Paul Nicholson was chubby, greying and unfit. At 33 he had had little luck with women and, in short, had retired early from the game, thrown in the towel, and now perpetually sat on the sidelines. He watched his obese friend date attractive young women. He looked on as another friend attracted the girl who would eventually become his wife by igniting a blue flame that issued from his backside. He observed with his keen intellect and rationalised his single status saying that, unlike lesser mammals, his life could be sustained without surrendering to animal instincts.
In general, he liked women and related to them quite easily. However, he was greatly threatened by any personal interest a woman might show in him. He had the fear of intimacy. He was uneasy about receiving a warm birthday greeting. A fond kiss was answered by a granite cheek.
He worked tirelessly at his job and this acted as an effective subterfuge to any advances a woman might make. His job involved coaching boys in the game of chess. There was continual touring, setting up a myriad of competitions and opportunities, maintaining a consistent programme at the school, networking with institutions, and so on. His workload exceeded sixty hours a week and in his spare time he played trombone in a swing band.
In the autumn of his 32nd year, it so happened that a couple of women appeared in Paul's life. He was introduced to Bernadette and her colleague Miranda at an intrastate competition. Both lived in the same city as him, worked in the same suburb, and were employed in a related area. So at a suitably private moment and with a belly full of beer he made a vague reference to his availability at evenings. For her part, Bernadette was interested in this advance but being a reflective person she was slow to respond. And so began a game of to and fro between two shy people making clumsy attempts towards a friendship.
Bernadette was a personality in recess. She was a cave dweller who ventured to the outer world only as a necessity for survival and who retreated from its perceived antagonism into her private quarters.
Miranda, was not so burdened. She possessed the skill, if it can be classed as such, of violating the psychological hymens of others when in mixed company. It was a carnal instinct, rather vampirish in nature, and yet accepted as part of her thespian flamboyance. For all his insecurities about women, Paul was surprised that he found Miranda's personality refreshing, not threatening. He fancied it was a type he could toy with safely: she was, he understood, happily married. Moreover, Miranda, like Paul, had grown up amongst the leafy privileges of Sydney's lower North Shore.
On an evening in the deep of winter Paul saw Bernadette at a public play-off that he had organized. She approached him at the end of the proceedings when he was alone and packing up gear. He had never seen her so agreeable or forward in her attitude. Even though his habitual nervous tics around women were playing for all they were worth they were suspended in the gelatinous air that surrounded them. Taking a leap into the unknown Paul suggested driving her home to show her a new software programme he had acquired.
As soon as Bernadette entered the interior of the car Paul felt the air in the cabin thicken with a kind of seminal ether. The atmosphere lightened over the course of the trip and once at her flat he could sense her easing into his presence. He found himself becoming guarded, trying to formalize his manner, drawing invisible boundaries of where he finished and she started. It was after all very late and at the end of another overworked day. He made moves to leave and began packing up.
"We should ... play," he offered.
"What should we play, Paul?" Bernadette asked suggestively.
"Chess," he nervously replied, with a hint of irritation. As they were exchanging phone numbers Paul decided to put her number straight into his cell phone. Paul stood in her foyer as he pecked away at the keypad. Bernadette suddenly snatched the phone from him, cut the light in the hall, leaving the LED torching the area between them. Any moment now and they would be plunged into darkness. Bernadette was laughing softly. Paul was facing a nervous meltdown. Then the mobile lamp cut out.
"Your hand," she said quietly, and he felt her hand touch his forearm. His heart was thundering.
"I'll show you where I've put your phone." She put her palm gently in Paul's left hand and guided both their hands into his left side-pocket. She moved in slowly and as deep as the pocket would allow and then slowly withdrew her hand leaving Paul's alone in there. Somehow she had inserted the phone into his pocket. Bernadette walked back to the lounge room, turned on a soft red lamp, and returned smiling.
"Goodnight Paul," she said, and kissed him on the cheek for what seemed like a full minute. Paul froze into a solid block of ice. All his receptors shut down. Bernadette finally withdrew to allow him to take leave of her. He paused, then gallantly turned, leaving a boyish smile hanging.
And so broke the dawn of Paul Nicholson's sexual coming of age.
2.
The journey home was endless and he longed to be back in his flat so he could relieve himself. This was overwhelming: she was a woman clearly interested in him, who was involved in a similar job, whose mind was similarly constructed. A woman who inhabited the same territory as he did, an intense and not unattractive woman putting it out for him. He couldn't objectify a woman like this. She was already in his pocket. All he could do was to stay remote and he would be safe.
So when she began a mild campaign of tentative advances he was mentally prepared and fended her off with polite indecision. She soon abandoned the effort. Bernadette had perceived Paul as a near perfect and quirky match for her, but his obtuseness, his peculiar take on friendship and his commitment to guarding his heart so closely, had forced her to formally resign from him as a project. She still had a space reserved for him in the carpark of her heart ; but in her less generous moments she would call it a disabled access car space.
Meanwhile, Paul began noticing a change in his outlook. It was lighter, sunnier, even dreamy. An attitude of sweet hopefulness kept returning to him. It reminded him of his university years. He was actually starting to feel a little happy about nothing at all. He bought a new car: a sports model, red. His life was in a different gear.
Three months later Paul saw Bernadette again in a work situation. Much had happened since the mobile phone incident. He had had a successful overseas business trip. His position within the international organization had moved ahead. He noticed that Bernadette had also moved on. She had changed from a comfortably plump woman with a quiet compliant demeanour to an edgier person whose physical shape was pared down to reveal distinct female contours.