Truman
really was unremarkable in every way. Large glasses framing his thin face and
even thinner hair, and a simple black hat and bow tie allowed him to fly under society’s
radar for his entire life. His days, spent alone in old book shops often wiping the dust from their weathered jackets, covering the fading verbiage, long forgotten, even by those who crafted such fine pieces of assembled words. His
pleasure was not so much in the absorption of those words, but in the reading
of any odd notes addressed to the last owner of such bindings. He really didn’t
understand his habit, but it drove every second of his free time. A few books had piqued his interest over the years, a couple of well-placed
words and once, a poem that seemed so familiar to him, as if taken from his own
thoughts, but nothing, like today’s visit would bring.
Ammos and
Dunn’s fine and rare books was where he ducked in at lunch that day. Skipping
past the regular genres his mood was a bit darker, passing the horror and doom
and gloom he stopped at a peculiar looking binding. Judging it, he pulled it
towards him and felt a slight electrical current in his fingertips. Hesitating to
some extent, he removed it, opening it. His eyes grew wide as he ran
his finger across the picture discovered inside and then, he dropped the book.
Years have passed, Truman now spends his days tending to his own rare bookstore, quite large even by a larger cities’ standards, Truman and Sara’s rare books is a destination in itself on this usually quiet island, now crawling with summer tourists. His looks haven’t much changed but, his energy has, it fills any room he enters. That would be especially true in Sara’s case as she finds him quite addictive. Her days are enchanted for lack of a better word, and no one seems to notice her vocabulary is odd in the sense of it being more appropriate for the 1800’s than present day. Most pass it off as the learned education of a true book worm rather than that of a person who is actually from 1823.
You see,
back on the day Truman that found that strange book, something happened that even I
can’t fully explain. Inside was a picture, old, tattered and fading but enough remained
that one could see it was a woman standing, holding Trumans picture. He didn’t recognize
it but when he ran his finger across it to clear off the dust the woman in the
picture moved. Her face became clear, and he could hear the sounds of the city
street behind her. Truman cleared his throat and spoke meekly, “Hello?” Sara
had blushed and said, “Hello Truman, I’ve been waiting for you my love”.
From the
little I know, Sara instructed Truman to rub the photo again which rumor has it
caused Sara to appear in person. Months passed and Sara told him things that couldn’t be possible but held no other explanation than what she'd given. She had been looking
for him since his death in 1821 in London. The little she had in her pockets had
been the gold coins, now old and rare which brought them the funds they needed to
start the store and fill it with more rare books, each placed upon the shelfs
after being inspected by a much grateful Truman.
3 comments:
I absolutely love this story Scott! The flow and thoughts really bring it to life much like the woman in the photo! I would love to see this story expanded on. Wonderful writing my friend, and thank you for joining at the Muse with the linky mishap and all!
I'm delighted you enjoyed this one my friend. I look forward to the next musings. Thank you for inviting me there.
You are very welcome Scott! I am so glad that you are writing my friend!
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