Monday, December 2, 2013

THE GIRL WHO LOVES WHITE (A short story)

She lives in a nice, tidy house painted in white. She loves everything white. She loves her morning cereals with a snowy glass of milk. She drinks it out of her little, white bowl and then carefully wipes her lips with a napkin. Her pet cat, Pristine, patiently waits for her under the table every time. They go out of the house every morning to play just outside the door, on the porch. But not before she washes her hands by the sink. She drags one of the stools by her arms and climbs onto it to turn the faucet on. She never fails to sprinkle her face and washes away any smudge left by her breakfast meal. That's what her mommy and daddy taught her.

Today, she is sitting with Pristine by the white swing at the garden. She enjoys watching the butterflies flutter by. She sees a single lustrous orchid by the branch of the tree beside the swing and snaps a photo. She shows it to the cat who meows in admiration. Later, they go for a walk and take pictures of the clean village street that Mrs. Christian sweeps everyday, the beautiful, spotless houses that lined the sidewalks, Mr. Chaste bathing his dog Spick and many other pleasant scenes. She will show them to her mommy and daddy tonight when they get back from work. Her mommy runs a laundry shop and her daddy is a dedicated police officer.

Every evening, after supper, her mommy and daddy always ask her how her day was. She then recites the events of the day. She even acts out the things that happened to her. She does this with so much passion, her well-ironed silvery dress dances with her every move. She is their precious, innocent angel. She shines every time the light from the fireplace in the living room hits her tiny bodice. She prances around barefoot; the rugs have been vacuumed earlier by their Spanish maid Imaculada. She entertains her mommy and daddy with her stories. What she doesn't tell them is what she did earlier that day that she knows her mommy and daddy will never approve.

She is perched on the bench across the village park browsing through the images she caught on her camera, when she hears the laughter of someone she knows not who. She stands up and strains her ears to follow where the sound comes from. She crosses the street and approaches the monkey bars where a couple of kids are swinging happily. She turns right towards the seesaw that one seemed to mind because it was empty. She can already hear the giggles are closer to her now. Just behind the old carousel, she sees a boy who is just about to stand.

He has been playing with dirt a moment before. He looks like he enjoyed it. His arms are muddy brown. He smells foul with grime on his former-white shirt. His trousers are stained entirely; he appears to have sat on the dark pool for a while. He turns and sees the pretty girl from the white house. He turns a tad red in the face although she can not see. He bows his head so she won't notice. He stares at his feet that are besmirched like the rest of his exposed body. He glances at the other pair before him neatly covered in pretty, white doll shoes. He realizes that she is still there. So he slowly looks up to see the owner and is pleasantly surprised.

She is smiling from ear to ear. It's all she could do while staring at the sullied face of the little boy in front of her. She doesn't mind the mud that has dried up across his dimpled cheeks and broad forehead and divided chin. When he reaches out his dirty hand, she takes it without hesitation. The soil is not wet anymore; tiny grains fall every now and then between their entwined fingers. They walk back together to the bench.


It was wondrous to behold.