Query at the Single Gloves Gate

single-gloves

__Does it still hurt?

He stood as he pulled his pants up.

__What does?

__Your knee.

He lifted his right leg and extended is foot forward. Again, and then once more.

__ I’m fine. I can walk, so I’m good.

As the door of our room slammed shut, the only thing I could hear was the rustling sound of our thermal pants and the light thuds of our footsteps as we walked towards the elevator. It hummed along the piano music faintly drowning the silence between us. I could hear his breathing while he tapped his fingers on the railings of the elevator and the buzz of the engine seemed to compliment it.

He insisted that we take the train to “the gate” despite the condition of his right knee. He’s exhausted, so am I, and I know he’s pushing himself a little too hard. Three days ago, he had just flown in to Madrid and within five hours, he was on board a plane to Reykjavik. From there we hiked mountain ranges, walked miles and miles of frozen land, and endured low temperatures he’s never experienced before.

When we were still together, I promised myself that I’d take him to Iceland once the right time presented itself. The time came, but it never occurred to me that we would come as visitors and not as a couple. We remained friends, though we still do the things we did before. Only less passionate, more regretful. Sometimes painful.

Tomorrow, he returns to Madrid, and he may never want to see me again. He had no more reasons to, I fear. While I hope this won’t be the last, I have enjoyed the last three days spending time with him. We slept on the same bed, made love, kissed, and last night, we watched a film in Icelandic without the subtitles on. He fell asleep on my shoulder while I stayed up as long as I could.

As I woke up to my freezing feet in the bright early morning of Reykjavik, I realized that he had curled on his side of the bed with his back against my thigh. I slid down to lay my body against his. This woke him up, of course, as he threw the blanket over us. I turned to him to wrap my arms around him, expecting him to push me away, but I was too sleepy to remember what happened.

__We can take the cab, you know.

He gave me a weirded-out look and smiled bitterly. The biting cold of the air outside was familiar, but it was nice to see some sunlight. I had never been so thrilled to see my shadow on the ground.

__There’s more stories to be seen when you ride with locals. You can take a cab, and I’ll just meet you there if you want…

Stories, stories… It’s what he always wanted. On our anniversaries, dates, and on his birthdays, all he wanted were stories. I thought he was easy to please, but I was wronged easily. Some stories made him so depressed he would not talk to me for days. Some made him so happy he’d shower me with sweet texts, and on many times, he wrote me letters.

The ride lasted faster than I thought. Neither of us had ever been here, but an avid traveller that he is, I knew he’d already figured out how to get to “the gate” even before he landed in Reykjavik. The same cool air greeted us as we exited the train, and I followed his lead around the exhausted pavements. He led me to where the streets rested, far for the sunlight to reach. The streets were quiet, as most streets in this city were, yet I was beginning to feel lost and far.

__Ah.

He stopped walking, and I almost bumped into him.

Across the street, straight to our left, was a rusty gate. Its walls were painted white, like the plate tied on it. To miss it would be difficult, as most walls on this street were painted in gloomy colors, as if mimicking the moods of the skies. As we crossed the lonely street, the sign became clearer.

“Single Gloves,” it said.

I looked at him, to see his reaction. It was the familiar smile he puts on whenever he becomes one with something or someone special. He smiled at me, and I tried to smile back.

__This is it.

Thousands of miles from his home, somewhere in the depressed streets of this arctic city, he seemed to have found the antidote to the false joy he’s had while spending time with me. I could not find the reason why he was brightened at this moment, but I enjoyed it far better than hearing his laughter.

He walked backwards to lean on the parked car. The sound of his bag being unzipped was the loudest sound I could hear, louder than the faint bustle of the busy street few blocks away. He pulled out his notebook, and at the sound of his retractable pen, I began to disappear from his presence.

I was not sure if I was hearing his pen dance across the paper of his journal or if I was just imagining it. Usually, it wouldn’t take him too much time to write something down when he needed to, so I stood there struggling to keep warm as I stare at the gate.

