Like
Rain on Spring Leaves
My name is Charlie.
Charlie Martin.
It’s raining.
It’s April. The 3rd of April.
That much I know, but I don’t know why I’m here or
what I was thinking just a few minutes ago.
I can’t even recall how I got here. Just
moments ago, I found myself sitting in this cemetery on a cold stone
bench flanked by two small shrubs. This dreary rain has soaked
everything in sight and driven away anyone who might have reasons to be
here. Anyone except me, I guess, and I’ve apparently forgotten my
own reasons.
I don’t remember when the rain began, either, but
I’ve been watching it patter against the fresh green leaves of the bush
to my left. Perhaps watching isn’t what I mean, because today I
am actually
seeing the
rain. The water pools clean and clear on a
leaf, rushes away in a miniature stream, cascades over the paper-thin
edge, and then disappears-lost among all the less ambitious drops.
It should disturb me, I suppose, that my memory has
abandoned me in the here and now. Yet, somehow, it doesn’t.
The grey blanket of the sky is comforting in its peculiar way.
Spring ought to be a bright and cheerful reawakening of life-but
without the rain, there would be no hope of rebirth. So, in its
dour manner, the rain gives affirmation that life goes on.
Thinking of it in those terms dissipates some of the gloominess.
My hair is soaked, plastered coolly to my scalp, and
I realize rainwater has trickled down past the neckline of my
overcoat. The back of my shirt now clings wetly to my body and a
tiny rivulet tickles me occasionally as it scurries to find a new path
to the small of my back. The seat of my trousers is probably just
as wet, but the cold stone I am sitting on has sufficiently numbed that
part of my anatomy. Numbed to the point that I can no longer
tell. I glance around and find that I have either misplaced or
entirely forgotten my umbrella. Well, not that having it would do
much good at this point.
Listening intently, I hear the
tap-tap tap of
rainfall on the leaves, a syncopated rhythm to entice all living things
to join in the dance of spring renewed. Oddly, those drops
hurling themselves headlong onto the thin fabric of my black overcoat
call less audible attention to themselves. I strain to capture
other sounds, but my ears have attuned themselves to the rain and it is
all that my mind will register.
The lower half of my trousers, unprotected by my
overcoat, are soaked through. My socks, too, are becoming
drenched. Droplets still bead on the coal-black sheen of my
shoes, but inside them I feel the dampness working its way toward my
toes.
I wonder, since I can’t seem to remember, how long
I’ve been here on this bench. Long enough to get wet. Yes,
I realize, that isn’t much help. Wet is wet is wet. Once
you get that way, it’s all the same. It isn’t that important,
after all, but it would be nice to know. It would be more
comforting to have a few simple points of reference.
I watch as a pale silver-blue Ford creeps down the
lane and rolls sedately to a halt. I am thankful that the smell
of car exhaust is far-removed. The rain has washed away much of
the stench of industry. The smell of new verdant growth and
youthful, sweet blossoms fills the air.
The car is parked not far from here.
Headstones, in neat rows, stand in the lush, healthy grass separating
my bench from the car. I watch as a woman emerges and opens her
umbrella. Beneath her unbuttoned raincoat I can see she’s wearing
blue. I’ve always liked blue.
Her heels make it difficult to walk on the softening
lawn of the cemetery, but she manages. As the woman nears,
recognition washes over my senses. Mary Beth!
But why would she come here? How could she
know she would find me here?
Then suddenly, the presence of Mary Beth reminds me
why I came to this place. And that this is not a bench at
all. Like rain on spring leaves, her tears fall and become lost
among the less heartfelt droplets. She bends
down and places a simple bouquet on the polished grey stone.
“You know, Charlie,” she whispers, “it always hurts
more when it rains on the third of April.”