The Girl Who Couldn'T See Rainbows. Rosette
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“No, as a matter of fact you didn’t do anything special,” he admitted, making my spirits drop, because of the quick way he got rid of me. “You’re the one who’s special, Melisande. Not what you say or do.”
His gaze locked with mine, determined to capture it as usual. He raised his eyebrows ironically, in an expression that I knew so well now.
“Thank you, sir,” I replied.
He laughed, as if I had made a joke. It didn’t bother me. He thought I was funny. Better than nothing, maybe. I remembered the conversation we had a few days earlier, when he had asked me if I would have given my legs or my soul for love. At that time I replied that I had never loved, therefore I didn’t know how I would have behaved. Now I realized that maybe I could answer that insidious question.
He pulled the computer towards him and began to write, excluding me from his world. I went back to my occupations, but my heart was fibrillating. Falling in love with Sebastian Mc Laine was suicide. And I had no desire to become a kamikaze. Right? I had always been a person with common sense, practical, reasonable, incapable of dreaming. I was even incapable of day dreaming. Or at least I had been up to that point, I thought.
“Melisande?”
“Yes, sir?” I turned to him, surprised that he had spoken to me. Usually when he started writing, he lost touch with everything and everyone.
“I want some roses,” he said, pointing to the empty vase on the desk. Ask Millicent to fill it, please.”
“Right away, sir.” I grabbed the ceramic vase with both hands. I knew it would be heavy.
“Red roses” he specified. “Like your hair.”
I blushed, although there was nothing romantic about what he had said.
“All right, sir.”
I could hear his look piercing my back as I carefully opened the door and went out into the hallway. I went downstairs with the vase in my hands.
“Mrs Mc Millian? Ma’am?” there was no trace of the old housekeeper, and then a thought came to my mind, too small to grab it. The woman, at breakfast, had told me something about her day off... Was she referring to today? It was hard for me to remember it. Mrs Mc Millian was a source of confused information, and I rarely listened to it from start to finish. Also in the kitchen there was no trace of her. I sorrowfully placed the vase on the table, next to a basket of fresh fruit.
Great. I realized I had to pick the roses in the garden. A task beyond my ability. It was easier for me to grab a cloud, and dance a waltz with it.
With a persistent buzz in my ears, and the feeling of an imminent catastrophe, I went outdoors. The rose garden was in front of me, the roses in bloom like a fire of petals. Red, yellow, pink, white, even blue. Too bad I lived in a black and white world, where everything was shadowed. A world where light was unfathomable, indefinite, forbidden. I couldn’t even dream of distinguishing colours because I didn’t know what they were. Since birth.
I took an uncertain step toward the rose garden, my cheeks in flames. I had to make up an excuse to justify my return without any flowers. One thing was choosing between two boxes, another was to pick roses of the same colour. Red. How is red? How can you imagine something you've never seen, not even on a book?
I stepped on a broken rose. I leaned over to pick it up; it was dead, lethargic in its death, but it still smelled nice.
“What are you doing here?”
I brushed my hair off my forehead, and regretted not tying it up in my usual chignon. It was hung over my nape, and was already soaked with sweat.
“I have to pick some roses for Mr Mc Laine,” I said laconically.
Kyle smiled at me, the usual smile full of irritating allusions. “Do you need help?”
In those hollow words, empty and ambiguous, I found a solution to my problem, an unexpected shortcut, and I jumped at it.
“Actually you were supposed to do it, but you weren’t around. As usual,” I said bitterly.
His face was crossed by a quiver. “I'm not a gardener. I already work too much.”
This statement made me laugh. I put a hand to my mouth, as if to hide my hilarity.
He looked at me furiously. “It's the truth. Who do you think helps him to wash, dress and move?”
The thought of Sebastian Mc Laine naked almost caused me a short circuit. To wash him, dress him... I would have done it very willingly. The following thought, that I would never be the one to do it, made me answer harshly.
“But for most of the day you are free. Of course, at his disposal, however, he rarely disturbs you” I reinforced the message. “Come on, help me.”
He finally gave in, still annoyed. I handed him the shears, smiling. “Red roses,” I said.
“All right,” he grumbled, setting to work.
In the end, when the bunch was ready, I escorted him to the kitchen where we picked up the vase. It seemed more practical and easy to split the task between us. He would carry the ceramic pot, I the flowers.
Mr Mc Laine was still writing, fervently. He only stopped when he saw us come back together.
“Now I understand why it took you so long” he hissed at my address.
Kyle hurried away, clumsily placing the vase on the desk. For a moment I feared that it would fall down. He had already left when I started to arrange the roses in the vase.
“Was it such a difficult task that you had to ask for help?” He asked, his eyes glowing with uncontrollable anger.
I floundered, like a fish that had stupidly bitten the bait. “The vase was heavy,” I excused myself. “The next time I won’t bring it with me.”
“Very wise”. His voice was deceptively sweet. In truth, with his face shadowed by a two day stubble, he looked like a malicious demon that had come straight from the underworld to bully me.
“I didn’t find Mrs Mc Millian,” I insisted. A fish still clinging to the bait and hasn’t yet realized that it’s a hook.
“Oh, right, it's her day off,” he acknowledged. But then his anger, only temporarily alleviated, reappeared. “I won’t tolerate love stories among my employees.”
“The thought never crossed my mind!” I said impetuously, so earnestly that I got a smile of approval from him.
“I’m pleased to hear it.” His eyes were icy despite the smile. “Of course that doesn’t refer to me. I have nothing against having an affair with my employees.” He stressed the words, as to reinforce the fact that he was mocking me.
For the first time I felt like punching him, and I realized it wouldn’t be the only time. Unable to vent my rage on who I would have liked to, my hands tightened over the bouquet, the thorns forgotten. The pain surprised me, as if I were immune to thorns, since I