
One
of Those Nights
The
rain had been pouring down all day in Washington.
Roy
had a lot of errands that day, and a dental appointment.
So, by three in the afternoon, his socks were squishy,
and his pant cuffs were wet. The humidity was intense,
and the temperature seemed kind of high for October.
It
was ten to four when he sat down in his dentist's waiting
room in the Commonwealth Building on K Street. He pulled
out his cell phone to check his office messages.
10/07
3:35pm
MESSAGE from
Ken
where r u
Right
off the bat, Roy was annoyed. Ken was doing this more
often lately. He'd call two or three times in an afternoon
-- never to actually talk about anything meaningful. Just
to chat, it seemed. Sometimes about absolutely nothing
- he'd just be on the end of the line not saying anything.
Roy would just hear Ken moving papers around on his desk
or typing on his keyboard, and Ken would even interrupt
their non-coversation to talk with people who stopped
by his office doorway. He imagined Ken looking up at the
person there, phone held between his ear and shoulder,
looking busy. It only left Roy wondering what was going
on between them.
It
was nice to be wanted and summoned, but after a few months
of this, Roy could only wonder what role he was actually
serving in Ken's life. Was Roy just a phone?
He
caught the receptionist staring at him. It was one of
those vague stares, perhaps from someone who was bored
sitting at a reception desk. Good, he thought,
she stares, he calls -- what is this?
But
he couldn't help but think that this was the first time
she was sitting at the reception desk since Roy got HIV.
She wasn't there in August when he came in for the x-rays
and disclosed his status. Of all the doctor offices to
be HIV-positive in, it always seemed like dental offices
had the most hostility. They fixed your teeth, that's
all. And all that blood was dangerous to them, an unwanted
danger. They dealt in the mouth -- which is supposed to
be clean -- and didn't want to hear about what you did
down at the opposite end, where everything was dirty.
They
didn't want to know you had dirty butt-sex for fun, not
in a place with pristine white porcelain spitting bowls
and little bibs. If
only the butt-sex was happening at all lately, Roy thought.
Ken
was always a really difficult character to figure out.
He had lots of issues -- it made him human after all.
He hadn't been drinking that much since they started going
out and that cleared a lot of his emotional acne up. No
rages anymore, no see-sawing from kink to despair.
Lately
it seemed that Ken just needed a warm body next to him,
and someone to call several times a day, if only just
to put the call through. Ever since they'd reached their
fourth month together, Roy had begun to wonder whether
it could be anyone that Ken had in his life, so long as
they promised not to leave him. For he seemed to need
so little, and was losing interest in giving almost anything
at all back.
She
was staring again.
Roy
gripped his phone tightly, stifling a bit of anger himself.
He wished everyone would stop looking at him. He opened
up his phone and dialed Ken.
*****
Clancy
lay sprawled across Kevin's lap on the floor of the living
room.
Kevin
was on a marathon conference call with a client in the
Caribbean, and was writing notes on a yellow pad as he
stroked Clancy's head.
The
rain was starting to intensify outside, and the sound
of it rattling against the metal trim of his terrace was
getting louder. He would normally get up and move to his
desk in the other room, but he was too tired, and he wanted
to stay there on the floor with Clancy, who hadn't been
eating lately and was spending more time than usual under
the bed during the afternoon.
"What
is that sound?" someone on the call said. It
was one of the women, who annoy easily.
"I'm
sorry, it's me, it's raining very hard here,"
Kevin said. "I'll mute myself."
And
he did. It was kind of a relief, as he was better off
listening as he prepared for this new program he'd be
running for this client. He hadn't yet gone to the region
and established his bona fides to the sprawling team he'd
be working with, so chiming in wasn't a good idea anyway.
But
what's more, it was Friday. It was raining one of those
soaking rains outside. He was exhausted from the week.
And he was pulling in his emotional oars.
His
work was important to him -- and indeed, sometimes he
was swinging between Brazil, Mexico, France, the U.S.
and some island nation someplace in a single day on the
phone and via email, but he knew he could do the work
and still tend to the life he refused to put on the back-burner.
He knew he could do it all -- all that he wanted to do.
Ever
since he'd gotten off the crutches and returned to normal
life from the leg injury, Kevin had a crystal clear picture
of what he had, and what he didn't have -- what he wanted,
and what he didn't want.