The bottom part of the sign looked torn, leaving the “g” of the “gloves” look more like a “q.” There were wooden covers inside it, like a reverse scaffold, with the smell of paint, as if someone had just painted its inner walls. Probably. It was too dark to tell what’s inside as if the gate asked light to keep its secrets.

He was still writing.

There were gloves of different kinds covering the spikes of the old gate. Some were just hanging, some on the ground. One was pink with a neon yellow lining whose middle finger covered one of the spikes and another, of brown leather, with its thumb up. There was a gray right glove dangling from the index finger and another gray one on the ground. There was a puffy blue glove smashed into the coils of the gate, a black one, a maroon, and a darker brown. The more I look, the more gloves I see.

My eyes were glued to the gate now, and I felt him walk up beside me.

I looked at him. He’s now smiling at me. I smiled back and asked him.

__What… is this?

I looked back at him, and his smile was gone, though he was looking at the gate now.

__It’s a gate for single gloves.

We were both watching the gate now. Quiet, beside each other, but obviously far away.

__It’s a gate for single gloves.

__I heard you the first time.

__I know.

I sighed, and he chortled. We stood there for a few more minutes until we silently decided that it was time for us to go back. He was content, and I was still confused. We spent the rest of the day hopping from one shop to another as we made our way back to our hotel. We were exchanging stories over the local food and local shops, watching the Icelandic folks spend their day without us, pretending we did not exist. It was all happening to quick for me, as our last night together crept near.

That evening, I found him watching the late gray night of the city as I stepped out of the bathroom.

__What’s the matter?

__Nothing. I’m just tired.

__I know.

He walked towards me, lightly limping.

I was two inches taller than him, yet he easily planted as kiss on my lips. I felt his skinny arms wrap my half naked body.

__Thank you.

He whispered.

 

The following morning, with the sky still dark, I felt his arms still around me. We were naked under the sheets, and though I could not see his face, I knew he was already awake.

__Will I ever see you again?

My question seemed to startle him. I tightened my embrace. He looked up to me.

__’Course you will.

He leaned in to kissed me.

There was a long pause before he finally broke the silence. He slid off the bed and started packing. I watched him do it quickly as I fought the drowsiness. In about two hours, he’d be on a plane and I’d be alone for another day.

As soon as he was ready to leave, I tried to put on clothes – my underwear at least – and said my goodbyes. I wanted it to be more special, thinking that this will be the last time we were alone together, but it turned out like we were still living near each other. We would be in the next few months, but after that, it could be worse.

__Are you sure you don’t want a cab?

As always, he declined my offer as he kissed me, perhaps the last time. As the door shut, I crashed back on the bad and surrendered. For a few minutes, I tried to harness everything and put me to sleep but I just could not. I sat up and watched the same skies he was watching last night.

My feet brushed on something on the floor.

It was his glove.

He must have dropped it.

Quickly, I put on some more clothes and tried to run after him. I knew he’d be long gone, but there was a likelihood that he might still be reading a book while waiting for the next train to the airport.

I ignored the piercing cold air as I bolted out of the hotel doors and walked swiftly to the train stop. There seem to be more people walking around, but I easily managed to get to the stop. I could not find him, as I expected, so I dialed his phone number.

__Hello?

__Hey… You, uh… You forgot your glove.

There was an unfamiliar silence.

__Did I?

For some reasons, I knew he was smiling on the other line. I could feel it. Then I heard a light giggle.

__You’re smiling right now, aren’t you?

__Yes.

He giggled again.

__Yes, I am… I know you’re smiling too.

He hang up, and I started my way back to the hotel.

And so, the air of this Reykjavik’s uninviting autumn breath froze everything I was ever scared off. How I wish there was a mirror in front of me, for I have never seen what true relief looked like. Indeed, I was feeling it at that moment. I’ve felt it, and I’ve heard it – but I wanted to see it.

I put his glove inside the breast pocket of my coat. I breathed out a smile, and the cacophony of the footsteps of the passers-by started to become louder. The air remained criminally cold, with my hands shaking. All these I ignored for I have never before felt satisfaction as timely as this.

