“So,
will you go to a nude beach with me tomorrow?” , she asked.
You
know folks, you really should not drink too much with a woman.
But
then, I hadn't. It was just my first glass, or so I thought and
looked at my glass for an answer. The liquid sparkled in the blue
glass, but did not feel in the least to help me out. Instead, I saw
in it, all the people I had met in the last four days.
I
looked up at her, and she smiled.
Somewhere
in that moment, the city got defined for me. Oh Barcelona.
Silvia
and I had met only a couple of hours earlier. I really do not know
why. Two weeks earlier, I had put up a post on facebook about my trip
to Spain, and she had asked me if we could meet up when I was in
Barcelona. A luxury travel company wanted an Indian partner, and
Silvia wanted to discuss if I could get the company where I worked,
to partner them. As we sat in the bar, I wondered if I should tell
her that I had quit my job.
Two
hours earlier, I was scampering across the road from my hostel,
towards Maria Cristina station, to take the train to Parallel station
where we were to meet. I was already fifteen minutes late. As I ran
down the station stairs, I had no clue which metro line to take.
“Scusa?”
said I, in my best Spanish accent, to a passing girl. When I had
asked her, she told me that she was taking the same train line, and
that we could walk together. In the twenty two minutes it took the
train, and us, to reach Parallel metro station, we had figured out
that we both loved writing. She told me she was an English language
teacher and I yelled. My station approached, and as I jogged out, we
promised to meet later for drinks. As I stepped out of the station,
just like everywhere in the city, a man was sitting and strumming the
guitar. Oh Barcelona.
No,
we didn't meet up later. Maybe some other day, some other train, some
other part of the world.
When
I saw Silvia, she was dressed in an Indian kurta. We greeted each
other in the traditional European way of a kiss each on both cheeks.
Her skin was light, and I would never have figured that she was
Venezuelan had she not decided to tell me later on.
Presently,
I was trying to decide if I should start wondering that when people
asked you to accompany them to a nude beach, it could possibly
suggest that they were hitting on you. Or maybe it was a Venezuelan
culture thing, to ask to go to a nude beach together. In India, you
ask for coffee, maybe in Venezuela you ask if the person would like
to accompany you to a nude beach.
Of
course, I had not drunk enough absinthe to come to such asinine
conclusions. I looked across the dimly lit bar, and a couple of
Germans were arguing about something at the far end. A prostitute
stood at the door smoking a cigarette and Silvia smiled at her. She
knew Raval really well, Silvia did.
“I
don't think I could do that”, I told her laughingly.
“But
isn't that what your trip is all about? New experiences? Trying out
new things?”
She
had a point. You know, I am quite sure she wasn't hitting on me at
all.
Let
us go back two hours again. When we had met near the station, she had
asked me if I would like to go to her favourite part of Barcelona. I
asked where, and she had muttered “Raval”. So we walked from our
meeting point, across La Rambla – Barcelonaùs most lively and
touristy area, full of clubs, bars and performers – to Raval –
the poorer neighbouring grotto with small shops and bars, dingy
looking hostels, but ethnically Barcelona most diverse side of town.
We
stopped at a bar to eat some rice and turkey. Of course with some
Cerveza, the spanish word for beer.
“So,
Neeraj, you like Barcelona?” I nodded, though I was desperately
trying to work the knife through the hard turkey.
Silvia
has been to over fifty countries. She left her house when she was 17.
I asked her which was her favourite city in the world, and she said
it was right there, in Barcelona.
Barcelona
has glamour, you know. And it has personality. It has Gaudi, and it
has people from all over the world. It has seventy year old women
roller blading to the nearby grocery store, it has kids walking their
dogs while they are skateboarding. It has men kissing each other on
the streets, and it has people with every single hairstyle you could
possibly think of. I was walking down the road on the first day, and
there was a six foot three man, incredibly built, walking absolutely
topless, a bag strapped on his shoulders, lugging another suitcase,
on one of the busiest roads in the city. He did not care.
Surprisingly, no one else did either.
The
city has flair you know.
“Character”,
I told her between mouthfuls. “Barcelona has character.”
“You
must try absinthe, you know, especially since you have never tried it
before”
So, we left the place and headed off in search of the vile drink. Minutes later, we were inside a bar with furniture so old that it looked antique, with lights so dim that I would think that they were candles, and a bar table so big that I thought it would never end. “This is where the first bar scene of ZNMD was shot”, she told me and I rolled my eyes. We both laughed.
Minutes
later, the barman served us two glasses of the much mentioned drink.
To mix the right amount of absinthe and water, you first put a fork
horizontally across the glass. Then taking two cubes of sugar, you
place them on the fork and pour ice water on the cubes. The cubes
melt and fall along with the water into the glass.
“That,
senor, is how you drink absinthe”, she told me while raising her
glass, following her tiny demonstration.
And
that is probably why I like to travel. Maybe to have a Venezuelan
tell me how to prepare a glass of absinthe. Or sit across an Israeli
man in a bar and have him tell me how it is to come out of school and
serve in the army for three years. I don't want to spend half my life
sitting on an office desk.
“You
know Silvia, I think I can teach english langugage in Mexico for 6
months. And then South America.”
“Absinthe,
originated from Switzerland in the 1800s, and became very popular in
France, especially among Parisian writers in the mid 19th
and early 20th century”, Silvia informed me. “Oh,
Hemingway, Oscar Wilde, Vincent Van Gogh drank it regularly”
“To
Vincent, Ernest and Oscar then.” I announced, raising my glass.
One
day, we shall have a Neeraj next to their names.
And
that is approximately when, two hours from when I first met Silvia,
she asked me if I would go to a nude beach with her.
“I
don't think I could do that”, I told her laughingly.
“But
isn't that what your trip is all about? New experiences? Trying out
new things?”
“Si
senorita. But to be nude publicly. I don't think I would like that
too much.”
“You
are on your way to become a traveller, my friend. And the first step
is to embrace what comes your way. You don't have to like it, but try
it, and then know if you like it or not.”
We
stayed at the bar for an hour more. And then, just like that, we bid
farewell.
On
the entire way back to my hostel, I pondered about whether I should
do it. I had asked her at the bar where the closest nude beach was,
and of course it was in the city itself. Though I wasn't drunk, the
idea started becoming appealing. Not to go with her, because I cannot
imagine going with anyone I have ever spoken to, or known, or
befriended. It sounds catastrophic to me to go with someone I am
friends with. But it felt appealing, ony because it sounded a hundred
times more dificult than running with the bulls.
When
I got off the train, I was still thinking. Ahead in the distance, a
man in white trousers and a white vest, held a mike and was singing a
Catalan song. A system blaring music, and a small hat for coins, gave
him company. Three women walked ahead of me, and as we got closer,
one of them broke into a little jig. As we passed him, his eyes fell
upon her, and he advanced. Taking the surpised woman into his hands,
he drew her close to his body and started to dance. She looked
shocked at first, embarassed next, and then started giggling. Her
friends clapped loudly and so did I. The man continued to hold her
close, and kept dancing, moving her around the small strip in the
subway, much to her delight.
3 comments:
So.. coming back to the point for the 4th time.. did you go? :P
Did you GO??? :)
Wonderful read!!
Haha did I go? Does it matter if I did, or did not?
Let us explore that possibility eh! Would the story make a difference with my decision? :)
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