Flaming Angel

 The tie was a bad idea. I had just put it on and it was already choking me. I saw my reflection in the rear- view mirror- red, swollen eyes; tired face; sad grim. How appropriate, I told myself. After all I was going to a funeral. A heavy sight slipped through my lips. This whole trip was a bad idea. I looked at the open church door across the street. It seemed creepy and for a moment I felt like I was in a horror movie. A wishful thought of escape ran across my mind but I cast it away. I had to go in- there was no other choice. No turning back at this point.

  I went in slowly. My head was a bit dizzy from the heat and I sat down on the nearest bench before I faint. My hands were sweating, my mouth was dry and there was a loud bell echoing in my ears. The casket was just several meters away and I saw an old, tall, thin woman crying over it. She wore a simple black dress. No jewelry, no make up. Her shiny, black hair was held in a tight bun on the back of her head. Her eyes were bright blue, like an early morning sky, her eyebrows formed a perfect line. I would have recognized her anywhere. She looked so much like her daughter… or was it the other way around.  “Excuse me.” I looked up. Tow serious, strict eyes were watching me curiously behind a pair of glasses.  “Yes”

 “Are you Mr. Foster?”

 “Yeah, can I help you?”

 “My name is Frederic Holt. I’m Miss. Fox’s attorney. I sent you the letter.”

 “Oh”…’so you’re the reason I’m here?’ I thought, “Can I help you?”

 “Yes, sir.” He smiled innocently, “ I’m afraid I have another letter for you.” He reached into his pocket and gave me a small, white envelope. “Miss. Fox told me to give this to you in the day she died, when she was in the hospital. If… anything should happen to her,” he explained “she told me to give this to you personally.”

 “Did she say why?”

 “No, sir. She said you would understand.” 

 I would understand??? I didn’t even know why was I there in the first place. He gave me his card and told me to call him if I had any questions. I just smiled politely hoping he’d leave me alone. I put the envelope in my coat and closed my eyes hoping that that way everything would clear up. It didn’t. I opened them again and there it was, the open casket of perfectly polished, dark brown wood. It just didn’t want to go away.

  I’ve been to funerals before. My grandfather, a colleague from work, my grandmother. I knew how it went. You understand, you cry a bit (or a lot), you go to the funeral, you get depressed and a month or so after that you find out that no matter what, life still goes on even without the loved ones. You cry a bit more and you move on. Tragic- yes, but yet common in a weird, soothing kind of a way. It was everyday life, almost too unrealistic to provoke fear or real everlasting sorrow. 

 This time it was different. One day, two and a half weeks ago, I woke up and found a letter, in my always-empty mailbox, that Ginger Fox had died in a car crash two days ago and I had to go to her funeral by request of her lawyer.  “IT’S VERY IMPORTANT!” was written in the end, underlined a few times. Since then I haven’t slept one night. I haven’t shed one tear. I haven’t been cheerful or calm for one moment. I expected it to go away. It didn’t. Finally I packed my backpack and went to L.A. It took me one afternoon. 3 hours, 15 minutes and 35 seconds to be exact. The sun burned my scull, there was a sense of mortality in the air witch couldn’t fill my lungs. I felt… no, not depressed. I felt desperate. As if I was just woken from an eternal sleep and I found out that I have one day to live. SHE had died. It was so… awfully true. So unfairly real. 

 I looked at the grieving woman in front of me and got up from the bench carefully. I walked slowly, minding my steps and clutching my fists for strength that I didn’t have. I took a deep breath and looked at the body, lying in its wooden bed.

 Ginger Fox. Gink. I felt a sudden urge to scream. Even now, she looked… 

“Beautiful, isn’t she?” Her mother looked at me with a sad smile. I gave a short nod.

“Beautiful” is a simple and incomprehensive word. It lets you know that her eyes were bright blue, but not that they were glowing in the sun, when she was happy or sad. That they were bright even in the dark. It means that her lips were thick, but only I know how she used to bite them when she was nervous. That when she smiled her whole face lit up and you forget everything and everyone else. 

