Being Inspired, maybe – 141
A picture paints ... well, as
many words as you like. For instance:
And, then, the words:
...
I hated playing games.
I hated it when I was
younger, namely because my brothers always cheated, and that had been carried
through to adulthood.
Now, I just avoided them.
It left me wondering how
I managed to paint myself into a corner, and agree to do the one thing I
assiduously avoided.
You could chalk it up to
being persuaded by a pretty girl. Yes, I
am the typical male, a sucker for a pretty face and a little flattery.
It would not have
happened if I'd just gone home, instead of being asked to go and 'just have one
drink' on the way home from work. I used
to, once upon a time, before I got sick.
But, perhaps it was a combination of cabin fever, and the monastic
existence I'd adopted since that saw the one visit a chink of light at the end
of a very long tunnel.
Whatever the reason, had
I not gone, I would not have met Nancy.
I'd seen her before, off and on, at work, and had noted, probably with a
degree of disdain that where she was, was the most noise. You know, the one who talks loudest in the
elevator, or the one who was the center of attention at a dining table.
And yet, underneath that,
if or when anyone got close enough, there was something else. Something that fascinated me. But, having become reclusive had made me more
reticent, and even though I was sitting at the same table, almost within arm's
length, I was too shy to strike up a conversation.
Until it was time to go
home. I had moved out of the way so she
could get out, and as she passed me she said, "You've been very quiet,
Brian isn't it?"
"Yes. And I know it's rather lame but I don't have
as extensive knowledge of sports, which I guess I should. Ask me about old movies, and I'm your guy. Anyway, I pride myself on being a good
listener."
"Old movies eh. I'll keep that in mind." With a smile, she went to leave and then
turned. "Look. I have this thing I have to go to, and I
don't want to go by myself. It's not a
date or anything like that, I just need someone to come with me. You might even find the people
interesting."
"I'm sure there's
someone else here more qualified than I am." It was lame and I was floundering. It was not every day a girl asks you to go
out with her. Even if it was, to a
certain degree, an unflattering invitation.
"They all seem to
have something else to do. Look, here's
my phone number," she handed me a piece of paper with her cell number
scrawled on it, "Call me if you change your mind. It's not going to be as bad as you
think."
I should not have picked
up the phone. I definitely should not
have called her number. And I knew I was
going to live to regret telling her I would go to her 'thing'.
Before I walked out the
door I looked at myself in the mirror.
It seemed to be telling me, 'you are a fool, Brian', and I agreed. This had disaster written all over it. I hadn't been out for a long time, and if
anything, those few hours last evening were a sign I was not ready to face the
world. Not after being so long away from
it.
A lot had changed in the
fifteen months I'd been in a coma. It
was a miracle, the doctors said, that I came out of it with very little
damage. I'd lost a chunk of memories,
particularly surrounding the accident, and perhaps, I'd been told, that was a
good thing. Cameron, the guy I worked
with had summed up the change in a few short words, 'you've gone from being the
biggest dead shit in the world to something that resembles a human being'. I didn't remember that person, though others
did.
Maybe she remembered who
I was, and, if she did, that didn't explain why she asked me. The person Cameron described was not a person
I would want to be with, so I guess the answer to my rhetorical question would
soon be revealed.
Nancy was bright,
talkative, and, at times, over the top.
She was the loudest in the room and the center of attention. I wondered if the old Brian had been like
that because if he was, I wouldn't like him.
It begged the question, why did I agree to go with her?
Curiosity? Maybe.
That I might find some people who knew the old Brian? I certainly hoped not.
I had barely got out of
the car to go and knock on her door when she came out, a small gym bag on her
shoulder, dressed casually. I had to
admit, in the morning sun and surrounded by an idyllic setting, she looked
almost like an angel. She jumped in the
car and all but slammed the door shut.
"You're early."
I looked at my watch,
then the clock on the car's dash. Both
said the same, Eight a.m. exactly.
"You did say eight a.m. and not p.m." I couldn't remember what she said, not right
then.
"I mean most guys
who come to collect me are always late."
