Authors: Amy Harmon
“It’s strange to think of you at thirteen, up here in this room reading, while I was just a few blocks away.” He hesitated for a moment, carried away, remembering. “That year changed me. I thought about you all the time, had arguments with you in my head, cursed you when I couldn’t read anything without a dictionary.” We both burst into laughter. After a few seconds he continued, “Sometimes I was angry with you because you made me question what I thought I knew. I started thinking maybe I didn’t know anything at all. Half the time I wanted to shake you, the other half I just wanted to be with you, and that made me even angrier. When I left Levan, I swore I wouldn’t come back until I could teach you a thing or two, or I could prove you wrong - whichever came first.”
I remembered what he said to me the night he’d made me listen to ‘Pevane for a Dead Princess.’ Sadness and regret trickled down my throat and made my stomach turnover. “Now you’re here. And here I am. Not quite what you remember.” I tried to laugh, but it got caught and sounded more like a hiccup.
He turned from the window, his thumbs hooked in his front pockets, and slowly closed the few steps between us. He gazed down at me intently. I looked down at my hands and then tucked my hair behind my ears. My hair was mostly dry now and curling around my shoulders. I stifled the need to run my fingers through it, and
held myself still under his scrutiny.
“No, you’re right. You’re not the same. Neither am I. You’re not thirteen anymore, and I’m not eighteen. It’s a damn good thing.” He reached for me then, cradling my face in his hands, pulling me to him. Ever so softly, he brushed his lips across mine. Then again. And again. His breath was the barest caress across my sensitive mouth. He never increased the pressure, never stepped any closer. Deep inside my soul I felt something rumble and quake, and I ran my hands up his arms, wrapping them around his wrists where he held my face in his work roughened palms.
“Will I see you tomorrow?” he whispered, lifting his mouth from mine.
I wanted to exclaim that he would see me more tonight, but bridled my pounding emotions. He seemed to know where he was going, and I had no idea.
“All right,” I breathed, and I stepped back from him, trying to retain my dignity. “I’ll walk you out.”
Just before he descended the stairs Samuel turned, looking again at my Wall. “I remember a few of those words. Some of those words are our words.” He looked at me with tenderness.
We walked down the stairs and through the back door. He gathered the big bucket and the bowl and the towels, putting the now empty water jug inside with everything else. The music had long since ended. We walked around to the front of the
house, silent. I wished he wouldn’t go.
“Goodnight Josie,” Samuel said quietly.
I didn’t respond. I thought I might reveal my desperate disappointment that the night was ending. I tried to smile and then turned and began walking back towards the house. I heard a gutteral groan behind me. I heard the pail and the silver bowl hit the ground with a jarring twang. As I turned, Samuel was striding towards me and I gasped at the vehemence in his face. I was suddenly gripped tightly in his arms, the force of his embrace, lifting me off my feet. Then Samuel’s mouth was on my mine, his hands buried in my hair. His lips were demanding, his hands holding my head firmly beneath the onslaught of his kiss. My hands gripped his head in return, fisting in his hair, pulling him in to me, feeling his arms around me, holding me to him, breathing him in, triumphant. The kiss was endless and infinitesimal all at once. He pulled his reluctant mouth from my lips and rested his forehead against mine, our combined breath coming in harsh pants. He pulled away just as suddenly as he had embraced me, his hands steadying me, and then letting me go, his eyes on my swollen lips.
“Goodnight, Josie.”
“Goodnight Samuel.” I whispered. He backed away, black eyes on blue, and then turned and picked up the items he had thrown to the ground. Then he slowly walked home, turning every now and again to watch me, watching him. Then I listened to his footsteps fade as he moved
beyond where my eyes could follow.
That night I tried to lose myself in Shakespeare and ended up staring at my Wall of Words. The writing had changed over the years, from the large loopy letters with heart-dotted “i”s, to the neat script of a practiced hand. I quizzed myself absentmindedly, defining each word my eyes focused on.
fractious
:
tending to be troublesome; hard to handle or control
.
insipid
:
dull, uninteresting
docent
:
teacher, lecturer
.
immanent:
My eyes stopped on the word, as a memory resurfaced. I remembered the day, many years ago, that I had discovered its meaning.
Samuel and I had been attacking some of Shakespeare’s sonnets for his English homework. I had been reading aloud and had come across the word
immanent
. I stopped, the usage not consistent with the word I thought I knew.
“You know.......
imminent,
meaning it’s about to happen ... it could happen any minute,” Samuel had volunteered.
“I don’t think that’s it . . . or it’s spelled wrong if it is. Look up immanent, with an ‘a’ instead of an ‘i’ in the middle.”
Samuel had sighed and opened up the dictionary, quickly skimming the pages until he found the word. He’d read it to himself and then looked up at me, shaking his head in wonder.
“You were right, it is a different word. You have a good eye ........or maybe it’s those elfin ears.” He said dryly.
Completely aghast, my hands had flown to cover my ears. I had absentmindedly tucked my hair behind my ears as I read, and I anxiously pulled the hair down again so it shielded them. I hated my ears! They weren’t big, and they didn’t stick out from my head - but they were slightly pointed at the very tips. And to make matters worse, the tips turned out just a bit, giving me the look of one of Santa’s holiday helpers. When I was little, my mother had told me they made me like a wood sprite. My brothers, of course, said they made me look more like a troll - and I had been hiding them ever since.
Samuel must have seen the dismay his words had caused. The blood rushing to my cheeks had made my face pound in concert with my heartbeat. I gripped the book in my lap tightly and asked him what
immanent
meant, eager to distract him from my crimson countenance.
