Thursday, August 20, 2009

Amaia

A newcomer

Amaia landed in Ipswich late 2006, possibly early 2007. She brought in her bags the essence of a sun-drenched Spain, the mellow flavors of the Mediterranean, and  the singing accents of the Sierra Nevada. Or so would the poet at the height of the XIXth century’s Romanticism have rambled. This was the time when Byron roamed about a neo-classical Greece while Garibaldi fought for his revolutionary ideals in nearby Italy.
The truth is, however, not so grand. Amaia is in fact from Northern Spain. Her home province is probably quite the climatic opposite of Suffolk: where Wolsey’s homeland is known for its dry weather in the UK (relative dry weather, we are after all in a very humid - to put it mildly - island), Navarra is on the contrary possibly of the more humid provinces of a bone-dry peninsula. Located at the easternmost tip of what is considered as Green Spain, the northern counties bow to the Atlantic as it brings in lashes of relentless rain. So much for Amaia’s sun-drenched, mediterranean-flavored Spain. As for the accents, in lieu of a melodious singing voice, people from Navarra are said to talk grossly, in a very recognizable way. I wouldn’t judge local accents though. I struggle enough as it is with English and French ones. I will return to Caesar what belongs to him and leave the accent debate to Native Spaniards.

Romance in the air

In this great confusion of Spanish stereotypes, Amaia had nonetheless arrived in the capital of Suffolk somewhere between 2006 and 2007. Her pretty face, ebony dark curly hair, and deep eyes soon had the better of most single chaps in our group of friends. Surely, soon enough a long list of suitors formed about her - much like Japanese tourists huddle around the Mona Lisa in Paris. Phone numbers were exchanged, compliments were hushed down the table at lunchtime, and invitations were sent.
I must admit I myself was not indifferent to Amaia’s charms. Then again, I have a weak spot for anything ‘made in Spain’. But at the time, I was happily engaged in a deep and meaningful relationship (ahem) with my then beloved Laurine (God bless her cotton stockings).
The first true contact I had with the newcomer was - I believe - on a gloriously sunny Saturday afternoon. To be quite frank, I can’t remember the weather, but it suits the storyboard. I then lived with 2 fellow Germans, Mirko and Michael. None of us really cooked then except when either Mirko’s girlfriend or mine came round. Shopping was therefore limited to the strict minimum and usually the bright orange bags we brought home from Sainsbury’s only contained breakfast items, bread, flour (for the bread-producing Germans), jams, and cheese. With this in mind, imagine Mirko’s surprise as well as mine when we suddenly saw Michael walking into the house plowing under the weight of several shopping bags full to the brim of fresh produce, meat, sauce, and even a bottle of red wine. What was he brewing? What surprise was he cooking us? Literally… Well almost, for if indeed he was about to toss together a five-star meal, neither Mirko nor I were invited to the table. Shyly, Michael came into the living room and told us he had company for lunch and asked us whether we minded sticking to the living room and not intruding into the kitchen, converted into his den for the time of the meal.
Mirko and I glanced at each other, shrugged our shoulders, and resumed whatever important task we were doing, keep well clear of the kitchem and its cacophony of plates banging, pots clashing, and pans simmering on the cooker. Then silence. A long pause. The meal must be ready. The doorbell - well a knock (the doorbell is broken). A rush of air - Michael running down the corridor - the door opens. Voices are heard. And in comes none other than Amaia. Yes, sir. Our very own Michael, slightly baldish (God bless his remaining hair), uncanny grin, and a good heart, had invited Amaia, the ravishing Pamplonese, to a tête-à-tête dinner. On the scale from zero to Hyacinth Bouquet’s candlelight supper, Michael scored quite high that day. If only he’d had hand-painted perrywinkle china…
Mirko and I refrained from intruding into the couple’s romantic lunch in the kitchen and we tried to muffle as much as we could our laughter. When I mention the event nowadays to Amaia, she dismisses it as being a simple lunch with no hidden agenda. Yes, we believe you, it’s Michael’s intentions that we question.

