Anna sought me out at the end of the day on Monday. She was worried about me. I needed time to reflect, but I didn't think that my mind was going to change.
- "Why don't you come over, Saturday night? Let me make a meal for you." I suggested.
- "You don't have to do that." she said. Anna seemed a bit uneasy. Was she that afraid of my cooking? It was only later that I realized - she probably interpreted my invitation to mean that I wanted to try having sex again.
- "We need to talk, Anna." I said. "Better in private than in a restaurant, I think."
- "Oh. Yes - you're right." Now she looked sensitive and understanding. I'm sure she could see that I didn't want to discuss my failure to maintain an erection in public.
I thought about Anna all week. I reconsidered every aspect of our relationship. But I wasn't wrong. She was devoted to her large family, and it was unlikely that she would ever leave her hometown. I still wanted to travel, and I certainly wasn't ready to start having children. I wasn't even sure if I wanted a family at all.
Would I be a better parent than my own mother and father? That wouldn't be difficult. But would it be enough?
The question of sex also loomed large. I didn't need a freak, but I didn't want a Madonna on a pedestal, either. There had to be a happy medium. Nina, for instance. Or Moe. Why would I settle for far less than I had with either of them?
I had never broken up with someone before. It had always been me getting dumped - twice, with Moe. I would have preferred that, now. But I was determined to give Anna every consideration. She deserved honesty, and privacy.
Anna was a bit jittery, when she came over. She was dressed really nice, but her usual bright smile seemed a little tentative. She probably expected that we would be having sex. In hindsight, I should have let her know that it was off the table.
Last Saturday hung between us, like an unwelcome guest. Anna thanked me for cooking for her, but I don't think she enjoyed the meal. Conversation was a bit stilted, too, because I was rehearsing - in my head - what I wanted to say to her.
After dinner, I suggested that we move to the couch.
- "Anna, we need to talk." I began.
- "About last week?" she said. "It's OK, Chris. It happens, sometimes."
- "No - it's not about that. I mean ... it is, but it's also ..." So much for rehearsal.
- "It's what?"
- "Anna, I just ... I don't think we should see each other anymore."
From the look on her face, I realized that I could have approached the subject more gradually. Instead, I had just dumped the whole pot of clams into her lap.
- "What did you say?"
- "Anna, you're wonderful, and beautiful ... but we're really different people -"
- "Are you breaking up with me?" she said.
- "It would probably be best, for both of us -"
- "You're
fucking
dumping me?" I had never heard her swear before - it startled me. "
You're
dumping
me
?"
- "If you want," I said, "we can tell people that it was your idea."
She didn't hear that. "What am I supposed to say to my family? To Nonna? Why are you doing this, Chris? Tell me why. Is it because you couldn't get it up last week?"
I tried to explain about our different experiences with family, and how I didn't want to be the lone 'cake' attached to her very large family.
- "So now you don't like my family?"
I learned some very important things that evening.
#1 Anna was not a happy camper when things didn't go her way. How had I missed that?
#2 Don't break up with someone in your own place. At their house is fine - you can always leave - or frankly, run for your life - if things get nasty. Anna was at my place. If she didn't want to go, what could I do?
#3 Think about what you're going to say.
#4 I was still an idiot.
Anna didn't want to go. At least, not until she got everything off her chest. She left very little unsaid. On the positive side, she didn't break anything. Eventually, she stormed out.
School was winding down, as the end of June approached. There were no final exams, so the students were a bit wild - summer wasn't that far off. But they were sentimental, too: they had enjoyed being with Antonia and me, and they were going to miss us.
Within a week, though, everyone on staff knew that Anna and I were no longer together. They immediately took sides.
Antonia was supportive, in the sense that she still talked to me - even if it was mostly to tell me what an ass I was. Nelson, the computer guy, was neutral, probably to thank me for not cutting in on Louise. He still hadn't asked her out, but he appreciated me leaving the field open for him.
Fortunately, the school year ended. And then Nina arrived.
- "Wow!" was my initial reaction. "You look great!"
- "Thank you." she said. "You look ... down. Are you alright?"
- "It's a long story."
- "That's why I'm here - the weekend of the long stories. Correction: the platonic weekend of the long stories."
Nina wasn't pleased to see that I had set her up in my bedroom, while I would be camping on the couch.
"I can't kick you out of your own room." she said.
- "You weren't here when the vote was held. You lost."
I had cooked a meal - for old time's sake. Nina was delighted.
- "I really miss your cooking." she said. "That was a wonderful time, when you visited."
- "It was like a honeymoon." I said. "I'll never forget it."
We were finishing our dinner when my door buzzer sounded. I was probably more surprised than Nina - I didn't get many visitors, apart from the pizza guy.
It was Anna.
She handed me a plastic bag. "Here's your stuff."
I was confused. What stuff? But I remembered my manners.
- "Would you like to come in for a minute? My friend is here. We're just about to have coffee." I had told Anna about Nina, and that she was coming to visit - before our breakup.
Nina came over to the door. "Hi. I'm Nina." she said.
Anna took a good, long look. Her lips started to curl - but it wasn't a smile. I would have to describe it as a sneer.
- "I get it." she said. "You wanted me out of the way so you could fuck your ex-girlfriend. Well ... fuck you, Chris!" Anna threw the plastic bag at me, and bolted down the hall.
I didn't follow her.
- "Umm ... that was Anna." I said.
- "Your girlfriend?" said Nina.
- "Ex."
- "Yeah - that was pretty obvious. What happened?"
I was sifting through the items in the plastic bag. Anna had returned three books that I'd bought her, a sweater, two CDs, and two mixed tapes I'd made for her. Basically, every non-perishable gift that I'd ever given her, except for the silver bracelet and the gold chain.
Over coffee, I told Nina the whole story. I was painfully aware, as I related the details, that I wasn't exactly the hero of my little tale. Nina listened attentively, and asked a question here and there.
- "Well, from the sound of it, I don't think you should marry her." she said.