Fill this ghost town up with life//Tsiuri&Marcus
Aug 15, 2023 5:37:55 GMT -5
Post by minie on Aug 15, 2023 5:37:55 GMT -5
Tsiuri .
I did not own much makeup, or any makeup at all. My mom had a dark shade of red lipstick that she used for special occasions.
The night I returned home from work, the night I met Marcus, I could not even contain myself as I told my mom about the awkward boy I met. Not awkward in the bad way, in the kind of way that made a girl giggle. His nervousness was charming, and his kind eyes were refreshing. A sense of innocence that I had only a few years ago before I started my job. He gave me back that sense of innocence and all the feelings of a stupid teenage crush.
Mom insisted that I wore her lipstick to my next rendezvous with the boy from the bar even though I insisted that it was nothing more than a meeting between friends. Before Marcus left, I had scribbled an address of a little café in the town square, a small hole-in-the-wall kind of place. In passing by, I pressed the paper in his hands and told him to meet me there Thursday at noon. I never got his answer because within seconds I was gone talking to the next person that required my attention. There was no certainty that he would show up, there was no guarantee if he even ever wanted to see me again, but I was not about to pass up the opportunity of company my own age.
I fused about as mom and my sister, Freya, attempted to help me with my hair. Neither of them could decide if I should wear it up or down and both of them grabbed at it as if I were a doll. My meeting with Marcus had become a family affair, I was finally acting my age, and everyone seemed more excited about it than myself. I was more nervous than anything. What if I made a fool of myself? What if I read all of his signals wrong. What if he never even showed up and I sat there in that little café all alone.
When all the prawning and preening over my appearance had finally come to an end, both the women of my family gave me a hug and I set off from our little home. Glad that I did not wear the white pants my mom insisted on, the dirt road from our house faded more into the background.
The café was located in a corner just off the main square of the district. An alleyway that looked a little dodgy but was harmless once you started walking down. I had a thing for places that were run down yet filled with so much history. A place where the people had character and many a stories to tell. The rough exterior and cozy interior made me feel welcome and seen. It was something I could relate to. May seem a little scrappy at the beginning but once you got me to open up, I was not as rough as I seemed. Maybe that is all I really wanted, someone I could finally open up to…someone who would finally see me for me and not what they wanted me to be.
What did Marcus want me to be? What did he want this to be? I could not help wondering what exactly I got myself into as I sat down on the bench behind a small circular table. I was a bit early; the nerves had got to me and I did not want him showing up and thinking that I was going to leave him sitting there alone.
I started to play with my hair, which we decided I would wear half up and half down. My fingers intertwining with my curls and my eyes glued on the door as I waited for him to walk through the small wooden door. I knew that the waiting made time feel like it was moving slower than it was, but it felt like an eternity had already passed. There was a point where I thought he would not show up, where I thought the connection we made in the bar was just fabricated in my head. Wishful thinking that a boy my own age would actually like me. Hope that I could experience the life the other girls who still could afford to go to school experienced.
Then he walked in and I sat myself up straight with a big smile on my red tainted lips as I waved over to him.