Sunday, September 4, 2011

stargazer stargazer

She stared at the page of that Sunday paper. The picture on the page pulled heavily and she was certain she knew him. She methodically went through the faces that came through her florist shop over the past few days and her searching stopped at last Saturday as she replayed the day in her head.


It was one of those mornings, she had gotten up early before sunrise and decided to take a morning walk down by the harbour. It was still greyish-blue outside and it was hard to tell whether or not it would begin to rain so she put on her trench coat and her hat before setting out.


The air was rather crisp and fresh, and was rather rich with the smell from the pine forest that were in view on the other side of the water. She stood a while on the bench by the harbour and watched while the coffee van set up shop. Ryan and Mae, the couple that owned the coffee-breakfast van had just parked and Ryan shouted out a cheerful good morning to her as he arranged the weekend paper along the mobile shelves by the side of the van. 


She walked towards the van as Mae toasted the almond toast she would usually buy to go with her coffee. Mae smiled as she approached and begun pouring them both a cup of coffee. She often accompanied Mae for a morning coffee as they watched the sun rise over the harbour. The sun was slow to rise this morning, but the blue in the sky began to take over as the grey dispersed a little. They sipped their morning coffee and had their almond toasts.


She looked up at Mae whose face turned a wistful sort of shade. The conversation had turned somewhat in that direction and Mae was contemplating her statement, or more like a word. Mae had asked her what she wanted to do while she was in one of her moods and she replied, I want to resonate. That statement, and the wistfulness by which she said it made Mae think. She left Mae in her contemplative mood as she picked up the Saturday paper before walking home to get ready.


She did really want to resonate. She was that sort. She was that sort who wanted to shake and bend and break because she was that sort that believed that was what people needed. She was a beautiful soul Maya, fiery and hopeful both at the same time, and she really would make it her mission to make the world feel again, with all that she could. 


She paused at that memory, the week had been a bad one, where she had been intolerant and impatient at the ugliness of society. She often felt the world ought to turn the right side up. She sighed and read the words that accompanied the picture of the man who brought her to the memory of that conversation. The words she were reading compelled her to go on jogging that memory of hers. 


She was having a rather lazy Saturday, thinking of the things she would rather do apart from arranging flowers, sorting out deliveries, and organising the books. She took out her journal and began scribbling some thoughts when he walked in. The face in the paper. 


She thought there was something odd about him and was extra attentive. She watched as he scanned the shop and mumbled to her asking if she had any stargazer lilies. She searched his face as she asked if there were a colour he was after. White, white, he answered quickly avoiding any eye contact. She hopped off her stool to lead him to the storage fridge at the back of the shop. There were about 27 stalks of stargazer lilies left and he picked up one and quietly put it back down. He needed more he remarked, but he would take all 27, and would pick them up later that evening. 


She looked at the man, he was nervous and awkward yet somewhat calm, sort of resolute. There was a calm resolve about him and she caught his eye and searched it. It was a little sad, and a little distant. He made a weak joke and she smiled. He smiled a little, a crooked sort of smile. If he were to clean up a little, he might have even been charming, she thought. She gathered the stalks and set them aside while he mumbled some words she could not catch.


She asked if there were a particular arrangement he would like, and he said, any thing that would be suitable for his stage. He asked for a pencil and a piece of paper so he could roughly draw the stage he meant. She asked if he'd like some coffee and he nodded. She poured him a cup and asked him if there were any reasons he chose stargazer lilies.


He looked at her rather awkwardly and said maybe it would resonate, he thought it may have been his last concert and he wanted to leave a thought. She frowned a little at that word, it seemed like it was word of the day, resonate, and she looked at him. He shrugged, and after a bit of silence said he liked the thought of purity and innocence the flower gave out, the way the lily looked up at the sky was almost as if it looked up hopefully, longing for that purity, that innocence, and for the lily, the white stargazer lily, the stature of it, it was as if the stars saw, and heard its wishful prayer.


She absorbed his bursts of words, and then nodded during the silent pauses. Long silent pauses. He was contemplative, wishful and she felt a pang of sadness for him. Something was odd about him, she thought and she felt the need to listen, between the words. She opened the door to him that afternoon, and allowed him, his words, his presence, his face to burden her heavy heart. She felt it necessary. She felt she should allow him to share his little world, and vibrate within her.


My music only gets thinner, he remarked. She was puzzled by that statement, but did not push him to explain. Thinner. She sipped her coffee and tried to lighten his spirits, but it seemed in vain. His soul was sort of resolute. Sort of given in to the, this is the way it is, explanation that was often forced down its throat. When he left that afternoon, she put her heart into that flower arrangement, and she did not know why, but her heavy heart wept for the pale soul that walked in and asked for stargazer lilies that morning. 


She took another sip of her coffee and continued reading the paper. The conversation between him and her was more relevant today than it was last week. She waited till after lunch and retrieved a stalk of stargazer lily from the back. She closed her little florist shop and turned to walk down towards the park. The paper had said there would be a memorial for him there.


His words burnt a little deeper as she looked into the faces of his grieved fans, there were many, mostly teenagers at the park singing to his music on their little portable radios. She had never heard a word of his music, not until today, and she smiled a little. He was definitely liked much.


Sometimes I do wish I can un-experience my experiences, he had said. She wondered about what sort of experiences he had wished to undo. What experiences that may have wounded his soul so deeply he would think ending his life would free it. Death to him seemed a sort of release. His soul, maybe would be able to float back upwards without the weight of his body. She understood his words now. She recalled his sad eyes.


She walked towards the picture of him in the middle of the park and set down the stalk of lily while looking into his eyes. Those who did not hear him, would have heard him today, and many will search his life for the why.


She went straight to the record store and got his first and his final record. As she listened closely she heard him. She heard the deep deep bass note, sort of like the bass string on the bass, that once plucked would vibrate for a long time after. The note that would often leave a hollowness in the music once it is gone. It is that deep vibration, that resonates, and of course until someone else resonates, this music would sadly only get thinner.


She sighed and her mood was back to the wistful, contemplative one the week before. She allowed the day to end and woke up early the next morning for her coffee with almond toast as she sat to tell Mae about the man with sad eyes.


I know him, said Mae. He once said that teenage angst had served him well but now he's bored and old. They laughed a sad laugh, he was only 27, old and bored? Guess he was unable to see beyond the fog. If only he had looked up, like his stargazer lily.


I guess he was a dreamer, just like us Mae, she said. But he was a frustrated dreamer, he just could not see that the world he dreamt up would never be and he just needed to make the best of this one. The world could never be perfect.


Mae smiled, it was a pretty arrangement, she said after a long silence. There in the paper was the picture of the man's last concert, and in the centre of the stage was Maya's arrangement of the 27 stargazer lilies. She smiled. Well if there was any consolation, her lilies did what he wanted them to do. They resonated alright, at least they resonated within her. He resonated.



“We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.” Oscar Wilde


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