Tuesday 10 March 2015

The Blooming Garden



There was nothing wrong with it, he thought while he was looking out his garden doors into the garden. Nothing wrong at all, in fact it had become his pride, his life’s work. The colour palette of green mixed with purple, violet, red and yellow was shining upon him. The elongated sunflowers at the end of the garden path, the waving plumes at the waterfront, the soft purple bellflowers of the Campanula and the brighter purple of the Lupines, the Spiraea softly swinging in the wind, the hollyhocks with their different colours, carefully chosen and sown by him, the honeysuckle which smelled so nice in the evenings. He sighed and turned away from the window. He knew it would never be the same again.

He once had been a slim, muscular and attractive young man, when he was in the prime of his life when he met her. He did not like to think back about it but the reason why she had chosen him had not been his looks. He only found that out later on. The fortune he would inherit from his father, who had become a rich man from his textile factory, was the apparent reason for her to go after him. He stupidly walked into that trap, blinded as he was by her good looks, slim body and feigned timidity. He was young and madly in love. A year later they were married. They moved into this house where, as it turned out, she never liked being in. He thought it was delicious. A cosy house, a lovely garden and his job at his father's office was sufficient for him. But not for her. Unfortunately they remained childless and although he could not prove it, until this day he guessed that there was no medical cause that supported that.
His wife had become over the course of the years, how unpleasant he even found to say, a cold woman. No longer the warm, shy girl he had met. He remained more and more often in his garden then he had planned. His wife amused himself sometimes without him. She went to her friends, to play tennis and attended parties. She was a guest at many a party. The few times that he couldn't avoid coming along, he noticed that she had many males casting an eye on her. Many necks were strained on an evening when his wife made her entrance not only men but also women although their glances were not always that friendly behind her back, as he saw it.
As the years of their marriage progressed, he had also increasingly reluctantly accompanied his wife on such outings. The people were, he felt, emptier and pompous, meaningless. They only did it, he said to his wife, for one thing: Money and ostentation. His wife thought that he was dramatizing and then left again with the most expensive creations next event.

Meanwhile, his father was old and weak. His wife, he perceived, made allusions to the death of his father and the resulting fortune what that would entail. Because his marriage got worse and worse and his wife completely went her own way, he decided to consult a solicitor, though without telling his wife about it. He spoke a long time with him and came back with a big smile on his lips. He had made his decision.
He visited his father more and more often now his health declined. His mother was deceased when he was a little boy. He had no siblings, so he was the only heir. How sick his father was, even he was enormously concerned about his daughter in law's sudden visits with some regularity. He managed to make his father comfortable and after a few weeks, his father died in his sleep at the age of 85. A huge burden pressed on his shoulders and suddenly he knew.

A few weeks after the funeral of his father, his wife came into the living room with two cups of coffee and sat down next to her husband. He looked up from his newspaper and looked at her puzzled. She went away every night and now she sat beside him with coffee? He folded his newspaper and looked at her. This would be the moment he had been waiting for. She did not hesitate. She began to talk about wanting to live bigger, his father's money, and factory sales, sell this, and buy that. About that she wanted to leave him, that she was entitled to half the money. She had already packed her bags and would leave him. Her friends knew about it, she was going to live abroad and demanded his money.
He saw it in her eyes. The greed, the desire of ostentation what he had seen all those awful parties. His wife, the girl he had married, that woman didn't exist anymore, but this was the last straw. He stood up and walked calmly upstairs. His wife followed him, screaming almost. She pulled on his jacket, forced him to listen. All that she accompliced was that he tripped and fell. She backed away to avoid him falling against her and he rumbled down the stairs on his back. As he fell he heard it. Crack, said his back. And while he was lying with his back on the cold tile floor in the hall, the cold he did not even feel, he heard his wife walking alongside him, looking him right in the face with a triumphant look before she picked up the phone to call the doctor.