 “Yeah, she’s very beautiful.”

 “Did you know her well?” 

I hesitated. “No. I went to school with her but we weren’t very close.”

 “I doubt that.”

 “Why?”

 She looked at me softly. “Otherwise you wouldn’t be here.” 

I slightly touched my pocket and wondered what exactly did she mean to say. 

 “What’s your name?”

 I hated that question. It made me blush every time. 

“Flame. Flame Foster.” She smiled again. 

“It’s a good name. Full of character.” 

If you say so.

 “What do you do?” she asked me after a while.

 “I’m a teacher. At the San Diego university. Literature.”

 “How brave! Books are a dying breed now a days. Have you ever written anything?” 

 “ No.”

 “Why?”

 My eyes filled with tears. “I never found an inspiration.” 

“I hope you do” she told me and went to take a seat.  

For five years Ginger, also known as Gink, and I had only one conversation. It was at a school play. She sat next to me and that’s how we met. 

“You know I was suppose to play the leading part” she said, “My mom is an actress and she wanted me to try and see if I had any talent too, but acting’s not what I want to do.”

 “What do you want to do?”

 She looked at me both amused and surprised at the question. Then she smiled. “I want to travel and see everything that is worth seeing in the world.”

 “It’s a fine goal.”

 “What about you?”

 “I… I …oh, well…hum… I want to be a writer.”

 “Have you written anything yet?” 

“No.”

 “Why?”

 “I still haven’t found an inspiration I guess.”

 “Well when you do, I’ll be one of your biggest fans, I promise.” 

 I looked at the girl in front of me. Pale and pretty. Calm and peaceful. Beautiful. Divine. I touched her cold hands for a final goodbye and sat down in the back of the room, deadly certain that I had just lost something I never knew I had in the first place.  The ceremony began. I didn’t hear a word. The awfully big bell in my head was louder that ever. After that I got into my car and cried for the first time in almost three weeks. It ended fast and just when I was ready to drive away I remembered about the envelope in my coat. My hand was steady. It was a short message, written by hand.

 “I wish you’d go and see the Angel- the only thing that can put out a flame like you or make it burn even harder. I think you’ll find your inspiration there, in the only place I couldn’t reach.

 P.S. I wouldn’t be too angry if you mention me in one of your books.                                                                                                          Yours Gink!

 That night I slept for 9 hours and in the morning I felt more rested that ever before. I carried the letter with me all the time and reread it every day. Of course, it took me almost a month until I figured out that by “Angel” she actually meant ”Angel Falls”- one of the places she wanted to see but didn’t get the chance to. It also took me just as long (or even longer) to find a way to reach it. Not by air, though that the best point of view. I wanted to stand in front of it, to see it, to hear it, to feel it, to taste it.  I stood there for as long as I could. The water fell with such force that it split the ground underneath my feet. And right there, for an instant of time, a split second, I felt as if she was standing next to me. Her smile, her glowing eyes. Her excitement at the magnificent view. I felt so proud that I had fulfilled her last request. I wondered if she ever knew that I loved her- I didn’t know myself, until then. I wondered if she ever loved me. But then again: “Does it really matter, if it got me here?”      

Bitter, yellow lemons

 This is not a story about love. I’m saying this, because you might get the wrong impression reading. This is a story about hate. This is a story about green eyes, yellow hair and bitter lemons. But we’ll get to that later.

 My name is Bill Lewis. And that name was the only thing I ever got from my parents. My mom died 2 years after I was born. I never understood why- my dad was always too drunk to tell me. Besides, I guess part of me was afraid that I’d take the answer with indifference instead of pain. When I was little I used to hope that she’d come and take me away. Away from that awful smell of beer and scotch that hunted me my whole life after that. But then I grew out of it. I stopped hoping. There’s no place for hope in a life where your father calls you “little bastard”. It sounds ridiculous to me now, a drunk, weak old man shouting and spiting in an irrational anger. But you have to understand that I wasn’t a very bright kid- at least no more than he was. He never stopped me from going out and playing with the other children but I felt scared, different.

