As I had expected, Spring Break until today had proved dreary with rain and lonely. I had discussed this with my husband in advance, of course. I had told him I was tired of being left alone while he worked on his damn dissertation, and he had told me to stop being so whiny. I tried a seductive tack, and he told me to use my own hand because he was busy and that's just the way it was.
My husband is a Ph.D. candidate in his final year at OSU. It should have been possible for him to analyze his data and write from home, which is here in Ocean View, but instead he prefers to stay at his folks' and analyze and write from there.
Summers were not so bad; I am a teacher so for the past four years, when school lets out, I pack up and go to work for him as an unpaid field assistant. It benefits me personally, because I get to be near my husband, and it benefits me professionally. As a science teacher, I can share the field techniques I have picked up working for him and his colleagues with my own students. Summers are good. We camp out and cook over a fire and laugh a lot, and I remember what it was that brought us together when we met in college fourteen years ago.
Fall, winter and spring are bad. He spends Monday through Friday at his folks' in Corvallis, where as he says he has access to the library ("What about Inter-library loan?" I asked and was told to stop whining) and powerful computers ("Can't you telecommute?" I asked and he chastised me for challenging what to him made sense). Friday he makes the five hour drive to the coast, usually starting around seven or eight in the evening, when he is satisfied that he is done for the day. He arrives exhausted and hostile, and then sleeps in until noon or so, leaving around noon on Sunday. He's not good at taking vacations, so Thanksgiving, Winter and Spring Breaks I can either travel to Corvallis to stay with the Miller horde or visit my own family and friends, by myself. This is married life? I have tried cheerful patience, reasoned argument, pointed questions, and by myself I have howled in loneliness. Crying doesn't work with him; the women in his family are all criers and he sees it as manipulative β not that my tears are meant to be manipulative. I just get so blue by myself that sometimes it just comes out as tears. He doesn't know. If I died and he found my journal, then he'd know.
You may ask, why don't I teach in Corvallis? Well, I started teaching right when he started his Ph.D. program; my school is a Title One school, which means that over forty percent of our students are on the free or reduced lunch program. If I stay here five years, then a major portion of my student loans will be forgiven. We didn't know when I got hired that on the recommendation of an undergraduate advisor, he'd be accepted to OSU at the same time, nor did we realize that it would take these four years (and possibly more). Anyway, I have another year before my student loans are forgiven, and then after that, who knows? Maybe we can live in the same town.
I was kvetching about all of this to Katy Michaels, a teacher in her second year at our school. Katy was also in town for Spring Break, and we had gone on a hike that morning up one of the peaks in the Coast Range. It had rained, as it had every day so far, although under the Sitka spruce we hadn't gotten too wet.
I felt bad about unloading onto Katy; she's younger than me by about eight years and so perennially cheerful that I didn't want to burden her with my self-pity and married woes, but once I started, I just couldn't stop. I even gave her details of our non-existent sex-life. That is, I said very bitterly that our sex-life was non-existent because he was too stressed out on Saturday or Sunday to have sex and that during the week he'd told me to "use my hand". I was sick of using my hand, I said.
Katy listened with interest and sympathy.
Katy is a crazy teacher. Her kids are wild about her. She runs through the halls just like they do, her red hair streaming behind her. Teachers and prissy students yell at her, "Miss Michaels! Slow down!" She just smiles and nods at you as she dashes by, a stack of books or papers in her arms. "Can't!" she'll say, or, "I'm late, I'm late, for a very important date!" as if she's the White Rabbit.
Her teaching partner, this old busybody named Annette who taught Humanities, delighted in sharing stories about Katy of a scandalous nature in the faculty room. Katy typically spent her lunch period in her classroom, working. That's how it is your first few years. I am not sure why the principal kept them paired this year; Katy and Annette had had some explosive arguments last year about how best to teach their sixty kids. Annette was all for chairs in rows and worksheets; Katy worked more on an open-ended, group project-based model. Annette was extremely organized to the point of being rigid; Katy didn't necessarily know what she was doing with her students from day to day, letting the process of discovery and scientific inquiry guide her somewhat extemporaneous lessons.
Annette's conversations in the staff lunchroom were typically about how annoyed she was with Katy. Also, she told this crazy story about her and this math teacher, Sandeep, sleeping together under the shore pines on the dunes, which I was not inclined to believe at the time because I thought Sandeep and this other teacher, Adina, had something going on. Since then, based on a casual intimacy between Katy and Sandeep that I have witnessed, I could believe that she and Sandeep had at least slept together, if not in full view of everyone on the dunes. Annette went on to insist that Katy, that hussy, had even seduced her ex-husband, which struck me as paranoid in the extreme.
For her part, Katy didn't talk much about Annette at all. I felt privileged while on the hike with her today when Katy went into an imitation of Annette that was so true that I almost tripped over a root and fell off a cliff I was laughing so hard. Katy always struck me as such an ethical person because of her unwillingness to gossip that I felt we must have been drawing together as friends.
After the hike, back at my house, she shocked me, and that's the state that I am in right now.
We were muddy from the hike, so we had changed into sweats and t-shirts, and I made grilled cheese sandwiches on whole wheat bread, stuffed with sautΓ©ed mushrooms and fresh basil and tomatoes. I was washing and rinsing dishes and Katy was drying them and putting them away. I was pointing out a Varied Thrush to her in the backyard under the feeder. She came up behind me and hooked her chin over my shoulder to have a look. Her touch surprised me, and then she put her hand on my hip, pressing her breasts into my shoulder blades.
She said, "Michelle, you are so frustrated and my sexual appetite is so huge that I think we could benefit from getting together now and then for some mutual pleasure." She slid her hand from my hip down to my inner thigh, several inches away from my crotch, but her words had made her touch unambiguous.
I went rigid with terror. The first thing out of my mouth was simply, "Katy, I'm married."
She said, "Yeah, but we're both women β it doesn't have to count."
I turned around to face her. I said, "Katy, I have gay friends who have been in exclusive, monogamous relationships for over ten years who have gone through very complex legal processes to have children together, whether through AI or adopting girls from China. Furthermore, our state last year married gay people for the first time. I can't believe you think that it doesn't count. I can just imagine what they would say to you!"
She backed off and leaned easily against the counter behind the sink, regarding me out of hazel eyes. "Ok, I see your point. What I mean is, we could just fool around without any strings attached. Just be fuck buddies. It would be fun and no one would have to know."
Next barrier: "This is a small town! We have students who live on this very same street! I'm sure they would notice!"
"Teachers can't be friends? So what if I'm over here every now and then? I always have been over here every now and then," she said.
Final barrier: "What about you and Sandeep?"
Her response: "Sandeep and I just sleep around occasionally. It's totally casual. No strings attached."
"He wouldn't care?" I asked.
"If he does, that's his problem. I'm not a jealous person and if he turns out to be jealous, too bad for him," she said. "Are you jealous?"
"No, of course not. I have no reason to be, given that I am married and in an exclusive, monogamous relationship."