
Ooohh,
I Gave You My Key...
"Ahhh, this is heaven."
"I
know!"
"Look
at the moon shining off the waves way out there..."
"I
know!!"
Kevin
and Sean stood chest high in the water as the gentle tide
was rolling in. It was 10:30pm, and their short dip before
heading out to 59
Lake needed to wrap up soon if they were going to
shower, change and make it before the fun would be over.
Everything
closes at one o'clock in Rehoboth, which makes evenings
a bit of a sprint. But it was so hot that night, they
needed the relief.
They
both looked up and saw Sasha still huddling on the beach,
not getting close to the water.
"I
saw a dolphin!" (Sasha)
"I
saw it too!!" (Kevin) "Wasn't it a beauty??"
"No,'
he said, with that short, Ukrainian abruptness. "Where
there are dolphins, there are sharks..."
Kevin
and Sean giggled.
"Aw
come on! I grew up on the ocean, baby. Dolphins kick shark
ass, okay? When I see dolphins, I feel safe." (Kevin)
"No,
no..."
"Seriously,
if I saw dolphins taking off, then I'd be scared..."
"No,
no, no, no...."
At
that, Sean ran (naked) up onto the beach and grabbed for
Sasha, who started to laugh and tried to get away.
*****
Ken
rolled over in bed and pushed a pillow between his legs.
Roy
shifted his weight and leaned against Ken's back.
"You
awake?" (Ken)
"Yeah."
"Feeling
any better?"
Short
silence.
"A
little, yeah. It's better with the a/c on like that."
"Okay."
Silence.
Roy
pulled the edge of the blanket up to his chin, and he
got a whiff of something that sent him reeling for a second.
Was it a cologne? Was it his imagination?
Was
it that same smell on the blanket in the hotel room in
Paris eight months before?
He
closed his eyes tightly, and felt Ken's hair brush against
his shoulder blade. It reminded Roy of that day he came
home from work and Ken was waiting outside his building,
wearing a nice pair of new khaki slacks and a pretty blue
Ben Sherman shirt. And his hair was sort of feathery that
day, something Roy had not noticed on Ken before. His
green eyes were looking straight at him as he got nearer
to the entrance. And then Roy realized that Ken hadn't
looked him in the eye like that for a long time, maybe
years. It was like a flicker of a candle in the dark --
like Ken had returned from a long exile.
But
he was standing there, inexplicably. But perhaps only
so for a moment.
As
the next moment came, and Roy remembered it was time for
both of them to get their HIV test results that April
evening. They'd made no plan to go to the Clinic together.
Ken just showed up.
And
Roy remembered that same look in Ken's eye the night they
walked out of having a long dinner at 2
Quail in early June, and the sky was full of stars,
and life seemed to return again after so many weeks of
shock and depression and rage. And Roy remembered seeing
that look in Ken's eye, and being unable to stop from
running his fingers through Ken's hair -- standing there
on Massachusetts Avenue -- and just looking at each other
silently, knowing what the other was thinking.
Roy
took in a deep breath, and the scent in the blanket became
clearer. It was Ken's laundry detergent. It was a fresh,
unique smell -- like a wood-paneled den in a split level
house in Buck's County, circa 1978. It was a new, happier
smell.
It
was Ken.
*****
"Another
Snozberry?" (Kevin)
"Umm.....maybe......"
Kevin
leaned over the bar at last call and ordered two more
Stoli Strasberi-and-sodas.
"Thanks..."
(Sean) "So, you were saying..."
"I
know, I'm being a bore..."
"No,
no..."
"I'm
just wondering about what the hell is going to happen
after the summer is over, you know?"
"Yeah..."
"I
mean, is it going to be the same grind or am I going to
do something about it?"
"You've
got plenty of options."
"Yeah...And
I feel a lot less encumbered anymore. Honestly, I am starting
to not give a shit about anything that doesn't matter
anymore, you know?"
"That
can be a good approach..."
"I
mean, I just feel so ready for something new. I am sick
of feeling like I 'need' this or I 'need' that. Right
now, it's all about what I want, not what I need,"
Kevin said. "And you know, I feel like time is running
out in a way. I mean, I'm gonna be forty before I know
it."
"Tell
me about it." (Sean)
"Work
is going really well, and I'm tired of sitting around
at home waiting for a phone call at eleven o'clock every
night. I need more."
At
that, Kevin felt a pair of hands going around his middle
from behind.
"Hello,
baby..." (it was Mark)
"Hey!"
"Let's
dance! The night is almost over..."
*****
Elaine
stood alone on the pool terrace of the Meridien, and looked
out over the Atlantic Ocean.
The
moon was rising over Sugarloaf Mountain, and the sea was
calm.
Her
hair was down around her shoulders, and she took a sip
of water and ran it around in her mouth.
She
knew that out there, somewhere, the boys were living their
lives. All of them. The boys in Washington. The boys in
Paris. The boys in Tokyo. And the boys she'd just left
behind in São Paulo.