 School changed me. It changes everybody. Brings out the worst in people. The teachers breathe fire, the girls act like seductive snakes, the boys fight with no reason and think they’re all rebels. I was mocked all the time. 1st and 2nd grade were the worst. My skinny legs and arms were funny enough without the huge shirts that I got from my father’s wardrobe. It wasn’t exactly stealing. He changed his clothes once every three months so technically he didn’t need them. In 3rd grade I started fighting. Surprisingly. Out of nothing. Nobody saw it coming. I never paid much attention to bullies; I was often beaten, but never gave any resistance; kept quiet, kept my head low, slouched my shoulders and quickly learned how to run fast and shut my mouth. I had no confidence (when you’ve been called an idiot for so many years, you start to believe that you really are one). Instead I became cautious, angry and contemptuous, but my slave like obedience vanished in a second that afternoon in the schoolyard. Somebody said something about my crooked legs or whatever. I don’t remember exactly the words, but I remember the hot blood rushing to my head. I remember my almost delicate arms clutching into fists. I remember how the boy screamed after I hit him. How his eyes widened when he felt the blood on his face. It took him about a minute to realize that I had actually hit him- me of all people. Everyone was staring at me with the same amazement that cleared my head from all the things that had viciously crushed my self-esteem through the years. We fought until the guards tore us a part minutes later. I was shaking. I had laid my anger out for the first time in my life and now I couldn’t stop it. I got in to a fight again the next day. And the next… and the next… and so on until I got suspended from school. It was as addictive as drugs. My hands were itching, my heart pounding in my chest. Some people call it adrenalin rush. I called it simple necessity. I fought outside of school (in a neighbourhood like mine there’s always someone willing to hit you). I wanted to get out of there so much that it motivated me to keep going to school. It wasn’t my thing, so to say but I did good enough not to drop out. I guess I wanted to prove to the world that I wasn’t such a creep after all. Plus, I felt nice around all those well-dressed kids. They were different, but spoiled and looked up to me in a weird kind of a way. I was the only “rough-edged” guy in school. An evil seed, a black sheep, a great misunderstanding. For them I was exotic. A wild tiger amongst tamed cats.

 I got taller; my hair was carbon black over my pale face. I was still a bit thin, but not skinny; my shoulders became stronger from all the fighting. My body was resilient, even gracious in a way. My eyes were innocent but my smile was as crooked as my heart. I soon realized that girls found me attractive. I guess it was sense of danger and unknown that made them turn their heads after me. I despised them for that. I mean, only a complete retard would find the scars from my dad’s belt on my back appealing, right. Who else, except a brainless Barbie doll, will be fascinated from my dark, smelly room, and my drunken father on the couch in front of the TV half-dead.

 “It so raw” they used to say with a dumb smile on their pretty but flat and empty faces. Oh, how I hated them for that. For reminding me of my self, with their disappointing weakness and feeble, naïve obedience. Just like mine was years ago. 

 Take Candy for example. Now, how exactly do you imagine an intelligent girl with a name like that? Possible but not probable. She was nice though. Funny, energetic, sweet like a watermelon and just as thick and juicy. We had a good time. We went to the movies a few times (I hadn’t done this with anyone else). She brought a new sensation with her, that I found amusing (for a while). You see Candy wasn’t obedient. She was obsessed (and naïve and spoiled), but unfortunately it took me some time to realize that. I guess I still wasn’t too bright after all.

 We were going out for three months, when I decided to break up with her. It was one of those nostalgic, sunny, summer days, that seemed to last forever. She came to pick me up (and wake me up) from my place and we went out. She was eating an ice cream, but I wasn’t in the mood. I’ve been craving something sugar-free ever since we got together- I could get diabetes just watching her. I was quiet, thinking how exactly to blow her off without causing a scene. Candy was trying not to see my bored expression and laughed at everything I said (mostly “yes” and “no”). Finally she asked me what’s wrong. I said it was the heat and she proposed that we go to her house. I should have said “no”. I should have told her to go away and stay away.

