All My Life (3 page)

Read All My Life Online

Authors: Rucy Ban

BOOK: All My Life
10.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

My mind jolts back to reality as he starts scrubbing over the last few puddles of coffee.

“Oh! You don’t need to!” I exclaim and run after him as he carries off all the cleaning equipment back into the kitchenette. I find him standing there looking uncertainly at the row of cabinets.

“Where’s the can?”

I open the cabinet below the sink and watch him as he empties the dust pan. I watch the way his arms flex as he lifts the wiper, the way he flicks his hair away from his face, the way his God-like persona is so completely ill-fitted for such a mundane normal activity.
Jesus! 
What’s wrong with me
? I don’t even know this guy for Christ’s sake! And here I am, setting myself up for disappointment all over again. No. No more of this. I have to focus on paying off Eddie and getting through college. That’s it. I don’t need these stupid distractions and these temperamental wayward thoughts. Especially, not over someone who’d been all over another girl not ten minutes ago!

“You want a cup of coffee?” I offer, wanting to pay him back for his help.

He grins. “No thanks. I haven’t inherited Agnas’s addiction for it.”

Well, if he knows that then he’s definitely close to her. Though I can’t ever imagine calling my Mom by her name. It would be a sure-fire way of inducing one of her freak-out episodes. Right then the door dings again and I throw a polite smile at the mad kisser before going out to check.

It’s not Agnas. Just a regular. Over the last month he’s had his bicep tattooed, ears stretched, even his nose and eyebrows pierced. Whatever he is in for today, I really don’t want to know. To be honest, I try to stay away from all the piercing action. It completely freaks me out. The grunts, the squawking, the ‘breathe in and let it out’ chants, the clients with skin outgrowths, scar tissue. Yikes! I can’t imagine why someone would do that to their body. Of course, working where I do, I keep all these patronizing thoughts to myself.

The weird guy starts looking over the jewelry portfolio that Nalini has handed over to him.

“Sadist, you think?” The mad kisser comes to stand beside me and even though I kinda agree with him, I bite back, “It’s art, you know?”

He smirks. “Is that so?”

Boss’s son. Boss’s son.
I chant in my mind and succeed in giving him just a wan smile in response.

It’s strange but as the piercing-obsessed guy comes over to the bed-table, he happens to glance in our direction and does a complete double take. Feeling conscious, I discreetly check whether my bra straps are showing or if I’ve accidentally left my fly open or grown a third arm. Nope. None of the above. Then what’s the deal with the dude? At least he’s not looking anymore. His attention got diverted as soon as Nalini got him another folder stacked with the piercing snap shots. Right. Time to earn a living and pay off my blackmail dues.

Ignoring the weird guy and the mad kisser, I walk over to the other bed table, load the machine and start practicing.

This time I choose a design I really like. A wispy feather with ‘One day, I’ll fly away’ scrolled across. It looks simple but it’s a tough one to see through. The rib of the feather, its each and every strand, requires not just skill but a truckload of patience. This will be my fourth attempt. I put on my earplugs and tune out the world.

I stumbled across this band one Sunday evening while spending an inordinate amount of time on the internet. Now, they’ve sort of become my catharsis. The song starts playing and its words fill my mind.

Stack my dreams away for some time,

I’m so lost in time.   

My body is trapped in a bind,

So lost in time.

Why did they take away what’s mine?

I’m just so lost in time.

An hour down, I put the last finishing touches to the design and once I’m satisfied, I unplug the machine.

I remove the earplugs, straighten my back, stretch my neck and look around. Nalini’s long done with the weird guy. Half an hour back I’d watched him leave, gingerly feeling the two extra rings pierced in his eyebrows. Wow, a few more and he’d be up for the book of records. Then I remember the mad kisser. I turn my head towards the couch to check what he’s up to. My breath hitches as my eyes land on him.

Hands folded behind his head, the mad kisser is staring 
straight at me
. And just like before, his unflinching gaze makes me weak, trembly and electrified, everything all at once. His eyes seem to be baring my mind, unraveling my each and every thought and…I really need to say something! NOW…before my heart jackhammers out of my chest! Think quick! Say anything, Kari! Anything!! “Your…name?!”

He doesn’t answer me straight away and even though I manage to suck in a breath, I’m unable to break his hypnotic stare. At least not until he drags his hands down over his face and takes a deep breath himself.
God Almighty.
So this is what it’s like? Being so intensely attracted to someone? I try to remember if I’d felt the same way when I’d met Eddie.

