Cathexis (48 page)

Read Cathexis Online

Authors: Josie Clay

BOOK: Cathexis
2.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

The living room had received the same rigorous treatment; plumped cushions, twinkling ashtrays. And the kitchen, swabbed and scoured. The sticky scabs around Prudence's eating area, purged. Clean bowls containing fresh, hairless water and new crunchies, no longer dark unappetising pips. Our white bedding rippled on the line, filtering non-biological light through the naked wisteria. Even the dubious items in the fridge had been rationalised. The fridge itself gleamed surgically. The envelope I'd left on the kitchen table still there, penned on the back in pretty, clever script.

 

'Dear Minette,

 

‘this is way too much money so I'll use it to buy cleaning products for next week.

 

‘Love, S x

 

‘PS. I found this in the bag for life and didn't know if it was important for your work.’

 

Dale's voice 'why Minky, is that a proposal?” I smiled, between my fingers, the Queen of Clubs.

 

These agreeable trysts between Sasha and my house, her mother and myself, continued in just that way for a while, until the unspoken rules began to erode. Nancy, unable to make the park, awaiting a delivery, switched the venue to Highbury. Sasha wouldn't be there she said. Apparently she had a cleaning job on Friday afternoons.

 

I stood before the front door of 12 Palladian Road, spellbound by the full blooded capriccio flowing from the piano.

 

Perched on the tall stool once again, heaping green leaves and olives onto my plate from an enormous salad mothership. Nancy poured Sauvignon Blanc into stemmed glasses which accommodated a third of a bottle.

 

“Cheers” she said, butting my glass with hers and then predictably holding my gaze over the rim, once and for all banishing ambivalence. A curious tickle in my chest, not unpleasant. With this potent gesture, she opened the door to the past and we entered that room, flinging wide the curtains, permitting the sun, blowing the dust off memories and showing them to each other. A smile on her lips, reminiscent, melancholic. The best and worst time she said, but always love for me, a fondness which never quite died, despite her best efforts
...leaving her to wonder why. And the reason she'd ended it, well, she just chickened out.

 

“I'd like to see where you live” she said, pushing the envelope, and I, reaching inside the lining pocket of that same leather jacket from which I'd retrieved the Russian wedding ring all those years ago, pushed an envelope of my own across the breakfast bar, a white one, containing one hundred pounds. It was unsurprising then, when she stood, came to me and tutting, ruffled my hair. Her fingertips stroking the nape of my neck and resting on the soft point of blonde there.

 

Bowing my head, we stayed in that tableau for some time, reflected in the light of a January Janus. Her heels tick-tocking across the floor, she replaced the wine bottle with one of schnapps. Her chagrin, swallowed in an eyeblink, when I got to my feet and shouldered my swimming bag, winning this round of brinkmanship.

 

“You can come to mine any time you like” I said. “Just call or knock at the door”.

 

Her smile, subtle like a seasoned tsarina.

 

“I'll call you tomorrow” she said.

 

I left her on the doorstep watching my diminishing back.

 

 

Chapter 8

 

Standing in the fragrant hallway, I hung my jacket on the peg next to an alien sheepskin, listening to evidence of a further infringement. The thunderous applause of running water issuing from the bathroom and when I put my keys on the spotless kitchen table, a bottle of Bordeaux, two glasses, a ruby droplet in one, its meniscus twitching in the storm of vigorous ablutions from above.

 

Shrugging, I poured myself a glass and took it upstairs to see what was going down. I rapped on the bathroom door, the frosted window running with condensation, expecting to be met with Marigolds. “Oh, you're early” she shouted. “I hope you don't mind me taking a shower, I got all sweaty”.

 

In our bedroom, immaculate bedlinen, the duvet folded back enticingly, under sheet tight as a drum and standing tautly to attention, the dildo, like an exclamation mark. Sighing to the ceiling, I drained my glass.

 

The bathroom door opened, releasing clouds of steam and stepping from this Stromboli, Botticelli's dream. Her hand modestly pressed to her chest securing the inadequate towel that skirted her bottom and pelmetted her pubic hair, which she obscured with her other hand. Strange how she'd elected to cover her breasts and not the lower, more intimate place, plus I knew there was a larger towel on the rail. Flushed and moist, radiating peaches and honeysuckle, her curls relaxed into corrugations, embracing her shoulders.

 

“What's the meaning of this?” gesturing at the silicone sentry. Like Venus, propelled by lustful zephyrs, she stepped forward and taking my index and middle fingers in her fist, she squeezed.

 

“I was hoping you could tell me” she pouted. “Or better still, show me”.

 

Running my hand over the unfeasibly soft skin of her buttock, a pulse flickered in the hollow of her throat, from where there bloomed a luxuriant pink rose. Drawing my hand back, I slapped her arse hard. Her eyes widened, first in confusion and then in excitement. She offered her face to mine, but I placed a finger on her lips.

 


Sasha” I said. “Not yet”.

 

She cast her eyes down, then regarded me again. I shook my head solemnly.

 

“I understand” she said, retreating to the bathroom. I turned to the mirror. “I'm glad one of us does”.

