Every day for the entirety of my time in Umbria (since I was ten), there had been a girl who rode by my balcony on her bike. Always at eight o’clock every morning, before the sun was at its strongest, she came on a shiny white mountain bike. Even during the rare rain showers, she pedalled on, her long hair swinging in rhythm with her movement. I always admired her perseverance, but never once caught a glimpse of her face. Everyday, my respect for her would grow, and I depended on her. I suppose she was my hero, the single constant variable in my ever tumultuous life. By the time I was thirteen, I had probably already fallen in love with the idea of her.
Then when I was fifteen, she didn’t pass by for a whole week. I remember; I was too old, too mature to be panicked, but even on the first day it sure felt like panic. I relied on her so much. By the fifth day, a sense of sadness set in, and I thought that I would never see her again, that she had moved away, or given up biking. Regret choked me.
But on the eighth day she was back. Joy swelled. In the days previous I had regretted not stopping her to talk, or following her home and then gotten some stupid excuse to come in, but for now I was content just to watch her from my balcony. Too bad, really, that the fates intervened.
She fell.
For the first time in five years, the gravely slope in front of my father’s house got the better of her. The wheels slipped, the bike skidded. I was frozen in the plastic chair, my knuckles white on the armrest, the plastic digging into my skin painfully. It was two seconds before I rushed out of my room, down the stairs, and out the door. In retrospect, she didn’t seem that badly hurt, just a little out of breath. But my hands were shaking and my mind was running at a mile a minute. I shoved the bike off from on top of her and knelt by her side, still shaking from adrenaline and over excessive fear.
“Pa…p-parlo inglese?” I asked shakily. My Italian was never worth crap.
“Yes,” she said irritably. “Why’d you have to throw my bike like that? It could get damaged!” She was definitely American.
“I-“ I started, but my shyness got the best of me. She turned her eyes - furrowed, dark - to me, and I couldn’t say a word. Her eyebrows rose slowly, her eyes less unkind, and I slowly became less mute.
“What’s your name?” I spat out all at once, turning red. Instead of breaking the ice, it looks like I banged my head into it. Looks like I made a crack, though.
Her mouth twitched toward what might have been a smile, and her eyes relaxed. “Beth. And-“
“Rufus,” I said, as though out of breath, “Rufus Payne.”
Her face was rather square, with a long straight nose and wide lips. But her smile made her infinitely beautiful, as a saw when she gave a little laugh and stretched out her hand.
“Piacere, Rufus.”
“P-piacere mio, Beth,” I whispered, bewitched by her smile. Numbly I shook her hand, but forgot to let go. Her eyebrows darted up again. With a small “oh” I broke from the trance and used the hand to help her to her feet. She was a few centimetres taller than I, but to me it seemed appropriate, her being mythical, a goddess, unreal.
I reluctantly released her hand and led her into the house. It was spotless, of course, as always. Beth flopped onto the couch, clutching her knee but assuring me that it was nothing. I ran back out and took her bike inside as well. She thanked me, then refused a drink, food, ice, and even a band-aid. Instead, she wanted answers.
“How did you help me so fast?”
I could easily feel the heat rising in my face. It was too much, far too fast - even I, who had been cut off from civilization since my tenth birthday, knew it was weird to stare at and wait for a girl I didn’t know who passed my window everyday.
“I just saw you from my balcony, is all,” I said, badly attempting nonchalance.
“Wait…” she said, her eyes narrowing on my face, then widening them dynamically, “You’re the kid that’s always sitting on the balcony over the road! I see you there, all the time-“
“Every day,” I murmured.
“What’s that?” she said, eyes narrowing again.
“I’m there…everyday,” I whispered, cringing, avoiding her gaze.
“You…you watch me every day?” she said, with what I dreaded to be disgust in her quiet tone. My whole being felt like it was plummeting, deeper with every word.
“Well...” I said reluctantly, “yes.” Rock bottom.
“That…that’s kinda sweet. I’ve got a secret admirer, haven’t I then?”
My head jerked up just in time to see her hide another smile with a hand. Swelling is all I felt, as though I was shooting up from the depths. But another part of my mind was whirling negatively.
“You mean…you don’t think that’s kind of…well…creepy, or anything?”
