Then in a doorway on the other side of the street I saw a
familiar form sitting back reading a book by the faint flickers of light
streaming out from inside a small native hut. Yes, it could only be one person - Rachel. Eager and curious to find out what had
happened and what she had done in the time that had passed since I was last
here, I brought my vehicle to a halt just in front of her.
Climbing down from my mechanical horse I greeted my friend
in the usual manner. She was smiling
excitedly and certainly had changed in demeanor from the previous times we had
met.
“Well, John,” she said,
“I suppose you want to know what I have done since you
left?”
“No, not really, Rachel, unless you feel compelled to
enlighten me.”
I teased her, knowing that she could hardly hold back
any longer from telling me.
She had managed to rent out a small hut right on the main
street. It was some two meters in width
by two meters long and two meters tall. The sturdy walls were made from wattle
and covered with a blend of straw and grayish brown mud. Roofing consisted of a wooden frame with a
grass thatch roof that was neatly trimmed just where it rested on the top of
the walls. It had a wooden door and a
single window that opened downwards forming a simple counter. A lean-to had been added to shade customers
from the searing heat of the midday sun and to offer protection from the
drenching monsoon rains.
Around the walls were simple shelves filled with all
manner of basic commodities ranging from sugar and spice, to candles and
copperware. Hanging from the ceiling on
little pieces of string were shampoos, soaps and razor blades. On the mud floor was a rolled-up mattress with
a small pillow resting on top.
“Well John, here is my little shop.
What do you think?”
Her face beamed with satisfaction.
“It is a great!
And you look much more
vibrant since I last saw you.” I
replied.
I was every bit as animated as
Rachel.
And proud of her.
...more ...