Read Marie Sexton - Coda 04 - Strawberries for Dessert Online
Authors: Marie Sexton
“And shall I have dinner waiting for you when you come home, too? Or is that still
your
job? Shall I call
you
the wife, then?” He winced at that, and I knew I had hurt him. But I was too angry to take it back.
He stepped closer to me, although his expression was wary. “I have a life that most people envy, Jon. I can go anywhere. I can do anything. I have more money than I can ever spend.” He put one trembling hand against my cheek. “All I want to do is share it with you. All you have to do is say yes.”
I loved him. God, I loved him so much I wondered how my chest didn’t burst open from the force of it. But I couldn’t imagine doing what he asked. I couldn’t imagine knowing that I had nothing of my 200
“I can’t live like that.” I tried to make my voice gentle, but I might as well have slapped him. His breath caught in his throat. He closed his eyes and turned away from me, but not before I saw what he was trying to hide from me. He was ashamed. “Cole—” I started to reach for him, but he flinched away and held a hand up to stop me.
“You asked me once why I act the way I do. This is why, Jon. Because being flamboyant and eccentric is exactly what’s expected of me, and although people may laugh, they have a certain amount of respect for my ability to not care about what they think. But if I let that go, Jon, this is all that’s left. I’m a fool, and I’m a coward. And I’m
weak
. And that’s the one thing a gay man is not allowed to be.”
“I’d like you to leave now.” His voice was torn. It was almost his real voice, soft and quiet, yet choked with tears. But I could also hear the cadence of it changing again; the small lilt being forced back in. He kept his back to me and crossed over to the table. He picked up his wine and downed all that was left in the glass.
“There’s really nothing left to say.” It was still another moment before he turned to face me, but when he did, the affectation was there. His walls were firmly in place. He leaned back against the table and cocked his head to the right so his bangs fell away from his eyes. There were still tears on his cheeks, but his eyes were dry. “My plane leaves in five hours. I think you know where the door is, darling.” 201
Date: June 22
From: Cole
To: Jared
an indeterminate number of days later to somebody ringing my doorbell. I had absolutely no idea what day it was. A glance at my watch told me that it was four o’clock in the afternoon. I was still in bed. I pulled the covers over my head and tried to go back to sleep before I could think about whatever it was that had reduced me to this state.
It was too late, though. The truth hit me hard, just like it did every time I surfaced: Cole was gone. That was why I was lying in bed with an empty hole in my chest, wishing I could slip back into oblivion. Whoever was on my front porch, waking me from my self-induced stupor, I knew it couldn’t possibly be him. And there was nobody else in the world I wanted to see.
Whoever they were, they were persistent. And I was already awake. With a groan, I dragged myself out of bed. I found a pair of sweats and a T-shirt on the floor and put them on. I glanced in the mirror on the way to the door.
There was really no other way to put it. I hadn’t shaved in three days. I hadn’t been out running in longer than that. I ran my fingers through my hair, trying to make it lie flat. I was trying to remember if I had ever showered yesterday.
“I’m coming!” I yelled, and gave up on the idea of my hair. It was going to take more than a comb to disguise the fact that I was falling apart. I finally made it to the door and opened it.
It was Julia. She had a casserole dish in one hand and a six-pack of beer in the other. “For Christ’s sake, Jon,” she said as she pushed past me into the house, “go clean yourself up while I put this in the oven.”
I wandered out of the bedroom and sat down at the dining room table. “When was the last time you ate?” she asked as she put a bowl of something unidentifiable in front of me.
“You don’t have to do that.”
“I know, Jon. Shut up and eat.”
I looked at whatever was in the bowl. I tried not to think about the last time somebody had cooked for me. I tried not to think about sautéed pasta with lobster or cioppino or what wine went with each 203
one. I looked at the empty chair on the opposite side of the table and tried not to wonder where he was or what he was doing. I felt myself wanting to cry again, and I pushed it down, fought it back, and made myself take a bite.
It was good. It was chicken and rice, and I wasn’t sure what else, but by my third bite, I realized I was starving. I finished the entire bowl and went into the kitchen for seconds. Julia was there, working on the dishes.
She emerged from the kitchen as I was finishing the second helping of chicken-mush. “Come on,” she said, handing me a beer, and I followed her into the living room. She opened a beer for herself and put the rest of the six-pack on the coffee table in between us. “Tell me what happened,” she said as she sat down in the armchair opposite from my spot on the couch.
“What did you do?” she asked.
“Why do you assume it was my fault?” I asked defensively. “Because he’s the one who left.”
