Read A Veil of Glass and Rain Online
Authors: Petra F. Bagnardi
positions. Arthur found work in London and
Beth remained in Bath with their daughter.
I interrupted his tale then with a question.
“Were you unhappy to be apart?”
“Certainly,” he answered.
“How did you survive?” I demanded.
Peter wasn't surprised by my confusion,
because he knew how difficult it was for her
daughter to stay separate from her husband,
and how my own parents experienced the
same sort of distress.
“We wrote letters to one another,” he
explained.
Then he presented the letters to me. There
were so many, that he had to conserve them
inside a large box. He chose his favorite one
and let me read it. Only one word was written
on the wrinkled paper: You.
“With one word she told me that all she
could think about was me,” Peter said, and his
eyes shone with love and pride.
“Tell me the end of your story,” I urged, my
pulse pounding a wild tempo within my chest.
He gave me Eagan's easy smile. “The school
where Beth was working offered her a full-
time position, so I returned to Bath and I
resumed teaching part-time, while I took care
of our little girl.”
“Thank you, for sharing your story with
me,” I told him, and my voice broke a little,
for I realized that I yearned for the kind of
strong relationship he and his wife had.
I was young, and yet my heart was already
swelling with sensations, desires and
expectations I couldn't fully comprehend, but I
certainly accepted.
When the time to depart came, I had to
swallow a river of tears. Eagan noticed my
sadness. He didn't utter a word; he just held
me for an infinite moment.
3.
Rome is a city full of steps. And wherever
there are steps, there are also people sitting
on them.
The place where I'm supposed to meet
Eagan is an art gallery situated downtown. It is
an imposing, white building, that resembles an
ancient Roman temple.
I'm early, which for an Italian is quiet a rare
event. But then, I'm Italian only from my
mother side, my father is from the French part
of Switzerland.
I'm sitting on the ample steps, that lead to
the entrance of the gallery. To keep me
company I have Alessio, one of my best
friends, and his mp3 device, playing a tune
Alessio composed; the melody is so powerful
and haunting, that it pierces my already
tender heart.
Alessio, and his twin brother Ivan, are partly
Italian and partly British. Their father is from
Sicily but, due to his job, he and his family had
to move to Germany, therefore Ivan and
Alessio went to high-school in Berlin. When
they speak English they have a slight German
accent, when they speak Italian, they have an
almost incomprehensible Sicilian intonation.
Their British mother gave them their black,
straight hair, their pale skin, and their love for
music.
I'm nervous. I keep licking my lips and
rubbing my sweaty palms across my jeans-clad
thighs. Alessio, very gently, removes the
earphones from my ears, then he thumbs off
his mp3 player.
“Clém wants us to compose the music for
her show,” he says.
I smile. “We are a cover band. We don't
create. We imitate. Did you remind her?”
“We can give it a try,” he replies gently,
even as he strokes my long, inky-black hair.
Then he rummages inside my black shoulder
purse, which lays in my lap, and hands me my
dark-purple lipstick.
“Stop licking your lips,” he reprimands.
“Why didn't Clém mention the music idea to
me?” I give him the lipstick and leans toward
him, so that he can apply it, as I'm too shaky
to do it properly.
”I'm her roommate. I should be the first to
know these things,” I complain.
“You've been a little preoccupied lately,” he
remarks.
He smooths the purple smudges around my
lips with the tip of his thumb, then he glances
over my shoulder; a wide grin slowly stretches
his mouth.
I turn and see Eagan approaching. Dark-
blond hair cropped short on the sides, a bit
longer on the top of his head. Broad chest and
shoulders. Full, lush lips. Bright blue eyes and
an easy smile. Tall and fit, he's wearing dark
denim jeans and a gray sweatshirt.
Girls around us drop their conversations, lift
their gazes from books, forget about the text
messages they were about to send, to stare at
him. He just got himself another fan-club.
As we stand to greet him, I wave and Alessio
murmurs, “Wow.”
“I know.”
I make the introductions. Eagan shakes
Alessio's hand and gives him a warm smile.
Alessio blushes. His eyes wander to the white
steps, to the façade of the gallery, to the
people. He is incredibly timid especially
around attractive guys. He is sweet and caring,
and he could have all the best boyfriends in
the world, if only he'd overcome his shyness.
Alessio kisses my cheek and presses the
lipstick to my palm. “Forget what I said about
licking your lips,” he whispers.
I shove him playfully. “Go! I'll see you
later.”
Eagan observes Alessio walk away for a
moment, then his eyes settle on me; they're
not their usual bright blue, they appear
darker, more intense.
“I'm jealous,” he says.
I frown. “Of what? Alessio is-”
“I know. I caught the vibe. I'm jealous
because he gets to touch you and kiss you. All I
get is a wave.”
He moves toward me, and I take a step
backward, even as I gaze up at him, but I'm
unable to gauge is expression, for the early-
spring sun blinds me and forces me to avert my
gaze. To hide the discomfort and nervousness
caused by his presence and proximity, I make a
show of replacing the lipstick inside my purse.
