I am glad it cannot happen twice, the fever of first love. For it is a fever, and a burden, too, whatever the poets may say.
Rebecca
, Daphne du Maurier
He knocked on the passenger window and waited. A part of me knew he'd been behind me all the while, stalking me like the predator he was as I walked from my office building. There really was no choice left. I made my choice years ago when I let him kiss me and lost myself to him; there had never really been a way out after. The dark parts of him affixed themselves to mine so seamlessly that they would probably never be severed.
I unlocked the door and took a breath. My eyes were glazed over in the rearview mirror and my cheeks were flushed. It sounds melodramatic and cheesy, but the addict in me knew I was about to have a fix, and as much as I hated myself for being so weak, I was also thanking myself for giving in.
Just one more time
, I thought.
How many addicts have thought that and overdosed?
Andrew opened the door and made me wait. He didn't even bend over to look at me. He just stood there, waiting. I'd always admired his patience. Maybe he was debating if he should go through with it, or maybe he was tormented by his own desire to escape, to be free of me and this endless battle between us. Maybe he was just enjoying making me sit there with the knowledge that I had once again surrendered. Knowing him, it was very likely that last part that kept him standing there. Eventually he sat and shut the door, and then it was like our separation never happened. I didn't look at him. He pushed my dress up a little and put his hand on my bare thigh, and I turned the car on and drove back to my place.
---
My house is a tiny thing that everyone likes but no one envies. It's cozy enough for me, but I know my friends wonder how I don't go crazy living in it. They all have families now. I'm sure they envision their kids and spouses hanging all over them whenever they want a quiet moment, and it's true that if I married and had children I would have to move. For now, it suits me just fine..
Andrew told me once it was a dump, but I knew he secretly loved it. He drunkenly confessed once that he thought it was a fairy cottage. Every now and then I caught him studying it, his eyes admiring as they catalogued each corner.
When we got back to my place, Andrew walked into my living room and ran his hand over everything as if to check it was the same as the last time he was there. He picked up a book from the coffee table and flipped through it. I took the opportunity to finally appreciate him. He'd let his dark brown hair grow longer; it was almost wild. He looked thinner than the last time I saw him, and slightly older. Grief that I had missed those new wrinkles form, all the changes in him, filled me, like it always did.
Leaving him to it, I went into the kitchen and poured us wine. I debated telling him he'd have to leave once we finished it. That maybe we should just catch up and prevent another disaster from happening. Sometimes I wasn't sure if I could handle it anymore. If I had my phone on me rather than in my purse in the other room, I'd have texted my friend, Ash. She would have provided me with a speech to say and a script so I'd know how to act it out.
She, along with the rest of our friends, was baffled and frustrated with us.
"Just end things, for the love of God," she told me when I showed up at her house, weeping because I'd found out he was engaged briefly. "You're killing yourself."
If you've never experienced that kind of love, I guess I understand why you might think you could walk away from it. I've heard it described as an itch, as an obsession, but it's so much more than that. It's walking into a room and thinking you've forgotten something all the time. It's waking in the middle of the night and being unable to go back to sleep because you wonder what he's doing. It's hating him and loving him in equal measures, regretting every kiss but also every second apart. It's hating yourself, most of all, for your weakness. It's feeing so sick with desire that you've forgotten what normalcy feels like. It's thinking you'd freely and easily give yourself up if you could only sink into him, become a part of him. It's an addiction that seems sillier than others--it's not a substance or an activity like gambling--but it's just as real. It's devastating but necessary. It's a compulsion.
I thought of all this as I poured. As much as I wished I could stop myself, I wanted him more. I'd take on all the pain of what would come after if it just meant we could spend a few hours together.
Right before I walked out, I heard Andrew humming something I couldn't identify. I knew he hummed only when he was really content, and it made my heart and eyes burn. I felt content, too. More than. I couldn't remember the last time I felt so energized, so... activated. I felt like I could sit at my desk and write a best-selling novel. I felt like I could finally tackle my attic, or call my problematic sister, or run five miles. I felt like myself again for the first time since we last met.
It sounds strange, given how I've described it, but there were no obstacles between us. We weren't cheating on anyone. We weren't living hours apart. We'd loved each other since we met in a speech class in college. We were each other's first everything--first time, first love, first traumatic breakup. As much as we loved one other, we tried to accept that we just didn't work together. Every time we decided to be official, we started viciously fighting. He became jealous and territorial. I became paranoid and shrewish. Our friends unfairly took my side a lot of the time, but I probably needed it more. Our friends joked he'd corrupted me, but it was a mutual corruption they couldn't understand. And so we tried to give each other space, avoided each other at parties, ignored each other if we had to be in the same room. We'd last six months or so, sabotage whatever relationship we were in, and fall back into each other. It was toxic and doomed, but it just felt too good to stop. I didn't want to give him up, almost as much as I wished I'd never met him.
He was looking at some new prints I'd put on the wall when I came into the room. He took the wine from me and gestured to one.
"That's hideous."
It was an abstract piece that a friend had forced me into buying. I'd left it sitting in my guest room for ages, but I found myself appreciating it a few weeks earlier. It was a mixture of reds and pinks and blues. The title was "Love's Chaos". It seemed fitting for me.
"We can't all have blank white walls."
Andrew took a drink of his wine and shook his head. "I put some stuff up. You'd hardly recognize it."
I squinted my eyes at him. "
You
put some
stuff