 But I said “yes’.

 I suppose I was just curious. No girl I ever dated had invited me home. But then again, no other girl ever wanted to be seen with me.

 “I don’t think your parents will be exactly thrilled to see me.”

 She showed me her snow-white teeth and I turned my head around so that she wouldn’t see the disgust in my eyes.

 “My parents are on vacation. Only my sister’s at home, but we can lock our selves in my room. She won’t bother us.”

 She was supposed to be seducing me but I didn’t feel tempted at all.

 “I didn’t know you had a sister.”

 “She’s plane and boring. That’s why I never talk about her.”

 “Plane”. It’s just a word that she’d use. I bet she doesn’t know the exact meaning her self.

 “OK. Let’s go!”

 I didn’t see it coming, you know. Like a fist, hitting you square in the face, while the sun’s at your eyes.

 We walked in silence. Candy had finally understood my irritation. It was about time. She lived in a good neighbourhood. In a white house, with rose bushes in the front and a green loan. Sunny rooms, relatively new appliances and a full fridge. It was so clean that I was surprised that she let me step on the carpet. I did it with a strange victorious feeling. As if stepping on the floor would leave a mark on this house. As if I had breeched their territory, exploring the “other side”.

 “Lenny?” – Candy screamed next to me. “She’s probably not here anyway. Lenny!”

 While she was looking for her sister I saw a convenient opportunity to make myself comfortable and nearly laid down on the sofa. I started wondering if this was such a good idea when…

 She wasn’t plane at all! All the sudden my mouth was dry and I couldn’t catch my breath. I told my self it was from the heat. That it didn’t matter and I’m giving it more credit than I should. That I was so bored that anything would have impressed me. But I know, with a certainty strong as a brick wall, that it was more than that. You would’ve understood if you had seen her then. Her sister might have been a watermelon. Lenny was a lemon. Her hair wasn’t just blond but yellow- glowing like the sun. She was fit, strong. Her shoulders were solid rock, her arms moved relentlessly around her waist. Her lips- thick and pale. Her eyes- bright green and bitter like pits. They showed the same contempt that I felt inside of me my whole life. I was so amazed, that it took me a few moments to realize that this contempt was pointed toward me. Her look pierced me like an arrow and I smiled viciously:

 “Hey, Lenny.”

 She looked at me as if I was a rat.

 “Hey” she said frowning and turned to her sister. “Who’s that?”

 “His name is Bill. Be nice!”

 “You, be nice! I don’t communicate with cavemen. “

 “Would you just shut up and leave us alone for a few hours?”

 She shook her shoulders and pointed her razor-sharp chin to her sister.

 “You could have at least made him take a shower.”

 I laughed and she went out of the room. At the moment I didn’t care about anything else.

 “Candy.”

 “Yes?”

 “I wanna break up with you.”

 “What?”

 “You heard me right.”

 “But…”

 “It was fun but it’s over. OK?”

 “Is it because of my sister?”

 I smiled again. Why lie to her?

 “In a way.”

 She screamed at me and ran to her room. I got up and through the door where Lenny had disappeared. She was eating an ice cream and suddenly I wanted one too. She looked at me with clear despise and said nothing until I sat down in a chair opposite her.

 “What did you tell her?”

 “Do you care?”

 “Not really.”

 We stayed like that for a while. My eyes soaked her every move like a sponge.

 “You don’t deserve your name.”

 “What?”
 “Bill. It means “stroke, caress”. Didn’t you know that?”

 I shook my head searching her eyes with mine.

 “Your mom should have told you.”

 “My mom’s dead.”

 “I’m sorry.”

 “No you’re not! Plus, I don’t think she knew that.”

 She looked at me and I suddenly felt like my father. Old, weak, worthless. Then she smiled. A worm, welcoming smile. An intimate, shy gesture that I never forgot my whole life. She changed me. For a second. A magical moment from another life. Then everything was back to normal.

 “I think she did.”

I never saw her again.        

 

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