Her smile fell gently. “I would. But you’re not really that type of person, are you?”
“No,” I said, swelling, rising, nothing to pull me from this high.
We talked of our parents who had both dragged us here, her mother from Chicago, my father from Yorkshire. She had a sister here with her, while it was just my father for me. She went to the local school and spoke Italian, while I was home schooled and spoke almost none. I explained that my father was slightly unhinged, destroyed by the people he had loved. My house arrest was, at best, his way of protecting me, and at worst his way of making sure I could never leave him. She sympathized, and was smart enough to say that she could never understand how I must feel. Her mother was alright, just a little out there. She had no clocks in the house (Beth had snuck in a watch so she could make her daily bike ride on time) and never cleaned beyond the point of what was absolutely necessary.
We talked for hours, and it was one o’clock before either of us noticed the time. My father was away at work; she explained that her mother hardly ever worried about anything. I made lunch and we kept talking. I made her leave at half past four because I was afraid that my father might return early, but she refused until she had kissed both of my cheeks. She smiled and rode away as I watched from the doorway, my insides exploding, my cheeks numb, and my skin in a kind of feverish heat, completely undue to the unseasonable temperature. We had talked about stupid things and deep things, but most of it vanished as I watched her going away, just a very defined imprint left on my cheek and in my heart.
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We were together whenever I was apart from my father for the rest of the summer. We would walk through all the wineries, olive orchards, and sunflower fields that blanket Umbria and sometimes talk, sometimes just walk. I’m sure it seems very romantic to any of you, but rest assured, it was pretty platonic. The only thing that kept my hopes up was the kiss she gave whenever we went our separate ways; both cheeks, with the most beautiful smile in the world.
In September, Beth’s mother grew tired of Umbria. Beth explained that five years was an incredibly long time for her mother to stay anywhere, which I already knew - Beth had only lived in Chicago for two years, then moved to New York for a few months, then moved to Madrid for the rest of that year, then to London, and Paris, and Frankfurt, and Vienna, then finally to Umbria. I took my allowance (that I was never allowed to spend) and rented a box in the nearest Post Office, so that we could send letters without my father knowing. I’m not sure why I was so scared of him, but I feared if he figured out that I loved a girl, he wouldn’t stand for it. So I stayed cautious.
We were already seeing a lot less of each other due to the beginning of school term, but I knew I would miss her wave as she rode past my window, the talks we had in the afternoons and on weekends when I snuck out, or even the occasional times we met at night in the fields. On the day she was to leave, I saw tears forming and had the indescribable urge to stop them. How, I shouted at myself, how can I?
That was our first kiss.
Sitting in one of the olive orchards against one of the young trees, all my hopes and dreams and all my father’s deepest fears were confirmed. And I knew I didn’t just like her because she was there, because she was the only friend I had. I loved her because…because every sense I had was screaming it.
I felt her tears reach my cheek and knew my impulse had failed me. It would just make it worse for both of us, I thought, even if we can write each other it’s not the same…we’re just friends…you’re a stupid git for thinking anything else…
But as I broke away, full of shame and guilt for ruining it all, her hands reached my eyes and she held them shut. I thought I had imagined it, but I know now I didn’t; “I love you,” she breathed into my ear, and she was gone before I could move. I never said good-bye…I said hundred times more, and she a thousand.
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We wrote, but it was a bit awkward. I’m sure she poured over my letters as much as I poured over hers, but it was too strange to write to her as though we were lovers. Of course, we weren’t; that was the awkward thing. I knew I loved her back, but to put it in writing was infinitely hard, but to think that she thought that I didn’t love her back was torture. This is the trap we catch ourselves in…
A year after we met, I was determined to see her again. I had grown several centimetres and gotten much stronger. Not that she didn’t already love me, but I suppose I felt a bit more worthy. I felt more confident, and freer than ever before. I sent a letter to Beth, to meet me in a graveyard in Yorkshire, near the town where I grew up. The date I gave was a month away, plenty of time for both of us to get there.
I left home right after mailing the letter. I left my father a note bearing only the words “I’ll be back”. I had nothing more to tell him, nothing at that time to say.