The Workers of the Cloud Factory

Greeting Sara, the sun was inescapable. It greeted her from her windows and reflected the brightness of the day back into her face. Closing her eyes shut was not going to help, she figured. How can timidity bring such laziness upon her? The frightening reality that her everyday life was this never faded. This boredom kept her back to bed, and away from it at the same time.

It was time to wake up.

Her body dragged her off to the kitchen, and the food satisfied her morning hunger. Toothpaste and brush cleaned her teeth, and more water quenched her thirst. Without even remembering her nametag and to pack her lunch, Sarah was on her way to work.

It was the day of the strike. As a cloudmaker of the biggest factory in the country, exhaustion was her lunch and sweat was her drink. It was no easy job producing cloud. Hours and hours you would swivel and spiral clouds like cotton candies, hoping that they’re dense enough to make rainbows and contain enough rain. And, watching out for the wide, gaping floor-to-ceiling windows of the vent made the job more like a daredevil feat. Sara’s heard about the hundreds of people who died from extreme enjoyment of creating clouds that they trip over and fall off from the tower. She had seen bodies plop like water balloons.

She didn’t even make them. She was no cloudmaker like Lyndon and Quick, or the couple Liliana and Gaston. She was just a feeder. Once the clouds are ready for the sky, she just had to make sure they come out at the right level. So her falling off the cloud tower was not even a problem at all. She was at the lowest of the lows, and her problem was jus tripping over the metal bar. She was no danger hugger, not a death cheater.

Maybe she arrived early, she noticed. The entire place was dead silent. Even the wind didn’t whisper anything, and she felt it pull her back. Telling her to not go inside, and just go back home. She considered, but no.

What did people do when they strike, really, she thought. Only few mobiles were parked outside the tower. The huge spire before her sounded like everyday – the churning and the chug, the whistling and the screaming. Beyond that, silence.

Screaming. She heard someone scream, and she knew who it was.

Oganna’s loud screams, even from, who knows, eight vents up pierced through her ear and almost shattered her spine. The image of her yellowing teeth and big, bulking shoulders came to Sara’s mind. It grounded her, planting her feet stuck to the ground, paralyzed in fear. She could smell Oganna’s musty locks, oily and shiny at the same time, just right above her shoulders. She could picture her everyday routine, and everyday she noticed just one thing: Oganna never stepped foot in her vent. Ever.

This, she had always wondered about. Oganna would always pop her head upside down, through the spiral staircase of the tower. One would faint in shock and fright if one saw her creepy face like that. All other workers had close encounters with Oganna. She’d heard people vomit due to nervousness, while some people just felt disgusted in her presence. The hot atmosphere of the tower made everyone sweat, and Oganna’s fat-filled physique would boil along with her dissatisfaction with the workers’ produce. She would scream at everyone. Her scream so distinct that Sara could hear it synched with her scream at this very moment.

How did people strike? Where were the people in the first place! Where were her co-workers?

Panic ate her thoughts and rightful thinking. Oganna scared her. Not that she was abusive or something. It was the mood she always brought to work. A beast of action. She forced people to work hard – really hard. Ever since she supervised the tower for the feeders, rainbows had become rare, almost extinct. The pressure Oganna gave ate up people’s great energy and exhausted their bodies, keeping their focus away from rainbows. Clouds were important, and rainbows just futile. They were cloudmakers, not rainbow makers, Oganna would say.

The loud banging of the vent, sliding off, forced her eyes several floor up towards the tower. The dangling metal scraped the chrome wall of the tower, ripping the ears off of whoever could hear it. Screams, she heard. Her brute strength bent the thin metal doors, ripping them off from their bases. Ugly clouds shot through the opening, as if they were also scared of Oganna’s rage.

Oganna was feeding clouds by herself. Or not. There was smoke, but clouds she could not tell. Maybe a mixture, but still, she could not tell.

Sara quickly looked around for cover but couldn’t find anything. She walked far enough from where she thought Oganna couldn’t see her. And she was scared. She was scared early enough for Oganna to see her.

Terror chained her on her spot.

Screams. Oganna was red and mad. Anger erupted from her nose and her ears almost seemed to steam.

