I'm standing in the arrivals lobby of Dublin airport; waiting for a woman I haven't seen for 23 years. I have jelly legs and dizzy spells. I have flights of fancy and fugues. I don't know what I'm doing here. I don't know who called this meeting. I can't even remember what I'm doing in this country.
I know she's coming. It would too late to walk away. I'm so scared I don't know if I'll ever erect again.
I remember the love. I don't remember the body.
She might be wrinkled and sere. She might be old and decrepit. She might be wearing sackcloth.
But she was never like that. She could be wearing the flared skirt; have the great legs; be wearing the garter belt and stockings I bought her in '77. She could be wearing the push-up bra or be a little bit sloppy in a sweatshirt; nursing-nipple-nubbed.
We could jungle-fuck in the airport carpark or I could cry.
But it's too late for maunderings. Rubber meets road. Terror meets wonder and . . . here she comes.
I see the big glasses and I know it's her and my body aches. I burn and twitch; wondering now how she sees me.
She's uncertain and casting around; scoping the airport; confused a little. She's wearing a flared skirt and her great legs come back to me in a flush of memory. She's wearing a light white blouse and a blue jacket and dragging a small suitcase and pushing a cart with duty free yellow bags and miscellenia; walking closer; flustered and not connecting.
A small thrush is beating its feather wings in my heart. I am shaking and scared. My mouth is dry. I want to engage her but I'm not ready. I'm taken aback, branca'd stotted, skeined, fucked up, unsure, rattled.
I have so much to say that I'm devoid of speech.
She sees me and I start to cry. All my hubris explodes in a vapor of hopelessness. She is too beautiful to grasp and I cannot bear it.
I had hoped to loose-hiproll in her direction--swing the hips and look evil, magic and beautiful. But I can't pull it off. I'm frozen.
Autopilot kicks in and I stumble toward her holding out my arms. Her face is moving in slow motion from perplexity to wonder. I see her lips part and the beginnings of a smile. I see her bright teeth. I see her lips. I am walking and I am so tensed up I can't walk.
And suddenly she is with me as she always was. Suddenly she is in my arms and the tears sprout like spring radishes from my eyes. I feel my bowels loosening; things happening in my belly; things I had lost forever.
She comes into my arms and I feel her straw hair against my ear. I feel the sweet tissue of her light clothing and the nepenthe of her bodysweat. I feel the warmth of her body and the skein of her breath on my neck. I feel her need and her fear.
We murmur together in the lingua franca of unknown separations; the impossibility of this never-ever-again meeting. Our throats conjure sounds of uncertainty, terror and hope.
And she is here--three-dimensional; in the flesh . . . here in Dublin.
It all stops and we cling desperately. We cling.
I start to stutter and she completes my sentence.
"I'd love one."
So we head for the bar . . . me dragging enough of her goods to qualify me as the strong male goods bearer. It's not far to the bar in Dublin airport but I don't think they meant it as a clichΓ©.
We stash all her stuff close enough to the bar that Romanian tinkers won't do running raids on her booze and purse and I order a double vodka for her and a single for me 'cause I'm driving.
She stutters. I stutter. She laughs. I laugh. I'm terrified and shifting in my seat and I have no magic, no beauty, no charisma left. I'm a husk.
We drink. I order another and we drink again. No driving today so we load up yet again and stagger to the door to find the courtesy to the airport hotel. I haven't checked out.
I go to the desk and book another night and then we stagger down the endless corridors to the back room. No Irish bellboy emerges from the gloom to offer baggage succour. it's no Donleavy novel this new-fangled hostelry.
The sterterous breathing issuing from our tired bodies obviates difficult conversational gambits. You can score a lover in the lobby of the Dublin Airport hotel and have nothing left but carping enmity by the time you stagger to a room.
But God spares us that ignominy and she giggles as I fumble with the electronic card in the doorlock; she giggles.