"Then I guess, by
inference, I not like most guys."
She smiled, one of those
impish smiles I'd come to recognize from another woman I'd dated somewhere in a
distinct past, and who was trouble. I
did, for some strange remember the night we spent in jail, though I couldn't
remember why, except the impish smile.
"I suspect you're
not. Cam said you were different."
"Cam did, did
he?" The mentioning of his name
raised a red flag in the back of my mind.
Cameron was not above playing complex pranks and I was beginning to see
indications that this might be one. I
would have to be careful.
"Not in a bad way, I
mean. He had nothing but good things to
say about you, though I had the feeling there was something he wasn't
saying. You're not an ax murderer or
anything like that?"
"Shouldn't you have
done some more research before asking me along?" I had also heard from another source,
actually, a chap named, rather aptly, Jones, who was also at the party. He had left earlier but was still in the
carpark, apparently his car parked next to mine, smoking a cigarette. A suspicious man might say he was waiting for
me.
He had some 'sage'
advice. "You want to be careful
when you're with Nancy. She's not what
she seems."
I asked him to elucidate,
but, cigarette finished, he stubbed it out rather violently under his blood,
and left. He looked angry, sounded
angry, and it was an angry warning.
Perhaps he was a current or, more likely, ex-boyfriend. That 'advice' only added to the intrigue
value.
Someone else, when he
asked them about Nancy, had told him she was 'brilliant' with computers. Was that in programming, or hacking, or
simply data entry? He only knew she had
helped the website programmers when the company had built its intranet. Computers and I never got on, and I was the
only one who got a weekly visit from the IT help desk, just in case.
"I did. Do you remember anything from those fifteen
months?"
"Like what?"
"They say that when
you're in a coma you can still hear people, you know, that sort of stuff."
I thought about it for a
minute. I wasn't one of those lucky
ones, though I did have one of those out-of-body experiences, where I suspect
I'd nearly died. Just not my time, I'd
thought, later.
"I'd like to meet
the people who have that ubiquitous title of 'they'. They have a lot of opinions, most of which
are about the unknown."
"So would I, to be
honest. All you ever get to do is read
about them. So, are you ready?"
"For what?"
"A weekend
away. It will be fun if you want it to
be."
"Otherwise?"
"It'll be fun. You have my promise."
"And where is this
'fun' going to be?"
"Rhode Island. A friend of my parents, the son is having a party
and a few side events. There are about 40
of us, so there's no shortage of interesting if sometimes eclectic people. I'll put the address in the GPS."
Rhode Island, the other
home of the New York rich, as well as others, and I hoped it was the others we
were going to see. The host was the son
of possible millionaires, so that was an interesting description for me to mull
on. Would he be an ex? It seemed to me that Rhode Islanders would be
less likely to mingle with the paupers, and if they did it would be for their
own amusement.
There was a memory on the
back of his mind, that popped up, albeit briefly when she mentioned the
destination. The fact it didn't want to
come to the surface told me it was a bad memory. One from 'old' Brian’s days.
Nancy's beauty, manner,
and the fact she was clever might just win over the son of a millionaire, an
heir to a fortune, whereas it would intimidate a lesser man. As for me, I was a means to an end, so it
didn't matter what I thought, other than it was better than staying home.
It was the house with all
the cars parked out front. Multi
stories, with towers that no doubt overlooked the ocean, and extensive gardens
that seemed to be shared, that blocked the sightlines from the street front to
that invisible ocean. I was willing to be,
once on the other side, the never-ending sound of the sea might be heard.
In winter, this would be
bleak. In summer, well, what was the
saying, anyone who is anyone would be here.
Well, the sons and daughter thereof, perhaps.
I had expected the moment
I parked the car she would be out, and gone, like a proverbial schoolgirl dying
to get back to school after the holidays.
She was not. She stood there, at
the front of the car, and looked at the scene before us. To me, it was just a building, with trees,
shrubs, and grass around it. To others,
it was a portal into another world, one that would never be available to that
95% of the rest of the world. It was a
phrase that popped into my mind, again, randomly, that said, the top 5% of any
country held as much if not more of the wealth belongs to the other 95%.