Months later, he was sitting there, in front of the garden doors looking at the flowers in his garden. He himself had not had the courage to do something in the yard, let alone driving through it. The gardener he had hired had paved the way so that he could drive through more easily with the wheelchair. But as of yet he had not used it. He had reversed his chair from the window but stopped and turned back. He looked at the big hydrangea that needed to be pruned actually. He wanted to do that last year but hadn’t come to and now it was still too early to prune. Suddenly a smile came to his lips. With a tug he turned his chair and went to the phone. He called the gardener and after a brief conversation he hung up again.
After the gardener had dug a large hole for a beautiful apple tree beside the hydrangea that afternoon and he had assured the gardener that he could and would do the rest really himself, he sat there for a long time in the garden. Until he heard the front door slam and heard tapping heels in the hallway. Moments later she was standing next to him. The sun disappeared behind a cloud and it was chilly all of a sudden. He shivered. She looked at him with contempt in her eyes he saw. Not for long. He whispered something and she bowed her head to hear him. Then he raised his arm with the garden shovel still in there and let it come down hard on her head. With a sigh, she fell down beside him. He looked at her cold, beautiful face while a thin trickle of blood from under her hair seeped on the sidewalk. The red mingled with the purple flowers in the border. It would be quite a job but she would get a nice spot under the hydrangea next to the apple tree and as he rolled up his sleeves, he had a smile on his lips.
Finally his life got significance and purpose again.  

© KH

Sunday 1 March 2015

To Boldly go...

(a tribute to Leonard Nimoy)


‘So this is it?’


‘I am afraid so'

‘Just like that?’

‘Well, I do not believe ‘just like that’ as you put it… I am sorry. Breathing … has… become more difficult’
‘I’m sorry I shouldn’t let you talk so much. Go lay down’

‘Maybe that is better’ 

‘I don’t think I can go on’

‘I have found that we in life can do more than we believe we can endure’

‘Spock…’

‘Jim you can go on without me’

‘But I don’t want to’

‘I do not think you have a choice in the matter and neither have I’

‘I will miss you so much’

‘As will I miss you’

‘The difference is, you won’t know it’

‘How do you know that to be true, Jim?’

‘What?’

‘How do you know I do not know I am missing you where I am going?’

‘Ehm, I don’t, do I?’

‘None of us do know what is to come after we are gone from this world’

‘Will you let me know?’

‘If there is any chance for me to do so, I will’


‘Spock…?’

‘Yes?’

‘Are you afraid?’

‘I do not feel fear, t’hy’la’ 

‘Not even now?’

‘Not even now’

‘I feel sad’

‘That I do feel’

‘You do?’

‘Yes, I feel your sadness as well as my own … the way you will feel when … you are left behind’

‘Oh God Spock’

‘Do not cry ashayam, we had a wonderful life together … and I have had a long life. I am an old man … I am tired’

‘Then sleep Spock, you deserve to rest. I’ll be here, I’ll always be here for you’

‘Live long and Prosper Jim’

‘Sleep Spock rest now I am here’ 

---- 

‘Well, if that isn’t the old hobgoblin! What are you doing here, Spock?’ 

‘I thought I would come and keep you company Doctor’ 

‘Really and what about Jim?’

‘It is not the Captain’s time yet’

‘No it’s not, so it’s you and me again is it?'

‘It seems so yes’

‘Well let’s make it a good one then, where shall we go?’

‘Go Doctor?’

‘Yeah, didn’t you know we can go where ever we want to? The stars are ours Spock!’

‘If that is the case what are we waiting for?’

‘Speaking like a true explorer Spock’

‘Like Captain Kirk always said; to boldly go where no one has gone before’

‘Well you got that right, Spock, where we’re going, no one has gone before!’

‘Show me the way Doctor’

‘Now you’re talking Spock, never thought I’d say that, but you and I are going to roam the stars forever’

‘Indeed’

‘Oh don’t you raise that eyebrow at me sonny…’

---- 

‘Keptin, Vat is the matter? Why are you lookink like that?’

‘I felt something Chekov, something brush by me, view screen on’

‘View screen on’

‘There, those two bright stars, those weren’t here before were they?’

‘No Keptin they vere not’

‘There, they’re blinking again! Is that just me? Am I seeing things?’

‘No I am seeing it too’

‘Uhura are they stars, not something else?’

‘Just stars Captain’

‘They are moving away, can we follow them?’

‘Keptin, they are gone’

‘What? Gone where?’

‘They’re just gone Captain, I can’t explain it’

‘Seeing is believing, believing is seeing’

‘What was that Captain?’

‘No never mind, resume course’

‘Resuming course, aye Keptin’

‘Goodbye Spock’

© KH

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