The candy machine

Michael was not alone in his efforts as Ruben, my other housemate, and Amaia’s galant knight and defender, later explained. And I now recall the many moments spent at the candy machine during coffee breaks. Back in the old day, I used to work in a team of 4 - all friends - developers. A hairy Italian chap called Mauri, a military-obsessed Dane, Lenni, and our lyrical day-dreaming Austrian Andreas. The building we were located in had no candy or coffee machine much to our dismay and we therefore had to walk to the building next door to refill on unhealthy sugary sweets in the likes of Kit Kat, Twix, and Mars. Amaia so happened to work in that building almost nearly directly above the candy machine. Our Great Dane would always try to meet up with Amaia there and share a bit of chinwag. Chocolate certainly maintained the love feel in the air. All we now needed was Robbie Williams and his hit song ‘all I want to feel’.

Feria de Pamplona

I didn’t see much of Amaia in the following months. I had little if no social life then and never met with the Spanish gang. I merely noticed she seemed to get excited everytime the number of the day matched the number of the month, i.e. the 2nd of Feb, 3rd of March, and so on. Was it witchcraft? No, wisely replied Lenni coming back from a reconnaissance mission. It’s all about bulls, running, and Hemingway? Ah and it involves drinking and partying until the wee hours of the morning. The Feria of Pamplona of course - 7th of July.

Moving homes

A year went by, months flew until days wound down to April 2008. Forced to move out of their house because of landlord issues, Amaia & Ruben were looking for a new roof. At the same time, JuanLu was also searching for a place where to settle down. And I was reluctantly giving up my apartment where I’d shared so many precious moments. Three Spaniards, one Frenchman looking for roof big enough for 4 with possibly room for a guest (code name Tikka). The answer to this hypothetic ad came from the offices of Martin & Co, a letting agency and its charming blonde agent who toured us round a house in Bull Rd - quite a fitting name for a mainly Spanish household. It’s a dire shame none of our last names is Osborne. Contracts were signed, money changed hands, keys replicated. Soon, furniture was flying around the house. At this precise moment, a new chapter started.

…to be continued…

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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

The break-up - Part II

And so the ominous day comes along. Friday October 17th 2008. 3PM. Business as usual. The sun is shining out there or is it simply the knowledge that tomorrow I will be jetting off to Naples for the first time in a month? A meeting here and there swipe the morning hours away.

Natural Elements

And then suddenly the weatherman turned evil-wizard unleashes terrific thunderbolts, the entire building trembles, heavy showers lash the windows of my ground-floor office as I read the very simple French words Laurine has written me on MSN (of all places).
Now of course, it is still sunny outside - need I mention it? The weather only ever matches the main character’s mood in movies. Not real life. If only…

Drifting apart

A rupture is never good. A crack is no good sign, a fault more than a tectonic phenomenon. There is no perfect break-up, only perfect make ups, when they do happen. But an MSN separation is the Grand Canyon of all rifts small and mighty. It could be worse I guess. Much like a man asked his girlfriend to marry him on Google StreetView, Laurine could have posed with a sign in Naples to letter out her desire to carry on her life without me. Thank God, Naples isn’t quite digitized yet.

No, it didn’t really happen, did it?

From then on starts the period of denial, verbal jousts, pseudo-logical reasonings, knots in the brain, sordid calculations, phone harassments, and all for the benefit of mobile operators who reap in the cents of the rupture with their long cruel greedy clutches. Yes! Blame the Phone Operator! Go on, it feels good.
So there we are Friday Seventeenth of October 2008. It is between 5 PM and much later. I am quite under shock and am not really aware of what I’m doing. We have another meeting to close off the day’s work. But work is all in a daze. When I ask Laurine whether I should come, she merely replies ‘do as you like’. Reminds me of Mother when I wanted to do something she disapproved of.
I go out for dinner with friends - we wait for Sergio who never turns up and to top that points us to a shut restaurant. We then head out to the Galley in St Nicholas Street. A bit sordid really as I have only ever been there with Laurine. I remember Josh, Ji, Fadi. God knows who else was there. Ah yes the Bar XIX gang.

Math Myth

I eventually decide to not go to Stansted. Why? The simple answer is it’s easier to stay in bed than to get up at 2AM to grab a 2:30AM Stansted-bound bus. The more complicated answer is in the form of a question: am I that lazy that an early bird bus puts me off from seeing the gal of my dreams? I wish I knew how to draw. I’d pencil the equation of laziness vs. flying to Italy - surely less challenging that of Ostrogradsky.


