I awoke remembering
tomorrow would be my last day at this project and that it would also be the
anniversary of my father's birth -- the 17th of October. He's been gone a long time now, but not so
long that the surprising pain of sudden grief has left me.
I readied for the day
and rushed out into the world heading for the bus stop three stops away so I
would walk a bit. When the bus arrived I
greeted the always silent driver. Surly
faces were in each row as I searched for a good place to sit, which for me
meant somewhere near a door.
Trying to avoid eye
contact with all as I wended my way further into the vehicle until a pair of
eyes seemed to call to mine. A little
smile.
I chose to set next to
"just a little smile."
As I
settled into my seat, "just a little smile" greeted me with a hello
in a tongue that seemed not as confident in English. I tried to imagine his native land and
language, but gave up almost immediately and mimicked his hello before going
silent.
The fear of strangers
now so ingrained took my imagination away briefly to consider, that as wrong as
it was to racial profile, his olive skin, dark hair and features seemed Middle
Eastern. I wondered for a split second
how it would be if I saw that he had a bomb strapped to his body or a gun in
his pocket. A little shake to my head
dispelled the momentary silliness, as the music from my iPod pulled me back to
reality.
I smiled that
"you're a stranger to me" smile and searched for my Kindle, as he
rifled through his worn, olive-drab gym bag.
He fished out a newspaper and began to read. I smiled as I sneaked a peek at him, noticing
the childlike halting way he read the headlines, using his index finger to
slowly point to each word as he read.
The bus rocked
rhythmically and the passengers now seemed to have entered that warm drone-like
state, hunched over their cell phones as we moved onto the highway that would
lead us to the Harbour Bridge.
I politely continued
reading. Still I wanted somehow to reach
out to this "smiling stranger" who had risked so much with that smile
and his hello. But there was so little
time left of the journey and tomorrow he would just be a fading memory.
As I watched him out
of the corner of my eye, it happened.
It was clear, as we
had the first sight of the famous Coat-hanger Bridge, that he had never been
across it before! He gasped and nearly
pressed his face to the window, like a child at Christmas wanting to see the
sled fly!
It was just the
opening I needed.
"It is such an
amazing Bridge, isn't it? Have you been
in Australia long?" Both questions
completely safe.
And that was all he
needed.
His smile intensified
and there was the fresh breeze of relief flowing over his face.
"I've just
arrived from Italy. Well actually on the
fifth of October."
Then he spoke as if he
longed to hear his voice practicing new and unfamiliar words. He spoke of the day, the Bridge, the weather,
even the bus. His English was basic, but
delightful for the joy on his face as he "connected" each word in an
actual conversation.
I asked what brought
him to Sydney.
Again eagerness and
delight flooded his face. He announced
he was a bartender (as if he was sharing that he was a prince in
disguise). He had come to Sydney for a
job. I wondered if he was some master of
mixology, I had never considered it a
visa-granting type of profession. But I
wouldn't know how to mix a drink, so perhaps it is a special skill.
It was while he spoke
I took time to look at him for the first time.
Thin, he was far too thin, yet it was his face that captivated me. I had politely averted my eyes from his face
in some perfectly natural way of self-defense that I had chosen not to see it.
This face told me a
sad, almost pitiful story that was beyond explanation or reason. Pock-marked and with horrible scars, as if
someone had reached across some far away bar, late one night; and with a broken
glass, dripping of some antiseptic liquor, they had ground it deeply into the
middle of his face, then twisted it to disfigure him as much as possible.
My heart hurt as I
tried not to imagine the blood and the pain, the fear and resulting
rehabilitation...the deep loneliness from the isolation that brutality brings
with it. And then the sheer realisation
of his abject ugliness.
Yet, here he was,
smiling his crooked smile, that he knew was crooked and still smiled. I reached out my hand and touched his
forearm, not in pity but in respect or awe as he continued to regale me on the
beauty of the day, his grand adventure, the magnificence of the Bridge and his
forthcoming resettling into Sydney.
It dawned on me
through the fog of my admiration for this heroic man that the bus was nearing
the city. I looked to him with a love
not mine and wished him all the best. I
handed him my business card and urged him to send me an email or to call.
The bus lurched to a
halt and as I gathered my things and moved through to the door, I looked back
returning his kindness with my best smile.
I sincerely hoped he
would contact me. I stepped off the bus
and couldn't resist looking back one more time to see which direction his
journey would take him, but he had blended into the pushy crowd and already
disappeared.
I crossed the street
as always and just stopped. I was deeply
affected by the optimism of this man.
And there he stood, on the opposite corner of the street. He looked profoundly lost. I wondered if I should offer more help, when
he crossed over when the light changed and asked to buy me breakfast. A Starbucks loomed right behind me. It was so tempting, had an early meeting.
I thanked him, wished
him well, encouraged him again to contact me.
He said good bye and that today he was to start his English as a second
language course and hoped to see me again.
I never saw him again,
but will never be able to forget him and his smile.
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