It Rained Saturday Afternoon
by Antonio Gabila
It rained at three
Saturday afternoon. And we looked at the sky as if it could not be true,
at the slanting rain that fell in steady streams, at the earth getting
first moist, then sticky, then watery.
We
could not resign our self to the fact that it should rain on Saturday.
Why Saturday of all days? Why not Monday and the other weekdays? Any day
but Saturday – and Sunday also, that is.
All
the week, week after week, we work in close, stuffy offices from early
morning until late in the afternoon, except that promptly at half past
twelve every Saturday there comes a break in the routine, after which we
do not have to enter our close world again until the following Monday
morning at seven-thirty.
On
Saturday mornings our smiles are wider and last longer, our greetings
are cheerier. For at the back of every workers mind is the thought that
he may have that afternoon all to himself, to do with as he pleases.
To
some of us, Saturday afternoon always means a rectangular court of clay
with white lime markings, rackets, and balls about as big as a little
boy’s fist. On the court one can swing one’s arm about and not be afraid
of hitting something, and after five-and-a-half days inside an office,
you feel this is more important than anything else in the world.
Stepping lively on a marked court on Saturday or Sunday afternoons, we
forget about our close, dim offices with their wall clocks that never
seem to move at all, and about the things one has to do, about work.
But it rained at three. Saturday.
And
why should it rained on Saturday, and at three o’clock, when we always
feel that Saturday just begins, and with, in fact, the best part of the
afternoon yet to be. At three one plays his best game because it is
neither too warm nor too chilly.
Some
of us had played only a set or, at most, two, while the others just
arriving. We all always say we have not really played until the third
set. And here it was raining at three, raining so heavily that even the
most hopeful among us, looking up, could only shake our heads seeing how
black the whole sky looked. It rained so heavily that shortly the clay
court, just before so hard and smooth, was sticky with mud and water,
the white lime markings becoming indistinct and finally disappearing
altogether.
We
picked up our things disgustedly, taking care the rain did not wet the
delicate guts of the rackets, and made haste to the nearest shelter, a
low concrete bodega beside the townpresidencia.
The
rain made puddles at our feet in no time as we stood under the
overhanging edge of the concrete roof. The puddles grew and became
little running streams that twisted about in their tiny tortuous courses
to reach the nearest deeper hollows which, when filled, became
miniature lakes. We drew gingerly back against the bodega wall as the
miniature rivers threatened out shod feet. Over the edge of the roof
above us fell a thick, transparent curtain of rain. We were trapped, but
we were six and company made the trap less tragic.
We raised our eyes finally from our hypnotic regard of the water at our feet to look into four cells on that side of the presidenciawhose barred windows stared down at us, looking very much like caves in the sheer cliff that was the presidencia’s
austere wall. The barred windows did not surprise us, for we had long
known they were there. Nor did the old, ugly, vicious faces caged in
them: are realized they ought to be there too. Only when we looked into
the last cell and saw there a young face, not so much vicious as
mischievous in a childlike way, were we taken aback.
The
boy, he could not be over eighteen, had no clothes on: even when he
stood on the floor of the cell, we knew he was without covering because
the slightly lighter skin below the waist showed above the ledge of the
low, barred window.
“My God, that boy’s crazy!”
The
boy was so obviously that, without anyone saying so, that I turned
around to look at the speaker. And yet I knew we were all alike: we did
not understand such things. I wanted to ask someone what could have
caused such a thing, why that youth should come to be in this cell,
stripped of clothes and shame, and keep on singing and posturing, I
wanted to ask how people come to lose hold of reality and what goes on
in the mind of one like that boy of no more than eighteen, but I
realized we, toiling in close, musty offices, would know nothing of such
things.
“You are my sugar plum…” The mad boy’s singing could be heard above the crash of heavy rain.
In
the other cells, the vicious faces were momentarily still, listening,
their ugly faces intent and looking now less vicious, as if they too
were trying to divine perhaps how one became like his boy.
“Why
do people become crazy?”, I finally asked a young fellow who once
worked in a physician’s office-but who played a poor game of tennis.
“Many causes. Love for instance.”
“You are my sugar plum…” Perhaps
the boy loved deeply and futilely. He may have thought the girl was
everything the world could hold for him; and yet the girl thought
nothing of him. Such things happen.
The
boy has suddenly climbed up into the upper one of two bunks affixed to
one side of a wall of his cell, leaping full upon it in all his
uncovered state, and smiling down upon us, baring white, even teeth in
an expression that must have been one of geniality in a day now gone.
“You may not be an angel…” he broke forth, swaying his body and looking up every time he said “angel.” After
one song, there would always be another, as if he wanted us to know
that this repertoire of song was not by far exhausted, crooning in that
soft voice of his as if he were addressing his song to someone he held
so near him he did not have to raise his voice to be heard.
The
boy had a good figure, with slight, shapely muscles, and seemed so
healthy an animal that one could hardly believe he had lost his mind.
The unseemliness of his unconscious behavior was all the more pitiful
because of his splendid figure.
“Don’t take away my dreams…” Now why does he sing that?
They
say madness is a thick fog; losing your mind is like losing your
bearings in the dark: you believe you are doing the perfectly correct
thing not knowing that it is far from what you think. That must explain
the boy, his stripped state, his crooning, his friendly and shameless
grin which God knows he couldn’t help.
“Don’t take away my dreams…” Just
why had that crazy youth hit upon that piece? Was there a reason? For
madness too is like being a child again, playing again in that dream
world man loses as he grows up. Times there are in a man’s mature years
when he regrets that loss.
This
boy, suddenly grown a youth, had asked to be taken back to that world
and had been granted his desire. Now he had what he wanted, nobody could
take away his dreams, nobody tear the toys out of his hands, and nobody
come to him and strikes him. For a mad boy is always a child with
dreams…
The
rain had stopped, we realized with a start. We looked about us vaguely:
even had it been possible for us to play again, I doubt if we would
have. A little while before we had thought we were the most unlucky of
humans: but after what we had seen we hardly knew what to think.
We
stepped forth from our shelter and walked through the wet grass until
we hit the hard pavement, when we broke into a brisker gait, not one of
us brave enough for one backward glance at the body whom we could still
hear singing about dreams that no one please must take away from him.
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