Read A Veil of Glass and Rain Online
Authors: Petra F. Bagnardi
she was crying and breathless; I remember
that only one girl, the sister of David, Eagan's
best friend, was glaring disdainfully at all of
us.
I noticed Eagan's shadow painted on the sand,
before I saw him. And before I could turn
around and talk, he grabbed me, lifted me and
then he threw me in the water. It was frigid.
My words of protest became a startled gasp,
my legs and arms moved frantically, trying to
get warm. Eagan seized me and hurled me in
the water again, and then again.
I emerged and managed to shriek, “Stop it!”
He did. While I shivered in the ocean, he
observed me with his arms crossed and a
serious face. He was wearing yellow trunks,
the water grazed his knees, but he didn't seem
affected by the cold. Right then, I envied and
detested his strength.
“Are you done?” I spurted.
“Yes,” he said. “Lets swim.”
He dove, went under, and then reappeared
quiet far from me. Eagan was a great
swimmer, and he adored being in the water. As
I waded toward him, I saw the tension abandon
his features, I saw his smile spread, I saw his
twinkling blue eyes. The water, that loved him
in return, stroked is muscles, defining them,
shaping him into an ancient Greek statue, that
the ocean full of memories remembered from
the past.
I kept a little distance between us, panting,
trying to stay afloat.
“Are you still mad at me?” He asked.
“No,” I answered. “Are going to throw me
again?” I added, with a small smile.
He grinned. “No.” Then he pulled me to
him.
Instinctively I wrapped my arms around his
neck and my legs around his waist. His arms
encircled me, a warm cradle of velvet and
steel.
“Sorry about the throwing thing. I wanted
your undivided attention,” he explained.
I hid my face in his strong neck. “No need
for that. You're all I've been thinking about.”
He squeezed me. “I missed you, kitty-cat.”
I drew back a little to look at him. I let my
gaze caress his bright blue eyes, his dark-blond
hair, and his stubbly jaw. “You need a shave,“
I told him.
Eagan disentangled one of his arms from our
embrace and gently traced his fingertip along
my upper lip, where I knew a sparse layer of
fine hair could be seen.
I was just beginning to discover razors and
waxing; being a brunette, my hair was more
evident.
“You need a shave, too,” he teased.
I tried to push him away, but his arm went
around me again, and his hold tightened. I
trembled, but I was not sure the cold water
was to blame.
“Lets get back,” he said.
That summer he changed my nickname. I
used to be “fur-ball”, because of my
Mediterranean girl status. But as I began to
wax and shave, he started calling me “kitty-
cat”; it was gentler and I adored it. For me
he'd always been, and would always be, my
“good giant”; because he was tall and because
he protected me.
Eagan had brought towels. They were
waiting for us on the shore; one purple, and
two yellow. He wrapped the purple one around
me, he used one of the yellow ones to towel
off, and placed the other one onto the sand, so
we could sit.
“Why did you hurt Ines like that, Eagan?” I
kept my eyes focused on the black and white
lighthouse. I felt Eagan's gaze on me as he
answered.
“I didn't really mean to. Things haven't been
right between us for a while. I wanted to end
it. She wanted to keep trying.”
“So you cheated on her?”
“Yes, to send her a message.”
“Instead of talking?”
“Actions speak louder than words.”
“That's cruel and kind of immature.” As we
talked, I kept staring at the lighthouse, and he
kept looking at me.
“What can I say? I'm 18, and when I think, I
rarely use my head.”
At that I smiled, and I finally gazed at him.
He smiled back.
“I'm glad you and Ines are friends. But what
you and I have, is more important and stronger
than anything else. You are my best friend, my
family. And you should always have my back.”
I flinched. His words hurt me. “I
have
your
back.”
He probably noticed my expression, for he
reached out and brushed my cheek with the
back of his fingers.
“I know, Brina,” he said, his tone more
tender. “It's okay for you to be angry at me if I
mess up. And you have to yell at me. That is
fine. Not talking to me, avoiding me, denying
me you, that is not fine.”
I nodded. “Sorry about that. It wasn't very
mature of me.”
“You're 13. You're allowed to be immature,”
he said.
I winced.
“That was a joke,” he added.
Then he whispered a kiss across my temple,
and reclined on the towel. He brushed his hand
across the small of my back. It was a soothing
touch, and I sensed it all over my body. I
returned my gaze to the lighthouse.
“I love you, kitty-cat,” came Eagan's voice
from behind me.
“I love you too, good giant,” I told him, but
my eyes remained averted.
I was thirteen and he was eighteen, and
things were beginning to slowly change
between us; but I was the one who broke
everything.
We spent the entire day together, just the two
of us. It was heaven. At night we went to a
concert in the town main square. Various
groups played, and then a girl with short blond
hair took the stage. It was just her and her
guitar. She was magnetic and intense. I
couldn't stop staring at her fingers caressing
the strings. She made her guitar sing, and
moan and cry. It was beautiful.
When I looked up at Eagan, he was grinning.
“You're bewitched,” he said.
I was. I wanted to be that girl on the stage
with her guitar. I wanted to be an enchantress
of souls.
