The old woman stood by the door of the classroom. The room was
filled with college freshmen, she and one other would have to sit in the
doorway. She studied each young face. They were easy to see from the
place where she was standing. The sunlight filled the air and poured
through the windows on to the faces of the eager students of which she
was one. The students had come to learn Spanish. Some studied to earn
their degrees, while others came because they traveled to Mexico or
because they were in the medical profession. The old woman had come to
learn her own language. She had been born in a small village in
southern Mexico but had come to America when she was six years old with
her mother and her father. They had traveled up the Pacific coastline,
working the fruit and had settled in Oregon. This had been many years
before. Now she was old and she wanted to return to the little village
in Mexico where she had been born. Many of her relatives were still
living there. She wanted to learn her language, perhaps she would decide
to stay there, to die there, of this possibility she was thinking.
That
September morning was fair. She fixed her attention on the professor
who was sitting on the edge of his desk. He was a small man and very
handsome. He spoke with a thick accent. "I am from Spain," he told the
class, "Southern Spain," he added proudly. "Seville."
The
old woman wondered what Seville was like and why he had traveled so far
from home. Of course, everyone wanted to come to America, didn't
they? Even her own parents had wanted to come to America and they had
come, just as this little Spaniard had come.
One afternoon
during a class discussion she had asked him just that, why? He spoke
only in Spanish during these discussions. "I came for money and to
study the theater. In Spain one is only able to study the theater for
six months and then no more. Also the libraries in America are
extensive, unlike those in Spain." "Well," she had thought, "her
parents had not come for these reasons."
She had often
wondered how old the Spaniard was. Some days he looked quite young,
some where in his twenties, but other days-older, in his forties. On
these days his otherwise handsome face could almost appear ugly. His
beautiful expressive eyes would take on an almond shape and wrinkles
circled them and spread across his forehead. There were some days, she
felt, that the Spaniard was not happy. On theses days he could be
extremely harsh with his students. She watched him carefully, until she
began to wonder at herself and at the way that she would watch him.
"Surely this old heart of mine feels alive again," she thought. But she
put this out of her mind most of the time because she was practically a
dead old woman and he was a young, handsome man.
It was
true, the Spaniard was a handsome man. His dark hair curled about the
nap of his neck and his voice was rich and deep. His eyes were
expressive of all that he felt and this was enough to make any woman
fall in love with him, which many women were, this the old woman could
see. But these were not the only things that attracted the old woman to
him, for there were many handsome men walking around the face of the
earth and her heart had been dead for a long time, until now. Now, it
was not only his physical beauty that attracted her, what she saw over a
period of time was his great intelligence and his great sensitivity.
These were his valuable things and even his cruelty, yes, his quick
anger, could not spoil what he had been gifted with, these were the
qualities that she watched day by day and grew to love.
Early
in the fall it became known that the little Spaniard would return to
Spain. This seemed far off but made sense to the old woman who was
herself planning a return to her own people. "He will be happier," she
thought, "although I will miss him."
As the school year
progressed all of his students grew to love him more, although he became
more frequently unhappy and there were bad days with him as well as
good.
Once during the year the Spanish class met in the
park for games and a picnic. There the young people played soccer. At
this the little Spaniard was very good. He took off his shoes and ran
in his naked feet. He ran very fast. The old woman had heard of this
game but had never seen it played. She sat under a big tree with some
other women. They spoke part English and part Spanish with each other.
When one young man came running in from the field to rest, sweat
poured from his body and he gasped for air. "You look just like an
animal." the old woman had spoken to him in Spanish. The man had not
understood the words. She then watched the little Spaniard run and felt
sad to think that someday she would see him no more. She wondered more
at herself for feeling this. Why would nature play a trick on her now,
when she was a shriveled up old woman that even a blind man would not
want. Some days she felt very angry over this and could only hope that
the love in her heart would not show on her face, the love she had ,
unwillingly, for the Spaniard.
Finally the end of Spring
came and the beginning of summer. All the young students were tired
from school and this was especially true of the old woman. She
understood enough of her language now to go back to her people unashamed
that she had lived so many years in America.
There was
only one sadness in her life and it cut through her with a pain that she
would never have imagined possible, this pain was the handsome little
Spaniard.
"Surely I will not say goodbye to him or I may
cry" she thought. "And then everyone will wonder at an old woman
wanting a young man." Never had life seemed so cruel. She worked
quietly in her garden as she thought. She plucked the last dead buds
off her rose bush and tossed them to the ground. This rosebush was her
favorite, the flowers were a deep pink and they had a strong aroma. She
snipped off five stems that had multiple blossoms and filled a blue
china vase with them. "They never last," she spoke aloud to a white cat
that played with the petals as they fell from the branch. "The pedals
drop off and make a terrible mess, but the fresh ones are always
beautiful." She carried the vase into the house and shut the door.
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