I didn’t have enough money for a plane or train, nor for many hotels. I depended on other people’s kindness and generosity, which I learned can be both a wise and stupid choice. I told everyone how Beth and I had met, and how she had left after that summer. I never told them that I was only 16, though, and if they asked, I always lied. If the person was older, say, over 35, I told them I was 18 just so they wouldn’t turn me in to the cops. If they were younger than thirty, I just guessed their age and used that. They probably suspected, but didn’t say anything. They knew my motives were pure.
So I got rides with many people, slept in houses and apartments and on the ground. The thought of Beth didn’t comfort or soothe me, though; I actually secretly dreaded seeing her. But the regrets ate me alive whenever I lay down and closed my eyes, and I knew that I had to keep going or the rest of my life would be like those nights.
So I reached the town with one day to spare. All the wishes of “Godspeed” had done me well, it seems. I wandered around my old haunts, most of which I didn’t recognize anymore. I saw the old house where my mother had lived, the school a few blocks down that I vaguely remembered, and a play park that seemed very familiar. I used the last of my very small savings to rent a hotel room, and that’s where I spent my last night.
The next day, I dressed in the last almost-clean clothing I had and walked sedately to the graveyard. It took me longer than I expected to find my mother’s grave, but I didn’t mind. Time seemed slower and at the same time more valuable that day. I sat and rested my back against the stone, and waited. I never glanced at my watch or looked around as if she was about to appear. I sat and thought all day, just thinking about everything, stupid things and deep things, like the things Beth and I had talked about the day we’d met.
Truth was, I’d told her to meet me at sunset.
And so it was that as golden light turned red she approached me. When my eyes saw her I felt them relax, as if she was there to soothe me, and comfort me like the thought of her had been unable to. She sat down, cross-legged, facing me. She said nothing. Our gazes never broke.
“I love you too,” I said firmly. Something shifted behind her eyes, and even though a year had passed, I felt a colour rising in my cheeks. But I would not look away.
She caved. Tears spilled from her eyes like last time, and I lunged forward on my knees, holding her and her holding me. I pulled her back with me and we both leaned against my mother’s stone. She was weeping into my chest and I was willing her to smile, that was what I wanted, not to see her weak like she wasn’t, or vulnerable, like she wasn’t. I was like that, or I used to be. She was a pillar, a Caryatid. I grabbed her shoulders so that I could see her face, and she mine; for just a moment I saw her tears and could bear it no more.
“Please smile.”
She couldn’t help herself.
------
“Wandering properties of death
Arresting moons within our eyes and smiles
We did rest
Amongst the granite tombs to catch our breath
Worldly sounds of endless warring
Were for just a moment silent stars
Worldly boundaries of dying
Were for just a moment never ours
All was new
Just as the black horizons blue
"Then along the bending path away
I smiled in knowing we'd be back one day”
Author notes
Poem at the end is a song by Rufus Wainwright called "In a Graveyard".
So the poem and title are (C) him.
A little Italian:
Parlo inglese? - Do you speak any English?
Piacere (mio) - I'm pleased to meet you (too)
COMMENT OR I WILL TRACK YOU DOWN
jk, jk, jk.... (not really though)
A contest entry
- Write it out! ((15 options)) by Tashabambam.
156 points, ended August 31, 2007, 9 entries
Silver trophy winner
• next story in this contest, remove from contest - "Falling" in love and other options by Lady-Jane.
225 points, ended November 14, 2007, 24 entries
Bronze trophy winner
• next story in this contest, remove from contest - The Stories We Forget- The Wishing Star by Miss Hanako Cullen.
600 points, ended May 3, 2008, 11 entries
Honorable mention
• next story in this contest, remove from contest
Please tell me what you think
Comments
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This was a good story, full of good detail.

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This was touching...
I liked reading this... even though it started slow and a little confusing, his travels to her, were something of an epic love... Great Job!
DarkOne -
Very intriguing during the middle and end. It took a while for the character's and story to develope but, what good is a story if it has no where to go! Great job and good luck!
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Wow, this was amazing. I truly loved this. The characters were so vivid, so real, although I didn't get to know the parents well at all. I don't know what else there is to say. It was beautiful.
I love the part where he says, "Please smile". So wonderful.