He was quiet for several seconds, holding the dictionary, his eyes cast down. Then he reached up
and gently tucked my hair back behind the ear closest to him. I froze, wondering if he was teasing me or poking fun at me.
But when he spoke there was no mischief in his voice. He said, “I like your ears. They make you look like a wise little fairy. You ears help give you an
immanent
beauty.” His words were sincere, and I felt my curiosity peak. My look must have conveyed my question, for he quickly supplied the answer.
“Immanent: dwelling in nature and the souls of men.” His eyes met mine seriously.
After a moment, I slowly raised my hand and tucked back the hair on the other side, uncovering my other ear. I then continued on with the reading, and nothing further was said on the topic.
When I got home from school that day, I wrote
immanent
on my wall and looked it up for myself. In addition to the definition Samuel had given me,
immanent
meant having existence only in the mind. I had laughed to myself and decided if the beauty of my ears existed only in Samuel’s mind, it was good enough for me.
Smiling, I reached out and touched the word as I let the memory warm me. I was strangely soothed and, suddenly, very sleepy. I turned to my bed, climbed in, and fell instantly into a heavy and dreamless sleep.
Samuel was waiting for me in front of my house when I slipped out into the rising sun the next morning for my run. Somehow, I had known he would be. We hadn’t arranged it, but there he was. Today he wore sneakers and mesh shorts, his long brown legs muscled and lightly furred with dark hair. He wore another USMC t-shirt in soft grey. It fit snugly, clinging to his V shaped back and narrow torso. Yum. I walked towards him, not quite knowing what to say. Last night’s kiss was very fresh in my mind.
“Hi,” I said lightly. “Are you coming with me?”
Samuel looked me over silently, his eyes lingering on mine. He was never in a hurry to reply. I’d forgotten that about him. He always took his time when he talked, and I tamped down my urge to fill the silence. That was Samuel’s way. He might not reply at all. After all, he was obviously coming with me. The question was pretty rhetorical.
“I’m really hoping you’ll come with me,” he finally said softly, his voice deep and a little rough from sleep, indicating these were probably the first
words he had spoken out loud since we’d parted the night before.
It was my turn to study him in silence, not sure what to make of his comment. He met my perusal with steady black eyes. We were quite the pair, standing in the middle of the road, staring at each other for long stretches, not talking. I laughed suddenly at our owlish behavior.
I threw my hands toward the mountains. “Lead on, Super Sam.” I said gallantly. “Wherever you want to go, I’ll follow.”
Samuel’s expression lightened at the old nickname - but he didn’t smile. “I’m going to hold you to that, Bionic Josie.”
Samuel started off at a pretty brisk pace, and I wasn’t naive enough to think he was trying to impress me. I knew better. The man was fit, and he knew how to run. I kept up pretty well, finding a rhythm and settling in. We didn’t converse at all, just ran in quiet companionship - our feet drumming, and our breath echoing their cadence. We ran east a couple miles, climbing higher and higher as we neared the base of the canyon, until the fat orange sun had shoved off its mountain perch and hovered heavily just above us in the early morning sky. Then we turned, with its rays nudging at our backs, and ran back towards town. We picked up our feet as gravity pulled us forward, gaining speed as we hurtled back down into the valley.
Fall was in the air. The light changes in the
autumn, even at sunrise the angle is different, the intensity softened, muted, like looking through a painting under water. The air was just a few degrees cooler than it had been on previous mornings. I felt a sudden weightlessness, a burst of joy, and I looked at Samuel and let myself smile with it, let it pour out. I felt better than I had in a very long time. I felt whole, I realized. Complete. How was it possible than in two weeks I could undergo this radical shift? Like somehow I’d discovered the key to the secret garden -- a place that had been there all along, but had become overgrown with neglect, and I’d unlocked the door and stepped inside. I was ready to pull weeds and plant roses.
Samuel must have felt it too, because his white teeth flashed back at me as his grin stretched wide in his strong golden face. My eyes lingered on his face appreciatively, and then I turned again to the dusty dirt road in front of me. I knew better than to look away from the road ahead too long - I ran face first into horse butt when I did that.
As we neared the end of our run, my muscles protested the downshift in speed, having become accustomed to the flying sprint we’d maintained for the last mile of the homestretch. I needed to run with Samuel every morning; he made me push myself, big time. No more lazy morning jog for this super hero.
Samuel continued on with me past his grandparent’s house, and we slowed to a walk as we
arrived at mine. My dad was sitting out on the front porch, foot up on the rail, a Diet Pepsi in his hand. My dad liked his caffeine cold. He called it cheap whiskey and claimed there was nothing better then the burn of that first long pull after he popped the tab. I was my father’s daughter, and I couldn’t agree more, though I favored Diet Coke.
“Looks like ya got yerself a runnin’ partner, Josie Jo,” My dad called out in greeting as we walked across the grass towards him. I felt a flash of relief, like every girl does with every new man until the day she dies, that my dad seemed fine with the fact that I had male company.
“Morning, Daddy.” I leaned over the porch rail and grabbed his drink, stealing a swig of ice cold fire.
“Sir.” Samuel nodded towards my dad and stuck out his hand. My dad’s boot fell heavily to the porch as he grasped Samuel’s hand in his own.
“I’m glad you’ve got someone to run with, for the time being at least, huh Josie? I always worry a little with you running all alone. Even in a little place like Levan, ya just never know.”