Read A Veil of Glass and Rain Online
Authors: Petra F. Bagnardi
died.” The realization annihilates me. An
uncontrolled shiver grips my entire being.
Eagan covers my body with his. His mouth
captures mine. Our sobs blend. Then he makes
slow and soft love to me. He reassures me
without words; he's here with me, he needs
me, he loves me.
Afterward, I dig out my guitar and play for
Eagan and for David. My melodies tell about a
precious existence crushed and about a
wonderful boy, who was in love with life.
18.
We spend the weekend mostly in bed. We
cuddle, we kiss, we make love. We leave the
bedroom only to go to the bathroom, or to
prepare and share quick meals. Then we hurry
back in our cocoon of lust, suffused with
lemon, cinnamon and the musky scent of sex,
and imbued with our sobs, whimpers and
moans.
Eventually, when everyday life requests our
attention, I don't feel sad, I feel invigorated
instead.
“Clém? Where are you? The reception is
awful!”
“I'm in this stinky and smelly hole we call,
theater.”
“How is it going?”
“Not so good. My one and only male actor
left us. He found a job, which is good with this
economy and all. But he left me with a group
of very discouraged actresses.”
“Sorry.”
“We will be fine, as soon as I find a
replacement. I have good news, though. I
found a roommate!”
“Good.”
“Very. She's my assistant director. Well, she
happens to be also my manager and one of my
actresses. Anyway, it's a convenient solution.”
“I can see that. You'll be working non-stop.”
“That's the plan. So, how's your American
dude?”
I chuckle softly. “He's good. Look, I have a
gift for you and your theater company. I want
to give you my car.”
“What? Why? I mean, thanks! But why?”
Eagan's fingers grasp the steering wheel so
tightly, that his knuckles turn white.
Twisted metal and shattered glass. A car
crashed against a tree. Two boys are trapped
inside.
“Brina? Are you still there?” Clém's voice
wrenches me away from the terrible images
inside my head.
“Yes, I'm here,” I reassure her.
“I appreciate the offer, but-”
“Please, take it,” I insist, trying not to
sound too desperate.
“What's wrong? You like that car.”
I love Eagan's peace of mind more.
“Nothing's wrong. Just take it. Please.”
In the end she accepts my gift. After we
hang up, I call Ivan and Alessio.
“Hey, boys. Do you want to go shopping?”
“At last!” They yell in unison.
I need them to help me select some new
undies, for I plan to surprise Eagan tonight, but
I also require their advice.
I intend to go to Berlin only for a couple of
weeks; enough time to interview the fabulous
professor, who teaches Italian Cinema at the
university. Then I'll come back and I'll finish my
paper here, after all I'm planning to write
about movies mainly shot in Rome. The
scholarship will allow me to quit the job at the
bookstore, so that I will be able to concentrate
mainly on the paper.
All these arrangements will let me stay
close to Eagan. I crave him too much. Without
him, I am certain, I will crumble.
The moment I step into my home and let the
door close behind me, the voices swamp me.
One of them belongs to Eagan, the other two
seem to be owned by a man and a woman; the
voices I don't recognize sound distant and
metallic.
I remain rooted to the spot, unable to leave
the small entry space, because the words I'm
listening to tell about me, and they wound me.
She's fragile. She's my friend. You're not her
doctor. You're her boyfriend. She's my family.
Is she worth it? I'm not letting her go.
Consider her family history. She needs me.
She will drag you down. I need her.
The voices are like violent waves. They lash
and twirl my small body, until it dissolves and
becomes liquid. And then the currents pull me
down.
I want to slap my hands over my ears and
lock the words out, but I have no strength, no
weight, and no limbs. I am an insubstantial
creature.
When I open my eyes, I don't find myself on
the cold floor, but in my bed. Eagan's strong
body is curled around mine, keeping me warm,
As I stir, he cups my face in his palms and
turns my head, so that I'm looking at his bright
blue eyes.
“I found you on the floor. By the door. What
happened?” His tone is calm, but I detect an
urgent undercurrent.
“I heard,” I rasp out.
“What?” He urges.
“Enough.”
I slide away from him and he lets me. I
stand by the bed and force myself to stare at
him; he seems weary and his blue eyes are
moist and glum.
I am not good for him.
“I'm like my mother,” I confess. “She was so
sad when my father wasn't home. I had to let
her follow him, because she was fading away
in front of my eyes. You remember? You came
to help me.”
He nods. His lips part. He begins to utter
words, but I shake my head sharply.
“You deserve better. You're not like me, or
my mother, or your parents. You're not needy.
You're strong and bright. And I'm not.”
“Shut up.” His voice is a biting hiss. He
leaves the bed to stand before me. His fingers
are folded into hard fists.
I step away from him, and I turn toward his
desk and his lap-top. The screen-saver
represents a peaceful ocean; I wish it were
real, so that I could swim away.
“Your friends are right. I'm not good for
you,” I insist.
He circles his arms around my waist from
behind, tugging me back against his taut chest.