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Ok, so at first I wasn't hooked, but by the middle and definitely at the end I adored this! This was longer so I understand it took some time to develop. You gave me so much joy with this! I felt happy and sad with him and it was great to feel along with a character for once. Not to mention that I love anything with an American girl and British guy. Great stuff and good luck!
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Yeah, whenever I write it takes a while for me to really develop it. Esspecially in this story, because I started with "a story in Umbria" and then "a romance in Umbria" and then "a young romance in Umbria" and then I decided to imcorporate "In a Graveyard," so I was making it up as I went along, and this is what happens when I don't have a plot in mind. But a lot of good things happen too, so I like writing this way sometimes.
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Wonderful!
A wonderful story! I couldn't help but lose myself in this piece. It was absolutely beautiful.
A few technicalities such as grammar and punctuation... also sentence structures could do with some work. Nothing a little editing couldn't fix though.
Other than that, this was fantastic. A truly heatwarming tale! Well done.
Keep writing!
Yrs.
Azaradelle.

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nic
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great
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Good story
Your story was well thought out. I kept waiting for something more to happen with the couple. I like Rufus Wainwright's music. Now I have to fine that song and listen to it.

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Great job! One thing kinda bugged me, and it was in the beginning.
"Everyday, my respect for her would grow, and I depended on her.I suppose she was my hero..." I think this needs to be deeper. As a reader, I fail to feel the same as the writer--a girl that rides her bike at the same time every day worthy of admiration? At first, I didn't buy it. But after reading about Rufus's father keeping him inside...might I suggest mentioning his house-arrest at the beginning? Don't give everything away, just suggest enough to keep the reader wondering. Bait us a little, and play with our heartstrings a bit.
Also, this sentence needs fixing (it reads awkwardly): "In the days previous I had regretted not stopping her to talk, or following her home and then gotten(replace 'then gotten' with getting?) some stupid excuse to come in, but for now I was content just to watch her from my balcony." -
Really nice
what a very nice story. I thoroughly enjoyed it and it certainly made a change from most of the other stories I read. I stumbled across this and I'm glad I did. I especially love the poem at the end, or is it a song? No matter, it's a beautiful piece. -
WOW
Such a sweet and vibrant story. I loved the whole thing, it was really nice. You described everything so well. Keep up the great work. Congradulations on your silver trophy you earned it.beginning: 5, language: 5, plot: 5, ending: 5, dialog: 4, characters: 4.
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aww...how nice!! that story was pretty good!! and i love how u presented it!! and the italian makes it look so cute!! i love italian!!! great story!!
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Commentary Critique
Overall, I liked this write a lot BUT you've sort of managed to detach me a bit with the minor grammar errors. So below would be the paragraph and what's in '()' will show you a possible correction(s).
P2:
Every day for the entirety of my time in Umbria (since I was ten), there had been a girl who rode by my balcony on her bike. Always at eight o’clock every morning, before the sun was at its strongest, she came on a shiny white mountain bike. Even during the rare rain showers, she pedalled (pedaled) on, her long hair swinging in rhythm with her movement. I always admired her perseverance, but never once caught a glimpse of her face. Everyday, my respect for her would grow, and I depended on her. I suppose she was my hero, the single constant variable in my ever tumultuous life. By the time I was thirteen, I had probably already fallen in love with the idea of her.
P3&4:
Then when I was fifteen, she didn’t pass by for a whole week. I remember(DELETE SEMICOLON, ADD COMMA); I was too old, too mature to be panicked, but even on the first day it sure felt like panic. I relied on her so much. By the fifth day, a sense of sadness set in, and I thought that I would never see her again, that she had moved away, or given up biking. Regret choked me.
But on the eighth day she was back. Joy swelled. In the days previous I had regretted not stopping her to talk(NO COMMA), or following her home and then gotten some stupid excuse to come in, but for now I was content just to watch her from my balcony. Too bad, really, that the fates intervened(SENTENCE FRAGMENT)
P9:
“I-“ I(“I) started, but my shyness got the best of me. She turned her eyes - furrowed, dark - to me, and I couldn’t say a word. Her eyebrows rose(raised) slowly, her eyes less unkind, and I slowly became less mute.