It’s all Greek to me.
And so, over the following weeks, I ponder, wonder, chew over the previous years. I balance events, equate emotions, measure word impact, sketch out choices, calculate derivatives before integrating it all back together in a poorly knit bundle of feelings. I dream that Archimedes rings my doorbell and brings in a big papier-mâché sign spelling out Eurêka. But of course I don’t read Greek, not to mention he was slain by the Romans: oh dear it all boils back down to them and Italy.

Storia Consumendam Est

The hesitations & totters of my wee little brain do not end with whimsical equations that make no sense. But what happens next is for a later chapter where I get the unexpected visit from a charming young singer at my bedside. For now, here shall conclude the ramblings of a deflating heart.

Posted by The Blog Hiker at 10:56:45 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Monday, October 27, 2008

Orly Blues

I seldom write in French. The note hereafter which I’ve just dug out while sifting through emails is a small exception…

13:18 27/10/2008

Petite note depuis Orly.

Me voici attablé à un café-bar du terminal sud. Je tente de travailler ce qui n’est pas chose aisée vu le manque de sommeil: je n’ai dormi que 3h la nuit dernière et je me sens comme drogué maintenant. Je sirote un espresso en tentant de comprendre ce que j’écris sur mes «slides». Une voix monocorde lance des appels à passagers égarés, les uns en partance pour le Maroc, d’autres venant de Point à Pitre. J’aimerais qu’elle vienne annoncer ton arrivée surprise.
Malheureusement les contes de fées restent cantonnés aux étagères poussièreuses des bibliothèques pour enfants. Pourtant je suis sûr que toi plus que quiconque en ta qualité d’illustratrice détient la clef de ces contes de fées. Donc j’attends ta venue à ce café aéroportuaire…
Trêve de bagatelles, mes yeux se ferment, et je vois ton visage, je sens ta peau, tes yeux, tes sourcils, tes cheveux. Et ils me donnent du courage et de l’espoir. J’espère que tu ne prends pas ça du mauvais côté.
Je viens d’enlever l’étiquette de mon premier vol (Londres - Paris). Elle sent la colle, celle qu’on avait quand on était au primaire. Ces pots blancs et bleus je crois avec un bâtonnet orange que l’on prenait pour étaler cette glu blanche.
Nous venons de finaliser nos réservations pour le roadtrip. On restera dans deux gîtes de France en Gironde (Bourg) et à Mosnes, long de la Loire au lieu-dit du Buisson. Ça te plairaît j’en suis certain. Quand tu seras rentrée d’Italie, on pourra se le faire notre roadtrip. Je ne serai plus à Ipswich. Le Suffolk sans toi c’est un peu comme un crayon papier cassé, ça n’a pas de pointe comme dirait Blackadder. La traduction hélas ne rend pas le double sens (life without you is like a broken pencil, pointless… Tu connaissais déjà) Comment se passent tes cours? Rencontres-tu de nveaux étudiants? Les gens sont-ils sympas? Je t’ai déjà posé les questions mais je ne me lasse pas des réponses. Comment se passe le trajet en train? La ville de Sta Maria est-elle assez petite pour qu’on puisse facilement la parcourir à pied? Vas-tu souvent à l’amphithéatre? Es-tu déjà allée sur les sites importants comme Pompéi ou Herculanum (Ercolano comme tu me l’as appris)?
J’aimerais bien y aller avec toi, surtout Ercolano en fait, donc si tu veux bien attendre fin novembre, ça me ferait plaisir.
Emeline me demande de tes nouvelles. Elle est plus bavarde que jamais et croit toujours que je fais pipi au lit. Il faudra que je lui demande si toi aussi tu as eu droit à ça.
Hier nous nous sommes faits un repas du dimanche entre colocs (moins Amaia qui était à Londres). Les infirmières Pili et Maria sont venues se joindre à notre table. J’avais acheté de la venaison chez Abel & Cole. Ça m’a rappelé la fois où nous étions allés dans le Norfolk. Ma mémoire me fait défaut et je ne me souviens plus du nom de la propriété de la Nat’l Trust. Tout ce dont je me souviens est l’excursion bredouille vers le village Iceni. As-tu des photos de cette période?
Je vais aller faire mon check-in, je coupe cette lettre ici même. Réponds-moi ne serait-ce qu’un petit mot (un monosyllabique fera l’affaire).

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