Graciella by Patrick Sean Lee (good books for 7th graders txt) š
- Author: Patrick Sean Lee
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Graciella
It is December 23rd. Graciella stands beside me in the doorway of Garimendiās, one of the finest restaurants in downtown Denver. Iāve brought her here to impress her, to win herāthough in truth I know I must redeem myself.
The pedestrian traffic along the street is heavy this evening, but it moves with the consistency and order of a finely choreographed pageant. Frozen breaths. Overcoated torsos dancing like skaters up and down the icy sidewalks. Somehow in love themselves with every trapping of the season thrown across the arc of wires above; drapes of silver and gold, crimson and green. Lights. Lights by the million, blinking like jewels scattered across the heavens by God. And music everywhere.
I am in love with Graciella.
I first saw her last spring, in the small park near the capitol building a few blocks away from the restaurant. She entered from the north end across the broad concrete walkway bordered on either side by beds of dazzling May flowers. I happened to be sitting beneath a tree nearby, readingāI donāt recall what it was. It might have been a novel, āThe Sea Houseā, perhapsābut I glanced up for some unknown reason as she passed. Maybe Iād gotten to the end of a chapter, or maybe it was something far more providential. How unimportant, now. I fell in love with her immediately, though. That sounds crazy, certainly. Nobody falls instantly into the arms, the eyes, the soul of another person. Not without first hearing the music of their voice or feeling the soft skin of their body. Yet, there I was, instantly in freefall.
She wore a black skirt, I remember vividly. It moved with the same grace as her body, a body as perfect and elegant as Chinese silk. Her hairāstrikingly deep auburn. I wasnāt sure, as I sifted my eyes through it, if I had fastened them onto an angel of God, or if God had simply slapped me out of a twenty-five year stupor. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph! It fell to her lithe shoulders, passing the edge of her eyes as though the great master Raphael had been walking beside her, adjusting every strand, parting it to allow filaments of sunlight passage. She, too, carried a small book in her hand, and stopped momentarily to look across the flowers and the grass directly at me. I blushed and raised the book I held just slightly so that she couldnāt see that I was grinning like an imbecile, but I couldnāt take my eyes off her. For a brief instant I thought she intended to say something to me. I saw her lips purse slightly, the gentle beginning, I vainly imagined, of āI love you, tooā. I was mistaken. She turned her head and continued on as though I were merely another part of the tree; a gnarled root, the severed stump of a branch. Something inconsequential. I wasnāt surprised.
I am ugly. Not homely or plain or cursed with a feature which any vain and wealthy person would, on a whim, have altered by a plastic surgeon. It goes deeper than that. Had I been born with two noses and a single eye I would have been more handsomeāat least Iāve been told so. I learned early on in life, in great spasms of pain and feelings of self-loathing, to live with my abhorrence. I accepted the brutality of it. In my adolescence I quickly realized that those creatures who pierced my heart with their beauty were as unattainable as the gold in Fort Knox. Yes, I accepted itāuntil she walked by that morning.
āNo more. I will make her love me if I have to live forever to do it!ā I murmured through lips fit only to touch those of a beast. She turned, twenty feet beyond, and shot a glance back at me. I knew she had somehow heard me. I was certain of it. But she continued on and I mercifully lost sight of her beyond a downward-sloping turn in the path.
Each day I returned to the same spot beneath the tree, took my seat, and waited in great anticipation, hoping to see her again. I suffered for two weeks this way before she finally appeared again, book in hand. This time I smiled at her, though I instantly regretted having done so. Such an act of presumption, a foolish telegraphing of the drums smashing inside my chest! I prayed she hadnāt noticed, but this was merely another of my foolish notions. She had. For a moment she offered no reaction, but then she smiled in return. A very slight, enigmatic curve of her lips. Instead of moving on she stepped off the walkway, over the flowers (which swooned, I swear, as she passed over them), and walked toward me.
Let me become part of this tree. Dear God, let me disappear! She is tooā¦
āHello,ā she said.
Her single word of greeting devastated me. It was music, unlike anything Iād ever heard. I had been in love up to my ears before she uttered that one word, but now I was slain by its timbre. Her eyes, as luminous and lovely as her hair, seemed a part of that utterance, and I found myself unable to act rationally. To sit, or stand, or even think. I dropped the book to my lap and muttered something meaningless. My eyes fell in embarrassment.
She stopped a foot away from me and laughed. āMy name is Graciella,ā she said holding her hand out to me. I was unable to answer. I wanted to run.
āAnd you areā¦?ā she asked.
āMarā¦Martin. Iām sorry I was staring at you. I didnāt mean to,ā I finally managed to answer in a voice that sounded to me like it had been beaten on an anvil.
