I was in a mood. But that's every girl's right, isn't it? I remember what my mother used to say:
she's in one of her moods again
. It meant I'd done something bad, which was all too easy back then. But this wasn't like that at all -- this was a good mood, sort of. Restless and irresponsible, with no good cause. A
just-let-out-for summer
sort of feeling.
By rights I should have been weary from a full-on day at work. And I was. Perhaps I was
overtired
, another of my mother's expressions. I had pushed on through tiredness and out the other side to a state of manic energy.
We'd finally closed a deal we'd been working on for weeks. All the work I'd done would now be handed over to other people -- who would no doubt make a complete mess of it. But right now I couldn't care less. All that time spent teasing out from the customer what it was they really wanted, something only tenuously related to what they thought they wanted, or (queue eye roll) what they said they wanted -- it was as if all that had been done by some other Lisa. The Lisa of the past and she wasn't me anymore. I was free.
My job here is done
, I could have said as I sauntered out the door. I didn't say it but I did saunter, kept sauntering all the way to the bus stop, again for the short walk back to Paul's house. It was that sort of mood.
I let myself in and there he was, slumped on the couch, peering into the screen of his phone. "Hi honey, I'm home." Mood I was in, it sounded kind of witty. I slipped off my shoes, then I stopped. I was still wearing my work clothes -- a prim business suit. I had no idea what I wanted to do next, but whatever it was, I didn't want to be doing it dressed like this. Problem was, I hadn't officially moved in with Paul (not yet) and I couldn't remember whether I had left any casual clothes here to change into. Never mind, my mood told me, there's an easy solution to that. I unhitched my skirt and slid it off, followed by my pantyhose. After carefully hanging the skirt on the back of a chair so it wouldn't get crinkled, I skipped across the room and parked myself down next to my man.
I'm proud of my legs, and I've every right to be. Not especially long, but shapely and silky smooth. All sorts of wax and potions have been expended on them over the years and yet they spend the bulk of their time hiding shyly beneath my sensible career-lady skirts and stockings. Today was a day for getting my money's worth.
I didn't say anything, just let out a gentle sigh as I wriggled into place, hands around a bicep and head on shoulder. A tiny bit of that weariness seeped out from behind my defenses and that only made it better.
"How was your day?" he asked.
"Dunno." My head was still buried in his shoulder. "Don't care. It's over and I never intend to think about it again."
"Um, okay."
I opened my eyes, peered up at Paul's face, noting that his eyes were directed downwards, in the direction of those legs stretched out before him. I gave another little wriggle, just for the sensation of those puppy-fat thighs and sheer calves of mine sliding over one another, rubbing against the rough surface of Paul's jeans. Some people have high blood sugar levels -- me, I have naturally high levels of vanity.
Then I did an impulsive thing.
I don't know where it came from, a spinoff of this peculiar mood I suppose, and from thinking about my mother. The thought just popped into my head from some rebellious corner of my mind, went straight for my mouth before the more sensible and censorious parts of my brain could stop it.
"I've never told you about my wedding night, have I?"
"Are you sure you want to?" Paul angled his head around to look at me. "What are we talking about here -- a horror story?" He raised an eyebrow. "A comedy?"
I thought about this, gave a sly grin. "It's what it says on the label, hon. Erotica."
"You want to tell me about how you fucked?"
"Aren't you curious?"
What on earth had I been thinking? That I had briefly been married wasn't a secret. Paul knew, too, about how I had grown up in a religious community. But we had never really talked about it. I'm not sure why. It's not like it's some deep dark secret I keep repressed. The subject just hadn't come up until now. That's all.
Like more than a few of the fabulous ideas that pop into my head, this one wasn't faring so well in the daylight. Given the chance, the more sensible parts of me would have voted to bail out now before it was too late. But I'm a girl who finishes what she starts. Paul's concern was touching, but I also found myself a little irritated that he wasn't showing greater curiosity. This was an important chapter in the story that should matter more to him than any other: me, myself, and Lisa. I was damned if I was going to back off now.
