The quaint cafe had
become my second home for a while now. Nothing much happens in this small town
with people numbering few hundreds. And what does happen must pass this way.
Sometimes a good thing, at other times not so nice for the individuals
concerned. Everyone knows everyone else, the news travelling faster than those
tweets I am now addicted to. At least when the ancient piece left behind by my
cousin, whimpers to life.
"Hi, Sofia,
how are you feeling today?" Dona never tires of asking me the same
question.
"As good as
ever."
My standard
response never fails to elicit a warm smile from her and her friends, regulars
who haunt the cozy corner just as often. Most ladies in the group lives by this
side of the stream that divides this place into two...both parts of the town
bearing distinct, diverse characters.
No longer look
around for the owner's son Marco or the red haired girl to take my order. The
food arrives at the table within ten minutes of my arrival, Cecelia's pastry
for the day and milky tea. He personally serves my order every time, returning
my smile with a sad grin of his. Savoring the food, wonder why an attractive
guy like him is never seen with a girl.
I voiced my piqued
interest to Aunt who doubles up as the land lady at my insistence, left me with
unsatisfactory answers.
A cryptic reply,
“He is waiting." leaves me irritated and a bit frustrated of late.
'This wait, for
whom or what?' I ask the mirror which stares back.
A glance at the worn watch tells me of the
extended tea break. Need to buy a new one soon.
'Back to the shop
then lest she explodes in her anxiety.'
Temporarily, going through a slump in sale is
our shop down the street, where we create bridal wear. The orders from the
nearby towns have been steadily declining, blame the recession or in reality,
the girls wanted designer ones. She is worried, this aunt of mine but pretends
all is well and I do likewise. I been trying to get to her to explore other
markets, maybe create our own online portfolio but she is strangely rigid and
adamant. Not giving up yet, it’s time to pull in Roberto, her son who makes a decent
living in Venice selling his photographs.
Have learned not to leave a tip as I leave, it
finds a way back into my pockets with a matching reprimand from Ceci. Wave my
goodbyes to the other patrons, shuffle to the exit, when my attention is drawn
to the two sets of red diner tables lying unoccupied. They remain empty even on
those few evenings we come back here for dinner. Another puzzle that begs
unraveling.
Walking down the
cobbled square, think back to the conversation the other day. From the snatches
overheard and persistently pestering Rob, gathered that the occupants of the
tables were a group of teenagers from the village. A freak accident took away
four of the lives while two girls survived. So badly traumatized by the
incident, one has been in an institution ever since, the other having no memory
of it. Agonize over the anguished families, being an orphan myself when the
pain in the head starts. Funny it always occurs when I wonder about the girls.
Wc 565
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Glad you made it this far...would love to hear your take on the words scribbled. A comment every now and then keeps the blues away. :D
Since, crazy Mr. Blogspot won't let me reply to the comments here (is upset with the water ladies ever since they refused to verify visitors)...will do the next best thing, drop in to your blog to say my Vanakkam/Namaste/Salaam/Hello.