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Wednesday, 25 April 2007

Tapestry I: 50 Years to Say Goodbye

Judithtaylor
By Judith Taylor of Not Dead Yet!

PREAMBLE: Sometimes the tapestry of life's memories conceals sharp needles of sorrow for missed opportunities, for unfinished business or for useless and heartbreaking tragedies.

I came across a photograph of an old boy friend the other day, and it reopened a small wound which had left a permanent scar on my heart. Due to an idiotic mistake which was never explained, we parted without saying goodbye, in a way which was not only frustrating but painful, as it left each of us feeling let down by the other. But he was a good guy and would not have done that to me, I am sure, and I would not have had him think that of me for the world either.

It was during my time in Geneva, working for the World Health Organisation. I shared a flat with a girl friend, and across the road from us lived two American medical students. They were Jewish, and had come to the medical school in Geneva because at that time it was difficult for Jews to get places at the schools in the US. The four of us got on well and saw a good deal of each other, and for Josh and me there was soon more than friendship between us.

By the beginning of 1956, however, I was preparing to leave Switzerland and return to the U.K. as my two-year contract was up. The man I would eventually marry had stopped off in Geneva to visit me on his way home from India on leave, and I was pretty certain that I was going to say 'yes' to him this time.

I explained this to Josh, and as we had both known that our relationship would not be long-term, there was no difficulty about agreeing to say a sad but friendly goodbye over dinner one evening before I left for home. So we set a date and a time, and fixed a place to meet in the centre of the town.

The evening came and off I went to the rendezvous. I was not late – (I rarely am) – and I waited happily for a while. And a longer while And an even longer while. Until eventually, in disbelief, I rang the flat and spoke to his flatmate. He said that Josh had gone off to meet me as arranged, and he could not understand that we hadn’t found each other. He would come along to where I was still waiting, though, and take me out to dinner himself.

Josh rang me next day and said he had been where we had arranged, and where was I? I said that I had been there, and where was he? We checked what the arrangement for meeting had been: there seemed to have been no confusion, and we could not understand how we had missed each other. It was too late by then to make another date before I left, and so we never saw each other again.

Our last contact was that unhappy exchange on the phone, when I could hear the hurt in his voice, as I am sure he heard it in mine. Good mates should not part like that - it is still painful.

Epilogue
A few moments after writing the above, just for fun, or sentiment, or curiosity, or whatever, I put Josh’s full name into Google Search, and came up with a listing in the digital library catalogue of the University of California, San Francisco: it was his doctoral thesis written in Geneva (in French) in 1958, two years after we parted there.

It has to be him. I cannot believe anything else. I was strangely moved by this, as though we had touched hands again, even managed to say our final goodbye – at last! It was like laying flowers on a grave that one should have visited 50 years ago.

Tapestry II: Timothy Grass
Tapestry III: Cartoons and Romance

Posted by Ronni Bennett at 02:11 AM | Permalink | Email this post

Comments

Good story; I had a similar one. I hope you try to locate him. Surely his roommate would have told him that you were in the right place at the right time.

Too bad you were both cheated of that final time together. Strange that you could both be at the designated location, then not find each other if this was a place with which you were both familiar.

I look forward to the continuation of your story.

Ronni, I just noticed the new look of "The Storytelling Place" that as I recall, Mick, of "The Blog Brothers" was creating for you. I really like it!

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