I do remember feeling special when I’d gone out with him and my body feeling queasy, craving something more when he’d kissed me that first time. But then.
That
happened. And over the last year, I’ve had my blinkers on so tight no guy has been able to elicit this kind of a response from me. Till today. Till now. And this? What I’m feeling? It’s not just lust. It’s an awareness of him that goes much deeper. Like I’ve known he would be coming all my life or something.
Ohmigod!
I have completely lost my fucking mind! Get rid of this fuckall sappy attitude right now, Kari. Aim higher. Think yellow tracksuits, kick-ass swords, boxing gloves, tomb raiders, gun-toting alien punchers…

The mad kisser snaps me right out of my cinematic haze as he utters his name. “Neil Mars.”

“Neil…Mars?!”

“Uh-huh. Neil as in Armstrong and Mars as in Bruno.”

I stare at him for a few seconds and then shrug. I could blame him for having killer looks but he could not be faulted for this. He couldn’t have chosen that name for himself. No wonder he tortures his Mom by calling her by her name.

I turn away from Neil Mars and watch Nalini as she taps her fingers expertly on the laptop. Then I wonder how long Agnas will take to come back because I can still feel Neil’s eyes weighing on me and it’s unnerving being the object of such scrutiny. I have to fight this constant urge to itch my forehead or ear lobe or just…something.
God!
Why has my body suddenly started betraying my mind? Rein yourself in, Kari. Tap it down. Stomp on it with your sturdy Blundstones. Yellow tracksuits…

“What’s
your
name?” he asks.

I open my mouth but before I can say anything, Nalini replies absent-mindedly, “Nalini…and that there is Kari.”

“K-a-r-r-y.” My name rolls off his tongue in an exotic mispronounced lilt which I don’t have the intention of correcting. Ever.

Nalini finally catches up on all the undue attention I’m getting because after a few seconds of contemplative silence she starts goading him, “Isn’t it a beautiful name? And she’s acing her college too. Works here in the evenings on weekdays and full time on weekends. Girl is a head down slogger. No time for boys eh, Kari?”

I glare at Nalini and wonder if she’ll start recounting my kissing skills next or maybe ask me to provide him a floor show. I purse my lips and turn my back on the both of them.  Then I choose another design from the folder. A skull. I flash it pointedly at Nalini but she doesn’t take the hint. Instead, she changes her tactic. She starts badgering Neil for information.

“What did you do before…?” I hear her asking him.

“Studied Arts,” he quickly replies, cutting her off.

I hear Nalini suck in a breath. “SH-u-t u-p. That’s been my dream since I ditched diapers!”

“Really? Actually, I always wanted to pursue dance,” he says in a regretful tone that makes me curious.
So why didn’t you?
I almost ask him but Nalini bounces off her stool and puts her hands up in the air. “Oh-my-gawd. You lie! This is a joke. Right?”

“Nope. Trufax.”For the next hour, they both chat about Nalini’s life-long wish to study arts and learn dance. I also learn that Neil’s ambition is to set up his dance studio back in Chicago because that’s where he’s from. And after some more blah blah and gush gush from Nalini, he starts talking about how
Agnas
(no Mom, Mum or even good ol’ Mommy!) had called him a week back asking him to visit for a few days.

That’s exactly when the door dings and I lift my head to see Agnas walking in. Only she looks very unlike her usual self. Her hair is all undone and there are dark bags under her eyes. Very uncharacteristic of her normal pristine self. Then as soon as she notices Neil, she purses her lips and walks straight across the shop floor towards the stairs at the back.

I think Neil is as surprised with her behavior as we are, because for a moment he just sits on the couch staring at the stairwell door through which Agnas has just disappeared. It takes a few seconds for him to collect himself but when he does, he doesn’t waste a moment in trailing after his mother.

“Well, that was weird,” Nalini mutters after he leaves.

I nod in agreement. “Yup.”

An hour later, Nalini leaves for lunch and I get to man the counter all by myself. Just when I’ve settled and started practicing another design, I hear a muffled voice shouting out my name. I look up in alarm. The voice seems to be coming from somewhere behind the stairwell door.

“Karriii!” it goes again. I rush to open the door but there’s no one there. Then I hear shuffling sounds coming from the apartment upstairs. I race up the stairs and find the entrance door wide open. Without a second thought, I enter the apartment.