And
the idea of having it all vs. doing it all was going to
be resolved.
He
hired a maid for the first time in his life, finally.
Lulu badgered him into it as he lay on his bed in September,
completely desperate and unable to do everything himself
as he'd always done his whole life. Just looking around
the apartment from floor level, with a debate over advertising
specs raging in his ear, and the sound of the rain and
the light twitches from the sleeping dog on his lap, he
could see that the spotlessness of the room brightened
everything, and made it all beautiful...accomplished...more
certain.
And
a week or so earlier, it was one of those nights. He'd
run out of ways to procrastinate about talking to Dane
about his feelings. All through the leg ordeal, Dane was
wonderful as always in being attentive to Kevin's needs.
There was more than enough food in the house, and Clancy
was being well cared for at Dane's house in Arlington.
On the rare evening that Dane was free from work, he'd
always offer to come over and spend some time. And he
was there on the weekends. Always asking, what do you
need? And always going overboard to provide it.
And
that's where Kevin reached the water's edge. Little known
to Dane was this ongoing debate in Kevin's head that dated
back years, maybe decades. What was it that Kevin needed?
The
easy, Oprah-ish answer would be "love." It was
easy to answer, and to feel, that one needed a man and
needed to be loved and needed to have this, this and this
in a relationship. Indeed, when Dane and Kevin first started
dating, and their romance began, there was a hint of anxiety
from Dane over whether Kevin was needy -- whether he'd
push Dane to move in together or something. It was an
odd anxiety, as Kevin was never more happy to live alone
than at this time in his life. And after so many relationships
with men, three of which resulted in live-in situations
that blew up, Kevin had the philosophy that if he and
another man were destined to be together forever, then
they had plenty of time to get to that issue later.
It
pushed Kevin to confront this earlier contention in his
mind, from his more neurotic twenties, that he "needed"
things. Indeed, when Kevin moved into his new apartment
in 2002, he decided that he didn't want to need anything
or anyone. Thus began the journey to discovering what
he wanted.
There's
a difference, he reminded Dane many times. And what Kevin
wanted became clear, simple to describe, and --frankly--
reasonable to ask for...in terms of relationships with
men, with clients, with colleagues, with family and with
friends.
So
that night that was one of those nights was the night
that Kevin and Dane broke up. It was sad, and it was clear.
But it was coming, they both knew it. And it was amicable,
and tender as it always should be. That's
what Kevin wanted.
Now
he had to deal with a sad dog, one that was attached to
life at Dane's house quite obviously, and intensely attached
to Dane personally. He was a dog Kevin had rescued six
years earlier, who'd in turn rescued him from an abusive,
murderous owner as a puppy. Clancy was, by such account,
a privileged dog surrounded by more that he could possibly
need. But even a dog has the right to want as well. And
as Kevin stroked Clancy's head and watched him sleep,
he knew it would be no trouble at all keeping him and
Dane together as closely as they were before.
*****
Elaine
was out of cigarettes now. She was smoking the last one
in the pack, and as per the deal she'd made with herself,
that would be the last one at all.
She
stood in her kitchen, looking out at Rock Creek Park from
the window across the way. It seemed like the rain was
never going to stop.
The
cigarette was already half gone. It meant she'd have to
do something next. It would have to be big, if it was
going to rouse her to some direction away from the cigarette
issue.
She
took another puff. No more trips, not today anyway. It
was raining. She had no clean clothes. She was tired.
So
what then? What did Elaine want now?
She
finished it off, quite casually. Ran the butt under the
water in the sink and dropped it down the disposal behind
the match she'd tossed down there minutes earlier.
I'll
go to the gym, she thought. I'll go have a nice
workout or something. Maybe sit in the steam.
She
leaned forward and looked at the rain. She felt cold and
tired. Traffic was backed up on the parkway, and she could
hear sirens.
[Posted:
October 8, 2005]
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Silence
Tells Me All I Need to Know
Ken
was staring at the mirror again, like he did every morning.
Roy,
in turn, stared at Ken from the shower. Like he did every
time Ken stared at the mirror.
Neither
of them would ever say anything during all this anymore.
