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As an eager young man leads his sister to his secret garden, he tells her the story of the tragic day he asked for his past-lover's hand in marriage.
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At that point, the sun was beginning to set. We were walking in the sand along the edge of a long cold
river and my heart was racing. It was a very special day; a day I wanted to remember for the rest of my
life—but, sister, haven’t I told you this story before?
Tell me again, Jake.
Okay, well, Sophia had always wanted to visit the Northwest so I knew the Cascades would be the
perfect place to spend our summer vacation —and that’s where I wanted to ask her to marry me. That’s
exactly what I wanted.
The sun, which was at our backs, was setting just above the horizon so that in the sky were fading layers
of red and pink and yellow and, finally, light blue. I was holding her hand as she intently watched the
ground on which she walked. She was beautiful, let me tell you. Her chestnut hair was flowing in the
calm breeze and her skin—Lord, her skin! If only you could see how her skin glowed in the light of the
setting sun. She had on her new favorite canary-colored sundress (which I remember I thought was
peculiar because I knew she hated the color yellow) and the way it rippled as the air caught it reminded
me of the little spring in Kauai we went to years ago. The water would lap against our bodies as we
would float in each other’s arms until sunset, letting the soft mist falling from the mossy rocks above the
spring surround us.
I remember wondering if Sophia still thought about those days because, well, I thought about them
every day of my life.
I sighed.
It was a sunny morning at the Center, and my sister and I were walking in the grass of the large fenced-
in courtyard. We were watching the others being taught how to ‘safely’ construct a bird feeder and
‘properly’ fill it with bird feed, which was indeed rather tricky and usually ended with a pile of seeds and
millet spray scattered at one’s feet. But we passed them because we had somewhere to be; I wanted to
show her my flower garden which lay hidden behind the large juniper bush at the very far end of the
courtyard. In the meantime, my sister urged me to continue, so I did:
Watching Sophia that evening and knowing that I would die for her, and that she would do the same for
me, gave me some sort of confidence, I suppose, and calmed my nervous heart a bit. I remember smiling
when she pushed back a lock of her hair from her mouth and tucked it behind her ear. She looked up
and threw me a sort of puzzled look.
I paused for a few seconds, reflecting on the sweet memory.
What did you tell her?
I said, ‘Sophia, you are beautiful. You always make me so happy; I never imagined I’d feel so complete.
When you came into my life, I was shattered. Nothing felt real and, honestly, nothing mattered to me.
And you changed everything.’
And what did she say to that?
‘I know, you tell me all the time.’
That’s all?
That’s all.
Then what?
I remember us walking for a few more minutes when suddenly we came across hundreds and hundreds
of little pink heart-shaped shells strewn throughout a long length of sand ahead of us. As we continued, I
remember Sophia seeing a few broken, jagged shells protruding from the ground and kicking them
aside. She never stopped treading carefully.
At that point, my sister decided to take a short break. She sat down on a bench and seemed to admire a
tiered fountain depicting a beautiful dame with long flowing hair swinging a hammer, almost bigger than
the woman herself, at another, but rather beastly, woman. I cringed upon approaching the concrete
sculpture and quickly turned my head; I always had a particular distaste for the fountain so I instead
watched a small group of finches as they flew by overhead. I looked over at my sister. She was once a
very beautiful girl: her blue eyes were always alit and she was always smiling. These days, however, her
eyes, the bright color having long faded, lay blank and gray and tired and her thin face seemed to give
permanent residence to an unwelcoming scowl.
After a few short moments my sister stood up and wrapped her right arm around my left, and we kept
walking.
Continue.
Okay. At that point I started reminding Sophia about the day I first talked to her.
‘I think about the first time we met all the time. It was at that little costume party during our senior year,
remember?’ I was looking up at the slowly darkening sky ahead of us as I recollected the old memory. I
reminded her that she dressed up as an Indian queen, but she was quick to correct me:
‘Mohini was a Goddess.’
I laughed. I told her that, nevertheless, from the very moment I fell in love with her she had been so
good to me. I was about to tell her that I couldn’t really ask much more of her, but that was obviously
untrue since I was about to ask much, much more of her. So instead I just said, ‘I love you.’
I paused again.
What did she say?
She grimaced, actually. She lifted up her foot and underneath was a crushed shell with a few drops of
blood on it. I began to take a knee to examine her foot but she recoiled.
‘No. I told you I was fine, Jake,’ she said.
So, I stood back up, brushed the sand off of my knee, and we continued to walk along the edge of the
river. She fiddled with her favorite little pearl bracelets as I dug my hands deep into the pockets of my
shorts, as if by grasping the small box hard enough, I might find some hidden reserve of confidence that
I couldn’t seem to find anywhere within me. My heart continued to pound and pound, but I kept talking
to her:
‘I just feel that we have something a lot of couples can only dream about. While everybody else argues
and tears each other down, we sort of, well I don’t know, elevate each other.’
Was that when you asked her to marry you?
No, it wasn’t.
Then what happened?
I let out a nervous laugh and freed my right hand from my pocket to give her a playful shove.
‘When is the last time we really argued, Sophia?’ I asked her, and she couldn’t remember.
‘I don’t know, I don’t really argue with you, Jake,’ she said.
The agreement helped pump a little confidence though my body. I remember thinking that all I had to
do was simply tell her exactly how I felt.
So, did you?
Of course I did. I stepped in front of her and spun around to face her. I placed both of my hands on her
shoulders, and looked directly into her eyes.
