The Beauty of Ordinary Life

Steel hissed as the tram reached the station and jerked to a halt. As the doors flapped open, Amália alighted, shaking her clinking umbrella until it opened with a thump. So what if she was running late? Let Patrick wait, for once. This was his idea, after all.
As she rushed down the sidewalk, her long green skirt dragging in the puddles, she replayed in her mind what she’d say to him. This time she wouldn’t put it off. Thunder cracked in the distance.
She waited at a traffic light and peered at her watch. Why hadn’t he given her more notice? Typical Patrick, she thought as rain pattered on the blue umbrella. Always so last-minute.
The lights changed. Honks and roaring engines overtook her as she tiptoed across the street, her high heels splashing on glittering puddles.
“Finally,” snapped Patrick, hands thrust deep in his gray coat pockets, as she approached. He had waited for her under an arch by the entrance to the concert hall. “We might as well forget it. Go somewhere else.”
“What?” said Amália. “What about our tickets?”
He shuffled as her umbrella dripped onto his shoes. “Forget it.” He shrugged within his coat. “They weren’t expensive.”
“Well, we can still try to see the second half.” She folded the umbrella and pushed past him to the door. She wasn’t having his passive-aggressive nonsense.
Patrick hesitated but followed. Their steps echoed in the empty foyer; everyone was already inside. He handed their tickets to a little man who took his time fishing with chubby fingers for spectacles in his pockets. A young lady with emerald earrings traded their umbrella and coats for a chip.
The stairs creaked as they rushed up the curved staircase but the doors to the auditorium were closed.
A woman walked slowly towards them along the corridor, past a vase with large flowers. “Sorry, we’ve already started,” she said. Her hair was all white but she wore a colorful scarf. She smiled apologetically and cleared her throat. “You'll have to wait.”
“Great,” said Patrick. He took a deep breath and glanced at the ceiling.
“That’s fine,” said Amália. “We’ll wait.” She looked at herself in a mirror and fixed her blonde hair.
Paul walked away to a bar at the end of the corridor and slumped in an armchair. Two servers took clinking glasses out of a tray and sorted them on the counter. Watching them reminded her of their latest fight. Did they do anything but quarrel these days? How could they have grown so distant?
The audience applauded behind the wooden doors. The usher opened them and Patrick rushed in, taking her hand. Despite her efforts, her heels clicked loudly against the wooden floor. She sat down lightly as applause was settling but the hinges on Patrick’s seat squeaked loudly.
The hall fell silent. A cellist turned over a music sheet. A few people coughed.
The music resumed; a piano and flutes, drums and violins. Calm and light.
Amália stared at the orchestra. What was she doing here? It wasn’t that she didn’t like concerts—she loved them—but she didn’t like classical music. This piece was utterly unprovoking and tedious; give her metal instead.
She flipped through the programme and stifled a yawn. And he said she was going to enjoy this? Well, this was the last concert she would have to follow him to.
She glanced at Patrick, who listened with eyes closed. He had explained to her that this is how he allowed the music to sway him. He was such a child!
The first movement of the second piece finished. The hall was quiet again, briefly. The second movement started.
A few rows back a couple whispered. She turned back but didn’t see them. The second and third movements followed smoothly. She tried to think of what he had said on a sunny afternoon in a Greek island, shortly after their wedding, but their fight from last weekend came back to her instead, fanning her burning anger. How many years had she wasted on him and his whims?
When the concerto finished, the listeners applauded and the orchestra left the stage.
Amália studied Patrick. Applause gave way to the drone of muted voices as people started leaving for the intermission.
“What did you think?” she asked. “Did you like it?”
“It was all right,” he said and stood. “How about we get a drink?”
“I’m okay. You go, I’ll stay here.”
Patrick frowned but joined the crowd.
Amália observed the hall from her seat. It was mostly empty but a woman was speaking a few rows behind her. The guttural hisses and scratches of Swiss German were hostile to her Lusophone ear.
She thought of Patrick and felt sadness replace anger. This was supposed to be a date, a time to have fun. She could see that he was doing his best, poor little Patrick and his classical music, to salvage the wreckage their marriage had become.
When the third-call rang Patrick came back with the crowd and took his seat. Neither said anything.
The orchestra returned and the murmur of conversation quieted. The conductor came out, greeted by modest applause. The music started, a piano and strings. Patrick closed his eyes and his head started swinging with the melody.
The music caught Amália completely by surprise. The more she listened, the more she liked it. Whoah, she thought. This composition is different, it’s actually good, very, very good. She couldn’t remember hearing anything like this before. Who composed this? She’d probably seen it in the programme, but she couldn’t remember. It must be a contemporary composer, not one of those boring old guys.
She wondered what this piece could be about. Sex? Love? War? Power? Gods? Death? The meaning of life? The beauty of ordinary life? She didn’t know. It didn’t matter.
The pianist took his fingers off the keys; time for the violins to lead. The rising trills captivated Amália. She imagined a city sprouting on a hill, buildings rising mightily with the melody, explosions of color in spring, trees jumping into the sky.
Patrick’s legs were swinging gently; she could tell he was really enjoying himself.
The music slowed, the quiet before the storm. As Amália leaned forward toward the orchestra, her seat creaked slightly. The music resumed with gusto, the piano joining the violins, thundering in a crescendo to a climactic finale.
A tickling sensation crawled up from the soles of Amália’s feet, spreading over her skin, intensifying as it reached her head. Now, this was music! This was something!
The piece finished. The audience erupted in applause.
Amália slumped back in her seat. “Wow,” she breathed. “I never...”
She took his hand as the musicians took their bows. “Wow, Pat,” she said quietly. “This was amazing!”
“Indeed,” said Patrick, sitting up straight and gazing at her. “Amália...”
She stood up and let go of his hand. “Let’s go home,” she said. “We need to talk.”