They used to have chatty conversations in the bathroom,
whether they were at Ken's place in the Mondrian or at
Roy's more comfortable digs in Penn Quarter --- where
Ken rarely wanted to stay.
Roy
was getting a little irritated by the silence. He didn't
mind that Ken was quiet. It was nice. Peaceful sometimes.
But lately, it was more a silence than a quiet. Something
was going on behind those eyes for sure; Roy could tell.
There was the heat of the motors turning. It showed.
And
in the little void of it, Roy was better these days at
not allowing bad shit fill up. Roy had been expert all
his life in allowing all sorts of polluted, sewage-strewn
waters fill the little pot holes and ravines in his mind.
Ironically, it all seemed to finally get under control
when something truly polluted, something truly awful,
spilled into his bloodstream.
It
was a strange sort of awakening. What mattered and what
didn't became much clearer. And opening his eyes to the
good things made it easier -- tidier -- in dealing with
the actual bad stuff.
But
still...that neutral din of silence. Roy never quite could
handle it so well.
Too
ambiguous.
And
only once --a few nights earlier -- had Roy ever felt
a pang of jealousy...hmm, maybe anger was a better word...about
the HIV thing between them. Ken was running all over town
towards the end, getting fucked by all sorts of creepy
characters and doing all sorts of drugs, never using condoms,
and he ended up negative last spring, and again in September.
But
Roy's single morning of stupidity in Paris left him with
an incurable infection that would be a feature in his
life forever.
Only
for a flash did Roy think that. They were at Thai Tanic,
waiting for their take-out. Ken was looking in the mirrored
glass behind the bar, sort of staring off into space really.
He had on a new Banana Republic jacket, and reached up
to scratch his cheek. Roy always liked Ken's cheeks. They
were sort of chippy and dimply. It made him look younger
than his age. And Roy instantly remembered running into
Paul Kurowski a week earlier in the street. Paul had been
sitting at a table, alone, at Trio's on 17th Street, babbling
into his cell phone about something or another. He'd been
HIV positive since the eighties probably, an old timer.
Lots of those in D.C. still. But Roy hadn't seen him probably
in two years or more.
And
Paul's cheeks were very sunken. It was that face-wasting
thing that happens when you're on the meds for a while.
Roy had seen some print ad in the Blade for cheek implants
or something, too. It seemed so awful to contemplate.
He wasn't all that old, but it would seem that his own
cheeks would lose their youth long before Ken's if they
stayed together. Long before Kevin's boyish face also
finally surrendered to age (probably gracefully, too,
like his mother). Long before Sean lost his childlike
smile and began to look more like an older man. Long before
the parties were all over.
And
as he stood in the shower, looking at Ken as he seemed
so far away, almost like he was in some other life, looking
into that mirror, Roy slowly ran his soapy hand over his
stomach. His skin was smooth. The little hairs trailing
below his belly button were soft and thin and whispy.
He could feel them.
He
could choose to live in the moment if he wanted to.
Roy
just couldn't figure out where Ken was living.
*****
"So
Ken is coming with Roy, hmmm?" Madison asked as she
poured the Veuve Clicquot into her orange juice.
"Yes,
they both said yes to my face," Kevin said, cutting
a bagel.
"Well,
this is going to be interesting," Sean said as he
assembled another batch of bacon for the microwave.
It
was Sunday morning, and Kevin was having them over for
brunch. It had been so long since they'd all just hung
out. It had been so long since they'd all been in Washington
on the same Sunday afternoon.
What's
more, Kevin was determined not to slip into some state
of depression over the break up with Dane. He wanted to
go immediately back to the life he always liked the most
-- the social whirl, on a small scale, with his best friends.
Indeed, he'd never allowed for enough time with everyone
when he would date someone. People like David and Sasha
and Elaine and Ran & Jeff, not to mention his best
friends, Sean and Roy, would get short shrift. And he'd
never get the chance to know new people like Madison.
Kevin
thrived on close relationships. With everyone, not just
one man.
So
-- off came the champagne corks. It was Sunday.
"Is
Elaine coming?" Madison asked.
"No,
she's jogging today, if you can believe it."
"Are
you kidding me?" Sean said, laughing.
"I'm
serious, she said she quit smoking and she's flushing
her system out." (Kevin)
"Wow,
good for her," Madison said, smiling. "You know,
I do prefer to hear about the healthy things our
friends are doing. I know it won't leave us much to talk
about but..."