‘Sophia, you are absolutely gorgeous: you always have the biggest and brightest smile on your face, you
have the most beautiful pair of eyes I think God Himself has ever crafted, and not to mention you make
the most adorable little face when you yawn!’ I said laughing a little. The newfound confidence was
beginning to grow. ‘But the extent of your beauty goes so much further than that, Sophia: you have the
most welcoming personality and the word ‘no’ is almost completely nonexistent in your vocabulary;
you’re always the life of the party and when you want something you go out and get it and you don’t let
anything—or anyone—get in your way.’
I was staring intently into her eyes, trying my best to gauge her reaction while I spoke; my attempts,
however, were futile.
‘Sophia, I love you… with everything in me. My entire heart. The same heart that you mended just when
I thought it was beyond any hope for repair. I just want you to be happy.’
As I spoke the final words, there was a splash on the far side of the river. Sophia and I turned our heads
toward the sound: there was a man lowering a canoe into the water with one arm while his other
gripped an old brass lantern. He had on a black Greek fisherman’s cap, which, against the setting sun,
casted a dark shadow over his face. The canoe was painted black and, although this man was fishing
alone, could seat two people.
You never told me about that.
I know. I just remembered.
Keep going.
‘We can keep walking if you’d like,’ I suggested looking back at Sophia.
She was still looking at the other side of the river: it seemed that there was a recent fire there. The trees
were charred, beginning to crumble into ash, and there was still gray smoke rising from the ground.
Eventually, however, she turned and began walking; I strolled quietly next to her for another few
minutes.
My heart was beating loudly in my chest and with each passing minute I was growing more and more
nervous. She was looking out toward the river while the sun behind us set almost completely below the
horizon and most of the bright array of colors were slowly being replaced with darker shades of blue and
indigo. We walked slowly in silence until we reached a section of large brown igneous rock jutting
upwards out of the ground; the rocks seemed to continue upwards at a slight angle for a couple
hundred feet before dropping off, making a low cliff overlooking the remaining length of the river.
Something about those rocks and the little cliff looked oddly familiar, as if I had perhaps seen them in a
faraway dream. My heart felt as if it were doing somersaults but she began to climb, so I followed after.
‘Kind of hurts your feet, right? Maybe we shouldn’t climb on these.’ I said as I avoided stepping on a
rather sharp edge of the rock.
‘There’s no way around them,’ she said.
I told her that we could turn back as I glanced behind me to catch a glimpse of the last fading rays of the
setting sun. It was beautiful.
‘No. I don’t want to go back.’
So, I turned around and again proceeded to climb the soft slope of the rocks toward the low cliff. My
breathing grew as my heart began to thump in my chest again and the weight of the box burned in my
pocket. We kept climbing until we reached the edge of the cliff and, when we got there, I stood and
stared at her as she admired the dark skies blanketing the cold river.
I sighed.
Look, we’re here now.
My sister stopped and grabbed my arm; I turned to look at her hard gaze.
That’s when you asked her to marry you.
Yes, it was.
What did she say to you, Jake?
I unclenched my sister’s white knuckles from my elbow, and spoke softly:
Sister, there comes a point where words become unnecessary. I saw her eyes and knew exactly what
she was thinking; she needn’t say a word.
A lonely tear crawled down my sister’s pale cheek.
But she did learn something that night, sister, something she hadn’t begun that evening knowing.
What was she thinking, Jake? And—what did she learn?
I wiped the wetness from her face with my thumb and looked into her eyes.
Eternity is a long damn time, my sister. And it is indeed.
My sister seemed to grow only more puzzled. Her eyes darting around in mine, she searched for
something.
But we were here now, and I wanted to show her my flowers. I slowly backed away from my sister and
ushered her around the large bush.
By the time she had wiped her face once more and followed me around the bush, I was already kneeling
over my newest flower; it was a yellow unplanted daffodil that I had found near the entrance of the
courtyard, hiding in the shadow of a large tree.
My sister gasped and brought her hands to her mouth as she saw it.
I had not expected anything else: it was beautiful. Although most of the flowers I had planted before
were dying, indeed passing through nature to eternity, my yellow daffodil was going to stand tall and
promising. I placed the roots of the flower into a hole I had dug earlier and scooped fresh soil onto them
until they were completely covered and the daffodil could stand on its own. I smiled and, still kneeling, I
looked up at my sister.
She was crying. Tears were rolling down her face and her body was trembling.
Sister, I don’t get it. You don’t like it?
She forced her eyes away from my flower and stared at me.
What did you do, Jake?
I planted a flower, it’s a daffodil. I’ve planted a lot of other flowers actually. They’re dead now, but this
one is alive.
I glanced at my flower and then back at her. She was sobbing, and her face became a clammy mess.
Fighting to open her eyes as tears poured out, she spoke:
Dear God, brother, is that what you see?
She took a few steps back and, without taking her eyes off of mine, whispered to me. I watched as the
whisper got caught in the wind and flew away. She turned around and walked back across the
courtyard. She passed the fountain, and the bird feeders, and a group of restless finches who, as she
passed, also flew into the sky, chasing the bright sun. I watched, completely still, as she walked slowly
away, growing smaller and smaller as if she were merely a fading memory already. Nothing in this world
ever remained, I figured; the life of everything around me seemed compelled to flicker away like a
candle in the fog of night. I watched her disappear and I looked back at my yellow daffodil and smiled:
Its beauty was everlasting.
Anthony J. Gonzalez