Rinaldo
had gone, in the Valentine’s Day. I was shocked. He texted me that his stomach
hurt and felt depressed via Skype on Thursday afternoon. On Saturday we were informed
that he passed away on Friday morning. There are too many that I’d like to
know. However it is impossible to find the answers. What I can do now are to
help his family close the loose ends here and think of those moments we share.
The
so-called coffee shop between two banks outside the south gate was the first
place he had dinner in this country.
Later it became the place where both of us have our late dinner. Its
food sucks. We went there because it was the only restaurant open after 8:00 pm
around old campus. I noticed he ate slowly and always skipped soup when having
a fried rice combo. Most of the time, I had already had my dinner. I
accompanied him because I understood how difficult was for a foreigner to live
here. It might make him more comfortable for being together with another one
like him.
I never
thought I could go to a KTV for the first time in my life because of him. He
himself wanted to see how the KTV looked like in this country, but he told
Joyce that I wanted to see it. So she found one and I could not refuse the
invitation. Actually I was a little
angry at him. To revenge, I called American students out for dinner in his name
later. That night, together with Rhi and Emily, we had a wonderful moment. He
sang very well; and I was like a dumb. That was really a joyful night.
His office
was empty. Maybe it was because he was always absent and had not decorated it
with small appliances and books. When he was present, he stayed long in it for
a day. At night, his office was quite faint. There was only a desk light
turning on. The heartbreaking letter I received said he was covered by
loneliness and the fear a couple of days before he was taken. I can imagine his
mental condition fell into a dark and void space that his office was not
comparable.
The very
last moment we shared is in the tailor’s shop. He had been looking for a tailor
for a custom-made suit. Since a student found a tailor’s shop for him, we had
visited it several times. I was the translator who interpreted his tons of
requests to the tailor. He was very demanding. He bought a few yards of fair
fabric from Kyrgyzstan, but wanted it to become a designer suit by less than
$50 dollars of labor cost. He checked each detail to make sure it was as close
as the one in the referenced photo. Until the last time I saw him, the suit had
not been completed.
I reminded
him don’t forget to claim his suit the night prior to my short trip to
Hangzhou. By the West Lake, I wished him had a nice winter vacation and
Christmas in his home country on the phone. This was the last time we talked.
I was
envious that he was always popular with girls because of his handsome face and
gentlemanly behavior. How could I foresee he pass away in front of his
girlfriend on Feb 14th? Now I have one more reason to dislike the Valentine’s
Day.