Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Race you to the end

She looked up at him and because her anger was drowned out by her shock, she was speechless. She stared blankly at his chiseled face and got up from her face down position on the floor. He was laughing, smiling at his achievement, and she could not believe what he had just done.

"Race you to the end," he said, "I will even give you a head start." She ran to the end of the corridor and as she approached the end she felt him grabbing her ankles and pulling her left leg from under her. Unbelief and shock caused her to freeze and she fell face down onto the ground as he raced past her and proudly chimed, "I won." It was hardly an action commendable. Especially not by a man who professes that he loves you, dearly. As she studied the pleased expression on his face it hit her that he could not have loved her all that dearly. Probably not even at all.

Her thoughts raced and the seeds of disgust that had been planted a while rocked back and forth as if germinating. She recalled the time when he bumped into her on the street where she was chatting to a friend, and he, to get her attention pulled her pony tail so hard that her head jerked backwards. Her friend was very taken aback by his brashness, and until that day thought she was the only one who thought him rude, obnoxious and very haughty. It was not until that day she shared her disgust, and her friend's disapproval of him as a friend, not to mention as a boyfriend, was thick and strong. There was no way, according to her, anyone could trust him to care for another. Disgust.

He seemed to throw his weight around, and her disgust of him grew deeper. As she got up to follow him down the stairs, contempt swelled up within her. She was a strong girl, one with character and personality that is until she met him. He managed to suck all that is her, out of her as he shakes his head at her flaws. She studied his beaming smile, so proud of himself, and it hit her he could not have loved her all that dearly, probably not even at all. Her disgust welled up enough to push her diaphragms outwards and fill her lungs. Suffocating.

She choked a little and tried to concentrate on the words coming out of his mouth, just so she could respond appropriately. They seated, ordered their meal and he talked on until the meal arrived. He said grace, and during grace muttered how thankful he was for his intelligence. She was unsure of whether it was a joke. He looked serious enough. She never doubted his intelligence, until he dared muttered such a prayer. It was almost as if he said it just to tell her how superior his mind was to her, a condescendment. The warped view she had of him begin to straighten out, and she begin to see underneath his display of chivalry.

Yes, it was with such an exhibit of chivalry that he went after her. Fierce and with such fervour. So much so that she believed he really was capable of loving and caring, and she, afraid of ruining a boy who had so openly and willingly professed an affection accepted his favour each time. Little did she know her incapability of saying no to that boy showed him he could walk all over her. It was with a lack of a no that started their short romance. And short it was, for a little less than a month later, he seemed to willingly and charitably give out seeds. Seeds that spawned disgust.

It was not until he raced her to the end that her eyes were willing to see. She tried to work it, of course she did, but there was another incident that had fed those seeds like luscious fat fertiliser. She recalled that tight slap he had distastefully placed on her right cheek. That episode began with a certain dinner he refused to get to, which she went alone, and upon returning found she was locked out of her own apartment. Hers not his. Fuming with anger she banged and screamed and when he opened it he challenged her. "Slap me if you are really that angry," was the remark. She did, and upon doing so found his palm on her cheek. She gasped, and he with such derision justified it immediately. "You slapped me first."

She looked at him and because her anger was drowned out by her shock, she was speechless. She stared blankly at his chiseled face and walked past him into her apartment. Her anger, instead of being expressed snuggled comfortably at the bottom of her heart and as she looked at his satisfied face  laughing, smiling at his achievement, and she could not believe what he had just done. He could not have loved her all that dearly, probably not even at all. His words and their promise shrunk and suddenly she regretted not rejecting his advances. She need not have felt so bad. His words and actions were in complete contradiction. She stared at his face in disbelief. She had never felt so cheated.

As her memory encouraged the seeds of disgust to take root and sprout she found she could not continue the mindless conversation they were having. Her food seemed to tighten into a ball at the bottom of her stomach and it began pushing its way back up to the end of her throat. She gagged. Almost vomited. She screwed her nose in disgust and in that moment realised that she despised him. Her disgust was clear as she acknowledged it. She accepted her realisation and at that point, there and then chose. It was from that point she decided she despised him.

She looked him in the eye as she set down her spoon and got up. She did not need to be bound by her fear of hurting a boy with a tender heart. There was no need. She smiled her sweetest smile and said to him loud and clear, "no, actually, I won." It was a triumphant note indeed and it was on that triumphant note she walked out and with such gusto too. She was glad for she was the first. First to reach the end of the horrid relationship.

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