Throughout that week, Stan kept trying.
"Anne, I really would like to talk about what happened. There's no need to throw everything away."
Anne turned to look at him.
"Stan, I'm not buying what you're peddling. You said you weren't ready for Denise, but you were, all the time. I don't really know what
you
thought you had with me, but I know what
I
thought it was. You said the right things, but your behaviour on Monday night showed something different to your words. You went beyond caring for a friend, Stan. Perhaps you ought to be mending fences with Denise, not me."
Of course, that wasn't really possible. Denise was obviously seeing Tom, and continued to be upset with Stan. When she saw Stan, Denise was cold and she turned away from him at every opportunity. That she was
still
with Tom was amply demonstrated to Stan on Thursday afternoon when Denise's cell phone bleeped during a discussion they were having about the documentation project.
"Ooh. It's from Tom!" she cried, gladly. "Wait a moment..."
Her thumb danced a jig over the keys for a few seconds, then she closed her phone with a flourish and dropped it back into her purse.
"We're going out
again
tomorrow night!" she told Stan, with more than a hint of challenge. Stan had learned - he kept his opinion behind his teeth.
- - - - - - - - - -
However, by Thursday night
Anne
was feeling fairly miserable herself. She finally admitted to herself that she had, perhaps, over-reacted a touch.
So, she phoned him, at home.
"Stan? Hi, it's Anne," she said as soon as he picked up the receiver.
"Hi, Anne! How are you?" came from the other end. 'Great,' she thought, irritably, 'he only saw me a few hours ago, he
knows
how I am.'
But aloud she replied, "I'm fine, Stan. Actually, I want to talk to you. You've been bugging me all week, and, well, I might have gone a bit far. Can you come over now?"
"Of course, Anne, I'll be there in a few minutes."
The phone went dead and Anne put a pot of coffee on.
Stan was true to his word and was at Anne's door in a remarkably short time.
Anne opened the door to find Stan there, looking damp and a little dishevelled. "Come in! Come in!" she urged him. Before closing the door she checked - it wasn't raining.
"You caught me just out of the shower," he told her in response to her quizzical look. "I didn't want to wait any longer than I absolutely had to, so I just threw clothes on and came straight over."
Sure enough, he had odd socks on. Anne couldn't help but grin.
"Sit down there and have a drink. I'm going to wait for the coffee to finish filtering, but you'd better have something now and warm up!"
Anne quickly grabbed a towel for his hair and fetched a drink for him –
Glenmorangie
with a separate glass of water. A few moments later they were comfortably seated next to one another on the sofa. Anne took the lead...
"Stan, I think I over-reacted on Monday. I think I saw just how much you obviously felt for Denise, and it caught me. I just didn't know how to react to something like that. I haven't had a 'Love Rival' since I was a teenager, and I'd lost out every time back then, and... well it frightened me."
"I understand, Anne. But to be honest the whole thing surprised me, too. It seemed as if it were happening to someone else, and I wasn't in control any more. It just... happened, and I... I was a spectator."
After Anne brought their coffee, they sat in silence thinking about what they'd done. Stan sipped his coffee, then continued, "I'm not very good at talking about things, Anne. So please, if this doesn't come out in a way you can understand, tell me before you turn on me, huh?"
Anne smiled. "Okay! I'll give you a warning."
"I was wrong, Anne. I was wrong all along, but I didn't realize the depth of the feeling I had, or even understand what it was. Me and Denise, I mean. She... I... We..."
He looked down, unable to continue. Anne laid her hand on his. Stan looked up again, and she held his gaze.
"Stan, it's all right, just think first and say it."
"I think I do love her, Anne. But I really, really love you, too. I don't think I understand that."
Anne gave him her slightly crooked grin, and said, "I don't either, Stan, it's something we'll have to work out. But first we have to look after our
own
relationship." She paused a second.
"Do you love me, Stan?"
She held his eyes. He answered with a catch in his voice, "Y-yes, Anne, I love you, I love you deeply..."
"Right. I love you right back, Stanley Hinch. So, no matter what else, we can always come back to that and work from there, okay?"
Stan took her hand and squeezed it. "Always, Anne. Always!"
Again, Anne took the lead – she moved to him, put one hand behind his head, and drew him into a kiss. It wasn't a fiery, sexual kiss, but there was depth of feeling there, of that there was
no
doubt at all.
Anne went into the kitchen to fetch herself a glass of wine, then sat back down. Anne shifted, and Stan moved, and they found themselves with her head on his belly, he half reclined, leaning against the corner of the sofa, she lying full out with her feet dangling over the other end.
They talked about this and that, skirting carefully around the minefield of Denise, each occasionally shifting the bare minimum to reach for her glass of wine or his scotch. Anne made a long arm and found the remote control for her stereo and turned on some music, it didn't really matter what it was, just something in the background. At some point she got up and brought the bottles in from the kitchen. They talked on, mostly about completely inconsequential things until the wee hours of the morning. Stan noticed that Anne's breathing had become slow and regular and felt his own eyes insisting on drooping.
Anne woke up feeling cold. For a moment she wondered where she was, then worked it out - on her sofa, with her man. Stan had fallen asleep with one hand gently curled around a breast, and Anne smiled. But her feet had gone really cold, and she
had
to move, it was already light outside. She glanced at her watch. 'Six in the morning, that must be early morning twilight,' she thought.
Anne carefully removed Stan's hand from its resting place and twisted and rolled until she was sitting up. She rubbed her calves, got the circulation going again and endured the pain as the feeling started to come back while she recovered.
Anne stood and hobbled upstairs fetching a blanket. Carefully lifting his feet up onto the sofa, she picked up the blanket and draped it over Stan's still recumbent form. He was snoring softly, and she smiled, tenderly. She had plenty of time to get herself ready, and she could let Stan sleep a while longer. Besides, she just wanted to watch him.
- - - - - - - - - -
Stan woke up when he was
shaken
. He opened his left eye and peered to see who, what, where...
"Oh! Hi, Anne. We must've fallen asleep... what time is it?"
"It's a quarter to seven, Stan. You'd better get yourself together and run home to get changed for work."
Stan's eyes tracked, following his nose. He found coffee sitting on the table in front of the sofa, and he took a sip, gradually coming to full awareness.