Elaine
didn't feel lonely or wistful. She just knew they were
out there. For once, there wasn't a party somewhere that
she was missing. There wasn't something more fabulous
someplace that she wasn't in the middle of. She was where
she wanted to be that August night, with the winter breeze
rolling gently over the palm trees lining Avenida Atlantica.
She
knew she didn't want to be anywhere else that night. Maybe
she'd need to be somewhere else tomorrow, or next week.
But she wanted to be there that night.
*****
Kevin
waved to Andy and Mark as they stepped into their hotel,
and he continued down the boardwalk towards Poodle Beach.
He
looked out at the Atlantic Ocean, and the air was lighter
and cooler than before. A smattering of people were out,
hanging around, sitting on benches, talking.
He
thought about the rest of the season, and what his goals
might be. For once, he didn't want to care about anything
weighty and ponderous. He was working out heavily with
Andy now -- indeed for the first time in his life he was
serious about fitness. And his body was gaining bulk it
never had before. Nothing dramatic, but people were noticing.
And it felt great inside his skin.
His
chemistry was changing. He was going to bed early and
waking at dawn, full of energy. He was getting a lot of
work done in time to stop for breakfast on his apartment
terrace at 9:00am every morning. He felt greater strength,
more agility.
And
above all -- he felt greater confidence about himself,
and his life.
And
what he wanted.
As
he made it further down the boardwalk, the faces changed.
No longer young men and women canoodling on benches. More
older men, lurking around under street lights. None of
them smiling or looking particularly happy.
It
reminded him of the life he no longer wanted -- one of
doubt and inaction and a sort of hovering around rather
than being on track.
He
walked a little more high on his heels, with greater purpose.
He was heading back to his beach house, and would get
a good night's sleep, and get back to Washington the next
day, and start getting things in order. He'd get in a
good workout, go grocery shopping and have a decent meal
and get some work done, and not think about anything else
too much for the day. Nothing beyond, perhaps, something
he wanted to do -- and in such case, he would just do
it.
Kevin
reached the end of the boardwalk soon enough, and turned
the corner at Prospect. A group of older men were standing
on the corner with their arms around each other. It wasn't
clear if they knew each other or not -- apparently they
were acquainted. They were talking and smiling, but it
seemed a bit odd.
As
he walked past, one said "wait a second..."
Kevin
kept his game face: "Good night, ladies...."
They
all giggled and laughed, but Kevin picked up a little
speed. He made it to the front stoop of the dark house
and reached for the front door. It was locked -- he'd
given the key to Sean.
He
went around to the gate and tried to figure out how to
open it from the outside, in the dark. No luck. He heard
the group of men coming down the street, one of them calling
out to him.
"That's
it," Kevin said to himself. He grabbed onto the top
of the fence and pulled himself up. His arms could handle
it. He flipped over the top and just about cleared it
when his right cargo-shorts pant leg caught on the top
and he heard it tearing.
In
an instant he tried to land on his left leg -- and lift
his right leg up 2 inches to unhook it from the fence.
No luck. It tore open, and he tumbled down onto the grass
in the back yard.
[Posted:
September 1, 2005]
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White Padded Cell, w/ view
Kevin
woke up to the sound of garbage trucks outside - seven
floors below, in the loading dock far beneath his bedroom
window.
It
was 6:30 a.m.
He
moved, eyes closed, and felt his body stretching like
it always did until a sharp pain fired up his left leg
and sent his eyes flying open. Ah yes, the leg
The
sun was up, but the room was dark. Dust swirled in the
two or three little beams of light here or there around
the black-out shade over the terrace doors. His scalp
was itchy. He could smell his own stink everywhere - the
sheets, the pillow case. The air hovering around the bed
where he'd already spent a week.
He
looked up at the clock on the windowsill behind him. Once
again, he'd not slept much. Another week was beginning,
another week of his summer vacation now being spent in
bed with an injury that was supposed to go away like all
the things that got in his way. Kevin was 37 years old
and had never so much as broken a toe or a finger in his
life. He'd never had more than a bad flu or some elective
surgery that was long planned and would be easy to overcome.
But he was now on week two of God-knew-how-many weeks
in bed with a torn Soleus, a torn calf muscle and a sprained
Achille's tendon.
The
apartment was also a week into its emptiness. He couldn't
do more than hop in and out of the bathroom without a
set of crutches, and caring for Clancy was out of the
question until he could walk. So Clancy was at Dane's
out in Arlington - with the big back yard, the dog park
nearby and the friendly big dog next door who loved to
play. He wasn't there to stare at Kevin all day and convey
a sense of disappointment and boredom. Nor was he there
to lick his face in the morning and cuddle with him a
couple times a day - or any time Kevin needed it.
Kevin
had to take his pills, and he had to get up. Mornings
were the worst. His leg felt like it was atrophying, and
he could feel his body's metabolism crashing from total
inactivity. It was a particularly bad crash, almost like
after a weekend on G or something, because he'd been working
out so hard and tenaciously for the previous weeks. He
had biceps and a chest for the first time in his entire
life, and already he could feel all this mass that had
never been there before was just sort of sliding down
to his belly. And entire days would be spent sitting up
in bed, his head crunched down, the jowls on his neck
bunching together and reflecting back at him in the screen
of his laptop.
