Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
embarked toward the Alps. It was snowing lightly and the pines
at the roadside had a Christmas-card look. I switched on the
radio and Christmas music was everywhere. It made me more than a
little homesick and brought back pleasant memories of my
childhood. I was driving in a dreamy reverie when I saw a couple
hitching on the side of the road. Ordinarily, I don’t pick up
hitchhikers but my loneliness was getting the best of me and I
slowed down to look them over. They were young, most likely in
their twenties, and were dressed in ski clothes. Each had a pack
on their back and wore sunglasses. He wore a knit cap and she
wore earmuffs which allowed her long black hair to blow
attractively in the winter wind. I stopped and they both piled
into the back seat of the Mercedes, placing their packs on the
floor.
I quickly found out they were Americans, vacationing for
the Christmas/New Year holiday. Their names were Scott Cleary
and Adelaide Loomer and they lived together in Manhattan. They
were going to the same hotel and would rent skis and boots. They
were hitching to save the exorbitant price of a rented car and
gasoline.
They had removed their glasses and headgear and I looked
them over through the rear-view mirror. He was small and wiry
with an engaging visage which was pleasant but just short of
handsome. She was probably about the same size as he and wore no
makeup, making it difficult to tell if she was plain or pretty.
They wanted to know what I was doing in Europe all alone at
Christmas time. I was so happy to have someone to talk to that I
launched into the whole story, leaving out no details.
“Oh, God, I think that’s so cool,” she said and I could
see the fascination in her eyes.
He just sat there, shaking his head in wonderment while
she kept pressing me for details.
“I dropped out of college when I was nineteen and did a
very similar thing,” she said. “I did the United States and
Mexico, though. I finally got tired of it and went back to
school and graduated. I’m an accountant.”
“Funny,” I chuckled, “you don’t look like my idea of an
accountant. What do you do, Scott?”
He was strangely silent for a while and finally answered.
“I’m an inventor,” he said. “I do kind of odd jobs to
support myself until I can get my inventions perfected.”
“What have you invented?” I asked, and was rewarded with
what seemed like an interminable silence.
“Scott is working on several devices to increase the
efficiency of aircraft engines,” she said proudly.
“Oh,” I said. “Are you an aeronautical engineer?”
“Well, kind of. I’ve been fooling around with aircraft
engines all my life and I did a hitch in the air force. They
gave me some courses and I read a lot of books. Most of all,
though, I have lots of experience. A friend and I have a small
lab at an airfield in New Jersey.”
“That’s great,” I said sincerely. “I’ve always envied
people who could create mechanical things. One of the things
I’ve always wondered about is how I would survive if I were
suddenly cast upon a desert island with all of the natural
resources at my command. I know that I couldn’t create anything
mechanical. It’s always bothered me. I really envy you.”
“That’s really funny,” he said. “I envy you and Addie.
I’m lousy with numbers and letters. I always feel inferior
around people like you.”
“Sometimes,” I said, “I feel utterly useless. Words and
management books sound romantic in today’s world but they seem so
utterly impractical if you put life into its basic sense.”
Adelaide interjected, “It just shows you that no one is
really happy. Everyone wants to be somebody else and is insecure
with himself.”
I quoted something Henry David Thoreau said: “Most men
lead lives of quiet desperation.” I thought as I said this that
it most certainly applied to me, although my desperation could
hardly be called quiet.
“Don’t forget women,” she said. “You men haven’t cornered
the market on desperation yet. I’ve got five years in analysis
to prove it.”
Scott suddenly turned angry. “Just forget the analysis
shit, okay? I’ve had about enough of your neurotic rambling. If
we had half the money you’ve spent on your dumb analyst, we
wouldn’t be hitchhiking. We’d be driving the Mercedes.”
With that, the car became suddenly quiet. She sulked in a
corner of the back seat and he just looked at the scenery going
by. I felt uncomfortable and couldn’t think of anything else to
say. I turned up the radio and American music came over the
airwaves and made me feel just a little homesick. I felt out of
place with this young couple and I wondered whether I had made a
mistake coming to this part of the world on Christmas. I didn’t
want to feel lonely at Christmas. I could remember the
Christmases of my childhood before I came into Julie’s Jewish
world and my ecumenical world which was really a neutral one. We
had a tree which was always decorated with gaily colored baubles
and candy canes. I remembered stealing just enough canes from
the tree so that no one would notice they were gone. All of a
sudden, I missed my parents terribly and tears ran down my face.
I was happy that I was wearing sunglasses. It was so hard to
believe that my parents were dead. Sometimes I would drive by
their old house, the one I grew up in, which had been sold after
their death. I had this feeling that if I got out of the car and
rang the bell, my mother would come to the door, wearing that
incredible smile she always seemed to sport, and hug me as she
always did when I arrived. I guess my crying was audible because
suddenly I felt a cool, soft female hand stroking my neck. I
looked in the mirror and saw Scott fast asleep.
“Are you okay?” she said gently.
“It’s nothing,” I said. “You wouldn’t understand.”
“You’d be surprised; I understand a lot of things. You
look like a person desperately in need of a hug.”
I laughed. “Yeah, I guess that’s it. I need a hug.”
With that, she put her arms around my neck and put her
cheek against mine. She smelled vaguely of something herbal. A
very pleasant smell. Saying nothing, she remained that way for a
long time. All the while I gazed into the mirror looking at
Scott, not wanting a confrontation with this young man who seemed
to be wound tight as a drum. Finally, she kissed me tenderly on
the neck, sending a pleasant tremor through my body and leaned
back into her seat. I looked into the mirror and made eye
contact. We looked into each other’s eyes for a long time. I
had no idea at that time what the looks meant and quickly shook
her from my mind.
