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JANUARY 13, 2011 11:48PM

The Shop Girl

Rate: 14 Flag

She quietly typed her name in next to his. Giving herself a way to imagine it. What would a life with him been like. She really had no idea. It was so far away in the past. It was a bit of something that once in a while seemed like it was real, and most likely it was not.

So much of her memory was being eaten away by this terrible disease. She had to remind herself of what was real and what was not all the time. She had a very interesting life, too interesting for some tastes.

The shoes at the Papagallo shop. She only bought them on sale back then. Her dresses were short, her body was thin, she was tall. Her hair was a kind of gilded chestnut. The eyes which looked out then were a hazel green, and mostly, well, mostly not too made up. Mostly beautiful. They looked into his and saw someone that no one else had seen before.

He could be spent. He could be drunk in and used up and spent, all in one delicious gaze as she became aware of him. She now cannot remember how they first met. Oh, she knew the place, the year, the season, but not the moment. Wait, was it that Mrs. Petruseka that introduced them? She knew him. Yes, she was playing match maker. He must have expressed an interest in her. He must have asked to be introduced. 

Just a little shop girl in for the summer. Working on a typewriter. Barely knowing where the keys were. That was her. She was terrible at it. He was in a suit. He looked short, and thin, but something about him was captivating. He was in his own way handsome. He worked in Antique Silver. His department worked under the same man whose office she worked in.

That is somehow, how they met. In a musty old department store that once heralded the era of elegant ladies who shopped, dined and sent their packages home. They were riding the tail of the comet, in a few years the place would not be recognizable and in a few decades it would be completely gone. Gone, just like the shadow of this young man and this young woman, about to embark on the most wonderful adventure of first love.

 She could remember it if she slept. If she laid down her head and conjured the dreams, it would play out for her like a movie. She would remember the first kiss by Rodin's the Thinker, a small, secluded pond. Just the right spot for the most romantic kiss recorded in this world. It was the one where dewdrops left the most  interesting glow, to light the way under the leaning tree. Where the hedges hid them for a single moment in time, that was never to be repeated again.

A first kiss with meaning and passion met equally. Not the french kiss trial on the speech bus with a boy on the team. Not an experiment. No, the first kiss, a contract almost, to begin something very meaningful.

Closing her eyes, she laid back. Gone were the age spots on her hands, gone the body of a matron, gone the silver hair, gone the demeanor of an aged woman, in its place the her of long ago, the shop girl.  

 

rodin 

The Thinker by Rodin, Philadelphia 

 

 Copyright 2011 by SheilaTGTG55  Wiki Image

 

 

 

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Comments

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Here is something completely different for your reading escape. Enjoy!
I like this very much, Sheila. Dreams, memories, what we remember or don't. Fascinating stuff here. R
Rita: Thanks, I wanted to give myself and everyone else a break from all the political and get to dream land.
I loved the kiss. I too need something to smile about.
HUGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
I did enjoy this, Sheila. You portrayed beautifully both the sadness and delight of memory loss and remembrances, of love, youth and the fragility of older age. Lovely!
Yes, yes, yes. Memories and dreams can sustain us. Sheila, this is just lovely. Beautifully written.
Great writing Sheila. A kiss by Rodin's the Thinker. I wonder what you thought of next?
Kisses from the guy on the speech team. I can relate!
I loved the ending...the loss, but the escape too. Have been to the Rodin museum in Philly-superb. Lovely piece Sheila! Many thanks @R.:}
And a great reading escape it is, Sheila...Thanks
"...french kiss trial..." Wasn't that an adolescent shocker? I was so repulsed, I thought about becoming a nun.

Such a beautiful memory piece of how it's done right.
When I close my eyes later I won't see ny age spots or the body of an old nan. I will be twenty again.

Very nice Sheila. Very nice indeed.
I am in love with this escape. I want to close my eyes and wae up in a new body ever so badly too.
Linda: Yes, a kiss like no other. A dream of something. The first one with a balance in it. Most of us have had at least one of those.

Hayley: Glad you could stop by.

Kate: Yes, those with memory loss might have it on the rest of us. They live in those dreams of the past. They don't have to see the present and live in it.

Faye: Thank you, what a book we could create in our heads....I know you know. All of us women have memories which, we can take a grain of and enchant.

Scanner: Well I could tell you, but you could probably figure some of that out....

Maryway: Yes!

Muse: Life is a series of loss, but memory a method to escape and reframe it, to make it work for us on many levels. Whoever designed this mind knew what they were doing I think. If we had to age and die, how wonderful to have murky swirling memories in fog to comfort us, challenge us and make us content.

Maryann: Yes, just a little imaginative escape. I bet you can conjure up a few yourself! We women of the world, can see the beauty too.

Linnnn: Yes, yes, shocking! My aunt was a nun and it was looking like a pretty good option to me for a while...ahahahaha.

torrito: We are what is in our hearts and what we put in our minds. I deal with the realities but I paint it all with memory and dreams too. It is a pleasant place sometimes, nes pa?

Mission: I understand. I live part in the past sometimes, and yet, am very happy to be where I am, who I am now. But, there is something very magical about how we remember the past too. Nice place to visit.