At
that, they all heard the theme from "S.W.A.T."
begin to emanate from Madison's clutch purse.
"Oh
my, I'll have to take this one outside..." (Madison)
She
reached into her purse and took out her cell phone, and
excused herself out to Kevin's terrace. It
was a sunny day, with a perfect blue sky.
"Hello?"
"Madison."
"Anthony?"
"Yeah,
hey, how's it going?"
"Well,
it's going fine. No complaints. How are you?"
"I'm
good. I'm in the car right now..."
"Oh
yeah?"
"...I'm
heading out to Harrisburg at the moment and I was thinking
about you as I was looking out at the open road, and just
decided it was time to call."
"Well,
that's very sweet. It's great to hear from you."
"So,
what is a lovely lady doing on such a lovely day?"
"Oh
well...." (smiling, blushing, looking down seven
stories as she leaned against the rail)
"Are
you at home?"
"Actually,
no, I'm at a friend's place across the street. We're having
a little brunch, that's all. Just relaxing..."
"Oh,
am I interrupting?"
"No,
no, it's okay, we're just really casual, and we're still
cooking and all. Not all the guests have arrived yet."
"Great..."
"But
that's what I'm doing today."
"Ah,
I see..." (and he made another one of those little
laughs, much like he did on the plane. Those sexy little
laughs)
"What
are you doing out in Harrisburg? Visiting?"
"Yeah,
I have a regional meeting tomorrow morning out there I
have to attend, so I thought I'd go early, since the meeting
starts at 7."
"On
a Monday?"
"Well,
the police are always at work, you know..."
"That's
brutal, though. Even the vice squad needs a break now
and then."
"Well,
you are right there. In fact, I was thinking of doing
just that this evening..."
"Oh,
you were...."
Madison
looked all the way down to the piazza behind Kevin's building.
A good, long, seven story plunge into concrete and metal.
Much like what she imagined a night with Anthony would
be that evening.
"In
Harrisburg?" (Madison)
"Um,
no actually, in Washington..."
(silence)
"In
Washington?"
"Yeah,
I was hoping you'd let me take you out to a really nice
place for dinner and continue our conversation."
Madison
took another breath, and looked out at the blue sky. She'd
rather be looking up from now on in life, not down.
"Oh
Anthony, that just might be the most perfect way to end
this beautiful day..."
She
could hear his sigh a little bit.
"But..."
"Oh,
no..."
"I,
um...."
(silence)
"I
think it's obvious that I find you very attractive....and
what's more, I also find you really interesting. To be
honest, if there was a guy anywhere you was truly my type,
I think you're the only man I've ever met who has come
close," she said.
"Okay...."
(he had this sort of adolescent tone in his voice, like
he hadn't been disappointed since he was a teenager)
"But....I
just got divorced not too long ago. I just moved across
the country."
She
looked around, fishing for the clarity of mind not to
relent.
"...and
I just don't want to get involved with a married man,
Anthony. I just can't. I won't."
At
that, it seemed like yet another little bit of the past
seeped out of Madison, up there in the clouds above the
streets of her new hometown, and floated away. For her
to cast aside a date with a man she couldn't stop thinking
about, whom she met under the most fantastical of circumstances,
and whose touch and look and smell she'd never forget
-- it was one of the bigger moments of her life.
"Don't
be hurt, please?" she said.
"Oh...I'm
not. Honestly, Madison (pause) I didn't think I'd ever
have the courage to call you."
"Why?"
"Well,
you can imagine from our conversation that it's not the
first time for me..."
"I
guess so."
"And
believe me, it's easier than you think for me to pick
up the phone and call some girl someplace. One of these
girls I tend to meet who want what I want, no complications,
and are just as easy to cast aside as they are to call."
"Mm
hmmm.."
"But
you're different."
"How?"
"Because
there's a lot more to you. And there was a lot more to
us."
"I
know..." (this was getting difficult)
"And
I hope there always will be, even if we never talk again."
Madison
sighed. It indeed would be easier to always love that
perfect man she met on the plane home from Los Angeles
if she never spoke to him again.
Better
to keep looking up, and looking ahead.
[Posted:
October 18, 2005]
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