I came up beside her and
looked in the same direction, at one of the towers.
"Having a Rapunzel
moment?" I hoped she had some
memory of fairytales or it would seem an odd comment.
"I used to have long
hair once. But, the last time I was
here, I can't remember. My mother's hair
was always long, some sort of hangover from hippy days, you know, the
1970s. She was here once. The stories she used to tell me about the
houses, and the people she used to know.
I'm ready. Are you?"
It was like a walk
through the park, getting to the front door.
There was a driveway, but there must have been a rule, no cars on the
property. Or perhaps the front gate was
locked and the owner had thrown away the key.
Or, more than likely, the
butler, standing at the front door, welcoming guests, had it in his
pocket. He was a tall, severe-looking
man, with a military bearing. I somehow
knew he was more than just the average butler.
Nancy gave him our names,
and in return, he gave us a sheet of paper.
The rules and the room number where we would be staying the night. I had thought that we would be given separate
rooms, but that wasn't the case, and it didn't seem to worry Nancy that I would
be staying with her. The only other
words he said were, "The rotunda, 11 a.m."
The room overlooked the
ocean, today more or less a millpond, and a number of yachts were out making
the most of the weather. There was a
pier at the end of the property, and, yes, a reasonably large boat attached to
it. There was also a view of a croquet
lawn, the rotunda beside the rose garden.
On the other side was a large pond, and seats where, no doubt on days
when people like us were impinging on their solitude, they sat and contemplated
how to make more money.
I didn't realize I was
that cynical.
The room had two beds,
and its own bathroom. She had thrown
her bag on one, checked out the bathroom, then dashed past saying, "I'll
see you at the rotunda."
I followed her down about
a half-hour later, descending the stairs at a more leisurely pace, looking at
the paintings on the wall as I did.
Forbears, and landscapes that were from around here. The one with the lighthouse was of particular
interest. It brought another memory to
the surface. I'd been there before, sometime
in the distant past, and it was significant.
The Butler was standing
at the bottom of the stairs, having stopped there when he saw me descending.
"It's nice to see
you again, Master Brian."
"Not Master Brian,
anymore, Jeffery. Sadly, I had to grow
up."
"We all do, sooner
or later. Pity we can't say the same for
Chester."
"Where is he?"
"You need to
ask. I hope you're up for a little X
marks the spot."
I groaned. Chester and his treasure hunts.
My last memory of that he
had hidden a fluffy bunny stuffed with money.
It was the weekend I had the crash, the result I was told of too much
booze, too much alcohol, too much of everything. I was just glad the girl I had brought up
with me had left with another chap, a decision, I told her when she visited me
in hospital, was probably the wisest thing she would ever do.
I just shook my head.
"Even if you don't
think so Brian, we have missed you."
Another look around, I
sighed, then went outside. My doctor had
been right. Coming back had stirred up
the mush in my brain, those thoughts, feelings, and memories of who I was, and
what I was. And who I would never be
again.
Nancy was waiting by the
rotunda, talking to a more youthful version of myself, Chester. It was an awful name, one that our mother
must have come up with in one of her drug-fuelled dreams, and he had taken a
ribbing at school, and a willing participant in many a fight.
Chester looked surprised
to see me, no, that wasn't surprise, but shock.
"I thought you said
you would never come back."
Nancy looked from him,
then to me, then back again.
"I'm not here,
Chester. It's just Nancy and Brian, here
for the treasure hunt. And this time
there better be more than a hundred dollars in that stuffed animal."
Chester looked confused
for a moment, then smiled his brand of childish smile, that of a child that
would probably never grow up, the result of what I did to him, and would spend
the rest of my life trying to earn forgiveness for.
"OK."
"What was that
about?" she asked.
"Long story. Remind me to tell you one day, if you stick
around that long."
In the background, I
could hear Jeffery calling the treasure hunt participants together.
Like it had ten years ago
when I came home...
© Charles Heath 2020-2021
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