Caw - Just One


He sat at his window watching the quiet street. She would be by any minute. He watched her every day ; twice a day, once in the cockcrow and again in the afternoon. He did not know where she came from or where she went each day. She didn't look up at him, she just walked by. He sat by the windowpane and wrote his stories and sent them off to his publishing firm. His newspaper publisher sent him check mark and he sat in his room and wrote stories and watched her walkway by. He wasn't aware of the passage of twenty-four hour period. He often didn't know what day it was or even caution. He only went out to get groceries or occasionally to contain his handicap to the banking company. When they arrived in the mail he dropped them in a draftsman and went back to his writing.

She got up each day and ate her breakfast and pledge a cup of coffee. She dressed for work and walked out the door of her flat. She walked to play each day. It wasn't far and she had no car. She walked the Lapplander streets each day stepping over the Lapp cracked sidewalk and seeing the Lapp summing up construction. She went to her job where she sat in her cubicle and did her mindless tasks. She could do near of her job in her sleep without thinking. She didn't socialise much with her gent workers. They said"trade good morn"or"respectable evening"to her. She heard them talking among themselves about their life history but they never asked about hers. They would discuss where they would go to eat lunch but never invited her to fall in them. Her days were all the Lapp and she walked household over the Sami streets across the Saame cracked and broken sidewalks. She passed the Saami summing up edifice to get to her apartment. She never called it her home, just her apartment.


He saw when she walked by returning from where ever she had been. He always paused to ascertain her. She was the only indicator of the passage of meter and he often made up fib about what her liveliness might be like. He thought about thing he pictured her doing or places she might hold up. Maybe she had a family or a buff or children. After she passed he went back to writing his taradiddle and if he received a baulk he would put it in a drawer with the others.

She knew he would be looking out the window when she went by. He was always there. She didn't aspect at him but she knew he was there. She wondered if he was an shut-in who couldn't move. Was he just watching the region or just her ? She had seen his human face and it was a pleasant face. She thought he might be someone who might be interesting to know but she didn't look up and she went from work to her apartment and from her apartment to work.

He watched as she went her way wondering about her life. He reflected on his own. His first wife who took what was his and hid it from him. She drove him into debt while he served his nation. When he returned he worked at a unthankful job to earn what she gave away to her unworthy family without his knowledge. She denied him the respect and loyalty that were supposed to come with a marriage. So he moved on. Later his second married woman that he gave his life-time to showed him he was always second base to her destination. She let him believe he was never right and his decisions were never honored. She emasculated him and showed him he had less worth than the bottle she had turned to. He became a non-person and felt himself fade away. So he moved on. Now he put firearm of his someone on newspaper publisher and sent them to his publisher for composition of report that he put in a draftsman. He wished that he had just one person that cared for him. One person he could depend on that would count on him.

She walked through the urban center remembering her past as if it were a brutal punishment. Her loves had traded her for others who were prettier or richer or more interesting. She had been used to cook and houseclean or to crop while he played. No tike to get in the way. There had been a few who promised her happiness but it was always their happiness and none for her. Her dreams or desires were never important, never a anteriority. So she drifted through a lonely cosmos wishing for just one person to like if she lived or died ; one individual who wanted her just for herself. Just one would be enough to feed her purpose, to make her tone wanted, to shit her feel anything.

He sent off his late tome to be read by multitude he would never have it off. He left his apartment with a stack of envelopes that needed to be taken to the bank, most unopened. They came with the broadside and occupant post that found their way to his mail box. He had never thought about money. He had enough for his rent and utilities ; enough for his food for thought. He took the unopened arrest to be deposited to his bill when the pile in the drawer got too large. He never paid lots attention to the things beyond his immediate needs. His bare aimless life story drifted by like time. This day he was stopped by an officeholder of the bank and drawn into his office. He left with a part of paper in his hired hand and a clean smell on his brass. He rode the bus to his block and sat on the bench across the street from his apartment. He looked down at the paper for the hundredth time and counted the issue on the furrow that showed his stream balance. 8… There were 8 digits in the turn. How had this happened ? How had he not known there were 8 dactyl in the number on the stock that said current equalizer ? He counted again as he sat and looked up at the windowpane of his flat where he sat each day.

She walked the same streets as she returned from her thankless job. She stepped over the same broken sidewalk past the same deteriorating building she saw each day. She glanced up at his windowpane. It was empty. He wasn't there. She stopped dead in her cut, frozen in disarray. He was always there. He had to be there ! He was one thing she had always depended on in her day. Where was he ? What happened ? Her life turned on its capitulum and tears rolled down her face. She stood there on the sidewalk staring at his window and cried out,"Where are you ? Why did you allow for ? You can't leave me ; not alone again."

He rose from the bench and looked at her as she broke down in helpless teardrop as her life seemed to crumble around her. He hurried across the street with tears of his own and laid his helping hand on her shoulder.


"I'm here. I've always been here and I always will be."He wrapped his munition around her as she turned to him. He held her as he finally knew she was the one he needed ; the one she needed.

That was all it took to save two lives. Just one mortal who cared.

The one thing we all need.

Just One
Sign-in {% trans 'to add this to Watch Later list' %}
{% trans 'Sign-in' %} to perform this action