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Lucas was glad that it would be time to go home in thirteen minutes. He’d had an early start that morning covering some extra hours available at the factory where he worked. Not accepting them hadn’t been as option. He was finding that it was an expensive business to top up the supplies he was in constant need of these days. Nonetheless, extending his shift today had meant working ten hours on the packaging line. His job was to check the freshly harvested olives for any blemishes as they were fed into the bottling machine. The machine then placed the good olives into small glass jars, pressed on green lids, and fixed on labels. The design of these depicted a little olive grove in which a family sat together at an outdoor table. Each member of the group smiled at the others as they contemplated the large and presumably freshly picked platter of olives placed before them.
He liked that label, but he also resented its sweetness. He enjoyed eating the discarded olives, but he still could not picture himself sitting on some shaded bench surrounded by his nearest and dearest. Lucas’s dad had been a petty criminal and was now in jail. He was also long divorced from Lucas’s mother who had remarried and moved on out of the area as soon as Lucas had left school. He had no brothers or sisters.
Lucas had known that everyone had thought of him as a tough guy like his father when he was growing up. To be honest, he hadn’t minded that at all. It meant that often have felt lonely, but it was also a means of keeping himself safe from the further judgement of others. And okay, so his job wasn’t exactly the greatest, nor were his long-term prospects brilliant. Still, the factory kept him in food and paid his rent, admittedly only for a small and somewhat dingy apartment just out of the town in the foothills. That didn’t really bother him because wherever you lived in Albufeira, you were close to the sea with its literally breathtaking Atlantic waves massing at the shoreline to race the stretches of sand and pound the little coves at every tide
In his teenage years, Lucas had enjoyed riding those waves on his own hard saved for surfboard. For a while he had looked and felt amazing as he soaked up the admiration of his less sure-footed peers. Inevitably, as time went on, some of them had concentrated on their schoolwork rather than on improving their surfing stances. They had succeeded in ways he knew he never could. When he heard about them setting up businesses, or working for some cushy software company, Lucas had not needed reminding that he should have spent more time in school and less on crafting signature moves on his board. Still, he always told himself that however much he had studied he could never have made it to becoming a career guy. He would never have been allowed to, he reckoned, not with his roots so entangled in the fringes of a provincial criminal fraternity.
Even so, he’d always remembered how some of his teachers had tried to encourage him. He’d thought fondly of his maths teacher for one. Senhor Santos must surely have been the most old-fashioned teacher in the school and had seemed to delight in that as if it were an accolade to have wispy hair, heavy spectacles and a worn linen jacket. Yet still he had shown an interest in Lucas, despite Lucas’s apparent disregard for academic learning. He could still remember how Senhor Santos had suggested in a casual manner that Lucas might like to join the after-school chess club. Of course, his teacher had added, he would only want to be there in the winter months when he couldn’t surf. Surprised, perhaps flattered, that this teacher understood him a little, Lucas had gone along that winter and enjoyed the club, though he hardly liked to admit it. Then he’d become fascinated by the speed he could travel at on two wheels. He’d been glad to leave school and start work at the factory, saving up enough to acquire his red and black motorbike. Riding it still gave him the same momentary adrenalin rush that he had once felt cresting the waves. At weekends he would steer his way skilfully upwards on the narrow looping roads leading into the hills. At the top he would pause, basking in the pent-up power of the machine, before setting it on its downward way; trusting his own judgement to know when he should gently activate the brakes.
That was how Lucas had come to encounter Senhor Santos once again at a weekend a couple of years ago when he was out for a ride. He had reached the top of the hill on a route he knew like the back of his hand when he had noticed an old, small car that had seemingly parked just off the road. Something about the way the vehicle was positioned had troubled him; as if the driver had had no choice but to stop so awkwardly, partly on the gravelled rock and partly still on the road. Much as Lucas longed to begin the heart racing descent that lay just beyond the high point a few metres away, he knew in an instant that he could not ignore the little cream car or the driver that appeared to be still in it. What if there were some kind of emergency? Lucas had pulled in behind the car and tapped on the driver’s window, only to see Senhor Santos waving back. His old teacher had opened the window to explain that his car appeared to have broken down, and he was just contemplating abandoning it to seek help from the garage in the village at the bottom of the slope. When Senhor Santos got out of his vehicle, Lucas noticed that he looked frailer and was hot and a little dishevelled. What else could Lucas do but offer him a ride on his motorbike down to the garage? Forgetting any resentment about missing the thrilling descent he had anticipated, Lucas buckled down to the task of manoeuvring the bike down the hill side whilst keeping his old teacher securely balanced behind him. From there he would find himself taking his passenger onwards to a small house, isolated by the roadside amongst some long-neglected olive fields.
