The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1963, Page 41

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1963, Page 41
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 39 hardly know what fathers are since I’ve never owned anything of the sort and understand they’re not really necessary. But the one thing I can’t stand, even in autumn, is a grin. I never risk a smile for fear it might turn into a grin, and a grin is an ugly taunt that deforms a face and is full of wicked- ness. I’ve never seen a man through a grin, just sick rats with twisting cat faces. A grin is poison that makes me sick to my stomach. I laugh if I must but never smile. My miracle happened on an evening in autumn. I was wearing new shoes, the rain fell and we collided, she and I. I don’t remember what I said, but I looked u,p and she grinned. My fingers crushed out the air in my hand and dug into the flesh. One foot stamped into a murky puddle and the mud flew. My shoes were no longer new, her stockings no longer clean. I looked up again and my heart lightened. She didn’t grin now. She laughed, and I was overcome with peace and remorse. I knelt before her, wet my fingers in my mouth and start- ed to wash the mud off her feet. “What are you doing—are you a little odd?’’ she said. But she didn’t move, yet I knew now that she wore no stockings. I felt her looking down at me and stopped. A paralyzing shyness overwhelmed me, I started to rub the muddy pavement with my bare hands, stroking it back and forth like a misty mirror. “Some think I’m a little odd,” I whispered. “Sometimes I think so myself, even in autumn.” There was a long silence. I sensed her thoughts. Yet I didn’t touch her— only the pavement that she stood on. Then she said gently: “Would you like to very much?” I had knelt all this time, polishing the mirror at her feet. I trembled and started rubbing with the other hand too. I stroked that pavement until my hands were torn and bleeding. “I am sure it would be very good,” I said, “but I only long for a warm greeting and a heart in one farewell, and soft fingers stroking the back of my head.” “You’re not odd at all, then,” she said. “Get off your knees, boy. I’ll try—only once, though—never again. This is not what I’m meant for.” I rose to my feet. She didn’t grin or laugh. I've never seen a face so grave. It reminded me of Christ on the cross in a little church I know. The raindrops loitered down my face in the vain hope that they could stay on my warm skin rather than fall on the cold, hard pavement. I felt hands around my neck and soft fingers stroking the back of my head, a moist cheek against my face and closed lips. “I’ll do that other too if you want it,” I offered. “Then you are a little odd, after all,” she said. She kissed the tip of my nose and walked away. I stood still. I don’t know why—I just stood still. The rain fell, my bleed- ing hands ached and I heard her walk out of autumn into winter.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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