Follow me Into the Sun

One sunny afternoon, five men clad in black and wearing tall hats played poker in a dark saloon. They had been playing for an incredibly long time.
Some women wearing revealing dresses sat near, smoking. They flailed their arms occasionally to keep flies at bay. They waited for the men to put their cards down and be men again.
The saloon’s doors swung open and a tall man wearing a black patch over his left eye, head full of scars, entered. The place fell silent save for the drone of the flies and the creaks of the boards as he walked to the counter. It was very hot outside and he had been riding for hours; his stench filled the room.
“Where’s the son of a bitch of Andrew!” he said.
Nobody answered. The men set aside the cards and looked at their hands.
“Pedro!” he called. “Where the fuck is Andrew?”
An old man with a beard came through a door behind the bar. “Oh, hi, Jack.” A big crucifix hanged heavy from his neck.
“Say, have you seen Andrew?”
The old man started rubbing the counter with a damp rag he found in his hand. “Uh, he was here last week, said he was taking the train to La Abadía.”
“Motherfucker,” whispered Jack. He took a stool by the bar and shook the dust off his boots. The women faded out and, once invisible, glided into the upper floors. The men looked at each other and at Jack.
“Well, I didn’t come here to fuck scorpions,” said Jack impatiently.
“Right,” said Pedro and went through the back door, limping slightly.
A coyote howled loudly outside.
Pedro returned with a glass full to the brim with something yellow. “Sorry, Big Jay, we’re out of Matador, still waiting for the next batch.”
“Ugh, go to Jericho.” Jack set his hat on the counter and drank half of his drink. “Fucking end of times. I can’t get a fucking drink, only this shit.”
One of the card players set two coins timidly in the pot. They resumed their game quietly.
Jack observed them with rage but said nothing. He finished his drink and tapped the glass. “One more.”
Pedro took the glass, went behind the door, brought the glass full again and set it on the counter.
Jack cleared his throat loudly, spat on the floor, drank the glass in one go and grimaced.
“Where’s Maggie?” he said, looking around.
“Uh, I think she’s ill, Jack,” said Pedro. “Incantation gone wrong.”
“Yeah, it’s okay, I don’t care. Tell her to be ready for me tonight. I’ll be needing all her virtues.”
“Uh, sorry, Jack, I’m just not su—”
“Shut up! Just tell her, okay?”
Pedro nodded and went away through the door.
“Motherfucking Andrew,” said Jack. “And Pedro. And you all,” he said looking at the poker players and raising his voice. “To hell with you, cocksucking thieves.”
They looked at each other and at Jack.
He felt like overturning their table. “Fucking zombies,” he said instead.
“Pedro!” screamed Jack. “Another glass of this horse piss.”
Pedro came back, took the glass away and brought it back full.
Suddenly, the doors opened. Rays of sun lit up the place.
A slender woman with blue eyes and long hair walked in. She was buck naked, save for her leather boots and a belt holding a sword with a large emerald shining brightly on the hilt.
The doors closed behind her. Jack’s dick was fully erect by the time his eye readjusted to the dusk.
The men in the table swallowed audibly and stared at her. One of them stopped dealing hands halfway.
The woman walked to Jack.
“And who the fuck would you be?” he said and smiled.
“I came to take you.” Her voice had an exotic accent. Boston? Nah, probably further.
“Oh, okay,” said Jack surprised, seeing nothing but her large tits. “Pedro, what room can we use?”
“No,” she interrupted. “We’re going outside.”
He laughed. “Like hell we are.”
“Follow me,” she said. She turned and started for the door. He looked at her young round buttocks.
“What the fuck?” he said, but she just shoved the doors and left. The men turned their gaze to Jack.
“What the fuck are you good for nothing fuckers looking at?” he said. They looked down at their incomplete hands.
Jack took a big gulp of liquor and grabbed his hat. He cleared his throat and the boards creaked again.
Jack came under the harsh sun. “Fucking hell.”
His steed, Dinosaurio, got a whiff of him and neighed.
The woman stood in the road, a few meters away, facing him. Next to her was a large statue of a man, twice as tall as her.
“What the fuck,” said Jack, who had never seen this statue.
The statue wasn’t very detailed: the head just one cylinder, two black circles for eyes. And yet, it was very impressive, made of some argent metal. Jack got closer and saw his own handsome reflection.
“Jack, this is Buné,” said the woman.
“Buné?”
The metallic giant moved! It lifted an arm menacingly!
Jack drew his revolver and fired three shots at Buné’s chest.
“In the name of... What the holy fuck is this fucking fuck?”
“Relax, Jack,” said the woman, walking to Jack who, mouth agape, his golden teeth reflecting the rays of the afternoon sun, stared at the robot. “This won’t hurt a bit.”
Buné extended a finger towards Jack and shot a continuous beam of bright red light. When the light reached him, Jack lifted his arms sideways and became rigid. Red rings floated around the beam, growing gradually as they approached Jack, engulfing him. Suddenly, Jack started floating a few feet above the ground, giving a red halo.
Buné and the amazon walked away towards the sun, bringing Jack with them. Somewhere a baby wept. The demons in the cursed saloon looked out the bloody windows and saw Jack for the last.