I had been living in the big city of
Calgary for three whole days.
My roommate got home from work just
after I did.
“Hey,” she said. “How as your
day?”
“It was good,” I told her . “I .
. .”
“We've been invited to a party,”
she said, sorting through the day's mail.
I stared at her. “But I don't know
anyone.”
“Oh, it was our Landlord,” she
said. “He's always throwing parties. And we're invited.” She
looked at me. “He's quite a guy,” she added. “You'll never
forget him!”
“Oh. Umm . . . okay.”
“Soo . . . let's go.”
“What? Now?!”
“Sure.”
I discovered that our Landlord lived in
the apartment just below us.
And that the party was already well
under way when we got there.
Food. Drinks. Laughter.
Music.
And lots and lots of people.
Lots.
We edged our way in.
“How did you get invited to this?”
I shouted into her ear.
“He was out on the balcony having a
smoke when I got home,” she said.
“Oh.”
“Come on. He wants to meet you.”
We worked our way through the crowded
room.
As she edged me past yet another knot
of happily engaged people, I happened to glance up at the wall
closest to us.
Covering most of it, was the RCMP
crest.
“Huh. Look at that!” I shouted.
“The RCMP crest!”
My roommate nodded. “Yeah!” she
shouted back. “Our Landlord used to be in the RCMP!”
“Cool!” I studied it as we made our
slow way past. It must have been about four feet square.
Bright and shining in the dim room.
“Wow!” I shouted “If every
officer wore one of those, it'd be like wearing a bullet-proof
shield!”
And it was at that precise moment that
the entire room happened to be drawing its collective breath in its
collective conversations.
And the current song ended.
My comment rang out over the quiet room
as though it had been shouted.
Which it had.
It was also at that exact time that my
roommate stopped in front of a man in a wheelchair.
Obviously a quadriplegic.
“Umm . . . this is our Landlord,”
she said. She leaned toward him. “This is my new roommate!”
The man was drinking a beer through a
straw.
He nodded and smiled at his newest
permanently-crimson-faced tenant. “Wish I'd had one of those
'bullet-proof shields',” he said.
“Ummm . . . yeah,” I managed.
“Would have come in quite handy.”
“Yeah,” I said again.
My roommate and I moved on.
“Wow! Look at the time!” I said.
“We should be probably be getting back to the apartment!”
We had been there for a grand total of
about five minutes.
And it was 4:00 in the afternoon.
But definitely time to head home.
After that initial awkward meeting, we
were in his home many times.
Along with most of the people in the
apartment building.
Always, he was cheerful and smiling.
And welcoming.
With never a word over the injury,
sustained while on duty, that changed his life forever.
My roommate was right.
I never forgot him.
Grace....I can't think of a finer word.
ReplyDeleteWhat a cool story!
ReplyDeleteWhat a sad story and such courage too
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ReplyDeleteWow. One of those "wish the floor would open up and swallow me" moments. Glad you all got to be friends in the end.
ReplyDeleteI am always truly amazed when people have gone through such life changing moments handle it with such grace ;)
ReplyDelete