is all you could come up with? You came up here, all the way from you were sitting, to ask me this? I thought you had come to apologise for being a dick to me earlier," she said, her expression remaining calm but her neatly done eyebrows and the corners of her recently lip-glossed lips betraying exasperation.
While she said all this, my mind paid little to no attention to her words. My mind was busy figuring out a few things: Why was she wearing a sweater on a visibly warm and breezy day? Why was she reading an obviously well-worn copy of Alice in Wonderland? Why was she flushed when she told Steve that she liked Fleet Foxes? Why had she even told that to Steve in the first place? What does she have against sugar since she likes honey in her coffee?
On that note, my subconscious mind drifted to the song playing in the background. It was 'How I got to Memphis' by Tom T. Hall. My poker face cracked an inconspicuous smirk as my insides laughed at the situation. While my thoughts wandered the far-reaches of possibility, karma had other plans.
According to the lyrics of the song, Memphis debatably stands for the place I am today. So in a way life was telling me everything in my life was leading me to this moment.
"You know, for someone who looks quite smart and intelligent, you sure do ask a bunch of dumb questions," she said quietly, picking up her cup of coffee on the right hand of her book, neatly nestled on a coaster I clearly remember never picking out when I went shopping with Steve for knick-knacks for the cafe'.
"How does one look intelligent?" I asked her, still unable to take my eyes off of her eyes.
"It is something you have to guess, you know. You live long enough around a lot of dumb people, you learn to identify the intelligent ones just by looking at them," she said matter-of-factly.
"I don't understand. I am a seemingly intelligent guy asking quite dumb questions who has a relatively good taste in music. What are..." I said, wanting to ask a smart question but my muddled brain only running into dead ends.
"You doing here? You doing still talking to you? You doing reading a tattered copy of Alice in Wonderland? You doing here sitting all alone? Take your pick." She said, smiling at me.
"Wow, I have heard of multiple choice questions. That has to be the first multiple choice answer I have ever gotten," I said, visibly taken aback by her presence of mind.
"You don't get out much, do you?" She asked still smiling.
"Only for work and for meeting clients," I shot back at her, dismayed at the accuracy with which she was reading me.
I realised: I had more questions about her and for her than when I had walked up to her table at Steve's behest. Also, she had not answered any of my questions yet. At least not the ones that mattered to me the most.
Meanwhile, note to self: I hate Steve. Steve is the real dick in this situation. Also, Steve, I love you for making me walk up to this maddening and frustrating woman. As perplexing as she is, there is a warmth to her that I have yet to encounter in my life.
My eyes wandered back to her eyes. I noticed that they were now boring into mine. And neither one of us flinched. There was something natural in the way we both tried to sneak into the others' soul through the eyes. Not getting past the gravitas of her eyes, I tried blinking and averting my gaze. I failed. Miserably.
"So, you want to answer any of my questions before my ears stop reddening in embarrassment?" I asked her, trying to bring the conversation on track.
"I think the correct question is: What do I say to her that she allows me to sit right next to her and apologise for earlier without pissing her off even more." She said, winking at me.
Utterly bewildered, I shook my head and turned 180 degrees on my heels, hanging my head in frustration and formulating a nice way to chew Steve's head off without hurting him enough that he does not allow me back into the cafe'.
"Leaving so soon? I did not hear that apology yet, you know." She said with an emotion in her voice I was yet to place.
"I guess Steve will give it to you since he was the one who sent me here and I have done nothing but make a complete and utter fool of myself since I got to your table," I said to her, dejectedly, without turning my head in her direction.
"You were not so bad. I would give you a seven out of ten for the effort. Though your speech delivery could definitely improve. Now sit down opposite me, look me in the eyes and crack the best joke you can to cover the three point spread," she said to me, her voice giving away a hint of request in the statement.
"Seven? Seriously. I thought that was a four at maximum," I said incredulously.