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Chapter Thirty-Two

so it was clear in my mind, I knew what I had to do next. I

needed to do what I was sent here to do, make Elizabeth’s life as comfortable for her as possible. But now I had gotten so involved with her I would have to help heal old wounds and the new wounds that I’d foolishly caused myself. I was angry at myself for making a mess of everything, for getting caught up and taking my eye off the ball. My anger was overpowering the pain I felt and I was glad, because in order for me to help Elizabeth, I needed to ignore my own feelings and do what was best for her. What I

should have done from the start. But that’s the thing about lessons, you always learn them when you don’t expect them or want them. I’d have plenty of time in my life to deal with the pain of losing her.

I’d walked all night thinking about the past few weeks and about my life.

I’d never done that before, thought about my life. It never seemed relevant to my aim, but it should always have been. I found myself back at Fuchsia Lane the next morning, sitting on the garden wall where I had first met Luke over a month ago. The fuchsia door still smiled at me and I waved back. At least that wasn’t angry at me; I knew Elizabeth would be. She doesn’t like people being late. I’d stood her up. Not intentionally. Not out of any malice, but out of love. Imagine not meeting someone because you loved them so

much. Imagine hurting someone, making them feel lonely, angry, and

unloved because you think it’s best for them. All these new rules. They were 233

C e c e l i a A h e r n

making me doubt my abilities as a best friend. They were beyond me, laws that I wasn’t comfortable with at all. How could I teach Elizabeth about hope, happiness, laughter, and love when I didn’t know if I believed in any of those things anymore? Oh, I knew they were possible all right, but with possibility comes impossibility. A new word in my vocabulary.

At 6 a.m. the fuchsia door opened and I stood to attention as though a

teacher had entered the classroom. Elizabeth stepped out, closed the door behind her, locked it, and walked down the cobblestoned drive. She was

wearing her chocolate-brown tracksuit again, her only informal outfit in her wardrobe apart from her work jeans. Her hair was tied back messily, she had no makeup on, and I don’t think I’d ever seen her look so beautiful in my life. A hand reached into my heart and twisted it momentarily. It hurt.

She looked up and saw me and stalled. Her face didn’t break into a

smile like it usually did. The hand around my heart squeezed tighter. But at least she saw me and that was the main thing. Don’t ever take it for granted when people look in your eyes; you’ve no idea how lucky you are. Actually, forget about luck, you’ve no idea how important it is to be acknowledged.

Even if it is an angry glare, because it’s when they ignore you, when they look right through you, that you should start worrying. Elizabeth usually ignores her problems; she usually looks right past them and never in the eye.



But I was obviously a problem worth solving.

She walked toward me with her arms folded across her chest, her head

held high, her eyes tired but determined.

“Are you all right, Ivan?”

Her question threw me. I expected her to be angry, to shout at me and

not listen or believe my side of the story, like they do in the movies, but she didn’t. She was calm, with a temper bubbling beneath the surface, ready to erupt depending on my answer. She studied my face, searching for answers she would never believe.

I don’t think I’ve ever been asked that question before. I was thinking about that as she was studying my face. No, it was as clear as day to me that I did not feel all right. I felt brittle, tired, angry, hungry, and there was a pain, not a hunger pain but an ache that started in my chest and worked its way through my body and head. I felt that my views and philosophies had I f Yo u C o u l d S e e M e N o w

been changed overnight. The philosophies that I had gladly carved in

stone, recited, and danced upon. I felt as though the magician of life had cruelly revealed his hidden cards and it wasn’t magic at all, just a mere trick of the mind. Or a lie.

“Ivan?” She looked concerned. Her face softened, her arms dropped

from their folded position, and she stepped forward and reached out to

touch me.

I couldn’t answer.

“Come on, walk with me.” She linked my arm and we walked out of

Fuchsia Lane.

