Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
routine.
I tossed and turned in my bed for hours. I had a tight
feeling in my chest and gut. I couldn’t tell what I was feeling.
Anger was mixed with grief and emptiness was mixed with a vague
feeling of a monkey being off my back. Julie asked me what the
matter was at breakfast that morning and I contrived a story
about business pressures. My drive into the city seemed endless
and I drove in a trance. I felt like a teenager who had broken
up with his steady. I was desperate and ready to play the fool,
a role that I sadly played for the best part of the next year. I
stopped at a florist shop and picked up a dozen roses. I was
convinced at this time that I was ready to leave my wife, my
home, and my children for this woman. I wrote a card and
enclosed it with the flowers:
“Laura, my love. Only you can make my
dreams come true. Marry me. I love you, Bob.”
Laura was a person of rigid habits and disciplines. I
knew that at precisely ten there was a scheduled coffee break, at
which time she always headed for the ladies’ room in the hall.
We had met there so many times. We always joked that it was like
meeting between classes in high school. I actually lurked in the
hall with my box of flowers under my arm. People looked at me
like I was some sort of idiot, but my pain precluded any sane and
reasonable behavior. I saw her walk out the door of her office
and my heart skipped a beat. My fantasy was that she would
tearfully run to my arms and everything would be as it was.
Instead, she glared at me with a look of hate in her eyes that I
had never seen before. The face that always looked so pretty to
me, even in the morning upon waking up, took on an ugliness I had
never seen before. She screamed at the top of her lungs. I felt
lucky that no one else was in the hallway at the time. “I told
you it’s over. Stop trying to make something out of this. It’s
hopeless. Leave me alone, leave me alone, leave me alone!”
I threw the flowers at her feet and literally ran back to
my office. The receptionist looked at me like I was a madman.
I locked myself in my office and actually sat there crying
like a baby. I think I hated myself at that moment more than
anything.
About twenty minutes later, my private line rang. I
picked it up with anticipation. Laura’s voice was calm and soft.
“That was very sweet; I’m sorry I lost my temper.”
I breathed a sigh of relief. “Did you read the card?”
She said that she had and that it moved her deeply and
before I could get a word in she said, “I’m very confused; you’ve
got to give me time to think. There’s no one else, believe me,
but I’ve been thinking about this for a long time. If I didn’t
discuss it, it’s because I have great difficulty putting the
words together. I’m not like you.”
I pleaded and cajoled and even sounded to myself like I
was whining and sniveling. I knew that I was putting myself in a
position of great weakness, but I was obsessed. She finally told
me that she couldn’t speak any longer and hung up. I managed to
get her to lunch several times in the next few weeks but as soon
as my whining and begging started she clammed up and the lunch
turned into a shambles. Her overriding theme at all times was
that nothing had changed. She still felt the same about me but
was not willing to go back into what she now seemed to consider a
bad situation for her. My despair evolved into despondency and I
just couldn’t shake it off. If it wasn’t for the friendship and
love of Ann Marie who was, through everything, my sister, my
mother, my lover, I think I would have gone off the deep end.
***
I reached the Place de la Concorde and looked over the
vast panorama of this magnificent square. I tried to imagine
that this was once the place where some of France’s most famous
sons and daughters literally lost their heads. It was hard to
believe that this elegant setting was once bathed in human blood.
I lingered for a long time, studying each monument and perusing
the obelisk in depth. This structure is seventy-five feet high
and is well over three thousand years old, but on my previous
trips I gave it no more than a passing glance. I turned away
from the river and walked to the Rue de Rivoli.
I walked slowly along this magnificent arcaded street,
slowly and leisurely looking into shop windows and strolling
through hotel lobbies. I was no longer lonely and felt a strange
and cleansing calm cover over me. I felt that in a few short
days I had come a long way toward a peace within myself. I felt
that looking from afar I could better sort out some of the things
in my life that were bothering me. I would call Ann Marie this
evening to let her know where I could be reached. She was the
one link between the world and Robert Boyd. Her husband,
Dominic, had died three years before and her son was living in
North Carolina. She lived in a modest home in Douglaston, Long
Island, and could be communicated with easily. Julie spoke to
her constantly so that if anything was wrong with my family, Ann
Marie would know.
I wandered through the streets of Paris, occasionally
alighting at a sidewalk caf´e for wine or coffee. I felt that I
had never felt Paris before. I had seen it but never felt it. I
stopped at a kiosk and bought the latest edition of the French
pictorial magazine, Paris-Match. It was fun sipping wine and
leafing through the ads and photos. I found that, surprisingly,
my French was still strong and that I could read a good deal of
the text.
Afterward, I walked all the way to Montmartre, passing the
white-domed basilica of Sacre Coeur, located atop the highest
hill in Paris. I wandered through the main square and through
the streets and felt like I was walking through a Utrillo
painting. I took my time and drank in the street scene. I tried
to make believe I wasn’t a tourist, but to no avail. I soon
tired of the unimpressive paintings by artists imitating other
artists and looked for a place to have some lunch. Montmartre
seemed to get more seedy and dirty each time I visited it. After
about ten more minutes of looking around without my heart in it,
I decided on the Metro and lunch on the Champs-Elys´ees.
I was glad to sit down in the Metro after a long morning
of being on my feet. I leaned back in my seat and relaxed,
closing my eyes.