The following day I spotted Eagan with the
girl he betrayed Ines with, and my heart broke
a little bit. Mina was with me and she
suggested we take off and search for our own
adventure. We found on the internet an
international language school that organized
summer courses. We chose an advanced
English course in Canterbury, which was about
to start. Our parents were proud and happy.
Mina's in particular, because they both worked
for the European Parliament, therefore they
spoke various languages.
A few days later we were all packed and
ready to leave. As a parting gift, Eagan gave
me a blue classical guitar.
“I can't accept it,” I protested.
“Why not?”
“Because it's too much and I can't even play
it!”“You can learn. You break my heart if you
don't take it, kitty-cat,” he insisted.
So I accepted his gift.
Eagan has always been an affectionate guy.
He often uses warm hugs, gentle caresses and
generous gestures to express his feelings.
A couple of years earlier, when I was eleven
and he was sixteen, we went to Rome on
vacation. That was when we both began to use
words, and not only actions, to declare how we
felt about each other, about our families, and
our closest friends.
The cause was an encounter, during an
excursion to the Colosseum, with an American
screenwriter. He was old, as wrinkled as a tree
trunk, and full of vigor.
While talking to our parents, he admitted
that he favored movies where the characters
manifested their feelings with actions, and
never said “I love you”, but used alternatives
such as “I see you”, or “I feel you”.
Knowing how much our families enjoyed
being original and unconventional, we
expected to see the phrase, “I love you”,
almost banished. So we decided to make it our
own.
When the tour-guide left us free to explore,
we stood for a long while in front of the
Colosseum, mesmerized. Our faces were lifted
up, up toward the sky.
Eagan broke our astonished silence. “I read
on the internet that the Roman arch is the
strongest construction ever invented.”
Staring at that eternal stone giant with all
its arches, which resembled eyes, that had
witnessed wars and revolutions and human
cruelty, I had no trouble believing it; despite
all that, the Colosseum was still standing,
strong and proud. Right there I knew I wanted,
one day, to live in Rome, because it was
protected by a construction that could bare
the weight of the world.
“I love you, Eagan,” I said, my voice full of
wonder and delight.
“I love you too, fur-ball,” Eagan said back.
My trip to Canterbury with Mina was supposed
to be amusing. I was supposed to be
independent, free and all grown-up. None of
that happened. Mina, in the end, did not
accompany with me, due to family troubles. I
stayed because I wanted to be brave.
In truth, life forced me to be brave all year
long, because my parents were often abroad
working, and Eagan lived in the United States,
while I resided in Italy. Summer was the time
when I could have the people I loved the most
with me, and I was missing it. I regretted my
choice terribly.
The English teachers were good, the dorm
was cozy, and the other kids were nice; but
they were not what I wanted. I held on for a
week, then I crumbled.
While in the room next to mine some girls
sang and laughed, I took my lap-top and looked
for Eagan on-line. He was there. He was
waiting for me. And he was upset.
“Why are you mad?” I asked his face on the
screen.
“It's been a week, Brina. No emails. No
texts. Nothing.”
“I wrote an email to my dad,” I said
defensively.
“What about me? I heard Mina did not make
it. You're there, alone. Why did you turn off
your cellphone?”
“I don't know,” I said and stared at the
keyboard, which suddenly seemed very
interesting.
“Of course you know,” Eagan's voice
snapped.
“I wanted to do this on my own.”
“You do everything on your own almost all
year long. Summer is our time,” he said in a
softer tone.
“I know. Will you come and get me?”
“I'll be there tomorrow.”
I glanced up and Eagan smiled at me. I
smiled back.
He was staying with his grandparents, who
lived in the city of Bath, so coming to get me
in Canterbury was easy. But I knew he would
have come even if he were on the other side of
the world.
We met the next afternoon in the city main
square. I saw him before he could notice me.
He was admiring the Cathedral and the people
working to restore the façade. A group of girls
was openly ogling his ass. Eagan did not mind
them, or better he pretended not to, because I
saw his cocky grin as I approached him.
“You already have a fan-club,” I said.
“Hey, kitty-cat!” He took my baggage from
me, leaning in to kiss my temple. Then he
turned to the Cathedral.
“I think I know what I want to do with my
life,” he said after a moment.
I followed his gaze. “You want to fix
monuments?”
“Yes, I want to make things good again.”
I reached for his hand and took it. He
squeezed my fingers.
The memories I collected during the days I
spent with Eagan and his grandparents, Peter
and Beth, are all tinted with warmth and
kindness.
During the day we visited the Roman baths,
the Abbey, and the city main streets, while the
evenings were spent preparing meals, talking
and listening to jazz and blues tunes.
After dinner, while Eagan helped Beth
cleaning, I explored the immense library. I
chose a different book every night, and Peter
kept me silent company, even as he read the
newspaper. Only once he interrupted my
reading, for he wanted to tell me his own
story. He and Beth used to teach art. In the
beginning they were part-time teachers, and
they lived in a small house. Then, after the
birth of Eagan's mother, Bea, they decided to
search for a more spacious home and full-time