The twilight did not end bleeding as if wounded
as I was briefly in the landfill. Dim light, low visibility, my wandering
steps, I walked as a ghost unaware that night I would also bleed with some new
wounds. If it wasn't because there was a time I had wanted to go there in
search of clothes, and the previous days of rain I had not been able to do so, I
would have turned back soon. I found a couple of blankets that could be useful and
there I had to stop. I would return one other day to find clothes. Anyway, it
is not easy to find any trousers or shoes in good condition in a landfill. Or
maybe you can find a useful shoe, but you never find the other. Finally we have
to buy these pieces of clothing at the Salvation Army shops. That’s why you see
me come every day, Protch, wearing the same trousers. I tend to wear them for
about six months until finally, one day I have been lucky on the street, I have
to buy new ones in charity shops. But on October 20 I could finally give back
to Luke the blankets he had lent me.
−I have to go, Protch,
and I had better do it now. Tomorrow I will tell you all I can about those two
days and the night from one to the other, of which I have to tell you so much...
−Go in peace. One of
these nights I will soon go again to my cousin's house. Now they will be
allowed to tell me about yourself in the years in which I lost you.
−If you see them, send
my regards. And don't be hard with them for not having told you. Oh, and as for
your uncle, remember that he won't know of whom you speak if you do not name me
as Nicholas."
Quickly I came to his house the following day
February 21, Monday, wanting to shorten the time to refer to him at least the
strangest night of my life. And without much prior conversation, assuring him
that today I had a lot of stuff to tell him, and a lot of energy, because I longed
to reach that unique night, he brought me breakfast to the room, we sat down
and I started.
It was an unusually cold twilight, and I am
not able to remember any other equally cold in my four autumns in the street.
On my way through the landfill, I noticed some voices were accompanying me, some
young men who perhaps had stopped a while in Meander Bridge. It seemed that
soon they left, but when I was jumping Menhir Bridge, one of them must have
gone there because I witnessed a scene that I would not have wanted to see. An
individual of some twenty years, well dressed and shaved, luxury clothes, he was
surely a well-to-do boy, one of those people who hurt with their words wherever
they go. In the surroundings of the bridge was my fellow mate Lucy. They wanted
to light the bonfire, but she was looking for firewood, because she wasn't sure
that the wood for that night would be enough. In addition the ground was still
wet and the firewood was damp. It would not be easy to light it. And suddenly she
met the insolent young man, who began to speak to her.
− "What are you
doing here at this hour, you beautiful princess? You should already be back
home –I almost bumped into that young man. At first I watched the scene not
knowing if I should greet him. It was the first time I saw a stranger in our outskirt−.
Let me see you. Even in a dim light, I would say that you are very pretty. And why
are you so lonely? Don't you have a husband who will be with you at this time
in the woods? You might need a man, you cute little thing. Here's one. You look
scared. What is your name?"
− "Lucy. Please, I
am in a hurry. Leave me alone. I must find a little firewood. The night has
come."
− "Would you like
me to help you find any firewood? You seem a little Red Riding Hood. Do not be
afraid. I will help you to avoid the wolf. You need a man that can defend you."
I was looking increasingly concerned. Lucy
seemed scared and what that young man told her seemed frankly an insult. But in
those moments, I was afraid that he was going to touch her or hit her. My
fellow mate felt uncomfortable, but she didn't know how to get rid of that
annoying "gentleman". Then I no longer could stand it:
− "Young man,
please, leave her alone. Have you still not learned that you should not molest
a lady?"
− "A lady? Are
you her husband?"
− 'No, I am not. I am
a friend. But she does have a husband. If you can’t treat a woman with respect,
it is you still have to learn it all in life."
− "Well, well, I
was only speaking affectionately with her –and addressing Lucy−. I see you have
a man to save you from the big bad wolf. You will not need me, you beautiful princess.
Too bad. You're so beautiful –and he must be seeing the anger in my eyes−. Okay,
you friend of the princess, I'm leaving now."
Lucy
and I remained some time together hoping he moved away. We saw him leave in the
direction of the Outcasts. But I don’t think that my neighbors had any problems
with him. That was when she spoke to me:
− "Thank you
Nike."
− "Do these
things happen many times, Lucy?"
− "Fortunately to
this outskirt very few people come. In Wrathfall Bridge it was very usual, but
I was not going anywhere without my mother or my "grandmother". You've
avoided me a problem tonight. Thank you, Nike. We are fellow mates. And each
time we feel that word more intensely."
She seemed, rather than grateful, really moved.
Her eyes with so little light were not distinguishable but I saw that her gaze
was wet, as if they would like to release information that I did not then know.
And about myself, what could I say? There are wounds in which pain is so strong
that it should suffice as a warning, but you're not able to notice until you do
not see blood. I could have realized then, but I didn't see it. I only felt one
puzzling increasing weight as I was walking to the fire which delayed to be lit,
and which was only a flame, one other blood, one other wound, on that night of
wounds.
There was a free room, where I sat, between
Luke, on my left, and Olivia, on my right. Her mistress was sitting beside her.
Embraced to her husband was Lucy telling him the scene that had just happened.
Luke looked at me grateful, but said nothing to me. His look was enough. Bruce
was sitting left of Lucy. John was then in his tent, suffering from a slight
headache. He had taken something to eat and chose to read a while. Perhaps in
the middle of the night he dared to leave. Paul was in his grandmother’s arms,
but lived a difficult night in which it was difficult for him to sleep. Shortly
after sitting down, Olivia, who had heard what her daughter had told, handed me
the little king.