As
he hopped into the bathroom, he wondered again about how
he had to find a way to shower that day. He couldn't take
his own smell anymore, or the feeling that bugs were crawling
in his greasy hair, and the thickening layers of dust
settling over the clutter and newspapers all over the
apartment filing his mouth and lungs.
He
looked down at the swollen, purple appendage dangling
under his body as he hauled himself across the floor and
felt gravity pushing on every nerve in his ankle. He got
to the sink and looked up at his own face and saw everything
he was feeling. Messed hair sticking out in all directions.
Three days of beard filling the folds in his face and
neck. Dark blue circles around his eyes. Dried out lips.
Deep lines across his forehead.
And
he thought about Sundance. It was only two weeks away.
He couldn't imagine ever being out of bed by then, or
maybe ever at this point. So much time passing and no
improvement at all. It just seemed to hurt more, to look
worse, to feel more lame and useless with every day -
no matter what the nurse, the doctor and the orthopedist
said. In fact, he remembered the nurse saying the words
"weeks and weeks" when Sean and Kevin rushed
home from Rehoboth with frozen bottles of Stoli pressed
against his leg (there was no ice left after the beach
party) to make the 3pm appointment they'd begged to get
in town. Kevin had to be on a plane south for business
the next day and while he couldn't walk he was still,
bizarrely, insisting to Sean that he was going to be on
that plane. Sean had even said later that Kevin's insane
independence was almost an out-of-body condition at times
like this and he had to be ordered to stay in bed no matter
how much agony he was in.
That
was the morning that it finally hit Kevin that he was,
for how ever long nature would decide, a total cripple.
Sidelined. Not in control of the situation anymore, and
not even able to feed or bathe himself without help. Not
able to schedule around it. Not able to dress it up with
a cute accessory and ignore it as he plowed on with his
life. Working out his upper body was out of the question
- he couldn't even make it to the mail room in his building
on the crutches without having to sit down someplace and
take a breath from the pain. And he hated the Vicodin
- he hated everything that brought him down.
He'd
even gotten so desperate that he started looking into
wheelchairs. Anything that gave him back the ability to
get out and live his life was better than this, he thought.
But none of them seemed to work for him - they were expensive,
or bulky, or not a good value. All of it seemed too much
- indeed, someone would have to go get the chair for him
and bring it over, something he couldn't even imagine
asking someone to do. It made him furious to think he
couldn't just go pick up his damn wheelchair if he wanted
to.
And
Kevin stood there on one leg - the uneven weight making
his right hip grind in agony, the pressure forcing his
pulse to bang like a drum in his left foot and ankle and
all the way up his back, and he could smell the dried
urine around the toilet seat, and there was dog hair everywhere,
and the towels were musty and the toothpaste tube was
flat as a sheet of tin foil.
So
Kevin just almost vomited out a loud, wailing sob, exhausted
from the seven-day siege, and just surrendered once and
for all. He felt all his hopes for Sundance, for the beach,
for the summer, for his body and his skin and his hair
and his plans and his own brand of happiness that one
August of 2005 just evaporating in the air-conditioned,
padded hell of that apartment where all the shades were
pulled down and there wasn't a shred of anything left
in the refrigerator or the kitchen cupboards, and the
Brita was empty.
*****
Ken
stood before the mirror in Roy's bathroom and looked at
his hairline again.
It
had been a while - it was something he used to do every
morning last winter when he started to take Propecia and
wonder if it was too late to do anything. About anything.
But he really could see something happening up there.
Little baby hairs were peeking out all along his part
and his cowlick in front. His hair was getting sort of
floppy again, like it was when he was 25.
He
wondered - how could something happen like that, so fast?
One day you're getting old, and the next day you're getting
young again.
Roy
shut off the shower and reached for a towel on the outside
of the sliding door.
"How
late do you have to stay tonight?" (Roy)
"Not
sure, why?"
"Well,
I thought I might go over to Kevin's tonight and see if
he needs anything."
Ken
didn't say anything.
"Wanna
come?" (Roy)
"Um,
not really."
Roy
toweled his hair, standing naked next to Ken, and looked
down at Ken's feet. His toenails needed trimming. He had
callouses and needed a pedicure. Despite his great tan,
and the soft, sexy blond hair running up his calves.
"Okay,"
Roy said. "I'll give Sean a call."
*****
Elaine
pushed open the shutters and looked out over Mrs. Finney's
garden.
The
sun was just coming up and the birds were flocking around
the bird feeders that the maid was filling up with whatever
it seemed they all loved so much. That was the buzz word
in her mind about this arguably modest four bedroom house
that Jack Finney grew up in - abundance.
Mrs.