His breathing against my neck is heavy and
labored. He grinds his penis against me with
possessive force, until it becomes turgid and
swollen. Then he quickly fumbles with the
button and zipper of my jeans, so that he can
slip his hand under my panties.
When his fingers find me ready, he groans.
“Say yes, Brina,” he growls.
“No,” I whisper.
His pained cry vibrates throughout his body.
He jerks his hand away from my mound and
rests it on my abdomen.
He nuzzles into my hair, then he trails open-
mouthed kisses across my jaw and my cheek,
his tongue and lips create soft and wet sounds.
I gradually melt against him.
“You promised. No more running away from
me,” he rumbles against my skin.
“I'm too selfish. I can't let you go. I need
you too much,” I reveal.
He nibbles and licks my neck, before telling
his own truth. “We're alike, Brina. I'm just like
my parents. I'm desperate and lost when you're
not with me.”
“Earlier your words hurt me. You should
make it up to me,” I murmur.
“Undress,” he demands.
Our gazes fused, we take off our clothes.
Eagan stretches out onto the bed and
prompts me to straddle his chest. Then he
seizes my waist and draws my sex toward his
mouth.
He makes love to me with his lips and his
tongue. As I writhe and squirm above him,
Eagan fists and strokes his shaft, so that we
dissolve into cries of ecstasy at the same
moment.
Afterward, he cradles my trembling body
against his chest.
He waits for my pulse to quiet down, then
he asks for a kiss. I frame his handsome face
with my hands. I brush my lips across his
mouth once, twice, three times. Then I push
my tongue between his lips and caress his
tongue with tiny, teasing touches, meant to
heal our troubled hearts.
“We will be fine. I'll make everything good
again,” Eagan promises against my mouth.
I want to believe him.
I try to believe him.
I fail.
19.
EAGAN
My name is Eagan Sherard.
I have to hold on to what I know. Otherwise
I'll go crazy.
I left the radio on. Songs keep playing.
They're like background noises. I'm not really
paying attention. But I need them to crush the
quiet.
One week ago, I took my girlfriend, Brina,
to the airport. Before kissing me good-bye, she
gave me a gift, a DVD.
During the weeks preceding her departure,
she shot a short film. Ivan and Alessio helped
her. I was glad about this new project of hers.
I didn't suspect the true reason why she was
making the movie, though: Me.
I watched the DVD as soon as I got home. It
gutted me.
The film is a about a young man who finds a
broken guitar and decides to repair it. Then,
he learns how to play it. After a while, he
begins to travel the world to let more people
experience and appreciate his tunes.
Eventually, he becomes a famous musician.
A simple and easy plot.
What was painful for me to listen to, was
Brina's voice-over telling an entire different
story.
A tale of a girl walking down a busy street
full of stores and people. The girl is sad and
lost. She glances at the windows and at the
passersby, but she doesn't really see anything.
Then she meets a boy. The boy shows her a
beautiful garden and the girl begins to truly
notice and feel things. When the boy leaves
her, though, even for a brief time, she ceases
to feel all at once. Everything around her
disappears. The girl is so scared, that she
decides to leave the boy and the garden
behind. However, it's not a permanent
separation. She just needs time to learn how
to sense the world by herself. After six weeks,
she returns to the boy with new knowledge.
She confesses to the boy that reality seems
brighter when he's beside her. But now she
also knows how to use her perceptions when
the boy is not with her.
My girl wants six weeks away from me.
Because we're too clingy and too needy. We
don't breathe when we're apart. We forget
about the rest of the world when we're
together. We resemble our parents. And we
both don't want to.
I keep repeating these words like a song in
my head. My temples throb. Violent rushes of
blood in my ear make me dizzy.
I know that we have to be better and more
open than our parents. Our greedy love can be
dangerous. I'm aware of all that.
But I ache.
I'm twenty-five years old.
I met Brina when I was fourteen.
She wrapped herself around my soul when I
was sixteen.
It was very early in the morning. The
annoying buzz of my cellphone woke me up. I
wanted to destroy the damn thing. I stopped
when I saw the caller ID.
“Hey, fur-ball. What's up?” I tried to stay
calm. She was calling from the other side of
the ocean. Normally we sent each other
messages or emails, or we talked over the
computer. Something was definitely wrong.
“A need a friend.” She sounded small and
fragile.
I didn't hesitate. My parents were
somewhere in China, working. So I called my
British grandparents. They helped me book a
flight. The next day I was at Brina's place.
At first she didn't want to talk. She didn't
even hug me when she opened the door for
me.
I respected her silence. I dropped my
backpack to the floor. Then I sat on the couch
beside her.
After a while she spoke. “I had to let my
mum go. She was too sad, here, without my
dad. It's fine. I can do this. They hired a
housekeeper. She will take care of the house,
and of me.”
“She's a nanny,” I told her.
She lifted her chin. She gave me a stubborn
stare. “I don't need a nanny. She's a
housekeeper.”
I smiled. “Right.”
“Anyway,” she went on, “My mum was sorry
to leave me, but she was also so relieved. She
needs my dad so much. I don't understand all
this need.” She looked at me, seeking an
explanation.