 

I wanted you badly. Pulling aside the wardrobe door, my hands sought out your leather jacket. I sat on the bed and the dildo toppled, rolling towards me. I buried my face in the red, quilted armpit and wrung the distressed shoulders, holding it on my lap, staring blindly. A solitary tear splashed on the sleeve. Sasha in the doorway, fully clothed, sending me all the devotion and pity her coal eyes could summon.

 

“I'll call you tomorrow” she said and galloped down the stairs, closing the front door with a respectful click.

 

Sliding my arms into your jacket, its weight settled across my back, the wings of the Nephilim upon me. 'Please baby, come tonight”.

 

That evening, I cooked your favourite dinner, chicken with ginger and cashews and as I washed the pans and put them away, determined to sustain the cleanliness levels Sasha had established, I talked to you about ideas I'd had and the funny things that had happened lately. Over dinner we reminisced about the days we had collaborated in every conceivable way. We pleasured the dickens out of each other, didn’t we? So in tune, so akin, but variant enough to provide each other with challenge, stimulation, surprises, wisdom and an intrinsic 'otherness', which was at the heart of our ferocious attraction and would ensure it would never die. But it was too short Dale. I've had toothbrushes that lasted longer. Dale, Min sanna kårlek, jag sakner dig …so much.

 

After dinner, Prudence sat with me and I watched telly, not really paying any attention except for a programme about a man whose mind had been fooled into thinking the dead man's hand he'd been issued with was his own, lost in an accident, his brain filling in the gaps. One of those primal drivers again; we must function, even if it means tricking ourselves. You've been gone a year and  a half now, more or less the same time we had together. Although the shape of my grief changes, its mass doesn't. It's everywhere - I meet it on the stairs, the first and last thing I see.

 

I went to bed and after an hour, setting down my book, I snapped shut my glasses case, applied my night cream and put out the light. Shivering into the cool cotton, I lay on my back, arms at my sides and inch by inch I slid, inexorably, from the sloping board into the sea, buried once again for another night.

 

Can't breathe, black slab, ribs crushing, legs pinned. 'Breathe'. A liquid voice and I inhale to make myself more robust and catch you in my arms. Laundered jumpers, cedar, ozone, wood smoke, caramel, a strong presentation and I relax. Your hair on my breasts, your heat a shocking depth charge as I feel your nipples on my skin. I want to touch you but I can't. You move up me and I'm not crushed but anchored. You're here and tears fill my ears. But Dale, I'm afraid to open my eyes.

 

“Don't be afraid, silly, it's only me”, your breath like parchment. But you're not really here. I have to re-remember that every morning, over and over again. Your warm mouth on mine. “Sshh Minky, I'm here, I really am”. And now I'm frightened in case you are here because if you are, I'm insane. But I have to see. I'd die happy if I could just see you.

 

“Dramatic” you say and my lungs hitch with laughter. I open my eyes.

 

There you are, kind of resonating on me in waves, a shaggy silhouette, corkscrews flopping over your face, which I can't quite see. Dale, your hair has grown loads. One eye glinting like the moon in a dark pool. Here's your hand touching my cheek, a hand used to handling stone, I've missed your hands. Let me kiss it. You touch my lips with your fingers. Now pushing back a hank of curls, you're too close baby, I can't see you, so you draw back, straddling my body, your coco on my belly, your eyes spinning sparks like catherine wheels. They're smiling but I sense a physical effort in you being here. Desperate to touch you but I can't move.

 

“Stop trying so hard”. Your voice shimmers and slowly my hand rises. “Det stammer Minky”. I touch your hair.

 

“Dale?”

 

“Yes, Minky?”

 

“What should I do?”

 

You pulse a wise indigo and your hands take mine, bringing them to your lips and I feel your blessing. Your body shines golden and loving, like a temple, your hair a luminous forest, capturing Cassiopeia and Andromeda and you bare your fluorescent teeth as you unleash that joyous mix of opera and friction.

 

“Minky” and there are bells and flutes and strains of an eastern lament.

 

“Minky …my love …go ahead ...swim”.

 

I wake up. It's morning and for the first time in eighteen months I'm not wondering why I'm crying. In fact, I'm not crying. I smell my shoulder and I am infused with you. My rickety walnut in flux, growing veins and arteries, finding new ways, no longer beating a retreat. In my mind's eye there is blood, red, fleshy, vital and heart-shaped.

 

Your B of the bang carving in my hands, caressing its skillfully wrought contours, holding the smooth to my lips, I kiss it. You will always be with me.

 

 

The ‘phone is ringing.

 

 

And now it's night again. I'm in our bed. Look at the rain, fleeting needles in the street lamp. I reach out and touch the curly hair of my lover.

Other books

Vanished by E. E. Cooper
Slave by Sherri Hayes
See How She Falls by MIchelle Graves
2 by James Phelan
The Singing by Alison Croggon
A Dolphins Dream by Eyles, Carlos
Diary of an Assassin by Methos, Victor
I Married a Bear by A. T. Mitchell
Unfaithful Wives' Guide by Ronald Stephen