Fantasy can be brought crashing down very quickly by the intervention of reality, and perhaps it should be.
Yes, Jackie was beautiful. Yes, I thought this was the woman I wanted to spend my life with. In my eyes she was the loveliest and sweetest creature I had ever met, and I was deeply, passionately in love with her.
I had spoken to her of marriage and she had smilingly gone along with my flights of connubial fantasy. Not for one moment did I doubt her fidelity and our future together.
I had met her when I was twenty four and at university. I was working for my master’s degree, with the hope of eventually gaining a doctorate in geology. She was twenty and studying with the Department of Education with the aim of becoming a teacher. I was completely captivated by her as soon as I saw her.
Of course, many other males were also captivated, and it was with amazement that I found myself to be her “chosen one.” A least, I thought I was chosen.
Within a month we began our sexual relationship. She shared a small flat with a couple of other girls, while I still lived at home; so many nights were spent in her flat.
There had been girls before her; girls I had been “in love” with, by which I mean, “infatuated with.” They had ranged from one night stands to a few weeks of “having a relationship.” With Jackie I decided, “This is it”.
For almost a year I went along in my illusory heaven. Marriage, home and children with Jackie, what more could I desire, unless it was the far off doctorate? Yet even that would be for Jackie. Not only would geology be my other love, it would be the means of giving to Jackie.
It was towards the end of our year together that I first experienced a change in our relationship. It began with little things like telephoning her to be told by a flatmate that Jackie was not there and, “She has just popped out for a while, but I’ll tell her to get back to you.”
For a while she did get back to me, but ever more infrequently. We seemed to see less and less of each other. “Darling, not tonight, I’ve got an essay to write.”
A few times I called at her flat without prior contact with her, to be greeted by one of her flatmates who would inform me, “Oh, she’s not here Brent. I’m not sure where she is, but I’ll tell her you called.” Formally I would have been invited in to wait for Jackie and be offered a cup of coffee. Now the door was almost being shut in my face.
It was the night I decided to wait for her in my old station wagon in the street outside that the crash came. It was past midnight and I was about to give up and go home, when a car’s headlights swung into the street. It pulled up outside the building that contained Jackie’s flat. By the light of a nearby street light I saw a man get out of the car, go round the other side, opened the door, and out got Jackie.
The man locked the doors of the car and together they went towards the entrance of the building. Right near the street light they stopped and embraced. I could clearly see their hips grinding together, just as Jackie and I had done in the past. They went inside holding hands and laughing.
Under the street light I had recognised the man. He was studying in the School of Business Management, and was well known as the son of a local multi-millionaire. He splashed his father’s wealth around with great abandon, on cars, clothes, women and what passes for “The good life.”
I felt as if the blood had drained from my body. There was a roaring sound in my ears and I suddenly want to defecate and urinate. Bile rose in my throat and my emotions tumbled over each other ranging from impotent rage to snivelling self-pity.
In seconds my world seemed to fall apart. Had all the love and planning for the future been a hopeless self-delusion? Amid the turmoil I was experiencing a nasty little voice kept saying, “But it was you, not her who was always planning for the future.”
I sat in my vehicle until four in the morning, and the man did not come out from the building. My imagination added excruciating detail to what I knew in fact to be happening up there in the flat.
I drove home just after four and went to bed, but not to sleep. I lay there weeping for my shattered illusion and the humiliation that went with it.
My mother called me for breakfast at the usual time, but I made no response. She must have assumed I had decided to take a day off from the university and was sleeping late, because she did not call again until lunch time.
“Brent, you’d better get up and have some lunch.”
I made no reply.
“Are you all right, Brent?”
No reply.
Her head came round the door and a look of concern came over her face. “Brent what’s the matter, you’re as white as a sheet?”
She came to me and sat on the bed. “What is it, darling? What’s happened?”
I had always confided in mother, telling her of my hopes and miseries, my joys and despairs. She had always been a great support and comforter. She knew of my plans for Jackie and me, and if she had been a bit doubtful about Jackie and me getting married, she had said nothing.
Now I told her of what I had seen the previous night. She tried to find acceptable reasons for what I had seen. Could it have been her brother? No it couldn’t as she had no brother and I knew exactly who the man was.
After a few more futile attempts to find explanations she gave up and said, “Telephone her, Brent, there might be a perfectly innocent reason for what you saw.” We both knew there was no “perfectly innocent reason.”
Never the less I telephoned, and this time Jackie did answer in a bright cheerful voice. At least, it was bright and cheerful until she learned it was me on the other end.
“What do you want, Brent, I’m busy.”
I halting told her what I had seen and got her response.
“So what, you don’t own me.”
I spoke of our plans to be married and she laughed. “They were your plans, not mine. I never said ‘yes’ to them. Look, Brent, I tried to let you down softly by not being available. If you chose to spy on me and didn’t like what you saw that’s your problem.”
“But…”