Finney didn't just do the whole Garden District gorgeous
house all the way down to the knickknacks and grandfather
clocks. The rotund maid named Calpurnia wasn't just an
eyerolling choice out of central casting. Jack Finney's
mother even grew spices in a sun room, and played her
baby grand piano in the afternoons.
And
she had a ghost, of course. When Jack told Elaine the
story of the ghost, he had the eyes of a little boy again.
And his accent started to come out again. Apparently all
the houses in New Orleans were full of ghosts in some
way.
The
more he told the story, with all its various qualifiers
and obvious elements of childish naivety, Elaine began
to wonder herself if the ghost was indeed Jack Finney's
forever-absent mother. Even with her son just out of rehab,
HIV-positive and borderline-suicidal, she still seemed
to just come and go from the rooms of her house, where
she lived alone, and not pay much attention to him or
anyone else for that matter.
But
little did it seem to bother Jack. He had a comfortable
room -- actually a suite of rooms -- and was well fed,
no charge. He had somewhere to escape. As did she.
As
they always were, Jack and Elaine, since childhood when
they'd first met one afternoon at a softball game between
Sidwell Friends and St. Albans -- neither would complain
when a release valve of any kind found its way to their
fortunate paths.
Elaine
had a place to stay and would be meeting friends coming
up from Rio to Southern Decadence, set to begin in about
ten days. Jack had no pressure to return to any semblence
of adult life.
And
no one knew either of them was hiding in New Orleans.
[Posted:
September 10, 2005]
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Urban
Indoor Fauna and Flora
A
second or two after the interphone rang, Kevin's eyebrows
moved up.
He
reached over to the bed table to pick it up and buzz Lulu
in. Everything had been moved into his room to be within
reach, as he was now largely immobile, except for when
he could hop a short distance.
It
was 6:22 p.m.
And
his movements were clearly lazier than usual, slower.
His reflexes were duller. The room was dark, danker. He'd
managed to wash his face and comb his hair, but he hadn't
showered in two days -- not since Roy had been by to help
him.
He
remembered looking back into Roy's eyes when he shut off
the shower. Roy was standing there in his bathing suit
- an unspoken remedy to the awkwardness of them standing
pressed together in the shower naked. Although, Kevin
couldn't have felt less sexual, so he wasn't concerned.
It was the look in Roy's eyes that worried him.
"Have
you told your boss yet," Kevin asked as he sat on
the side of the tub, towel-drying his hair that early
Tuesday morning.
"No,"
Roy said, looking down. "I will, though. I'm gonna
have to. I gotta get started on the meds."
And
this sadness seemed to be welling up right under the surface
that Kevin hadn't seen yet, not since that day in April
when Roy came over, sat on Kevin's couch, looked out at
the setting sun over Washington through the wall of windows
in the living room, and said he was HIV positive.
Roy
somehow never managed to convey a sense of sadness. Shock,
yes. Stunned. Unsure what to feel. Angry. Self-accusatory,
around the edges a bit. But the strange, almost organic
way he then plowed into this improbable relationship with
Ken seemed to wash over all that. It gave him a strength
that Kevin still didn't quite understand. Indeed, he was
a bit suspicious of anything related to Ken behind closed
doors. Some secret self-indulgence they both engaged in
to keep themselves sane? Kevin didn't want to think about
it.
But
he couldn't help it. The things that were growing in his
mind -- along with the dust and musty odors collecting
around him in his sick bed -- were blooming all over.
He loved Roy, and was heartsick about what happened. Even
more, he was sad to see how Elaine handled it, as Roy
had cared so much about what she always thought about
everything. She just took off as usual, no note. So much
for a woman raised in wealth, who never had to do anything.
Kevin
had his own sense of shock and anger to deal with. He'd
never been sidelined by an injury before in his life.
And just as his brief summer vacation was starting --
and the possible road to some kind of resolution about
what to do with his relationship with Dane was in sight.
Here he was. More trapped than he'd been before. He couldn't
even be a good friend to anyone.
He
heard the front door open, and Lulu's faint voice carrying
to his end of the apartment.
"Hi!"
(Lulu)
"Hi."
(Kevin, wanly)
"How
are you feeling?" (Followed by a startled grunt when
her eye caught sight of his swollen, purple ankle on the
bed)
"I'm
okay."
"I
brought your bread and cheese that you asked for."
"Ohhh
thank you so much, I'm so sorry the place is such a wreck."
Lulu
handed him the Whole Foods bag with goodies inside. He
clawed at the bottle of Snapple and guzzled it down.
"Does
it still hurt?"
"Yeah,
it throbs. I can't stay vertical very long either."
"My
gosh, it looks awful. What did the doctor say?"
"Stay
off it, basically. Just don't push it."
"Have
you been able to work or anything?"
"Yeah,
I've done my best. Thank God most of what I do is over
email and phone. But I'm on vacation anyway. So I don't
really have much to do except lay here and think about
my life, which is never a good thing in August."
*****
Sean
was on day three of his week in Rehoboth, as his birthday
was drawing nearer. He was baking on the sand as the late
afternoon sun was just beginning to relent slightly.