āThatās ok. I wasnāt offended. Were you staring? I thought you were just reading as usual. Iāve seen you sitting here many times with your book, you know. What is it?ā
My book? I had no idea. She waited patiently for me to answer a question that might as well have been, āHow many stars are there in the universe?ā God only knows. The book. I looked down at it as though I were a simpleton. Fun With Dick and Jane? Barney Meets Mothra? Dear God, why was I so hideous looking. Why was I so stupid?
āUm...War and Peace. No, no. Winterās Tale, maybe. Iām not sure,ā I said shaking, unable to gather my wits and just look at the cover. Goddammit! Why didnāt I just nail a sign onto my forehead stating, āIts title is, I Am Hopelessly in Love Withā¦Graciella.ā
āLet me see,ā she said as she knelt down beside me, so close I caught the sweet scent of her intoxicating perfume. I sighed and handed her the book with trembling fingers.
āOne Hundred Years of Solitude. Wonderful! I loved it. Do you read many of the Latin authors? I think theyāre absolutely drowning in lyricism,ā she said, handing the book back to me.
āOh, yes. Dickens and Proust. All of them,ā I replied.
That inanity made her laugh again. I closed my eyes, wondering if her mission in life was to humor stupid people. Perhaps she was a nun. I learned in the following weeks that, indeed, she was not a nun. She was twenty-five, she told me. Three years younger than myself. Her apartment was close by, the upper floor in one of the beautiful old turn of the century houses that had survived the madness of the high-rise developers on Capitol Hill. Her parents had been devout Catholics, but they were both dead. She worked in the Main Library across the street from the parkā¦
I learned many other things about her in the following weeks, and dwelled on them each evening until sleep inevitably overcame me, and then I would dream of her. Far away in unheard of, enchanted lands with stately mansions gracing tall, green hills. Graciella was always there and never failed to overlook my ugliness. Always invited me into her arms as though my face meant nothing at all to her. As though her lovely eyes could see to the very center of my heart.
I began to forget what I was, more so with each casual visit beneath the tree where she chattered like a finch this moment, sat quietly beside me the next, or read aloud from one of her books. Beside me. Every day, now. But why? What could she possibly see in me?
Each morning as I stood in front of the bathroom mirror to dress, the image staring back at me lost a tiny bit more of its repulsiveness. The twisted nose, the too-heavy browāthe ghastly ears pasted flat against my skull. Could it beā¦
My eyes overclouded with the blinding strength of hope, and I tried to discover exactly what it was that made my Graciella look past the ink spot of misshapen features. Was I mistaken about myself? I finally gave up these ridiculous mental inquiries and allowed myself to stumble ever farther into her flawless beauty. I imagined she, too, felt something of what I was consumed byāthat her heart also beat rapidly in those infinitely sublime moments of our encounters.
*
Fall descended onto the city in a slow, disarming enchantment. Marigolds replaced the tulips and irises and daisies in the beds along the walk. The elm leaves turned dark green, and then faded to gold before cascading down in amazing disarray onto the cool carpet of grass in our park kingdom. We continued to meet each day beneath the tree, volumes in hand, as the breezes whirling down on us from the north lost their warmth, and the first storms stood offstage, waiting. I wanted to tell Graciella that I loved her. I wanted to hear her low, musical voice say she loved me, too. Ah, no! It wasnāt time, not yetābetter that I wait. Oh, please, my love, donāt just walk away, never to return! The thought began to haunt me. I must tell her. The snow would come soon. She would go away to some other warm distraction. Iād be left alone.
Graciella remained, even after the skies grayed and dusted the park and the city in its first milky gown. Yesterday we arrived as usual at our tree and I laid a red wool blanket on the ground, covered in a field of dazzling white. She sat, in her graceful, unforced way, opened a small, worn book, and then began to speak.
āListen, Martin.
āI have gone marking the atlas of your body
with crosses of fire.
My mouth went across: a spider, trying to hide...'"
She read each stanza of this poem to me in her voice as soft and cool as the snow-white landscape of the park. Every now and then her eyes left the page and glanced across the short distance between us, gauging my reaction, and then they returned to the words she found so captivating. When she finished reading she looked up again, closing her lovely eyes for an instant. āIsnāt it magnificent? Does it move you, too?ā She placed the book in her lap and waited for my answer.
My mouth fell, my soul bared, and every cell in my body screamed at me to say it. Now! Now is the time, Martin. She loves you as you are. Say it! I covered my face with both hands instead. Why had she read those words?
āDonāt you like it? What is it?ā I heard her ask in a voice as melancholy as a eulogy. Graciella touched my hands with steady fingertips, soft and warm despite the frigid air.
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