--I’M LOST INSIDE A PAINTING ON THE WALL
I won’t be back on the blog until Tuesday at the earliest, so please come back then.
February 14th, 2014
Rosie ambles into the kitchen,
nosing my hand to be petted, and behind her, Virginia, the woman whose home
I’ve been staying at the last month.
“Sounds like torpedoes,” she
says. “I’ll bet it’s something to see.”
Virginia taps the edge of the
counter, feeling her way toward the coffee pot, retrieving a cup from the
cupboard, and filling it precisely to the brim.
“What’s it look like out there?”
“Destruction,” I say, “but kind of
beautiful, in an angry sort of way.”
“Beautiful and angry. How wonderful. More coffee?” she asks holding up the pot.
“I’m good.”
The night I arrived at Virginia’s
house, after a five hour trek across the frozen lake, she answered her door and
welcomed me in without any hesitation, as if I was a relative instead of a
complete stranger. Later I learned that
she was widowed, childless and lonely. I
hadn’t expected to stay this long, but fell into a comfortable pattern of
laziness. Other than once on the phone
with my wife, I haven’t spoken to anyone but Virginia and her Labrador, Rosie.
“Now that the weather’s turning, I
suppose you’ll be going soon,” Virginia says.
Her housecoat has flapped open and I can see the gleaming outline of one
of her bare breasts. She’s just past
sixty, yet fit for her age, hardly wrinkled except for a smattering of crow’s
feet. Despite her being blind, I feel
sleazy for staring and take Rosie’s snout in my hands.
“Yeah. Maybe this afternoon.”
When I told my wife I wasn’t at our
house, she said good, because she’d moved in with her boss. She said I should be on the lookout for
divorce papers in the mail. She said
marrying me was the worst thing that’s ever happened in her life, which is some
kind of dagger considering she was sexually assaulted by her father for years
as a child.
As if channeling my thoughts,
Virginia says, “So your marriage, it’s over then?”
I remember the few nights we made
love, when my wife’s fingernails pierced the skin of my neck, nothing kinky or
erotic about it, just her distain of me being verified.
“Over and done,” I say, realizing
for once what a release it is to be finally free.
“Relationships are quite a
challenge.”
“But you were married for thirty
years.”
“Yes, and most of the time I was
miserable. If David hadn’t died, I think
I would have ended up killing him.”
“Why stay then, in a bad marriage?”
Virginia points to her eyes, wide as
they always are. “I’m pretty
independent, but being blind is a tricky thing to negotiate all alone.”
I stayed in my marriage because my
identity was all wrapped up in being Jess’s husband, her a successful bond
broker, me a failed alcoholic.
“Would you happen to have a drink
handy?” I ask.
“Water?”
“Something harder.”
Virginia’s eyebrows arch. She likes the idea. “Well, why not, it’s noon somewhere. There are a few bottles in the shelf above
the fridge.
I haven’t had a drop of alcohol in
five years, not since the car accident, then losing my job and not having the
confidence or wherewithal to get a new one.
I thought that being sober would center me, that I’d discover my true,
authentic self as they say in AA, but I only felt more lost, empty and
soulless.
I make us screwdrivers, mine mostly
vodka. The first taste is like seeing
old yearbook photos. I don’t know what
I’m doing, but I’m enjoying the missile of heat that slakes along my nerves,
making my senses electric. I have
another and another. As if I’m leafing
through a magazine, I start to count my past mishaps and failures, picturing
them in my mind, bloody and glossy.
I don’t even realize that Virginia
has gotten up and is standing behind me until I feel her hands on my
shoulders. “You’ve gotten quiet all of a
sudden.”
When she leans forward, her breasts
are squeezed over my head like earmuffs, warm and plush.
She whispers in my ear, “Before you
go, do you think you could do me a favor?”
Rosie’s asleep on her mat. My glass is empty. Outside the ice sounds like steel beams
breaking.
“It’s been a very, very long time for me,”
Virginia says, kissing my head. “And
after all, it is Valentine’s Day.”
I put my hands over hers, ready to
push them off. Instead I grip Virginia’s
fingers, stand and walk with her toward the bedroom.
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