It
was an annual tradition that he'd spend a week there,
but for the second year in a row he had a share in a beach
house and was a bit more "part" of the scene
there. In particular, he was lucky to have so many friends
able to come out to spend all or part of the time with
him.
It
seemed as each day went by, the weather got better and
better. The water was clear and warm. The waves were inviting.
The people around the beach were great-looking, friendly.
And he felt more at ease with himself than ever.
Whatever
the reason, he was able to even let his mind wander past
the quick pleasures of the here and now, and dream about
ways to integrate this part of life -- which he loved
so much -- more tightly into his daily life. Elaine always
had that luxury, of course. But she did a lot with it.
Kevin managed to achieve an enviable balance, even if
sometimes it seemed like he wasn't sure if it was all
that he wanted in the end.
And
then Sean thought about his own potential dissatisfaction.
Beyond the sense of fear that any person feels when they
think about doing something unconventional -- and the
financial risks of leaving a comfortable, yet not-so-loved
salaried life -- there was also a core element missing
that couldn't be replaced by anything else. He didn't
have a boyfriend.
There
wasn't someone there up close, inside the circle, sharing
his life with him. Matt was already married. Kevin, however
unhappy now and then, was almost never single. Even Roy
and Ken managed to somehow hook up and stay together for
months on end, with all the challenges posed there.
Suddenly,
David was standing over him in the sand. He leaned over
and whispered in his ear.
"The
boys from last night are in our hot tub...right now...."
Sean's
eyes flew open, and he reached for his bag.
"Oh,
I'm so there...."
*****
Jack
Finney was thumbing through the brochure for Southern
Decadence that came with his set of event tickets.
He
couldn't help but want to go to every one of the parties.
It was a week away.
But
Elaine never seemed too interested when he'd bring it
up. It seemed almost illogical for them to miss out on
the party of the year. They were there. They were free.
They had a place to crash. It would be full of people
they knew.
It
wasn't Ibiza, sure. But it was more fun than laying around.
Of
course -- there was the small matter of Jack having just
left a rehab center, and testing HIV positive and having
probably infected one or more others in the process. And
that New Orleans was about to be inundated with horny,
drugged out men with hot asses, big cocks and nothing
better to do than fuck.
He
liked to tell himself that maybe this would be the chance
to enjoy it all without the excess. Without the G and
the coke and the Tina. Without the fucking. Maybe just
some dance-floor-smoochie, some good times, then home
with Elaine. Maybe....
"Give
me that," Elaine said, as she took it out of his
hand. "We're not doing that."
He
didn't look up at her.
And
Elaine, quite unexpectedly more to herself than to Jack,
didn't make a counterproposal of fun that would somehow
allay the obvious problems with the idea of going to Southern
Decadence.
"We
should talk about this, don't you think?" (Elaine)
"Talk
about what?"
"What
we're doing here, and what we're doing next."
He
didn't know what to say.
"You
know, I don't really know this town very well. Granted,
it's hot as hell and I'd rather be somewhere else."
"There's
not much to see really," Jack said. "Beyond
what you know of."
"So
why are we here?"
"Um...cuz
it's a place to sleep for free right now, and I have no
home at the moment."
"We
can go anywhere, you know. We know people everywhere."
"I
don't wanna be someone's guest right now."
"Aren't
you already?"
Jack
smirked. He didn't have to say it - being in that house
with his mother was like being alone, except for the daily
piano recitals she performed for no one in particular.
"This
is a sort of refuge of last resort."
Elaine
looked down. They both did. They didn't say another word
to each other. The conversation ended there. But they
both had the same exact thoughts. Indeed, as both had
been sober for weeks now, their minds were pretty clear.
They both imagined a little bit into the future -- what
that refuge here in his mother's house might bring upon
them.
What
about the forces gathering right out of sight? They both
knew that Jack had infected Roy with HIV in Paris. Everyone
in Washington knew it. Jack didn't feel much guilt --
he didn't know he was positive at the time. Jack was also
on leave from work because of the rehab, but that had
to end soon. The airline wasn't so generous as it used
to be. And then there was the days ahead. What now, they
both thought. Will I be stuck in some room --- here in
New Orleans, back in Washington, or up in someone's New
York guest room, or in some Rio hotel room, or some lodge
in Aspen or in a fifth-floor walk-up flat in London or
Paris with a pull-out couch --- sitting there, smelling
my own odors, hearing the voices in my head of the mounting
things I have waiting for me back in my life? Even if
I had enough money in my trust to buy my own apartment
in every city in the world, wouldn't I just be spreading
myself around and never staying ahead of the game? Wouldn't
everything eventually catch up with me and capsize my
boat?
What
then? Why wait in this alleged refuge for life to come
pouring in through the windows and doors?
It
was on that Tuesday night in New Orleans, a week before
Southern Decadence, that Elaine and Jack Finney, perhaps
for the first time in their lives, trusted their instincts
above all else. They never talked about it further. They
packed up their things, gave each other a tight hug at
the airport, and went their separate ways.