In his black eyes fate wore a cloak of
darkness that was coming toward me with stealth until, as if it were a ruffian,
it began to stab me. But I was looking at Paul, who was awake and looked at me,
and I heard Luke’s voice saying:
− "Logically he
still cannot speak, but in his eyes sometimes it seems that words are
forming. Lucy and I are looking forward
to listening to him calling us mom or dad."
I looked again at the well of his black eyes
in search of words. Globes were his eyes, with a burning flame, the brush of some
star. The others did not speak, without John, of stars, and I do not remember
what murmurs made me lose the thread of their talk, while Paul and me, looking
at each other, might be talking together.
He was sufficiently warm. He was almost the
only one of us who was not shivering. Actually that fire of October 19 I don’t remember
for the heat but for how it shone. Flashing in the eyes of Regulus, crystal
almonds, black twilight, tenderness mirrors, stopped clocks, universe in
movement. A slight cold tremor made me tell him in my thoughts: If the wind hurts
you, the six elders who here accompany you will become a labyrinth, so among many
corridors it cannot find your door; if tonight you are hungry, we will heat in
the bonfire the appetite of all and you will have a delicacy in your baby’s bottle.
If you see that you take long to sleep, my heart will be the prologue to a
story that rocks the universe in the cradle of your eyes. You little star that smiling
at me is watching me, sleep. We are your guardian angels and we care for you.
And then it happened. Paul seemed to
understand something of this litany of the heart that I was dripping him. He
smiled tenderly at me, not willing to fall asleep, wanting to continue talking
with me. Fate wanted him to have a rattle for me. Three letters that changed
everything. How was it possible, if he was unable to speak yet? Perhaps it was
a sentimental babbling, without the meaning that I wanted to give it. But he
said it. Staring at me, he uttered the syllable that could be clearly heard in
the silence of all:
− "Dad."
My world broke into pieces then. Luke
repeated over and over again: "He has said it". Yes, he has said it.
But he has said it to me! How is it possible, Paul? What am I doing so badly
that you haven’t addressed it yet to your real father and, however, as a knife
for him, you say it to me?
I could not stop crying. The son of the man I
loved had called me dad. Really for this family I could not be but a stain. I
collapsed. Frightened, I handed the little king to his real father and I shed
tears which soon became convulsion. I didn't hide my anguish. Maybe I thought I
heard a murmur from Mistress Oakes:
− "Infinite are
the rectifications of the universe for you."
Terrified, I realized that Luke and Lucy
looked at me fondly. But still I had a part of my blood to spill. With the
desire to calm me, spoke his mother then:
− "Look at me,
Nike. If the voice of my son terrifies you, think that perhaps he cannot talk
and he is not aware of what he has babbled. But maybe through his tongue the
universe has spoken tonight, because our little king wants to make you see that
you've deserved it. We cannot know fate, but its yarns are not moved by chance.
They are looking for us..."
Fate fell like twilight on her reddish hair,
the color of a wound. Her eyes, like lakes of shadows, pierced me.
− "Anyway, Nike,
both of you need some rest. Let him lay his head on your shoulders or on Luke’s,
where he is now, and you lay your thoughts in a rocking chair of calm. You only
need to reflect and you will finally see that nothing happens by chance, that
life is a poem that is already written and we can already hear the rhapsodist who
recites it."
The wind has swings that rock us on
unforeseen airs. Her words were wise and would have maybe calmed me if it
wasn't because at last I saw the last blood of my two wounds from that fire and
with that blood I was aware of the pain. It had prevented me to see it to have
made a mistake when in July I accepted that my heart had moved toward Luke. And
for a sacred ephebus, I believed that my spirit rejected in my rivers its
naiads. But a nymph with her hair the color of a flame was also entering my
Olympus. I was aware by the tenderness of her gaze and the mellifluous cadence
of her speech that I had fallen in love again. No, it was not that night. I was
doubly in love, but the second arrow I was unaware when it had hit me. I looked
at my mate. Not for this second bite I would take out the first. For him I
would feel eternal love. And now also for his wife? The putrid cloud which
because of my unconsciousness overflew the sacred icon of his relations had
already gone to all the family. I loved both of them and their son referred to
me incorrectly. The eighth mate had an insurgent heart whose veins were opened
in filthy flowers that fired aromas of maculae.
I had stayed with them fifteen days in which
I had learned almost everything, but not the fundamental lesson: to tame my
heart, which was still forking into new rivers. How many meanders did my blood
yet have to swim? Before I could end up falling in love with the other five, I should
leave them forever.
Merciless fate was becoming a black angel, a
frozen vortex, a single fragile color meadow: despair. I didn't know how to
cry, how to disguise what my face must be betraying. I didn't know what to do.
Intuition only helped me to recognize the pain that I should go away, but not from
them, I should go away from myself. A penultimate light in the useless lighthouse
of my lucidity made me at last stand up. I should get away to shed some tears
or to kill myself. Leaving the bonfire I said to all of them:
− "I will go for
a walk."
The other figures also moved. Lucy told her
husband to enter a while in their tent. Luke handed the little king to his grandmother.
At the time in which the sacred couple, by me dishonoured, began to stand up, John
was coming out of his tent, just to find me opposite him. My face must have
been a portrait where some hectic ravens danced a macabre pantomime of tears
and death. He was aware that I was inhabited by the cruelest of the
riders and on his black horse, my mind in darkness, was the ghost of despair.
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