Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Chapter One: At the International Institute




On the morning of September 5th, 2001, instead of going to class, a student panicked and ran into the bathroom on the first floor of the International Institute in Madrid, Spain. As the clock struck eight, a monastery silence reigned over the building.



Staring so deep and hard at his reflection drew an excessive amount of strength and soon the student was overwhelmed and needed to sit down. He pressed the stall door, which opened like a confession booth.




"What's wrong with me?" He asked.




As he waited for an answer, he stared up at the birds walking along the parapet.




"I'm living in a city without a single person who speaks my language. I'm ignored by the world, overlooked by millions. I can't change my appearance. I can't miraculously communicate with these people. I don't have one Spanish word I can whip off my tongue to convince these people I'm real, I exist."




But it wasn't true what he was saying. There were plenty of people in Madrid who spoke English. His roommate spoke English. The students in his classes spoke English. Even his Senora spoke English.



The walk from the Senora’s apartment to the International Institute took approximately thirty-five minutes. It was not uncommon for this walk to produce great strain on Lethe's delicate emotions. A tide of anxiety swelled up inside him and threatened to drown his face in sweat. Obstacles grew out of the empty air. The large flank of a church nearly pushed him off the curb. A cavity in the road suddenly appeared underneath him.




Construction workers swarmed the sidewalk, suffocating him with their dirty looks and manly shoulders. Cigarettes burned in between their teeth as they shouted orders back and forth. Then came the jackhammers with the crescendo of shrill intensity.




Lethe followed a winding footpath into a wide-open plaza. Set apart from the whirlwind of city madness, a cluster of old gentlemen sat with their legs crossed, reading the morning newspaper under the blue fresco dome of the sky. A lazy dog slept underneath one of the chairs.




Lethe stood next to the fountain, debating whether he should go to class this morning. The taut underbelly of the lazy dog rose with each difficult breath.




"What's wrong with me?" He repeated.




One of the Spanish gentlemen smiled wistfully, as if recalling his own foolish youth.




Lethe glanced at the dog and saw how perfectly content it was. Stupid dog. Lucky dog.



“Que Vida! Que Vida!” The old man proclaimed.




The other men in the plaza hardly moved; they were like figures in a block of marble.




"Que Vida! Que Vida!"




It was too late to make it to his next class. He decided to stay here until the dog woke up.

7 comments:

Pamang said...

your writting is sort of flowery(in a good way) at one point did you write poetry?

Lethe said...

Yes, you can find a lot of my poetry on my website,

http://www.escapeintolife.com

I'm a descriptive writer. Thanks

tashabud said...

Hello Chris,
I can vividly see all that you're describing here. I can understand how Lethe feels about his pimples. I never had them in my younger years until I had my second child when my hormone levels changed dramatically, which unfortunately have caused me to get pimples. I agree that the more I pay attetion to them, the more they seem to appear. I'm off to the next post.

Chris Poirier said...

Hi Chris,

Just read Family in Decline, and have now started here. Thought I'd let you know. :-)

Chris.

Lethe said...

Chris,

I just found a ton of comments in my box . . . is that good or bad? I wonder . . . I will read on.

Chris

Christopher said...

"......I'm living in a city without a single person who speaks my language. I'm ignored by the world, overlooked by millions. I can't change my appearance. I can't miraculously communicate with these people. I don't have one Spanish word I can whip off my tongue to convince these people I'm real, I exist........".

The above passage, and also this chapter as a whole, read like a disturbing dream.

Good descriptive writing. I felt I was there.

Lethe said...

Thank you.