pixabay photo
By
Stephen Faulkner
A man and a woman sit on opposite ends of a park bench from one another. Both are solitarily heedless of all that goes on around them, even of each other. Each is lost in his and her own private contemplations in the sparse shade afforded by a gangling old elm tree that grows behind the bench which they occupy.
The man is in his mid twenties, a smiling charmer for the ladies at the late night establishments he frequents, a sour-dour expression in all other situations. He carries a book of poetry and an empty paper bag that had once contained blanched pistachios, now only rattling shells. His hair is longish but presentably neat, his clothes are casual but with a dressy, tailored look to them.
The woman carries her considerable weight and parcels with the slouched dignity of an out-classed, well pounded boxer. The parcels, obtained at a variety of “better” department stores in the area now lay scattered at her feet and on the seat beside her; the beginnings of a fortress. No one, she believes, will attempt anything against anyone so well guarded. She has heard the word “crone” used in describing her present stature but she will not believe it, though the young man seated at so close proximity to her surely might. In a fit of pique that morning the word had swelled forth in the mouth of her daughter and sounded more a complaint against age than against any certain person, least of all her mother. No, daughters don’t mean such ill-chosen words for too long. Apologies came quickly and the memory was blacked over, if not completely forgotten.
Crone. To look at her the word would seem aptly applied: a thick set of circuitous wrinkles lay over her face like a descending, undulating plane that might, at one time or other, have been the map of a battlefield replete with trenches, mortar holes and the lines of advancement of the contending forces. In contrast the young man at the other end of the bench seemed barely in need of a shave and it was already coming on to five o’clock in the afternoon.
The old lady’s glance veered and she caught sight of his crumpled bag and thought – Nice boy; feeding the pigeons, probably. People like that are always nice. Solitary but kind. She returned her gaze to the packages at her feet past which lay one of the many snaking cracks in the asphalt pathway towards which the park bench was situated. A scattering of coarse gravel brushed the shoulders of the path giving the pedestrianway a lopsided, uneven feel as one traversed its constantly turning, rising, dipping length.
Both pairs of eyes, young man’s and old woman’s, rose to the garden on the other side of the path. The towering old tree behind them, its missing, severed limbs forming holes for the late afternoon sunlight to pass through, cast strange shadows, darkening the bright flowers to a deeper purple than those still bathed in the brightness thrown from the clouded blue. The sun shone, cheerful and hot and the flowers’ colors faded and blanched intermittently as the wind shifted the cloud shadows here and there, nudging the dying tree to allow light for some, early dusk for the rest.
Lilacs. The twittering of birds; the hum of a distant wind, much greater than the one that rustled the leaves above the heads of these two lone souls. And inside each of them, the stillness had halted, a movement begun.
If I could see my way clear, thought the young man as he draped his left arm over the back of the slat bench. To do it all my own way…. That little garden over there would be larger, much larger, would fill out the entire space in which it rests.
So pretty, thought the old woman appreciatively.
And it had begun.
Fill out all the sides to the very edges where
the trees begin and not so much with the
lilacs – they make the scene seem so
somber. Daisies would be what is called for
– and chrysanthemums and marigolds and
perhaps it would be good to keep the lilacs
all spread around the inner circle – but no,
lilacs are too…. Too funereal I guess the
word would be, like I’ve read before:
“April is the cruelest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.”
But that is my own subjective stance about
lilacs. Most people see lilies as the death
harbinger, strewn all over caskets going into
the grave and, besides, the daisies will do to
supply the white. The rest must be all color,
all reds and blues and yellows. Tulips,
perhaps. In a variety of colors all with that
one, cupped shape – a smattering of lilacs to
tone it down and the daisies for white, yes,
and the tulips for color and a hardness of
line – oh yes, those Dutch knew what they
were about – yes, to the very edge where the
trees begin and maybe even further, winding
through the trees like a colorful path of glory
– but no. Flowers need the sun like a father.
That is the purpose of the cup of the tulip, to
catch Papa sun’s rays and Mama nature’s
rain and hold them for the sake of life – so
much like the B and D cups of women’s
bras, holding life. Little girls, oh, in high
school, they ran bouncing through the halls
until the rules had to be changed about
fourteen and fifteen year olds not having to
wear the damned things but, up until then,
I was a watcher, only that, delighting in their
giggly glances as they caught my waiting
leer at the hall intersections, pushing out
their pigeon chests to the limit until a button
popped open and then they ran away, baiting
me with their sorry eyes cast like marbles
never touching the ground as they went but
that was all I got: a glance, sorry it couldn’t
go any further than the childish flirtations
but Mommy would soon find out so,,,, I was
glad for the respite from those misplaced
angers when college began its toll-taking
and that was what it was…. A penalty to pay
in order to “make it” as a student, no time
till Saturday for trying to be a man she was
older than I wanting to take more than she
could even think to give through any length
of time. My love diminished rapidly
deteriorating to take take take off the last
vestiges of decency of mind and ordered
soul until her mouth filled mine with tangy
wine, flavored with a cigarette bite and her
body only wanted to charge forward at a
slow and even pace till I could do no more
than hold back, slide deep, hold back, not
even warming her layers of thick, viscous
scales of a she-dragon until my eyes ached
letting loose the final bursts into her first
moanings of don’t stop don’t stop I think
I’m coming closer to a realization of
something like a pain in my groin but not
sharp, not dull and aching but insistent to
that strange thought that she was – my love,
once. For a long time, long ago and I
couldn’t stand the sight of her now but she
exuded a lusty exuberance when we fucked,
a life not to be coincidental with my own
when I hated her later with a passion that
surprised me, with a sadness, a thought of
the waste of feeling, what I had done, who I
had been, what I had done and not done—
not done…. The one thing from that
relationship that I am truly sorry for — That
I didn’t give her one single gift of flowers
in all that time….