After what couldn’t have been more than a few minutes, I
was awakened by a beautiful female voice, accompanied by a
guitar, singing a familiar John Denver song. She looked to be in
her middle or late thirties and wore her blonde hair long and
straight, in the style of a 1960’s hippie. She wore round
rimless glasses and looked to me like the people you always see
hanging around Madison Square Garden in New York when the
Grateful Dead are in town. She wore high boots, a long print
skirt, and a buckskin vest over a yellowing white blouse. On the
floor was an overturned floppy hat with a smattering of coins and
bills from various countries. We made eye contact, and she,
being cognizant of the indifference of the other passengers,
focused exclusively on me. She could see that I really loved her
music and performed in great style. My attention seemed to
inspire her as we rolled along.
When the train stopped at L’Etoile station, I dropped
fifty francs in the hat and turned to leave the train. As I was
walking up the stairs to the exit, my peripheral vision spotted
her print skirt trailing behind me. Just as I exited she fell in
beside me.
“You really liked my music, didn’t you?”
“It was very professional,” I said. “Why is a girl of
your talents singing for pennies on the Paris Metro?”
“It’s a long story,” she said, in an obviously mid-western
American accent. “Buy me lunch and I’ll tell all.”
I was so grateful for the company that I accepted eagerly.
We sat down at a charming sidewalk caf´e on the Champs
D’Elys´ee. I ordered a salad and a glass of wine and she ordered
enough to feed the two of us. I surmised she hadn’t had a decent
meal for a long while. She seemed to hold back on the promised
story until she sated her appetite and imbibed several glasses of
wine. How we must have looked together! The well-groomed
businessman and the 1960’s hippie in quasi-western dress, floppy
hat, and guitar leaning against the chair. She looked at me for
a few silent moments with her sad light-blue eyes and told me her
story slowly and in great detail. Her name was Jane Brubaker and
she came originally from Toledo, Ohio. She attended the
University of Michigan, which is a short distance away in Ann
Arbor, and while in her freshman year was captivated by a fellow
student, an angry young man who was the archetypical protestor of
the era. He was anti-establishment and, like so many of his ilk,
was into hallucinogenic drugs. Rock music was his undying
passion. Some time during her first semester, they got into his
van and headed for the west coast. She discovered that she had a
better-than-average singing voice and learned the guitar during
the time she spent with him. They bummed around America for five
years, making a living by singing, doing odd jobs, and
occasionally stealing. They partook of marijuana, quaaludes,
mescaline, heroin, cheap wine, and beer. There was scarcely a
day of her life that she wasn’t stoned.
One morning she crawled out of her sleeping bag in an
abandoned barn near Sacramento and found her companion stiff and
cold in his sleeping bag, a needle sticking out of his arm. Her
first thought was to run, but instead she got into the van and
found the local police. She hadn’t thought of tidying up the
barn and was arrested for possession of drugs. She spent three
years in the California Women’s Penitentiary at Tehachapi. She
was raped and beaten by other inmates and led the most miserable
of existences. When she was released, she was a beaten and cowed
woman with the shakes and a thousand-yard stare. She went to
live with friends made during her travels who lived in Los
Angeles. One night she almost overdosed, but her friends were
afraid to take her to a hospital, lest she end up back in prison.
Near death, she was miraculously nursed back to health by her
friends. For almost a year, she was semi-comatose and
incoherent. When she finally recovered, her friends scraped up
enough money for a bus ticket and sent her back to Toledo. Her
parents, who had long ago given her up for dead, were overjoyed.
She stayed at home reluctant to do anything but lay around all
day strumming her guitar and staring into space. One night she
swallowed a whole bottle of aspirin in an attempt at suicide. If
she hadn’t rolled from her bed with a loud thump, she may not
have survived.
Her next stop was a private psychiatric clinic, which
became her home for six years. When the family decided she was
fit to be released, she was thirty-one years old, with no job, no
professional skills, and a history of prison and psychiatric
rehabilitation. She practiced her music with a great dedication
and finally landed a job singing and playing at a lounge near the
university. She was so successful that she was approached by two
male professionals who wanted to put together a Peter-Paul-and—
Mary-style act and tour Europe. The group was a mild success
until it broke up suddenly about a year ago. Jane decided to
stay on the continent and attempt to make it on her own. She got
a few bookings but eventually ended up stranded here in Paris
after going through all of her money. The costume she was
wearing, which made me think she was a hippie, was actually a
costume from the act.
“Where are you living?” I said.
She looked at me for what seemed like a long time with
those sad, light-blue eyes that were already haunting me. “What
little belongings I have left are in an abandoned building in
Montparnasse. I sleep there and use public toilets for bathing.”
I stupidly asked her how she bathes in a public toilet and
she gave a detailed explanation of wetting rags or paper toweling
and standing naked in a booth and washing herself down. She
washed her clothing in the sink and carried it back to the
abandoned building where she hung it to dry. Most of the money
she made was used for food and other necessities. She knew that,
unless she caught on with a real job, she could never accumulate
enough for airfare back to America.
“Why don’t you ask your parents for the money?” I queried.
She explained that her father was now dead and that she
didn’t want to be a further burden on her mother after all the
pain she had already caused.
“My mother thinks I’m still a great success and knockin’
‘em dead in Europe I prefer to leave it that way.”
We sat silently for a long time, eating and drinking, when
I realized I hadn’t even told her my name. I told my story. She