Once inside, I realize that Agnas’s living room decor exactly matches the shop’s. The same brick walls, leather couch, mounted racks but that’s right where the similarity ends. The racks here are not filled with abstracts but with warm memories. A ruddy cheeked, toothy boy fills up the frames of a day full of sand castles and bruised shins. Another frame captures a fistful of soaring balloons and a summer full of impossible dreams. His effervescence bursts through those frames, softening the harshness of the brick walls and the coldness of the leather.

“Kari, are you there?” Neil’s voice calls me from somewhere inside.

“Yeees!” I holler and head across to the corridor which leads to what are presumably, the bedrooms.

I walk into the first room on the right but my step falters as I take in the scene inside. Agnas is sprawled across her bed like a lifeless doll and Neil is standing right next to her, fanning desperately with a magazine in his hand. With rising alarm, my eyes register Agnas’ clammy and ashen face. “What happened?!”

“Water, Kari. She needs a glass of water,” he says, without taking his eyes off her.

I rush to the kitchen and get him a glass of water. Neil  holds it out for Agnas and she takes a few sips before curling up on the bed. I stand there feeling uncertain, wondering if we should rather be rushing Agnas to a hospital but the expression on Neil’s face stops me from saying anything. Forehead creased, lips pursed, he seems deeply troubled and
angry
.

“Go away,” Agnas says suddenly. Her voice sounds broken but her tone is adamant.

Neil tries to reason with her. “Agnas, just…”

She turns to look at us and then fixes a seething look at Neil. “I said, GO-A-WAY.”

She looks so different from her usual self that it almost seems like she’s possessed. My first instinct is to flee but I don’t want to look like a coward, so I start edging slowly towards the door. After a few seconds, Neil follows me out as well, carefully closing the door behind him. I get a glimpse of his face and the misery etched there twists a knife straight in my heart. I want to do something…anything to make that awful hollow look go away.

“Hey, don’t worry. Maybe it’s just a headache, you know?” I say as we head downstairs.

Neil doesn’t reply and I cringe at having said anything at all. Then as soon as we reach downstairs, he heads off to the coffee machine. Feeling dejected, I resume my seat at the counter. Just as I get started on my design again, a cappuccino appears in front of me. I look up in surprise and find Neil holding the cup out for me.

“Thank you for helping…up there,” he says with a small smile. My heart turns to mush.

“No biggie.” I take the cup  from his hands and his smile widens but it doesn’t touch his eyes. And somehow that bothers me. A lot.

I watch as he slouches against the counter with a faraway look in his eyes and my heart goes out to him.

“She’ll be okay. It could be a cold or…just as simple as a bad day,” I say softly.

He nods but the creases on his forehead don’t disappear. Then he says, “For a moment I thought she was having a stroke. That’s why I panicked and called out for help…” His voice drops, sounding forlorn. “I’ve never seen her like this before.”

The sorrow in his voice makes my nose sting and I have to fight the urge to touch him, pull him in for a hug, make the world a better place for him. Maybe I just feel this way because this somehow reminds me of my Dad and me. How we used to be before all the messiness. How after we’d had an argument, I’d wait in my room with my eyes squeezed tight, waiting for him to come and put his hand on my head. And how just with that one gesture, everything in the world would be okay again.

Fathers were hard to keep grudges against. I guess mothers were no good either.

I squeeze my eyes shut and shake my head.
For Christ’s sake!
I have enough problems of my own to start worrying about others. Sometimes life sucks. That’s just what it is. Nothing more. Nothing less. Move on, Kari.

I wipe my tears and take a deep breath. “Hey, you wanna go get something to eat?”

His spine straightens and he looks up at me in surprise. I’m beginning to regret my impulsive offer but then he smiles and nods his head. “Yeah. Let’s go.”

“We’ll have to wait…” The front door dings open and Nalini walks in. She pauses in surprise, seeing both of us standing there staring at her. But we have a reason for bugging our eyes out at her. Nalini’s hair is ruffled and her lipstick all smudged up. There’s no doubt as to what she’s been up to during her lunch break.

Other books

Loon Lake by E. L. Doctorow
Mao's Great Famine by Frank Dikötter
The Secret of Shadow Ranch by Carolyn G. Keene
Marked for Submission by Savill, Sheri
Jane by Robin Maxwell
Kiss Your Elbow by Alan Handley
Being Celeste by Tshetsana Senau