P15 & 16:
“P-piacere mio, Beth,” I whispered, bewitched by her smile. Numbly I shook her hand, but forgot to let go. Her eyebrows darted up again. With a small “oh” I broke from the trance and used the hand to help her to her feet. She was a few centimeters(centimeters) taller than I, but to me it seemed appropriate, her being mythical, a goddess, (and)unreal.
I reluctantly released her hand and led her into the house. It was spotless, of course, as always. Beth flopped onto the couch, clutching her knee but assuring me that it was nothing. I ran back out and took her bike inside as well. She thanked me, (and)then refused a drink, food, ice, and even a band-aid. Instead, she wanted answers.
P25:
“Well...” I said reluctantly, “yes.” Rock bottom.(sentence fragment)
P31 & 32:
We talked of our parents who had both dragged us here, her mother from Chicago, (and)my father from Yorkshire. She had a sister here with her, while it was just my father for me. She went to the local school and spoke Italian, while I was home schooled and spoke almost none. I explained that my father was slightly unhinged, destroyed by the people he had loved. My house arrest was, at best, his way of protecting me, and at worst his way of making sure I could never leave him. She sympathized, and was smart enough to say that she could never understand how I must feel. Her mother was alright, just a little out there. She had no clocks in the house (Beth had snuck in a watch so she could make her daily bike ride on time) and never cleaned beyond the point of what was absolutely necessary.
We talked for hours, and it was one o’clock before either of us noticed the time. My father was away at work; she explained that her mother hardly ever worried about anything. I made lunch and we kept talking. I made her leave at half past four because I was afraid that my father might return early, but she refused until she had kissed both of my cheeks. She smiled and rode away as I watched from the doorway, my insides exploding, my cheeks numb, and my skin in a kind of feverish heat, completely undue to the unseasonable temperature. We had talked about stupid things and deep things, but most of it vanished as I watched her going away, just a (much)very defined imprint left on my cheek and in my heart.
P38:
I felt her tears reach my cheek and knew my impulse had failed me. It would just make it worse for both of us, I thought, even if we can write each other it’s not the same…we’re just friends…you’re a stupid git(girl?) for thinking anything else…
P41:
A year after we met, I was determined to see her again. I had grown several centimeters(centimeters) and gotten much stronger(that she didn’t already love me). Not that she didn’t already love me, but I suppose I felt a bit more worthy. I felt more confident, and freer than ever before. I sent a letter to Beth, to meet me in a graveyard in Yorkshire, near the town where I grew up. The date I gave was a month away, plenty of time for both of us to get there. [You carried a double negative in line two of this paragraph]
Hopefully, you'll keep in mind that these are suggestions and just keep penningbeginning: 3, language: 4, plot: 3, ending: 4, dialog: 4, characters: 3.
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I'd like to just say a few things:
1) This is a piece of creative writing. Therefore, I have creative license. Not only can I change and manipulate facts, I change bend grammar to achieve the effect I want to have. Adding commas, omitting coordinate conjunctions, and using sentence fragments are just some of the ways I do this. It's called style, Chandler.
2) Sometimes when you changed things it changed the meaning I was getting at, IE,
"I had grown several centimeters (centimeters) and gotten much stronger(that she didn’t already love me). Not that she didn’t already love me, but I suppose I felt a bit more worthy."
I won't even go into the centimetres thing because...well, I'm weird and spell some stuff the English way. I meant that he was physically getting stronger...and "that" can't be used to start an adverbial clause, if I'm not mistaken... Again, I took a lot of stylistic liberty with that sentence, but that's how I write, and how I think as well I suppose.
Thanks anywho, I guess.
PS: and for Paras 3&4, a semicolon is the correct punctuation there...
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OMG! This is such a sweet sweet amazing story! MUCHO BELLA (Please let me have said that right, it's the only Italian I know, or is waht I wrote Spanish??)
Any way, I loved this, it was so sweet and... Well, WOW!

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Goodness!! wow that was a little.....just wow. Oh and don't worry about any spelling errors cause I do about 20 times worse -_- I really like the song at the end it sums up a lot of the story!!
I loved it!
GOOD LUCK!

beginning: 5, language: 5, plot: 5, ending: 5, dialog: 5, characters: 5.

