The dangling metal scraped the wall once more, this time with the wind, taking the chrome layer off. Oganna was letting the clouds go through without proper feeding. It could clog the whole tower or make storm clouds, but she didn’t care.

The world needed clouds, and she was determined to provide them no matter what. She knew of Oganna’s determination. It was her job, and she would do it no matter what.

The silent wind crashed against the clinging metal, and sailed the metal away like a polyp in the ocean. It flipped and flopped until a loud crash assured it landed on the ground. This, Oganna did again and again, descending all the way down. One by one, metal scraps were freed from the towers as clouds blasted through the vents. Or just smoke.

Sara braced herself for Oganna to crash open the last, bottom-most vent. She knew what was coming.

A loud crash, a screech, and the sound of wheel ripped through the metal door. Shards of glass flew everywhere as the mobile halted with a screech right in front of her. She was even more paralyzed.

“Let’s go!” Wilson shouted over the noises Sara could hear now. “Hurry!”

Her legs dragged her behind the mobile and jumped to her seat.

“ Put your hands around me!” he said, turning his head. Before she could hesitate, Wilson upped the speed. She almost fell, but she grabbed his shoulder just enough to drag herself up and put her arms around him.

“I knew you’d come, Sara!” Wilson said, his loud voice muffled by his helmet.

They stopped at the city lookout not far from the cloud factory. It was a park for everyone. At the edge of the cliff was a meadow of low grass. Today, the grass was green and the sun bright but not blazing. Together, they watched the bright blue sky. Wilson laughed genuinely and ignored the fact that he himself knew Sara was just forcing herself to enjoy the moment. Her smile shouted confusion and light laughter weighed the awkwardness of the situation.

“I knew you’d come, Sara.”

She nodded. She hugged her feet as they sat on the ground, watching the cloudless sky. Few minutes ago, they saw the last waves of clouds pass by the blue sky. It was a mess that entertained Wilson but worried her. The wind was still quiet. No whispers, no sound.

“ What will happen now, Wilson?”

“ I don’t know, find a new job, I suppose.”

Wilson stretched his arm as he collapsed on his back to get an even bigger view of the sky. The view slapped a smile on his face. He felt relaxed. Overjoyed.

“ We really don’t need clouds anymore, you know. That job is a joke.”

“ But what about the rain? And rainbows?”

“ Nobody cares about those, Sara.” He leaned on his elbows and looked at her, “ What made you join this time, Sara?”

“ I don’t know.”

“ You were her best cloud feeder, you know that.”

“ If I were, I wouldn’t be at the bottom,” Sara replied. “You’re the one who’s three floors above me.” The higher the feeder was, the better he was at feeding the clouds to the sky. The best clouds were meant for the highest level in the sky. Low clouds were bad, and the lower they got, the faster they diffused.

“ That’s right but no. Nobody cares about the middle. They care about what’s on top and what’s on the bottom. They love the moon and earth, and everything in between is forgotten.” Wilson lied down on the grass again.

With worried eyes, Sara looked up the sky one more time. She felt lost and misunderstood.

“ Everything’s going to be alright, Sara,” Wilson said, closing his eyes and breathing in freedom and life. “Nobody would notice that clouds have stopped moving until the next few days…. Don’t you like to have a little bit more excitement in your life Sara?”

“ We feeders get up and drag our butts to work every single day. Nothing becomes of us. We are underpaid. We would never make enough. Boycotting that useless scrap of a business that had sucked our lives would be the best thing ever.” Wilson talked and talked.

The grass swallowed the sound of her steps, and Wilson was too happy to notice.  Sara stood up moments ago. Not even trying to avoid making rustles against the grass, Sara walked casually back to the mobile.

The seat was warm and the steering wheel moist. She saw Wilson still down on the grass. Talking or not she didn’t know. She knew she had to go somewhere. She needed to go back, she thought. She had to, and she felt it.

“Sara! Hold on!” Wilson noticed now.  He stood up, slowly walking faster and faster towards her. “Where are you going? Hey, come back here!”

Sara sped off to the road and left Wilson screaming for her to come back. She’d come back, she told herself.

She’d return.Image