Beni Mellal, Morocco
NOTE: The man the reader talked about is a childhood friend whom he hadn't seen for more than 10 years. He finally had the chance at least to see him this year in his miserable and terrible state.
(After more than fifteen years of absence,
I had finally the chance to see an old childhood friend.
I stood in the rain and kept watching him
for a long time. As luck would have it, his body still kept some signals under
the auspices of which my assumption was confirmed. He had been talking to some
unseen spirits in a dark and cold corner, barely untouched by the freezing
sleet that was slashing both ways like steely tomahawks. Half of his face was
covered with his sleek and glossy hair, so wet and cold that it kept dripping
right into his chest-bone. Sometimes he would laugh hysterically, moments
during which he would wave his hands as if trying to untangle some perturbing
cobweb.
No doubt he had seen me standing in the
rain, reaching out for him, trying to blow dust off his mind and make him
believe that the world around him was as real as death. I knew he couldn’t
recall my name, nor could he spot my face. Yet, my silhouette must have
appeared to him familiar; something he had always seen before--something he had
knocked out more than twice with his dexterous limbs and knack in a cemetery.
The period during which I stood and watched him, being nothing more than a
black wet ball in the corner that was in the process of letting out atavist
utterances, my past recollections were being punctuated by his savage
chuckling. My feelings towards him were that of sorrow mixed with hope and love. I felt sorry for him because he had been the matter
of which life was stuffed and upon whom he scavenged mercilessly that nothing
remained of him but his beautiful hair. I felt, however, some hope regarding
his chants and giggling--they were precisely the same as those of old times.
Every once in a while, he would stop his
mysterious conversation with his unseen friends and have a look at me, or
rather my silhouette. His right eye was blind, for he would make sure that the
wet patch of hair that covered his left one was
put aside so that he could have a clear look at my frame. Whenever he did this,
he would giggle again, put the patch back, and resume his conversation while waving his hands at the cobweb that
made it hard for him to chant. He was living in darkness
cloaked in grey and slimy concrete.
There was a faint submission in his
voice, mournful of character which gave me the impression he was an injured
puppy yelping for mercy. There was no doubt his extremities had been numbed by
cold, turned into frozen pieces of flesh that were drained of life. Terrible
was his coughing, no wind was left in his lungs, nor could he help hoodwinking
coughs that required a huge draught of air. How he could fool the law of life
was something I couldn’t fathom.
I had to evacuate the scene. The laws of life were hard to understand, and
if anyone tried to infringe on them, the tolls
would be heavy if not lethal. Bellicose was her frown upon the whole scene, for she feared something
unprecedented would happened; more precisely, something against his rules. Hence, I had to leave and go back home with
a broken heart and sorrowful spirit. I felt ashamed at my “puny being” and at
the fact that instead of providing some help, I was reduced to the tinniest of
all creatures by one single frown. As I
was walking back home, the sad utterances kept fading into the air until I
couldn’t hear them anymore.
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