“It's been years, Eagan. Things have
changed,” I mumble.
I'm still not looking at him, even so I can
perceive the tension gripping his taut body,
like a gust of heat. He shifts toward me,
blocking the sunlight with his frame.
“Look at me,” he demands.
I glance up at him and wince, for his eyes
are full of pain. I exhale a trembly breath,
then I go to him. I bury my face in his chest;
the familiar scent of cinnamon envelopes me,
and so do his arms; a cradle of velvet and
steel. I wrap my arms around his waist, and I
feel the tenseness leave his muscles.
“I missed this, kitty-cat,” he murmurs
against my hair, his voice deep and rough.
The popular, young artist Eagan is so curious
about, is a very mysterious personality. She
despises the media, so much so that no one
has ever seen her face. Regardless, people
adore her paintings, because the characters
she depicts have soulful and penetrating eyes,
that mesmerize and enchant the observers.
The unusual artist is quiet famous, but it is
a warm spring Sunday, and the Romans don't
spend such a day indoors, therefore the
museum is not crowded. Even so, Eagan keeps
bumping playfully against me.
“Sorry, didn't do that on purpose. Someone
pushed me,” he says with fake remorse.
“You're so doing that on purpose,” I
comment, and feign deep interest in a huge
painting portraying an emerald-green garden,
dotted with purple flowers and lemon trees.
But the beauty of the picture is unable to
capture my complete attention, for Eagan's
presence, his easy smiles, the smell of
cinnamon, claim my concentration; all my
senses are focused on him.
I resume walking, but I don't really notice
where I'm heading. Eagan follows me.
All of a sudden, he grabs my hand. Startled,
I look up at him, but his eyes are not on me,
they are fixed on one of the paintings. It's a
portrait of one of artist's muses. The naked
woman is lying on the wooden floor of the
painter's studio; her long strands create a dark
halo around her face, her breasts are small and
rounded, her nipples a deep red; her legs are
slightly parted, revealing a dark patch of hair.
She is staring at her audience, at us, with raw
and unveiled desire in her gaze. As we admire
her, Eagan's thumb draws small, insistent
circles across the back of my hand. My eyes
move to his face. His neck is flushed, and his
Adam's apple moves up and down, as he
swallows; he is aroused.
The unrelenting caress of his finger draws
goosebumps on my skin. My nipples harden and
strain against the thin cotton of my dark, long-
sleeved shirt. I feel an insistent throb between
my legs. I disentangle my hand from his and
curl my arms around myself in an attempt to
shield my body from all this sensations.
Eagan notices. “You alright?” He pulls me
into the cradle of his embrace.
“I'm fine.” My voice is small and strained. I
don't recognize it.
Eagan tucks a finger under my chin and tilts
my face upward, so that our gazes meet. His
eyes roam my face; except for a spark in their
blue depths, I can't figure out his expression.
And I can't stand his probing appraisal, so my
eyes dart away from his, and the moment
breaks. He lets go of me.
We continue walking, gazing and admiring.
By the end of the exposition Eagan suggests we
find a coffee-shop, to enjoy a cappuccino, but
mostly to talk. I nod. In truth, all I want is to
run away.
When we leave the exposition, the white
steps leading to the entrance of the gallery are
occupied by numerous people; their faces are
raised toward the sky, allowing the spring sun
to brush their skin.
Someone calls Eagan's name, and we turn to
see whom the voice belongs to. A portly young
man, about Eagan's age, approaches us. He has
longish dark hair and a round, beaming face.
He is followed by two pretty young women;
one is a brunette, the other has long, curly red
hair. Eagan introduces us. They are all his
coworkers, and they're all Italians. They have a
slight accent when they speak English, that
sounds funny on Enrico, the young man, and
sexy on the two young women. As soon as I
hear their names, I forget them.
They all smile at me politely, but then their
attention turns completely to Eagan. I half-
listen, because both my mind and my body
want to be somewhere else. I am witnessing a
fragment of Eagan's new life in Rome. It
involves fancy parties and clubs, that I've
never been to, although I've been living in
Rome for almost two years.
They want Eagan to go with them;
apparently they have a big night planned out,
which will begin with an early happy hour in a
famous Irish pub. This one at least I know and
have been to. Eagan glances at me and grins,
then he invites me to join them. The other
three, once again, smile politely. They don't
seem to really care if I go with them, or not.
I don't have a real reason to decline the
invitation, but I pretend I do, because the
entire situation is making me uncomfortable. It
is all evolving in a sort of painful slow motion.
The forced politeness, the way the woman
with dark hair smiles and touches Eagan's arm
and chest. In my mind, this strange film moves
quickly forward, and I can imagine what I
would see, were I to follow them. Her body
leaning in, grazing his. Him grabbing her hand,
and drawing arousing circles across her skin
with his thumb. I realize that it is all a product
of my active imagination, but it hurts
nonetheless.
“Thank you, but I have a previous
engagement.” This is what comes out of my
mouth.
I wave politely, then I leave.
I used to adore Eagan's expansiveness, but
now I detest it.
4.
When I was fourteen and Eagan was nineteen,