I've written several stories about two people of a certain age finding each other and I have generally not been overly explicit in describing their intimacy. I wanted to take this one further.
Some readers will say that a person like Claire does not exist. Enough of us know that they do. They are often complicated, long overlooked people who live without love never knowing why. They typically deserve better.
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"How did we get to this sorry state?" It was an odd question for me to ask, but this night I was feeling my age and enough frustration fatigue to give voice to my frustration.
Claire just laughed. That was her way. Sometimes she laughed because it was funny, and sometimes she laughed because she was self-conscious or uncomfortable. It seemed to be a nervous tick and you often couldn't tell which laugh was which. Still, she was almost always in a good mood unless she was dealing with someone who was making her life harder when they're being paid to make it easier. The support staff at work seemed to go that way more and more these days and I was about at the end of my rope with that nonsense as well. Since that topic succeeded is pissing off the both of us, we avoided it tonight.
There we sat, side by side on the hotel couch, sipping our drinks and talking. We had adjoining rooms, although it was an unplanned coincidence, and I decided to open the honor bar where overpriced liquor waits for unsuspecting victims. Screw it. We were ending a long day of sitting in unpleasant seats while drivers and pilots moved us from there to here and we deserved it.
Claire picked up on my rhetorical question. "What do you mean "this sorry state'? Speak for yourself old man."
She's a funny girl. She's also a full 14 months older than me, but we both know it and I wasn't going to rub it in.
"Why are we still doing this shit? We're old enough to collect Social Security for crying out loud, but we're still running around the country like a couple of newbies." It was the truth.
"I've decided that I'm going to put up with the shit for a few more years just so I can enjoy those rare moments when I get to close my office door, pull up a piece of honest work on the computer screen, and do something that makes me feel like I've still got it! So long as I can do that, all the stupid shit is almost worth it."
I was nodding slowly. I had to agree she was right, and I was doing the same thing.
"To be honest, some things have gotten worse, but other things just annoy me more than they used to. It seems like management keeps changing accounting systems or reporting software or something else every year and the new programs don't work any better than the old ones. They just consume our time learning to do the same thing with new tools. I don't know if I'm getting old or I've just been doing this long enough to see that things don't need to be this frustrating."
She looked at me. We were sitting shoulder-to-shoulder and she was staring into my eyes close enough for me to feel her breath. "Aren't they one in the same?"
"Probably."
"Besides, what would you do if you weren't working? Are you going to get a straw hat and garden all day or take up stamp collecting?" She was laughing and as usual I couldn't tell which kind of laugh it was.
"I was thinking I'd take up womanizing."
That earned me a scowl. "You old goat!"
"Well, at my age most women are getting slower what with all that arthritis and all..."
Okay, now she was laughing again.
I was trying to turn this around. "You know, you're not doing great things for my ego here. You're supposed to be saying things like, 'I bet you'll have them lining up at the door!' You know, lie to me!"
Okay, by now we are both laughing and being silly.
We calmed down after a bit and things turned more serious, if still a bit playful.
"How come we never go dancing?"
That question practically knocked me off my seat. I looked at her, again up close where I could feel her breath on my face, and shrugged, "I never thought of it." She seemed to deflate at that response. "That came out wrong. What I mean is I haven't thought of dancing in so long that I don't know if I can still do it. I danced with my daughter at her wedding, but my wife lost interest in dancing with me a long time ago."
"Your wife lost interest in doing anything with you a long time ago."
"True. If it hadn't been for my daughter, I'd have left her years ago."
"Liar! You stayed for years after your daughter went to college. You just aren't the type to cut and run. I've watched you take whatever crap is thrown at you and you try to make it work. You made those promises when you stood with her in the church, and you wouldn't break your word no matter how bad it got." Claire knew me too well and she never let me get away with anything.
I took a deep breath. She was right, of course. I just wasn't the type to cut and run. "I guess she did me a favor when she left."
"I think she did you dirty for years and finally left when she wanted to go." She wasn't wrong.
We were quiet for a time after that. It's true what Claire said. My wife left me three years earlier and moved in with her latest distraction. He had money and she fed his ego. I'll give him credit for this much - he had enough sense to know that a young trophy wife would be more trouble than she was worth whereas my wife would work for it.
"I never told you; I never told anyone. She ended our sex life years before she left."
Claire seemed stunned for a moment and then shook her head. "I always figured that sex was the only reason you kept her around."
I scoffed. "Not hardly! The truth is she moved into her own room and after a time I just got used to it. By then she was living her own life going out more than she was home, and I decided to do the same." I looked at her. "Well, not the same so much as just my own thing. I actually kept my vows for what that's worth. Once Britt went off to college I stopped caring altogether. Before that I wanted Britt to have a normal home life. After she left, I was happiest when Barb was out of the house. I suppose I should have divorced her then, but I had too much inertia and just went on living my own life."
There was sadness in Claire's eyes. She cared for this man and his pain was obvious.
"And by the way, I do play golf! I'm not collecting stamps and I prefer to buy my vegetables at the farmers' market." She was laughing quietly now.
She squeezed my hand. "It still shouldn't be like this."
She wasn't wrong.
"What about you? How have you avoided getting tied down all these years?" I regretted it the moment I said it.
Her face turned sad. "Nobody ever asked." There was such vulnerability in her face.
"I find that hard to believe."
She stared down at her drink without speaking and stirred the ice with her finger. With a deep breath she raised her head and looked at me with sad and frightened eyes. "Can I tell you something and will you keep it between us?"
"Claire, you can tell me anything. You know that."
With another deep breath, and again staring at the ice in her glass, she whispered, "I've never even been with a naked man."
I was momentarily speechless. At first, I couldn't believe it, and then I didn't know what to say. I finally decided that at the very least she needed a smile. "Well, we're overrated." It worked. Now I was squeezing her hand and she was smiling a sad smile.
Claire said quietly as if speaking to herself, "I wonder what's worse, not being wanted or knowing that the person you love wants someone else?" It was clear she was feeling the pain of loneliness.
"You know neither one of us is so old that we can't still enjoy intimacy."
There were so many emotions written across her face after I said that. There was doubt, sadness, and did I see hope?
"No man wants an old woman" she said with sad resolve. "I'm not what I once was, and I wasn't much even then." She was being very hard on herself. "I'm not that 25-year-old hard body that men want. Everything sags. My boobs jiggle when I walk and not in a good way."
I had to smile at that. If I were truthful, I had long imagined what Claire is like when she's naked. "Claire, neither one of us is 25 anymore. Time doesn't do great things for men, either. Does that really matter? Isn't intimacy all about accepting the other person the way they are and celebrating a relationship together? Isn't it about the joy of giving pleasure to someone else and letting them pleasure you?"
She was quiet after that and seemed deep in thought.
I, too, thought for a time after saying that and tried to weigh my motivations. This was a friend, a dear friend, and since the divorce I'd begun to think of her as much more, but was I being fair to her? Was I being honest with myself? Still, I knew what I wanted.