Elaine
went back to Washington, and landed after midnight. She
took a cab home, crawled into her own bed, and went right
to sleep.
Jack
Finney went back to San Francisco, the only place he'd
ever been happy in his life, without any idea what he
was going to do there.
[Posted:
September 21, 2005]
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Cruising
Altitude
Madison boarded early, as she usually did.
Her
boarding pass placed her in 8B -- a middle seat. Not what
she was used to, but she was getting a flight back to
Washington earlier than she'd planned, and would have
taken whatever seat she could get. Her visit to Los Angeles
was fine -- but would have been a day too long had she
kept with her original plans.
It
had been six months since she'd packed up and left L.A.
for D.C., leaving behind a life, a career, a Rolodex,
everything outside herself that she knew. She used to
crave being back there, and would have to stop herself
from going for visits like this.
But
six months had been enough time. She was an adult - she
knew life was meant to be lived in forward motion. Sitting
around someone else's patio, looking out at reverse sunrises,
reverse sunsets - a world backwards from where she was
now heading - was just slowing everything down unnecessarily.
She
was a Washingtonian now. Her life was back east, and it
was calling her to get back to it.
Madison
slipped her boarding pass into her Vuitton city bag, and
laid it against the small box from Cartier. The little
present sitting on the desk at Mitch's house that morning,
left behind with a small note.
Mitch
-- another part of L.A. She looked out the window at the
men working right outside, on the tarmac. She couldn't
help but wonder who they were, where they lived, what
their wives looked like. She imagined they were passionate
men. Jealous men. Full of life and vitality, who would
come home sweaty and tired, asking for their dinner, and
who would break the neck of any man who looked at their
wives with desire. They could never afford nice things.
But they had something that Mitch just didn't have, despite
all the wonderful trappings of his home, his car, his
quiet loyalty. It was passion -- and a kind of basic male
sexiness.
Madison
didn't want Mitch, at the end of the day. Every day he
would make it quite clear that he would love her no matter
what, and stand by her through anything that would come
in life, and be at her side, accepting her. There was
a time in her life, many years ago, when that was all
she would want in anyone. It was a tall, cold mojito in
an endless, searing desert. But life had left that time
far behind her -- indeed, now it was almost a continent
away.
She
didn't love Mitch. She knew she never would love him.
At best, she'd settle for him. But that wasn't part of
her itinerary anymore.
Madison
nudged the Cartier box over a tad and reached for the
issue of Cosmo
she picked up in the terminal. She started flipping through
it, looking for the latest quiz.
This
month it was: "Are You A Bitch?"
It
was a very short quiz for her -- and she already knew
the answer was 'yes' anyway.
She
reached into her bag, looking for a pencil. She just couldn't
find it, even though she knew it was in there. So, she
sighed, and reached for her compact. She popped it open
and began to reapply her lipstick.
Out
of the corner of her eye, she saw someone looking at her.
She looked slightly past the compact mirror and saw him
coming down the aisle -- looking straight at her.
He
must have been six-feet tall and 220 pounds. Rock solid.
Thick black hair on his head, and piercing blue eyes.
He had a navy blue shirt and cargo shorts on. Orioles
baseball cap on, with sunglasses on top of the visor.
He hadn't shaved in two days, probably. Flip flops. A
medium sized carry-on over his nice shoulder.
It
was 9:52 a.m.
The
man hesitated for a moment, leaning into a different row
and saying something to another guy. Suddenly, as she
looked at his big arms, and adjusted herself in her seat,
someone tapped her shoulder.
"Excuse
me," said the gawky college student - earphone in
his ears, scratchy treble spilling out into the air from
his iPod. He pointed to the window seat. Madison stood
up to let him slide in, which he did quickly. Just her
luck, she thought. She'd probably have an old woman with
tuberculosis on the other side, jonesing for a cigarette
and coughing up a lung.
Then
the tall man turned toward her again. He caught Madison's
eye, but she was cool, and looked right past him to the
flight attendant behind him. He picked up on it, looking
over his shoulder. She could see him do it.
In
what seemed like a moment later, she could almost feel
him standing right next to her. And indeed, he was. Until
he sat down -- in 8C -- and lightly touched her elbow
with his forearm as he came down.
The
aisle seat beside her.
Madison
froze for just a moment. She wasn't nervous - she was
just surprised. This never happened to her on planes.
Never did the man straight out of central casting that
would be the perfect man ever - EVER - sit next to her
on a four hour flight across the country.
"I'm
sorry," the man said, with a deep, deep voice.
"Excuse
me?" Madison said, reaching to touch her right elbow
with her left hand -- and gently lifting her breasts under
her left arm, so very subtly.
"I
bumped you, I'm really sorry."
"Oh,
don't be." (Her mouth, and her eyes, smiled widely.)
"It's okay."
"May
I turn on the air?"
"Of
course, please, go ahead." (She smiled again, and
looked down at her magazine, all the while trying to steal
another glance at him.)
