The sunlight, the muffled hum of voices, the colors, the people. Stalls bursting with roses on every corner, tablecloths and flags striped in Catalan red-and-yellow flying proudly from businesses and balconies. It was too bright, too much (Déu meu!) too much—
“Miquel? Are you listening?”
The tall boy, the thin boy (with the waspish waist and the youthful face) seemed lost and haunted-eyed, staring out from the window. The voice of his sister was like draining water to his ears, flooded and far-away. With a pop! he seemed to shake it off and looked up at the older girl, mute but attentive.
“You silly thing. Where do you go?” She patted him affectionately and he leaned into her, resting the side of his head on her shoulder. “You heard me, right? You’ll go, you’ll find a gift for Mamá?”
He nodded his head yes.
“And you won’t be late to meet us later?”
He shook his head no.
His sister opened her arms and hugged him tightly, kissing him twice on the cheek before releasing the dark-haired youth. He covered his mouth with his hands to hide his smile as his sister draped his shoulder-bag over him and spun him around towards the door. “Get going, go, go! Have fun, go outside, enjoy St. Jordi! Don't forget Francesca is meeting you at the museum at three, yes?”
He waved from the landing, a tiny motion with his arm held close to his body, his shoulders hunched.
“And try to make friends!”
The door closed.
Miquel turned up his collar, moving slowly down the sidewalk. He hugged the shops which lined the streets of Barcelona, shying away from patrons and shopkeepers who shouted out jovially towards him. He stood and watched a street-play for a little while and seemed to have more energy after the closing lines, slipping away amidst applause with his purpose for the day renewed.
What rose should I get for Mamá? The brown-eyed boy wondered as he hovered by a simply-decorated stall bursting with bright flowers. Red, of course, as scarlet as the blood of the dragon St. Jordi had slain—but orange as tiger-fur, and white as morning dawn, and yellow as—
“Oh, you like that one? Three euros!”
Miquel jumped. He covered his mouth with both hands unconsciously, staring wide-eyed at the shopkeeper. He’d been touching the roses, gently running the tips of his fingers over the tasseled grass and ribbons as he contemplated, enjoying how they felt in his hands. Panicked and unsure, he fished in his pocket and pulled out the change. The shopkeeper handed him the yellow rose and wished him well. Miquel turned and walked away as quickly as he could, eyes stinging, heart pounding from the interaction.
He looked down at the yellow rose. Mamá likes red, he thought with regret, twirling the stem in his fingers. Well, there are many stands with red roses. It will not be hard to find. The idea of another interaction made his heart quail, however, and he ducked his head and bit his lip. Too much, too much...
He swished the rose in his hand a little, as if it were a blade, and looked down at his fingers.
The boy had moved away from the worst of the crowds now, wandering down a quieter part of the festivities. The huge book-stands with the authors signing he had steered clear from, but something here caught his attention. Chapbooks, small and neat, smelling of dust and age (and of character.)
Miquel browsed through them guardedly, hunching down to make himself as small and unnoticeable as possible. What is that one? The title looked especially promising, but was too far away for him to pick up and examine unnoticed.
He peeked longingly over the stacks of thin books and accidentally caught the eye of the red-haired girl behind the stand. He snatched up one of the poetry pamphlets and flipped it open to cover his face as quickly as he could, in such a hurry that he opened it upside-down.
Last edited: Apr 24, 2018