Staring
Me In The Face
The tray didn't just hit the floor.
It crashed and smashed his lunch to pieces. Serves you damn well right, I
thought. You were staring again.
He stood
stock-still and looked down at the food. Suddenly I got up and moved towards
him. I hadn't intended to, hadn't wanted to help him. I called to the woman
behind the counter. She closed her mouth and brought a cloth to clean up the
mess. I picked up crockery, put it on the tray. There was a soppy stain on
his trousers and through it you could see just how bony his knees were. Like the
rest of him. All bones, dangling jacket and hanging trousers. Stooped
shoulders and mile-long arms. Then he smiled at me. A wonderful smile that
creased up his worn face and totally surprised me.
"Thank
you."
I shoved the
tray at him and went back to my table.
I worked at
a large publishing company and ate lunch in the canteen. I had noticed him
because he stared at me. He was weird-looking. His hair was badly cut and his
clothes were ancient and dull; too-short corduroys, baggy at the knees and
colour-less sweaters, dotted with fluff. Often he sat alone and just picked
at his food. Or he read and jotted things down.
A few days
after the crash, he stopped at the table I was sharing with Mark from proof
reading, and asked if he might sit down. I said the seats were taken and
continued eating. He apologised and took his tray off somewhere else.
"What's
your problem, Leanna?" asked Mark.
"No
problem. It's just that I like to choose who I share my mealtimes with."
"A bit
rough on the old chap though."
I shrugged.
It was Mark
who told me more about him. He had gone over to scrounge a cigarette. By the
time he came back to the table, I had my head stuck into the news-paper.
"Interesting chap. Sub-editor. Been all over the world," said Mark.
I decided to
find the newspaper more interesting and finally Mark shut up and finished
smoking.
"Asked
your name," he said.
"He
what?"
"Yeah."
"What'd
you say?"
"Leanna, of course."
I folded the
newspaper.
"I've
loads of work this afternoon."
"Said
you look familiar," said Mark. "Like someone he knew."
"Someone he knew?"
"Yeah.
Could be strategy. Maybe he fancies you."
"Fancies me? But he's old."
"Only
old enough to be your father."
I grabbed my
tray and left the table.
I didn't do
much work that afternoon. I kept wishing Mark hadn't said what he had said.
Old enough to be your father.
The following
week I took along a book to read during lunchtime. When I got into the lift
on my floor, he was already inside. He greeted me so I had to reply but I
didn't smile. We were alone and that worried me. I wondered whether I should
get out at the next floor and walk up the stairs to the canteen. Don't panic,
I thought. Just because he's stared at you for ages doesn't mean he's going
to do anything.
" Well,
I suppose one of us should press the button or we'll be here all day, won't
we?"
I'd been so
busy wondering what he was going to do and expecting him to do something,
that I'd completely forgotten to do anything myself. I felt like an idiot and
this made me smile and I hadn't wanted to. He smiled back, his blue eyes
crinkling right up to the grey hair at his ears and making him look ... nice.
Then there was a slap. My book hit the floor. I bent down and so did he, and
we bashed heads. At that moment, the lift shuddered to a stop and the doors
seemed to fling themselves wide open. I was so embarrassed, I marched out of
the lift, straight towards the queue at the counter. I ordered without
looking at the menu and took my tray to a table where there was only one
empty seat. I breathed a sigh of relief and began to eat. But the salad stuck
in my throat when I noticed that everyone else at the table had already
finished lunch and they were getting up to go. I glanced over at the counter.
He was paying and in a second, his eyes would scan the room to find me. I
ducked my head. Waited. Any minute now he'd sit down with his tray.
Short
Stories from Australasia. My book appeared in front of my eyes. His fingers
were the longest I'd seen and his nails were manicured. I hadn't thought he'd
bother.
"You
left it in the lift," he said. "May I sit down?"
His voice
was soft. Cultivated. What could I say? The tables were all pretty full so I
nodded. He said bon appétit and began to eat. I'd always thought he picked at
his food. But as I watched, I noticed that he selected small pieces, speared
them and moved them carefully to his mouth.
"Have
you been there?"
"Been
where?" I was totally dazed. From dropping my book and banging my head
and everything.
"Australia, New Zealand."
I stared at
him and thought again of what Mark had said about me reminding him of
someone. An Australian? Maybe an ex-girlfriend or wife?
"Not
such a strange question," he said. "You're old enough to have
travelled there. And Katherine Mansfield, Janet Frame, are most likely in the
book."
His smile
crinkled up his eyes.
"No, I
haven't and yes, they are," I said.
That's how
it started. He asked me a question, nodded when I spoke and then asked
another. I was off, talking about reading, books and all that stuff I love.
Days later
Malcolm passed our table with his tray and spontaneously I said a seat was
free. Mark stared at me and I felt a rush of heat to my cheeks.
After that,
Malcolm often sat with us and he and I discussed a lot of things. We spoke a
little about ourselves too. I told him how Mom had brought me up on her own
at the start of the Hippie Era. He said he had married during that time but
divorced a few
years later.
Mark asked me how come Malcolm and I always had so much to talk about.
"He's
easy to talk to. And he reads a lot."
"You
two got so much to say, I don't get a chance to open my mouth all
lunch-time."
"You
do. You shove food in."
One
lunchtime Malcom asked me if I'd like to go to a reading with him.
"Um.
Don't know."
