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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural
awareness throughout the world.
Special Treat – Hart Dowd
February 16, 2007
Do not forget to consider the special
treat entries as part of your contest selections. Thank you.
Best Wishes
Brian Joseph
http://www.giftofgabe.com/
Promise
By, Brian Joseph
As soon
as he sat down on the bench he began to drift back to that Valentine’s Day
eighteen years before. It had been at this very same bench. He had been
coming here every Valentine’s Day. He would sit for an hour or so and remember
her and how he had loved her. He had planned to ask her to marry him on that
day eighteen years before. His mind drifted back and in his mind’s eye he could
see her and his heart could feel what he had felt on that day.
He had only known her for nine
months. When he was twenty-five years old that seemed to be a longer period of
time that it now did. He thought about how they had met. People that he worked
with were going out for Friday night drinks and they had asked him to come.
This was something that they only did a few times a year and he had never gone
with them before. When this was pointed out to him he said that he would join
them.
It was a large bar and a band was playing
classic rock and dance music. He sat at the bar nursing a beer while listening
to the music. That was when he first noticed her. She was sitting at a table
with another woman. He glanced at her from the corner of his eye and in that
strange communication that is without words he knew that she knew that he was
looking at her. There was about ten minutes of this thing of her noticing him
noticing her while he was doing the same. It was interrupted when the band took
a break and his co-workers began to chit-chat. As soon as the music started up
again he gazed directly at her and in an instant that was unlike him he stepped
off of his stool and walked directly towards her table. She watched him as he
walked towards her and their eyes met before words were spoken.
“Would you like to dance?”, he asked. Her
eyes looked away from his as she said, “I can’t”. It wasn’t the answer that he
had hoped for. He muttered “Okay” and started to turn to walk away. Her hand
reached out towards his, “No wait, sit down.” He smiled and as soon as he sat
down he said, “I can’t dance either.” They sat and talked in staccato
conversation at points where the music got lower. One of his co-workers joined
him at the table and a few minutes later the co-worker and her friend were up
and dancing.
“ Are you sure you don’t want to dance?”
She shook her head to say no but her eyes said that she was not definite so he
asked, “Are you sure, there is no harm in trying?” She grinned and said, “I
really can’t but I’ll try.” As soon as she stood up he noticed the cane hanging
on the back of her chair. She walked towards the dance floor without it,
dragging her right leg while limping. He followed her slowly and they started
to dance. The ‘dancing’ lasted about two minutes before she fell down, landing
on her left knee. He helped her back to the table. When she sat down she
giggled and said, “I guess that you were wrong about it not hurting to try.”
He sat on the bench and
re-played the scene in his mind. The he fast forwarded to that Valentine’s Day
eighteen years before, right here at this very same bench. She was from Ohio
and had moved to Connecticut two years before they had met. It was a whirlwind
relationship and they had both rushed off into the high that comes when two
souls touch. He had rehearsed it in his head. They would take a walk in the
park and then sit at a bench and he would ask her to marry him. But something
had happened that was not part of the rehearsal that he had played in his head.
As soon as they sat down she said that she had something to tell him. He
listened. Her grandmother was sick. She was going back to Ohio for a few weeks.
She would call him and it would not be long before she would see him. He
decided to hold off on his question. He would ask her when she got back. They
would return to this bench. As soon as he thought this a wave of worry washed
over him. It seemingly came out of nowhere. What if he were to never see her
again? Instead of the rehearsal that he had played out in his mind he blurted
out, “I’m afraid that I won’t see you again.” She smiled a smile that reassured
him, “Don’t be afraid I’ll see you soon.” As they stood up he clasped her hand
and whispered in her ear,”I love you.” She looked down at her right leg , All
of me?” He kissed her gently and whispered softly, “ Every part of you,
forever, I promise.”
She would be staying with her cousin, not
far from the nursing home where her grandmother was. Two days after she left he
called he called the number that she had given him. Her cousin answered and
took a message. She phoned him back the following day and they talked for
fifteen minutes or so. He only spoke with her once after that. She didn’t
return his phone calls until the late night call that he received after not
hearing from her for almost two weeks. She said that she was sorry for not
calling, she had been busy. They chit-chatted and she said that she would talk
to him soon. He sensed that something was different during this conversation
and he had been right. Three days later he phoned her and her cousin said that
she had moved. He never heard from her again.
In the weeks that followed he wondered a lot. Wondered
what had happened.
