"Cazzo! Porca Miseria!" Hank Cabeiri swore and hissed when the solder he was melting at an odd angle to join the two pieces of steel dripped from their intended spot and singed the skin of his fingers instead. He hobbled over as quickly as he could to the bucket of cold water on the floor he always kept nearby in the workshop, bent down and dunked his hotly throbbing hand into the water, hoping to dull the pain. Swearing some more in both English and his few remembered choice words from his childhood Italian, he moved the fingers gingerly under the cool water to test the range of motion. They were smarting and his fine manual dexterity, so crucial for the small but complicated work he was doing, would be shot for the rest of the day.
He pulled his hand out of the water, shook the droplets off angrily and then kicked the blameless bucket across the workshop with his good foot, spilling water everywhere, drops hissing off the burning red forge. The violent outburst only served to make him lose his balance and nearly topple over on his bad leg. Gripping the side of the long wooden worktable he steadied himself, then looked back and surveyed the sculpture he was working on. Hank shook his head in disgust. He was hot and sweaty both from the blazing forge and the past hour of fruitless labor. He was so tired, and his left foot and leg were aching from standing for so long. The piece he was working on was pointless and he had to admit now looking at it from a bit of distance, no closer to what he had originally imagined and sketched it could be.
It was nothing but an ugly twisted pile of steel, not even close to something he would have been able to do in his first year of apprenticeship, much less now with the threat of his first gallery opening in less than 4 months. Threat of failure, of public humiliation loomed over him larger than life. What the hell was he going to do?
He overcame the urge to upturn the whole workshop in anger and frustration and toss the pile of steel back into the forge to melt, to destroy everything, obliterate everything. He took a deep breath instead and decided to call it a day and just go back upstairs to the loft he shared with his wife Vena and pour himself glass of scotch. A very large glass of scotch.
Grabbing his cane from its spot propped up against the wall he moved toward the spiraling stair that led from the entrance to the warehouse up to the loft. He sighed and decided he didn't have the patience nor physical strength that day to slowly navigate the twists and turns of the staircase, and instead walked toward the freight elevator on the other side of the room.
It was a short ride on a rickety and loudly grinding old elevator, the sound would no doubt irritate Vena, but he didn't care. He just could not deal with any more frustration and disappointment at the physical limits of his body. He hoped she would understand.
Grunting with effort, he closed the gate and then the heavy steel doors, pressed the button for the hydraulic engine and rode the screeching metal box up to the home he made with his classically beautiful but sometimes uncompromising wife.
When the elevator stopped Hank pushed the doors open with his cane and then slid the creaking gate open. The loft was all open concept, a modest but modern living room area, kitchen, dining area and bedroom arranged in logical format, decorated sparsely but tastefully by his wife. One could see everything and everyone from the entrance of the elevator.
So Hank was surprised to see Aaron standing in the space between the bed and the sofa, almost as if he were in mid-stride between the two distinct areas of the loft. Surprised, since he did not see nor hear him come in, nor was he expecting a visit from his business manager that day at all.
"Aaron! Hey when did you get here? I didn't even see you come in." Hank left his cane in its usual spot propped against the leather chair facing the bed and limped a bit as he walked over to greet his wife's distant cousin. The men shook hands and Hank clapped Aaron warmly on the back in greeting. Hank gingerly moved to the kitchen area and opened the cupboard to pull out two glasses, then to the fridge to get ice. In the cupboard under the sink far in the back was where Vena hid the 12 year old Scotch from him; he bent and pulled that out and poured himself and Aaron two generous glasses.
"I guess I must have been really into the work, I didn't hear you come in at all."
"No," Aaron laughed nervously and accepted the glass from Hank with a slightly trembling hand, "you were really intense when I came in and I...I mean I am here to see you, I just... I came up, I didn't want to disturb you. I figured I would visit with Vena a bit ...just talking... and wait for you," the younger man stammered.
At the mention of his wife's name Hank realized she wasn't there, which was strange. He turned his head around just as she emerged from the washroom tucking a few stray strands of her dark hair back into the tight knot she always wore and smoothing the non-existent wrinkles on her skirt. Out of the corner of his eye, Hank noticed Aaron mirror the gesture, passing a hand over the legs of his suit trousers. While he thought it a bit of odd behavior, Hank pushed the thought away and greeted his wife as she approached him, kissing her lightly on the proffered cheek.
"Calling it an early day Hank?" she whispered to him, glancing at the glass of scotch in his hand. Her face was a mask of self control, although Hank knew she disliked him drinking so early in the day, she did her best to conceal her distaste from reflecting in the deep pools of her eyes and smooth planes of her face.
Hank studied her face now, and really every chance he got. She was, he always admitted to himself, extraordinarily beautiful; a placid beauty like some sculpted Grecian statue of finest Carrera marble. Pale skin, clear green eyes, a high regal forehead and arched cheekbones under warm thick chestnut hair always pulled back severely and knotted into a ponytail or twist, highlighting the sharper bones at her cheeks and temples. What she was doing married to him, an older man, ugly and body twisted by the accident and just plain old age, was a question most who saw them together asked and, lately, he found himself asking as well.
He reached out to cup her face tenderly, and rub away with the pad of his thumb the slight smear of her lipstick at the corner of her mouth, the only thing currently marring her perfection. No matter how much Hank felt the failure in his workshop or in himself he could revel in and be inspired by Vena's beauty enough to give him hope to start again fresh the next day.
From behind him Aaron cleared his throat and set his untouched drink on the stainless steel kitchen table.