So pretty the way they have them, their little
violet heads in neat rows, one just peeking
over the other like little girls posing for a
school class photograph, all smiling so
brightly like they had just been shown one
of their most favorite things — but what
would a little girl smile at so sweetly? It’s
been so long, so long since I was so young
that I can’t even hazard a guess. There was a
song I heard once not so very long ago that
used those very two words –I would like to
sing but, well… if only in my mind, where
no one will hear. Let’s see – how does it go?
“So long, Frank Lloyd Wright
I can’t believe your song is gone
So soon
I barely learned the tune
So soon, so soon.”
Deadly in its way, the what and who it was
sung about, like a sad goodbye – but dainty
in its melody, colorful even. Pastels come to
mind, light and airy like a watercolor. Not so
morose like the old Dutch masters used to
do with all those dark browns, grays and
chiaroscuro old men getting ready
to go off to war to maim and kill like it just had to be
in those days. War! What a damned
nuisance, always with the catcalls and
marching in the streets to get everyone to
believe it was the thing to do to send the
boys off to get shot up so bad in the Big One
that they’d just have to leave them bleeding
in the trenches toward the end of it. What a
mess! My Halton, luckily, didn’t have to go
but by then it was Number Two – they’d
already gotten another one worked up in less
Than thirty years but I had Hal, dear sweet –
Always by my side never a stray glance to
any of the other “fillies” he called them,
always the gentleman. Never a stray word or
eye, yes. My man. I didn’t have to worry
with him around – not like some other
women I’ve known their husbands shaking
after every piece of skirt that came by like
they do today, their flies half open, eyes
bugging out whistling on the street corners
at every young wench that shows off a bit of
knee or tummy the way they dress nowadays
nobody cares but to look and gawk out in
the open with about as much discretion as a
dog lifting its leg on a tree root, and when
the wind blows a little lewd odor they can
smell it a mile away the whoremongers
about as old as my new skin like the doctors
say, all the body replenishes itself
completely except for the bones in about
seven years…. Ah! Those kids…. My Hal
would never, no, never until the marriage
day and that night he was so gentle and
patronizing to me it almost made me sick
like he was planning to rob the 1st National
the next morning he was so skittish but the
time came when we both became oblivious
to the volume of my low groans and he
never held back like I asked him to, pleaded
with him not to for so stupid was I then to
believe what Mamma, my sisters and even
my friends said about doing it being a man’s
thing and was only for the woman to lay
back and stifle the cries of pain like fire but
that – which was his odd joy, thinking he
hurt me – the fire soon fled and I felt his
heat more than his yearnings to push harder,
try to hurt me deeper than any gnarled
fingered doctor checking me for whatever
there was down there I can’t say – never will
– but for Hal, sweet, sweating like a
drenched flower cast away on a calm sea—
with only a sigh, a muffled sorrow…. And I
gave, yes, I gave…. But I took from you, too
– and it was, so, so much more, my Sweet,
than you will ever, ever know that I did.
The mind mutterings flitted, played out, died in unconsummated, unheard exhaustion. Others took their place but, for the bench across from that formally laid out expanse of night-closing flower in the midst of a green field of well trodden weeds, grass and patchy earth surrounded by the stunted, tired park trees, there seemed to be an end, for this man unbound to this woman, save for the occasionally concurrent, random thought – a fleeting yet clear memory – sometimes just a vague idea.
The young man rose, clutching his book of poetry like a shield, smiled kindly at the old woman in a mute gesture of farewell. The woman nodded solemnly, resolute yet friendly and began to gather her possessions together into a manageable pile on the bench.
What a waste, thought the young man. I’ve accomplished nothing here this afternoon. I didn’t even get half a chance to read, the light was so poor. Ah, well, maybe some other time. Tomorrow or the day after, perhaps – but soon.
And tomorrow, thought the woman. The weatherman says the temperature will be in the low seventies – quite pleasant. I only hope that I will be allowed, by His grace, to come again, to be able to browse back through my time once again over the little things, those sweet minor incidentals.
And the sun burst the clouds’ lower seams and continued on its daily journeying way over to the other side of the world, leaving these people and more to their coming night, to the stars and moon, the pitiful, sundry dreams or to lie awake, fitfully dozing until he, warm Father of the sky, reappears in the wee hours in the East to smile down his gift of heat and light so they can fret through yet another day.
Stephen Faulkner
Stephen Faulkner is a native New Yorker, transplanted with his wife, Joyce, to Atlanta, Georgia. Steve is now semi-retired from his most recent job and is back to his true first love – writing. He has recently had the good fortune to get stories published in such publications as Aphelion Webzine, Hellfire Crossroads, The Satirist, Liquid Imagination, Dreams Eternal, Temptations Magazine, The Erotic Review, Sanitarium Magazine, Impendulum Magazine and Foliate Oak Literary Magazine. He and Joyce have four cats and a busy life working, volunteering at different non-profit organizations and going to the theater as often as they can find the time.
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