Fair point. I opened the beer and downed half of it at once. It wasn’t even a micro-brew. It was some kind of weak mass-produced crap, and I wondered if a six-pack was enough to help me forget again. Just for one more night.
“I honestly don’t know. We didn’t fight. Everything was fine. More than fine. It was…. It was….” And I had to stop before I started to cry again. I finished the beer while I got myself under control again. “He had to leave town,” I finally said, as I opened a second one. 204
“So he’s coming back?” she asked in confusion.
“No. At least, not to me.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Neither do I.”
“Bullshit, Jon. Tell me.”
I finished the second beer too. I was starting to regret having eaten so much. On an empty stomach, two piss-poor beers might have at least been enough to give me a buzz. “He’s too restless to stay in one place, but he assumes that if he’s traveling, and I’m here, it will end. He says I’ll get tired of waiting or that I’ll doubt him.”
“Yes.” I opened a third beer, telling myself I would make this one last. “I guess he decided it was better to end it now than to stick around and watch it all fall apart.”
“And there aren’t other options?”
I almost laughed. “That’s exactly what I asked him.”
“And?”
“And he said the only other option was for me to go with him.”
“I can’t afford to live the way he does, Julia.”
“And what was his answer to that?”
“He said he would support me.”
“So what exactly is the problem, Jon?”
“The problem,” I said in annoyance, “is that it’s absurd! Just because he has money, I’m supposed to swallow my pride and follow him around like some kind of pet?”
“I guess so. But—”
“But you’re too proud to say yes.”
“How could I even face myself in the mirror every morning?”
“I had no idea you thought so little of me, Jon!” she said, not looking at me. Her sandals had somehow ended up under her chair, and she bent down to retrieve them.
Oh shit. I couldn’t believe it hadn’t occurred to me that she would take my words personally. I felt like there was a giant cliff right beneath my feet and I was wobbling, trying to figure out which way I had to lean to avoid falling off. The problem was she wasn’t giving me enough time. “That’s different, Julia.”
I knew immediately, based on the look on her face, that that was the way wrong answer. “Excuse me?” she said, her voice going up in volume. “What did you just say to me?”
“No. I mean, you’re not a woman! I mean, you
are
a woman, but not like a regular woman!” Her eyes got bigger, and I was almost surprised I wasn’t being vaporized by the rage burning in them. “Wait, that’s not what I meant!”
206
“Julia, I only meant that it’s not the same thing at all! Not because you’re a woman, but because you’re a… a….” I stopped short, feeling myself tipping over the edge of that cliff.
“A
what
?” she hissed. The word that had popped into my head was “housewife,” but I wasn’t sure if I should say that or not. Was “housewife” a politically correct term? I was racking my brain, trying to think of a better word, but I was too slow. “A
breeder
, Jon?” she asked, her voice like ice. “Is that the term you’re looking for?”
“Bullshit!” she said advancing on me, with her sandal still in her right hand. “You think you’re so much better than me? Is that what you think?”
“You think your stupid pride is more important than love? Then you deserve to be miserable.” She finally put on her second sandal, and I breathed a mental sigh of relief that she wouldn’t be able to smack me with it again. She grabbed the remainder of the six-pack off of the table with one hand, reached out with the other hand and pulled my half-full can out of my hand. “You’re an idiot,” she said. And then she left.
of. The next morning I got up and made myself go for a run, for the first time in a week. Afterward, I showered and shaved, then went down the street where I picked up donuts and coffee for two. 207
I was a little nervous knocking on her door. I was halfway expecting her to start beating me with her shoe again. But when the door opened, she looked apologetic.
“Sounds good.”
“Julia,” I said, once were sitting down, “I’m sorry.”
“I’m sorry too.”
“I didn’t mean to offend you.”
“I know.”
She shrugged again. “I’m not asking for sympathy, Jon. I have a good life. Don’t get me wrong—sometimes it feels like I’m juggling with one hand tied behind my back. But I know how lucky I am to have the luxury of staying home.”
“It wasn’t you,” she said. “It was Tony.” Tony, her gay brother who lived in California. “I talked to him two days ago, and
he
used that word. And I was just so shocked, I hung up before I could really say anything to him. I tried to tell myself he didn’t really mean anything by it, but the more I thought about it, the more pissed off I got. And then when you started talking about it being disgraceful for somebody to not work—”
“Julia, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean it like that.”
“I know.”
“Have you talked to Tony since then?”
him. I stand up for him, and what do I get for it? I get called names.” She shook her head, not looking at me. “I don’t understand. Neither one of us can help what we are, and yet for some reason, he feels that I deserve his contempt simply because I’m not like him.”