As they waited together there for his car to be retrieved, Senhor Santos had suggested they play a game of chess to pass the time. He recalled how Lucas had been a promising player at fifteen and so felt sure he would soon remember the strategies he needed fifteen years later. Rusty as he was, Lucas had enjoyed the game and found himself returning regularly to play chess with the retired teacher for old times’ sake. They spoke little, but Lucas was soothed by the old-fashioned house with its motley furniture and by the presence of the skinny black and white stray cat that his old teacher had adopted. More accurately, Senhor Santos had smiled, the cat had adopted him when his wife had died three years ago. Either way, he fed his house guest every morning and evening and named her Avida as his visitor was always so ravenous. In return, the cat allowed his feeder to give her a stroke or two and, as the months passed, this courtesy had been extended to Lucas who appeared to be Senhor Santos’s only regular visitor.
Then, turning up one evening, Lucas had found the door of the house opened by a fierce and smartly dressed older woman, whose chiselled features resembled those of Senhor Santos, though without the smile lines. She explained that she was there for a few days to sort the place out. She told him that her brother was in hospital but would say little about what had happened to him. She remarked only that she had been busy getting rid of the old stray cat that was always hanging about in the yard. She ventured a faint grin when she told Lucas how she’d dowsed the creature in cold water and thought it had finally moved on.
Sad, but suddenly shy, Juan had said little but fretted back at his flat about the old man who had been kind to him. They had given each other a little company, he thought, and for the old man’s sake he could not let things go as far as the cat was concerned. After a few more days he had returned to the house after work, but this time taking in his pannier a little cat food and a bowl. He had found the house deserted now. Leaving his motorbike outside the porch, Juan had investigated. He had found no cat lurking in the yard but picked up a faint mewing sound coming from the abandoned field nearest the house. There, under the olive bush next to a brackish stream a few yards from the road he’d found Avida. She rubbed against his legs and let him stroke her head before he hurried back to his bike to collect the food and bowl to feed her.
When the old man did not come back, Lucas had presumed that the house had been sold by his sister. As he never saw anyone else living there, he’d assumed that the plot had been acquired as a future investment by some developer. Lucas found that he could not abandon Avida and the babies she gave birth to in time. Each morning, he would drove purposefully to find hungry cats under the olive tree and feed them. Then, in the evening, he returned to feed them again.
This had become his life until just a few months ago when one of his colleagues at the factory had approached him. She had wanted to know whether he was the young man who appeared in their hamlet on a red and black motorbike every morning and evening and seemed to be sneaking round leaving packages for someone or collecting them perhaps? The young woman who had asked him that teasingly and laughed as she told him how her aunt who lived nearby had nothing better to think about. She had seen him coming and going and was suspicious that he was some kind of drugs courier. That was when Lucas had laughed too and explained to her how he had started looking after a stray cat when their feeder had been taken into hospital and never returned. He had offered to take her to meet Avida after work that day and she had agreed. She had also persuaded him that the two of them should band together to help some of the other stray cats she had noticed sleeping in hedgerows or under trees around the town.
Lucas glanced up at the clock once again and smiled to himself because his shift would be over in one minute. Now he did not need to fill the time by thinking about the past. He would have to hurry to put his work things away in their locker and get back to his motorbike. Ana would be waiting there to meet him with the food supplies for the strays they would visit together on their circuitous route back to his flat. Yes, Lucas thought, it was almost time to go home.
About the Author
Jane lives in Woodbridge, Suffolk UK. With the encouragement of the local creative writing class which she joined in 2021 she has been writing stories ever since, some of which have appeared on Café Lit.
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