But
when she did get him in her eye-corner sights, all she
could see was his face buried immediately in the latest
John Grisham novel.
Hmm,
Madison thought, oh well. He'll probably read the whole
way back east.
After
a few minutes -- with each of them looking down at the
reading material in their laps -- the plane pulled away
from the gate and began a long, winding, slow taxi. It
seemed like it was taking forever, and the plane was getting
nowhere.
Then
the captain announced a slight delay, and they sat a bit
longer on the tarmac. Madison could see that the man was
nodding off next to her.
His
face began to lean a little towards her, and there was
a soft, purring snore coming from his lips for a few minutes.
She smiled to herself. Even that was adorable.
Then
the plane started to roll down the runway, and he woke
up all at once, again apologizing.
"I'm
sorry, really..."
"What
is it?"
"I
was snoring, I really apologize." (He smiled and
his eyes almost twinkled.)
"Really,
it's okay," she said very softly, making it clear
to him she was not one of those women who took offense
at everything a man did.
"Honestly,
it's just that I've gotten maybe five hours of sleep all
weekend. I was out here for my brother's bachelor party,
he's getting married next Saturday, and he's sitting back
there with his best man, and my Dad and my cousins are
up there in the third row..."
"Seriously,
you're just fine next to me here," she said, quietly.
"My
name is Anthony, what's yours?"
"Madison."
"Pleased
to meet you."
His
handshake was very gentle, and he smirked as he did it.
She knew that smirk very well.
"So,
do you live out here in California," he asked her,
"because you look like you do."
"I
used to live here," she said. "But I live in
D.C. now. I was just out here tying up some loose ends."
"Is
that so?"
"How
about you?"
"I
live in Baltimore, but I was born in Mechanicsburg."
"Oh
really? What do you do in Baltimore?" (She leaned
a little bit inward, and spoke a bit more softly. He smiled
as he replied.)
"I'm
in the police department."
"Really?"
"Yeah,
I'm in vice."
"Interesting."
"Yeah,
it's very interesting work. My dad was also on the force
in PA."
"That's
great."
"How
about you? Are you a model or something?" (Smirked
again.)
"No,
no..." (she laughed, arching her back a little) "...I
used to be in show business out here, but I was a costume
designer. I'm in real estate now back in D.C. Kind of
turned over a new leaf and all."
"Why
would you do something like that?"
"Well..."
"Or
is that too forward a question maybe..."
"No,
it's fine. I just had a back injury that kind of ruined
things for me. Made it impossible to do my work at all.
Long boring story. I also got divorced. Anyway, it was
time for a new chapter, so I took my act east and now
I'm doing well out there. I love it there."
"Interesting..."
(He nodded slowly.)
Madison
decided to smirk a little, and leaned a little closer.
She wanted to know if this was going to be worth continuing.
"So
what does your wife do?"
Anthony
turned red. "Oh, uh..." (giggled a little) "...she's
a paralegal."
"Really,
that's wonderful..." (This is going to be a long
flight, Madison thought to herself, so I might as well
have a little fun with this guy.) "So, she doesn't
mind that you fly off with your friends to L.A. and go
to the bars and strip joints and everything...?"
"Well,
you know..." (he looked serious) "...my wife
is a few years younger than me and she goes out after
work with her friends and I don't ask about it. And we
go on separate trips now and then, and we've been married
for several years now. We both have demanding jobs, you
know..."
"Really..."
"So,
it's not something either of us throws in the other's
face, you understand..."
Madison
licked her lips slowly and smiled: "I understand."
"So
tell me then, do you have a husband back in D.C.? I see
plenty of jewelry on you but I don't see a ring on that
finger."
"Oh,
no. I'm not married anymore. In fact, I got a cute little
place in Logan Circle last March, and it's the first time
I've ever lived alone in my life."
"Oh
yeah? How is it?"
"Oh,
you know, it's great in a lot of ways." (Madison
looked away. Always a sign that someone isn't telling
the truth. He was an interrogator -- he knew that well.)
"I
see..."
"I
have my fun." (She looked back at him, smiling with
a certain wary confidence. Anthony found that very attractive
about her. She wasn't lying so much as she was looking
past the negatives that didn't set her apart from any
other intelligent woman who was living alone for the first
time in her life.)
Madison
and Anthony continued to talk about life and work, and
having fun. She told him some of her Hollywood stories.
He told her about a few funny moments on the vice beat.
They laughed. Sometimes, they looked away.
Then,
there was a short silence when they both were taking a
breath. And Anthony sighed heavily, almost like he was
blowing out the candles on his birthday cake and making
a wish.
"What
is it?"
"Oh...."
(he smirked again) "...nah..."
"No,
what...?"
"Nah,
nothing..."
"Is
it your wife?"
"No,
no..."
"You
mean, she wouldn't mind if she knew I was flirting terribly
with you the whole way home?"
He
turned bright red and smiled. They were now so close together,
their noses were almost touching. He motioned to her to
lean in so he could whisper something.
"You
are.....the most beautiful woman I have ever met...."