Wondered how he had let it happen. Wondered why he had
been so foolish. Wondered how she could mean so much to him that he could not
see that he mattered little to her. Wondered if things might have been
different if he had followed the script that he had rehearsed in his head for
that Valentine’s Day. Wondered what her answer would have been. Wondered if she
realized how much she meant to him. Wondered why she did not just tell him that
it was over. Wondered why she had whispered “I love you” when the times they
had engaged in a lover’s embrace. The worst part about this wondering was that
there wasn’t anyone to share it with. He wished that he could unfold it all,
the whole story, all of the wondering to another person. Then he could ask,
What do you think happened?” But there wasn’t anyone else because he felt to
foolish to talk about it with anyone. Two months after the last time that he
had spoken with her he phoned her cousin asking how he could reach her. Her
cousin’s reply was, “She’s unreachable.” He started to sob right there on the
phone. “If you see her please tell her that I still love her and can she please
call me?” He gave her cousin his phone number even though he knew that he had
given it to her the last time that he had called.
It took a few months but
eventually the wondering receded. It didn’t fully go away but he wondered less
often. He accepted that there were things that he would not know, that there
was no answer to all of the wondering and that anything would just be
conjecture. He moved on. That is what survivors of soul wounds do. Some move
forward, some become hardened, some hurt others, and some wall themselves off
from others. He was determined to move forward but he did not forget her and
knew that he never would. In this way she would always be a part of him in some
small way. When souls touch they leave graffiti.
One year after the last time that he had
seen her he returned to the bench and thought about her and the last day that
he had seen her. He sat on the bench on a day that was not unlike that
Valentine’s Day the year before. It was still winter but there was a hint of
spring in the air and the promise of what would grow and blossom. He felt at
the cross and chain hanging around his neck. The word “Love” was engraved on the
cross. She had given it to him. He contemplated taking it off and throwing it
as far as he could in an act to symbolize closure. He didn’t do it because he
knew that it would only be symbolic and that real closure would only come from
speaking with her. He imagined what he might say if she could hear him. He
reflected on this and reached down into all that he knew of his knowing her. In
his mind’s eye he spoke. The words came to him in an instant, utterances from
his soul:
There is a place I enter in.
What never was, what might have been.
Where are you now, what do you seek?
Afraid to talk?, me I still speak.
I say the things I never said,
In conversations inside my head.
If you could hear, you’d understand,
What never was, was also planned.
He returned to
the bench ever Valentine’s Day and remembered his love for her. Something
significant happened before his third Valentine’s Day alone at the bench. Two
weeks before Valentine’s Day he received a Sunday morning 10 a.m. phone call
from her cousin. There had been complications during childbirth and she had
died the night before. “You said that you loved her. I thought that you should
know.” If asked if she had been married and was told that she was not. There
would be a brief memorial service and she would be cremated. He thanked her
cousin for calling and hung up the phone. He went to a drawer and took out the
cross and chain that she had given him. He laid down , stared at the ceiling and
held the cross in his hand slowly moving his index finger over the word “Love”.
He picked up the phone and called her cousin. Could he come to the memorial
service? She told him where and when it would be.
The memorial service would be at 10
a.m. Tuesday. He flew to Ohio on Monday arriving late at night and taking a
taxi to a motel not far from where the memorial service would be. On Tuesday
morning he took a taxi to a small church. He arrived fifteen minutes before the
service was to begin and introduced himself to a woman setting out framed
photos on a table at the front of the church. The woman was her cousin.
He looked at the photos. There she was from little girl to grown woman. In one
she looked to be about ten years old and she was sitting on a bicycle. He
remembered her voice telling him of the car accident she had been in when
she was thirteen years old and how she had become a three legged person
referring to her cane. He looked at a photo of her as he had known her. He
stared closely at the photo and could see the cross that she was wearing. It
was the cross that she had taken off of her neck and put around his. Tears
began to trickle down his cheeks as he sat down. He was close to the front of
the church. He glanced at her cousin sitting in the row of seats to his right.
He shot a quick glance behind him. There were only two other people besides him
and her cousin. The minister said some kind words and quoted scripture. It was
clear by what was said that the minister did not know her. The service lasted
fifteen minutes.
He walked towards the doors of
the church. The two people who had been sitting behind him introduced
themselves as co-workers from the restaurant where she had worked. They shook
his hand and walked down the church steps. He looked at her cousin, “Do you
have time to talk?” She forced a smile through teary eyes and they went for
coffee. It was between breakfast and lunch and there were few people in the
diner. They sat down at a corner booth. He wanted to ask questions about the
things that he had wondered about. Maybe this would bring some answers, some
closure, or at least something close to it. He didn’t know where to start.
Sitting with this stranger had added another wonder. What did she know of him?
He began by asking a
question that he had wondered about at the church, right after the two
co-workers had introduced themselves. Before that he had thought that the man
might be her boyfriend and the baby’s father. “Who’s the father of the baby?”