They walked in silence deep into the heart of the countryside. The birds sang loudly in the early morning, the crisp air filled their lungs, rabbits bounded daringly across their path, and butterflies danced through the air waving through them as they walked along the woodlands. The sun shone

down through the leaves of the dominant oaks, sprinkling light on their faces like gold dust. The sound of water trickled alongside them while the scent of eucalyptus refreshed the air. Eventually they reached an opening, the trees held their branches out, making a grand and proud presentation of the lake. They crossed a wooden bridge and sat on a hard carved bench in silence, watching as the salmon jumped to the surface of the water to catch the flies in the warming sun.

Elizabeth was the first to speak. “Ivan, in a complicated life, I try my best to make things as simple as possible. I know what to expect, I know what I’m going to do, where I’m going, who I’m going to meet every single day. In a life that is surrounded by complicated, unpredictable people, I need stability. ” She looked away from the lake and met Ivan’s eyes for the first time since they had sat down. “You,” she took a breath, “you take the sim-plicity out of my life. You shake things around and turn them upside down.

And sometimes I like it, Ivan, you make me laugh, you make me dance around streets and beaches like a lunatic, and make me feel like someone I’m not.”

Her smile faded. “But last night you made me feel like someone I don’t want to be. I need things to be simple, Ivan,” she repeated.

C e c e l i a A h e r n

There was a silence between them.

Ivan spoke. “I’m very sorry about last night, Elizabeth. You know me; it wasn’t done out of any malice.” He stopped to try and figure out if and how he should explain the events of last night. He decided against it for now.

“You know, the more you try to simplify things, Elizabeth, the more you complicate them. You create rules, build walls, push people away, lie to yourself, and ignore true feelings. That is not simplifying things.”

Elizabeth ran a hand through her hair. “I have a sister who is missing, a six-year-old nephew to mother, about which I know nothing, a father who has not moved away from a window for weeks because he is waiting for his wife, who disappeared over twenty years ago, to return. I realized last night that I was just like him as I sat on the stairs, staring out the window, waiting for a man with no surname who tells me he’s from a place called Ekam

Eveileb, a place that has been Googled and searched on the damn atlas at least once a day and that I now know doesn’t exist.” She took a breath. “I care for you, Ivan, I really do, but one minute you’re kissing me and the next you’re standing me up. I don’t know what is going on with us. I have enough worries and I have enough pain as it is and I am not volunteering myself for any more.” She rubbed her eyes tiredly.

They both watched the activities in the lake as the leaping salmon

brought ripples to the water, making soothing splashing sounds; across the lake a heron moved silently and skilfully on his stilt-like legs along the water’s edge. He was a fisherman at work, watching and waiting patiently for the right moment to break the glassy surface of the water with his beak.

Ivan couldn’t help but see the similarities in both their jobs at that

moment.

When you drop a glass or a plate to the ground it makes a loud crashing sound. When a window shatters, a table leg breaks, or a picture falls off the wall, it makes a noise. But as for your heart, when that breaks, it’s completely silent. You would think as it’s so important it would make the loudest noise in the whole world or even have some sort of ceremonious sound I f Yo u C o u l d S e e M e N o w

like the gong of a cymbal or the ringing of a bell. But it’s silent and you almost wish there was a noise to distract you from the pain.

If there is a noise, it’s internal. It screams and no one can hear it but you. It screams so loudly your ears ring and your head aches. It thrashes around in your chest like a great white caught in the sea, it roars like a mother bear whose cub has been taken. That’s what it looks like and that’s what it sounds like, a thrashing, panicking, trapped, great big beast, roaring like a prisoner to its own emotions. But that’s the thing about love; no one is untouchable. It’s as wild as that, as raw as an open flesh wound exposed to salty sea water, but when it actually breaks, it’s silent, you’re just screaming on the inside and no one can hear it.

But Elizabeth, she saw the heartbreak in me and I saw it in her, and

without having to talk about it we both knew. It was time to stop walking with our heads in clouds and instead, keep our feet on the harder soil of ground level we should always have been rooted to.


Date: 2015-04-20; view: 418


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