The road became extremely narrow and curvy as we ascended
into the Alps. I looked straight ahead and shut off the radio.
Static and interference were affecting my concentration.
Finally, we rolled into the hotel complex. It consisted
of three buildings which were not far from the ski lifts. One
could literally ski to one’s hotel. The day was sunny and
beautiful and I felt a jolt of exhilaration. Christmas was a day
and a half away and the hotel was starting to fill for the
holidays. The lobby was crowded and it took some time to get our
respective room keys. Scott and Addie, after thanking me
politely, went their own way and disappeared to God knows where
in this enormous complex. I fully expected never to see them
again.
My room was pleasant, with a view of the mountains and a
window that was quite large. I had it fully opened and breathed
in the cool mountain air while the warm sun bathed the room in
light. The bed was single size and there were two of them in the
room. I sat on the mattress and was immediately disappointed.
Like most European hotels that are not rated Deluxe the mattress
was saggy, lumpy, and not to the American taste. I had lived
with beds like this before and it wasn’t really any big deal.
The bathroom was larger than I expected. There was a large
bathtub with a hand-held shower and no shower curtain. There was
a toilet and a bidet and a sink that was large and deep. There
was a glass shelf above the sink, on which I laid out my toilet
articles. There were two large bath towels hanging on a heated
rack and a small package of nondescript soap. Luckily, as I
always did, I came with my own large bar of soap.
I filled the bathtub with hot water. It was very deep and
I looked forward to steeping myself for a long time and then
having a good nap. If I awakened in time, there was still time
to arrange for my ski and boot rental. If not, I could do it in
the morning.
I sat slowly in the tub, getting used to the hot water,
and finally settled comfortably in. It was about three in the
afternoon and dinner would be about seven. I was a little hungry
and thought that after my nap I might go to the hotel bar for a
Bloody Mary. I lingered in the bath for the best part of an
hour, soaping myself luxuriously and adding hot water as the bath
turned lukewarm. I finally emerged, dried myself and crawled,
naked, under the covers of one of the beds.
I don’t know how long I was sleeping when I was awakened
by a knocking on my door. I got out of bed, holding the bath
towel around my waist and opened the door. Addie stood there,
her hair hanging straight and wet as if she had just emerged from
the shower. She was wearing a black turtleneck sweater and a
pair of faded jeans.
“I have to see you,” she said. The look on her face was
that of a little girl who was about to cry. She wore no makeup
and her face was cleanly scrubbed. Except for her woman’s body,
she really did look like a little girl.
“Sure, come on in.” I was puzzled as to what the urgency
of this visit was. I excused myself momentarily and went into
the bathroom and slipped on a robe. I brushed my hair and took a
swig of mouthwash and returned to the room. She was sitting on
the one chair provided with the room. I sat on the edge of the
bed and waited for her to speak. She sat there silently for what
seemed like a long time. Finally, she spoke.
“I’m so unhappy, I feel like I’m going to crack. You
don’t have anything to drink, do you?”
I went to my closet and brought out my bottle of single—
malt Scotch and returned to the bathroom and filled two plastic
glasses with about three fingers of the amber liquid.
“Thanks,” she said gratefully and sipped hers delicately
before speaking again. I tipped my glass and the whiskey felt
good going down. The soft warm breeze that blew in from the
window was now cold and I walked over and closed the window. The
only light on was in the bathroom and the impending twilight gave
the room an ethereal look.
She looked at me with her large, dark eyes. “I don’t
really know why, but when I talked to you in the car this
afternoon, I found someone I could really lean on. I’ve been
with Scott a long time and it only gets worse. I mean … he’s
okay … he doesn’t beat me or anything like that but he has no
idea of how to comfort me when I’m down. He laughs at my shrink
but gives me no love in the mental sense. I can’t live on sex
alone. I need a hug too. You understood the concept of needing
a hug. Well, I need a hug and I can’t get it from him. Will you
give me a hug?”
I was at a loss to react. “Where is Scott now?” I said.
“He’s sleeping and, the way he sleeps, he’s out for the
night.”
She got up from the chair and walked over to me. I sat on
the edge of the bed, dumbfounded. She put her arms around my
neck and pressed her cheek to mine. I put one hand on her back
and patted it gently. I couldn’t think of anything to say, so I
said, “There, there,” which immediately sounded stupid to me. I
hadn’t had sex since Budapest and I hadn’t had sex with affection
since Switzerland, so I found myself becoming aroused, even
though I was trying to be fatherly to this girl who was at least
thirty years younger than I. She put her hand on my bare chest
and gently ran her slender fingers through the hair, all the
while kissing my neck and cheeks. I gently pushed her away.
“Addie, I’m only human, you know. If you don’t go away, I won’t
be able to keep my hands off you.”
She moved away and stood momentarily facing me. By this
time, the room was dark, save for the bathroom light. She raised
the sweater over her head and dropped the jeans. She was naked
underneath. I looked at her perfect body, with large globular
breasts, standing before me, with the light from the bathroom
highlighting every curve. I removed my robe and pulled her down,
kissing her tenderly on the lips. It was a long time before I
spoke.
“Did you really come here just for a hug?” I said as I
ran my hands down her back and over her smooth buttocks.
“I really thought so,” she said. “Up until the time I
went to get dressed when I got out of the shower. That was when