She
slowly looked into his eyes again, a bit startled. Here
he was, so close to her face that they were both almost
cross-eyed, and said something so startling yet.
"That's
very sweet of you."
"I'm
serious." (she could smell the inside of his mouth
-- it was minty, inviting)
"Thank
you, Anthony."
"And
can I tell you my greatest fear right now, Madison?"
"What's
that?"
"That
the kid next to you will have to get up to use the rest
room, and I'll have to stand up, and the whole plane will
see just how serious I am about that..."
They
both laughed. Madison tossed her head back a bit, and
then leaned back in until her fingernails were touching
his arm.
"Can
I turn the air up a bit?" he asked.
"Of
course."
Anthony
reached up and brushed her breasts. She took a short breath
and smiled as he did it, quite deliberately.
"Cooling
you down a bit?" she asked, smirking.
"Nothing's
gonna cool me down."
And
his face paused as they sat there, almost nose to nose.
His lips kept moving forward, and his eyes were looking
straight down at her shirt.
"I
would love to kiss you right now, but I mean, my Dad is
sitting right up there."
Madison
didn't move her eyes from his face: "Anthony, they
can't see you right now."
And
before she could finish the last word, Anthony moved in
the final three inches and pressed his lips against hers.
They were full, and warm, and almost quivering. She closed
her eyes, and parted her lips to take him in a little.
It was an almost perfect kiss, and it was punctuated slightly
as his fingertip very gently moved in and lightly brushed
along her breast as his tongue followed the same motion
around her own. All pulled down into that tiniest of areas,
maybe 2 square feet where their bodies touched, it was
so explosive a moment of contact that Madison wondered
what was behind all of that passion in Anthony. What was
the energy pulsating inside him beyond the hormones and
the thrill of the hunt that every man had in him? People
meet on planes, on trains, on the side of the road perhaps.
And it's one of those chance meetings where both people
have hit pause on their lives for a couple of hours while
in transit, and their worlds cease to exist temporarily,
and all this pent-up emotion comes out. Some people cry
on planes, others think of death or making major life
changes.
Madison
and Anthony could think only of each other, and that space
in between Seats 8B and 8C that momentarily overlapped.
"I
can't believe this is happening to me," he said to
her. "I can't believe I met you."
"Honey,"
she said, "I can't believe this flight isn't longer
and the bathroom isn't bigger..."
They
laughed again, and each grasped the other's hands tightly
as they laughed.
Anthony
looked around at his fellow travelers. They were all apparently
asleep at this point. And then he looked back at her with
the look of a little boy who'd gotten what he wanted for
Christmas, and it made her so happy. He just looked at
her again very closely. And kissed her again.
All
the way home to Dulles Airport, they were rarely more
than an inch apart. They whispered into each other's ears
about past loves, about the various things they each loved
to do in bed. Madison ran her fingers up his leg, under
his cargo shorts. He'd brush her breast again.
Anthony
would get more detailed in what he wanted to do. He had
a way with words. And he kissed with his eyes closed.
And
he told her about how he had to attend a funeral for one
of his fellow cops the following day, and how he wasn't
looking forward to it. How it made him afraid for his
own future, and for the other men he cared about on the
force. She talked about her divorce, and her move, and
how much of a struggle it sometimes would be living alone,
no matter how good it was supposed to be.
And
as they were getting ready for landing, Madison got up
to freshen up in the rest room. Anthony had to adjust
himself before getting up, of course.
When
she got to the rest room, she took a deep breath and looked
at herself in the mirror. Nothing like this had ever happened
to her. She'd had first dates that didn't go this well
before. She felt like she was losing herself in a fantasy
-- she had to remind herself that she was on a plane.
This was a movie, it wasn't real.
She
re-applied the lipstick, and checked the eye shadow. All
good. Her hair was great. Her nails were perfect.
And
just as she was about to walk out, she looked down into
her handbag again and saw the elusive pencil sticking
up. And she pulled it out, yanked out a page from her
Cosmo and scribbled down her phone number.
After
they landed, Anthony insisted on getting her carry-on
out of the overhead bin. "I don't want you to hurt
your back, Madison," he said, his arms flexing as
he pulled it down.
"Thank
you, Anthony," she said.
And
she leaned forward and put the little corner of the Cosmo
page in his pocket.
"This
is my number, Anthony. I thought I might as well let you
know how much I enjoyed our trip home..."
He
smiled immediately, his hand in his back pocket.
"That's
funny," he said, "while you were in the bathroom
I wrote down my email address for you."
He
handed it to her, behind the seat in front of him, out
of sight.
"Please
write me."
"I
will," she said.
And
as they filed off the plane, they both felt that magnetic
field between them being pulled apart slowly, as it had
to be.
When
she walked off the plane, Madison passed right by Anthony's
wife, who was waiting for him. Madison immediately knew
who she was, but she didn't look at her longer than a
second as she went by.
All
Madison caught was her fragrance -- Pure Turquoise
by Ralph Lauren.
[Posted:
September 27, 2005]
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