"Amelia
Turner. Shortlisted for the Booker Prize last year."
I wanted
very much to go. But although I no longer thought Malcolm quite so weird, I
wasn't sure if I wanted to go out in his company.
"Afterwards, I'll cook us curry. Do you like it? "
"Love
it."
"Me
too. Settled then?" he asked and smiled his soft smile.
It didn't
surprise me that I nodded.
After the
reading and the curry dinner, I went into Malcolm's sitting room where there
were more books than I'd ever seen on anyone's shelves. I began to read the
titles.
"Help
yourself," said Malcolm.
"Thanks. But if I read a book, I have add it to my collection."
"Strange, same here." He waved his arms towards the shelves.
"But look where it's got me."
"I'd
hate to be without books. They're ... friends."
"That
sounds like lonely," said Malcolm.
I turned and
pulled out a book.
"Are
you?"
"Am I
what?"
"Lonely?"
I shrugged.
"Not
really."
"Not really
but what?"
My voice
came from a distance as I tried to answer him.
"I'm
choosy about my friends. Don't have a great many."
"I'm
listening," said Malcolm and sat down, indicating the armchair opposite
him.
"My
childhood was ... I mean, my mother loved moving around. She had no trouble
putting down roots all over the place. I hated it! Books were the constant
things, so I buried myself in them."
"Hell,
sounds familiar."
I sat down
in the armchair.
"I had
very academic parents," said Malcolm. "Was an afterthought, perhaps
a mistake even. They loved me in their vague intellectual way but left me
alone to get on with growing up. Hence the books."
"That's
lonely, too," I said.
When I left,
I took along a couple of Malcolm's books.
My
friendship with Malcolm grew but my curiousity remained. Who did I remind him
of? My mother? If so, could he be my father? Although Mom had never bothered
with books, our physical similarities, apart from my tallness, were undeniable.
She had never told me much about the man who had fathered me. Clever, was all
she had usually said. Once though, when I had been ill with chicken pox, and
hot and scratchy, she had relented.
"What
was he like?"
"Skinniest man you ever saw."
"Where'd you meet him?"
"In a
park. I was catching a suntan and these papers started blowin' in my face. I
was a bit cheesed off at them blowin' all over me and then this man comes
runnin'. He grabbed and grabbed but couldn't catch them all. So he jus' stood
still, a helpless look on his face. It was so funny, I started
laughin'."
"And
then?"
"I
helped and we chased all over the place after them papers. When we sat down
to get our breath back, he told me he was a student. He was ever so clever.
Can't re-member what the devil it was he was studyin'. Somethin' I'd never
heard of then or since."
"Why
didn't you marry him?"
"Marry
him? Good Lord, Leanna, I wasn't ready to marry and he wasn't the type I'd
have wanted to marry by a long shot."
"What
else did he look like, Mom?"
"Lord,
stop the questions, child. Get some sleep."
She saw my
disappointment however, and said she would write it all down for me. Put it
in an envelope to open when she was dead and gone. I was happy with that. On
a wet, slick highway, driving to France for a weekend, she was involved in an
accident and died instantly. I was twenty-three then and on my own feet but
as I sorted through and packed up the belongings in her flat, I felt like a
child again. I looked for the envelope but didn't find one. For a long time
after, my mother's death and not knowing who my father was, made me feel as
though I was drifting on a sea without horizons.
One
lunchtime I just decided to brave it and ask Malcolm who I reminded him of.
"Met
her while I was a student," he said.
"Was
she studying too?"
"Oh,
heavens, no. That was what attracted me to her. She was ... so
different."
"What
were you like?" I asked.
"Like?
Much as I am now. Nose in books, bit of a loner. Not very interesting. Not
for a live wire like she was."
"Go
on," I said.
"She
fell pregnant. I was very happy until she told me she didn't want my help.
Thought she'd change her mind, though, as the pregnancy advanced but when I
attempted to see her, she told me to leave her be. I was very hurt but
accepted her refusal to involve me. A few months later, I took a job I'd been
offered in New York. Salary was dreadful but I thought it would be for the
best."
"Was
it? " I asked.
"No.
When I returned, they'd moved. Left no forwarding address."
"So you
never knew whether it was a boy or ...? "
"A
girl?" asked Malcolm.
I nodded.
"A
boy," he said. "Had the approximate date and went to the Registry
of Births to look it up."
I sat there,
trying to take in what Malcom had said. I felt as though I'd been flattened
by a truck.
"Somewhere out there I have a child I know nothing about," Malcom
continued. "I was stupid. Rushed off instead of staying to have a share
in my son's life."
"I
thought perhaps it was a daughter."
"Beg
your pardon?"
"A
daughter. Me."
"You
thought I was ... your father?"
"Books,
curry, I'm tall. We ... we like the same things."
"We
definitely have things in common but I'm not your father." He looked at
me.
"I'm so
sorry to disappoint you, Leanna." I tried to smile.
"We're
not related but we can be something else."
"What?"
"Can't
you think of anything?"
"Uh
uh."
"Friends."
"Friends?"
"It's
been staring you in the face for weeks." Malcolm's use of that phrase
made me burst out laughing.
"Let me
in on the joke sometime," he said.
"Okay," I said. "Tell you sometime seeing we're friends."
Then I
smiled. And my smile was as wide and warm as the one he smiled in return.
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Comment:
This
short story is very good In order to enlarge our vocabulary... J
J
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