"Like a Rolling Stone." Bob Dylan and My Irish Bartender
I was sitting in a bar in Cologne Germany, surrounded by people but alone, drinking a whiskey, neat. I liked the cool rush on my lips, the sharp clink of ice cubes against glass, and the bite of the hard alcohol. The rough edges of my life were about to be smoothed over, even if just for an evening.
I spoke English first, pretty good Mandarin, and no German.
The bar had a live musician, but he was on break. He was French but mostly played American songs. A one man show, just an electric guitar, a harmonica, and pretty good vocals.
Between sets, I tried to eavesdrop on the people around me. There was an older British trucker across the bar, talking about the "chunnel," his complexion was ruddy. Not my people.
Next to me was Crutches (the nickname in my head). He was young, under thirty, and probably German. He had an obviously broken leg wrapped in a thick neon green cast. Seemed pleasant enough, but I wasn't sure he spoke English.
Everyone else seemed very German, except the bartenders.
I took another sip of and shut my eyes, breathing deep the caustic edge of whiskey.
It had been almost two months since I had a real conversation in English. I was twenty-eight. My career was going great. I was solving supply chain problems, arguing, fighting for deadlines, learning something new every day.
Most of all, I traveled. America to China to Germany to France back to China. I was rarely in America, never stopping long enough for the jet lag to completely wear off.
It was challenging and exciting. I had insane opportunities professionally and personally. I was learning Mandarin and Chinese Culture, touring ancient German cities. I took vacations in Shanghai and Taipei.
That was where I met Anna. She was German living in Taiwan. A little bit older, accomplished in her field. She was reserved at first, but all she needed was a long runway and Anna would get going. Once you got her talking, about semiconductors or government, about Taipei and Beijing, she would unwind, start talking with her fingers then her hands then her arms. Her brown hair never settled, even on absolutely still days it would ripple on a breeze.
That relationship was never going to work, but I was too naive to understand. I spent a decade being too busy, studying then working then traveling. I never took the time to stop and figure dating out. I was approaching thirty but still "young" when it came to women.
We spent a weekend together in Shanghai, staying at the Grand Hyatt on the 86th floor of the Jin Mao tower. Anna only wore clothes to greet room service, and even then just a robe.
Anna leaned forward against the window, naked, always naked. She tried to look down on the city. I stared at her pale ass and her lean back. Her auburn hair was wild and sweaty. The weather was overcast, stormy. We didn't have a proper view of the city, but what we did have was lightning periodically arcing across our window. The storm was at eye level, because we were in the clouds.
A crash of thunder hit us, and we were flash blinded by light. Anna jumped, turned to me, smiled. She skipped back to bed and slid her body close to mine. I reached around her ass and pulled her tight.
Our encounters were sporadic and unscheduled, but we made the most of them. I ran my hands up her body to her breasts. Anna's nipples were large and pale, with no clear definition to say exactly where nipple ended and breast began. On lazy mornings, I would lick and nibbled around them, kneading and flicking and teasing. Anna could come from her nipples alone, but it took time.
That night I sped things along. I kept my mouth on her nipple while ran my hand up her thigh. She moaned. I pressed against her, then sliding just along the edge, finding her wet. I used her body to lubricate my fingers, then slid up to the nub of her clit. She arched her back. I kissed the edge of her lips then looked in her eyes, my fingers stroking. Her eyes were already distant.
"Inside?" I asked.
She nodded. I moved one finger down, sliding inside of her. Then another. Her right hand strayed to her breasts, a hard nippled. My mouth found the other. I left two fingers inside of her, stroking soft flesh, focusing the rest of her body with my lips. She preferred it this way, wanting my lips and my tongue as much or more than my dick. I didn't mind.
Anna moaned, writhing her hips against me. I felt her body clench from the inside as I moved from her nipples to her neck, licking and kissing up to her ear, interrupted only by breathy whispers, calling out the details of her wonderful body. The storm outside was blinding light and crashing sound, but we barely noticed.
The relationship with Anna didn't end with a bang. It just kind of dried up. We were rarely in the same country. Every relationship eventually needs proximity, small comforts, convenience. She was beautiful and smart and a good person, but it wasn't enough.
Another sip of whiskey.
The breakup was rational. Calm.
Years of travel and tight deadlines had broken my coworkers. All of the people around me eventually started acting irrational, picking the wrong fights or fucking the wrong person. Each time they self immolated I got a promotion, more money, and more responsibility.
It seemed I was the only one who knew the secret to staying sane. I had cracked the code. The secret was my absolute refusal to make major life decisions while jet-lagged.
It was a good rule. Over the past year, my life was two constants. Work and travel. Travel and work. Along with those constants came stress and loneliness, deadlines, flights. Never enough sleep.
The deals never quite went through as planned, but there was always just enough to salvage and keep going anyway. It never stopped.
My emotions were all over the place, but I was wise enough to see it. I was on tilt, like a poker player who takes a bad beat. I was forcing myself to sit a few hands out, waiting for a time for things to be "normal."
"No major decisions while jet-lagged," was my rule. The breakup was necessary, but I just felt stupid and guilty. She was a little bit older, ready to settle down, and I had stolen something precious from her. Time.
After Anna, I added one more rule. No long distance relationships. I was done stealing time from innocent women.
Since then, there had been no romantic partners or even prospects. Hell, since Anna there weren't even any friends. The breakup was more than sixth months ago.
I signaled the bartender for another round. She was younger than me, probably twenty five. Short, her blond hair tucked behind round ears. Freckles and dimples. A quick smile and gray, cynical eyes. She was petite and frenetic, bouncing from order to order. She spoke German but wasn't. Her accent was a bit off. Maybe British? Not American at least.
The uniform was a green and white checked polo shirt that didn't seem to fit quite right. She made the most of it, leaving the collar unbuttoned, showing off a lightly freckled chest with a hint of cleavage. The shirt was tied on the side, causing it to hug tight across her mid drift, paired with dress slacks that were almost skin tight. I could see the outline of her panties gripping a tight butt when she walked away. When she dropped off my whiskey, I saw the glossy, soft pink of her nails matched her lips.
Cute girl. My rules were smart. Logical. I'm a logical guy. But they also didn't work, not really. I failed to take in to account the soft edges of humanity, refused to acknowledge that logic isn't always enough.
The musician was in to his set. He was pretty good, but I hate live music. It gets in the way of communication. I am honest with myself. I was an average guy: height, weight, build, hair. My only real edge was my brain and my wit. I was better at dancing with words than feet.
The musician was playing some middle career Paul Simon, but it was winding down, transitioning to... Bob Dylan?
Yeah. Dylan. I was almost certain. Even though the guitar was electric, I could still hear the strings. The melody was raucous, bouncing like an acoustic. Turbulent flow, not laminar. Then he started to sing:
Once upon a time you dressed so fine
Threw the bums a dime in your prime...
Didn't you?
Dylan for sure, "Like a Rolling Stone." He wasn't a favorite of mine. I knew plenty of people found substance and meaning in his music, that it was important. Songs that impacted art and culture. It just wasn't for me.
I never got past the rambling vocals and the odd tone. Difference in taste. The musician kept singing:
Now you don't... talk so loud.
Now you don't... seem so proud.