She was silent for a moment, looked down at her coffee, sipped at it, then
said, “I don’t know and neither does anyone else. She’s in foster care now and
will be put up for adoption.” He didn’t know what to say. His face dropped,
“What? How can nobody know who the father is?” Her eyes darted back down
towards her coffee. “She slept around a lot.”
There had been too much
wondering. He did not want to leave with more questions. He did not want to
have another un-finished conversation. He drank deep of what she told him. In
her grief she shared in a way that she might not have otherwise. He listened.
In a flash of realization he understood that while he had loved her he had not
fully known her. He had only known a part of her.
She had never known her father. Her
mother was a heroin addict who had become a prostitute to support her habit.
One time her mother had ran off with a customer. Her pimp was angry and he
waited for her at her apartment. After two days had gone by he became so
enraged that he locked her daughter up in a bedroom, bound her hands behind her
back and repeatedly raped her. She was only thirteen years old. When he left
the bedroom she escaped by crashing through a third floor window. That was how
her leg had been injured. There had been nerve damage. When she left the
hospital she went to live with her grandmother who was the only adult who had
ever treated her decent. She fell in with a bad crowd when she was sixteen
years old. Her self-esteem was low and she would do just about anything for
some attention. By the time she was eighteen she was addicted to snorting coke
and was selling her body on the street. She had gone to Connecticut to escape
from her pimp and to get off of coke. The trip had been arranged by a young
street preacher whose life had been threatened for helping street girls by
helping them to relocate and setting them up with a job and a place to stay.
Her cousin wiped at the tears streaming down her cheeks. “I’m the one who got
him to talk to her. I had him come to my place when I knew that she would be
there.” She looked at the cross hanging around his neck. “He gave that to her
and told her that the cross was not a symbol of suffering but a symbol of love
overcoming suffering.”
Her
grandmother had been sick. Three weeks after she had returned to Ohio her
grandmother died. She fell back in with some people that she had known before
and while she stayed away from hooking she had gotten back into coke. She ended
up bouncing from man to man, anew one every month or two. “Most just used her,
some were abusive, all of them had coke.” Somewhere during the conversation he
had started to cry. He whispered, “I loved her.” Her cousin looked into his
eyes and said, “I know. She thought that you were too good for her.” He wiped
at his tears with a napkin, “How do you know that?” She reached across the
table and touched his hand. “Because she told me. She was worried that she
would hurt you if you found out about her past. She felt guilty for lying to
you.” There is a communion when strangers share tears with each other and he
knew that she meant what she had said. “I wanted to ask her to marry me.”
She clasped at his hand and whispered, “She always spoke well of you.”
Less than two weeks
later he sat on the bench on Valentine’s Day. Three years had passed since the
last time he had seen her. On this day he replayed in his head what had
occurred on that first Valentine’s Day. He could hear the words that they had
spoken to each other, words etched upon his soul. His life had been touched by
her and he had felt in ways that he had never felt before. The whole thing had
been an opening. He could feel more now. He was grateful for the experience. He
had come to know himself more.
What he decided that fourth Valentine’s Day on the bench was life changing. But
that was long ago.
Now it was eighteen years
since that first Valentine’s Day. He sat on the bench and placed the cross
around his neck between his thumb and index finger. He said a silent prayer to
the Spirit that moves within each of us but is not felt by everyone. It was
through this Spirit that he still felt her. There had been others before and
after her. There had even been a marriage that had ended two years before. It
had only lasted three years. He reflected on that and how it started as a
mutual convenience for two people who didn’t have much in common other than
approaching middle age, being single, and not wanting to be. It thought it
fortunate that they had not had children together. He had dated over the years
but most of the woman had seemed fearful of emotional intimacy or perhaps he
just felt too deep. It was different with her. He had only been with her for
nine months but he had felt closer to her than any of the others. He had never
promised anyone what he had promised her.
That first year they had
walked to the park but now he lived an hour dive away. It was 3 p.m. and traffic was very light. As he drove
home he thought of the joy that had come from the promise that grew out of his
love for her. He went into the house and walked into the kitchen. His fifteen
year old daughter was sitting at the table sipping tea and looking at a
magazine. He opened the refrigerator, took out a bottle of water, and sat down
across from her. “Are you okay daddy?” He grinned and said, “I’m fine.” She
looked directly at him. “You look like you’ve been crying.” He was silent for a
moment. “I was thinking about your mother.” She knew that Valentine’s Day was
special to him but she didn’t fully know why. “You must have really loved her.
I love you daddy.” He looked across the table, smiled and said, “I love you too
Promise.”
Brian Joseph is the author of the mystical, musical,
novel, The Gift of Gabe.
giftofgabe@yahoo.com
http://www.giftofgabe.com/
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