It was an arranged marriage, of course, but I was past the age of consent so it wasn't like any laws were being broken.
I call it a
religious community
in polite company but that's just to spare my dignity. It was a cult, pure and simple. Not that I bear it any huge grudge. For one thing, it was thanks to the cult that my parents were able to move here in the first place. They got mixed up with some missionary back in China and ended up having the community sponsor their emigration. They arrived when I was just four, so for my childhood the community was all I knew.
You couldn't call me innocent -- I'd had it drubbed into me from an early age that I was a sinner like the rest of us. But I
was
naïve. And there is a sense in which weddings are wasted on adults, can only be fully appreciated by teenage girls.
"Hmm," said Paul, filing this observation away for later reference.
There was a clique of us. Four girls, all in our late teens. Being slightly older than the others I was the first to be chosen for marriage, and as you could imagine we talked about nothing else for months beforehand. Vanity has never been far from my nature, and being the focus of all this gossip and clucking only dragged me deeper in. I can't say I wasn't a willing participant.
But we didn't talk about sex. You may find that hard to believe but we just didn't. To that extent the brain-washing had worked. As close as we got was my girlfriends cooing about how handsome my prospective husband was. I'd reached such imperial heights as clique-leader and attention center by this point that they wouldn't have dared to say anything else, but the truth was he wasn't that bad. His face was unobjectionable, if bland, and the community was big on manual labor. That can have positive effects on a young man.
This -- that he looked good from a distance -- was about as much as I knew about the guy I was about to pledge my life to. He hadn't grown up in the community but joined in his late teens, rescued from somewhere or other. So although he was only a few years older than me, I had never spent much time in his company. Looking back, I suspect I was a reward, offered up to help keep him loyal.
Anyway, cut to the chase. The wedding day happened and was over and then the wedding night came. Suddenly I was on my own. All my jabbering friends melted away, leaving me, no longer queen of the court, just a girl in a frock, property of this man I didn't really know -- and worse (as far as I was concerned) not entirely sure about what would happen next, nor -- worse still -- how I was expected to act.
After a day that had been minutely choreographed, if only in my own mind, I was now in a situation for which I had no script to follow. It wasn't that I had no sense of what was to come, the possibilities must all have been there at a subliminal level. It was rather that my conscious awareness was split between, on the one hand, trying to appear innocent and demure (so naïve was I that I had no idea there was no need to act), and on the other a fear of doing something inappropriate that would reveal just how naïve I truly was. I became entirely passive, not because that is my nature (it isn't), but as a hastily improvised strategy for getting through this situation without embarrassing myself.
Whatever I might have expected from him, it wasn't a lecture on theology.
He had carried me over the threshold, plonked me down in the middle of the bedroom. "Let us pray," he announced.
I was surprised to put it mildly. But at least this was something I knew how to do. I put my hands together and bowed my head.
"Dear Lord, I ask you to give your blessing to this union. I ask also a special favor of you -- to send down your grace to your child Lisa. She will have been taught about the sin of fornication ..."
I hadn't actually. I guess the men's Bible class covered different ground to ours. Still, there was something in the sound of the word that hinted at what it meant. It wasn't that I was ignorant of the basic facts of marital consummation, just its finer points and its etiquette.
"... that fornication is a temptation sent by the Devil. But the Devil is incapable of true originality, can only work by corrupting that which you Lord have given us as a gift. Where the Devil turns love into sin, the sanctity of marriage turns sin back into love. Help Lisa, I beseech you Lord, to welcome the physical love between a husband and wife as your gift, one that is not to be spurned. Lisa may feel uncertainty, Lord, about what is about to happen. Maybe even fear. I ask you Lord to take away her fears and her concerns, to help her to understand that to truly worship you she must accept your grace in all its forms, to open herself up to the full intensity of the Holy Spirit, even as it manifests itself as physical sensation.
"Finally, Lord, I thank you for Lisa's great beauty, for her innocence and her purity of spirit. I accept these things, dear Lord, and promise to cherish them I as would cherish anything that is your gift. Amen"
"Amen," I echoed.