Lady
Jayne
The
interview seemed to have gone well. They said they would get back to
me soon. I believe they will. What a beautiful day. The light breeze
flowing in from the bay. The sun just beginning its downward arc in
the sky. A great day for a walk, thinking about dinner tonight with
Julie.
"Ahhh"
The scram came from an elderly lady up ahead who had fallen on the
hot pavement.
"Can
I help you up? Are you ok?"
'Yes
thank you. And yes, I am ok. Just a silly old lady falling down like
a drunk. Which I am not, by the way. Thank you for asking. Oh my
lord. My stuff. They fell out of my wagon. They are all over the
street!"
"I'll
pick it all up for you. Just sit here on this bench. Catch your
breath"
I
looked up at her as I started to pick up her "stuff"', as she
called it. She took a napkin out of the left side of her blue knitted
sweater and proceeded to carefully wipe the green public bench,
before sitting on it. She could be 65 or she could be 50. The streets
can do that to someone, I guess. At least that was what he always
read in his social study and psychology classes, when he was still in
school. Her clothes were ill fitting, wrinkled, not matched. They
were also clean, as she was. There was no foul smell, on either her
or her clothing.
Her
stuff consisted of canned food and other food products that can be
picked up at food pantries and garbage cans. They were all clean as
if they had just come out of the local grocery store. He picked them
up and put them back in the bags and then into the wagon, on top of
the bags of clothes, that occupied the lower half of the wagon. He
wondered how she came to be here, in this state.
She
was watching him, observing him. He could feel it. He looked up at
her as she reached back into her sweater pocket, taking out a long
string of bright white beads. Counting each item as he placed them in
her wagon.
Pedestrians
walked wide around the bench that she was seated on. Some glanced
sideways at her as they passed. Pity showing on their faces. Others
past her with a look of disgust. Most just past. Could this be what
life holds for him? Twenty years ago, was she the one kneeling on the
hard concrete, of the city streets, picking up the "stuff",
of some street person.
Watching
her for all these minutes, as she counted on her beads, he realized
that she was younger then he thought. The wrinkles on her face were
from a difficult life, gifts deposited over many years. Her clean but
uncombed hair hung long below her shoulders. Her skin was dark, and
leathery, from too much time spent in the sun, for a pale skinned
woman. Her cheekbones mouth and nose were in perfect proportion to
the shape of her face. She may have been a model once. Her most
striking feature were her eyes. A blue green ocean set deep in the
caverns of their sockets. Their gaze reaching out, watching his every
movement, counting every can, expecting his betrayal. She knew it
would come. It always did. She just waited and watched.
"I
believe I got all of it."
Her
posture was bent forward. Her head kept moving up and down. She was
not nodding her approval, but her involuntary movement her body made.
Minute, almost imperceptive, and constant. Her head bobbed up and
down. My god, she's appraising me! Making a decision. He finally
stood up, still watching her stare at him. She still made no move to
get up and take her shopping cart, filled with what he assumed were
her life belongings. He moved the cart closer to her, expecting her
to grab the handle. She made one big affirmative movement with her
head as she stood.
"Follow
me", she said and started to walk away.
I
stood there, my right hand still holding the handle of her wagon,
watching her begin her slow walk away. Three steps. Four steps. She
walked and I stared.
"Well
don't just stand there. I have things to do," she shouted
turning around.
She
turned and took another three steps. I followed. I did not know why.
She walked slowly. Her feet barely lifting above the grey, hot,
pavement. When they crossed over a couple of squares of cobblestone,
her steps slowed, becoming more deliberate.
He
quickened his step to support her, prepared to let go of her wagon
and catch her if she stumbled. She didn't. He did.
"Please
be more careful with my belongings", she said in a raised voice.
"Those things are very valuable. Now please hurry up, and for
Judy Garland's sake, be careful. If you need me to, I can walk slower
so you can keep up. But we need to hurry.
I
just stared up at her, kneeling on the cobblestones that he had
fallen on. My left knee was bleeding a little from scraping along the
stone as he fell. The knee of his slacks ripped. He quickly picked up
the few items that fell out of the wagon, putting them back in,
carefully. She stared down at him with those deep eyes. Watching,
making sure he did not miss anything
"Come
on now", she said. "No time to sightsee. I have things to
do"
I
stood there. She turned and continued walking, certain that I would
follow. I did.
It
was not as if I had anywhere to go. Dressed for a job interview that
morning that had not gone well. I always think it went well. "We
will contact you shortly', they all say shaking his hands warmly and
showing him the door. I looked down at my torn pants and wondered if
they could be repaired.
She
continued to walk down the street at a faster pace, which I did not
expect. At times, she would stop at a garbage can or bag. I felt
uncomfortable as she reached in. I looked at my torn slacks and
wondered if the people walking by thought we were together. That I
was one of them.
She
did not stop at all of them, just some. Opening bags, she would reach
and move items around. Sometimes, when her hands came out of the bag
they were not empty. They would contain a can or bottle, never
opened. She then reached into her left pocket. Taking out a package
of wipes, removing one, which she would use to carefully clean the
removed item. holding the item up, lifting her head and carefully
observing her catch. Sometimes she would continue to wipe the Item.
Twice she shook her head and placed it back in the garbage bag. When
it met her satisfaction she smiled, walked to the wagon, and
carefully place it into the wagon.
She
continued this for 10 blocks. Never addressing me, acknowledging my
assistance, when she placed the item in the wagon. Suddenly she
stopped, turned and walked back to the wagon empty handed. Grabbing
the handle wagon handle, taking it from me, she finally looked up at
me.
"I
will be at that bench next week at the same time." She turned and
continued further down the block. Not stopping at any of the garbage
bags and cans she passed.
I
don't know what I expected. Maybe thank you. I do not know why I
followed her to this point. I knew I was not coming back.
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