The moans of a mad man. That's what Josh said it sounded like. He wasn't meant to have heard it at all; not a sound. However, to my embarrassment and utter dismay, the walls had betrayed me and sold the sounds of our intimacy to the nearest bidder.
Josh had not wanted to hear us, of course not. He looked at me with his usual soft complexion and admitted that our love making was unavoidably audible to the party goers. I couldn't speak of the horror myself, yet as my only friend, Josh found ways to laugh about it and poke fun.
"He really is a little bitch." Tom said as matter of factly as he could, which was strangely out of character I thought. Gentle Tom, the kind hearted and loyal man I had thought him to be, saying '
bitch
.'
"Okay, I know you don't like Nelson, but at least say things that are true," I implored. After all, I didn't see Nelson as being weak or anything of the sort! He was a professional man; indeed he wasn't a little bitch.
Tom rolled his eyes and shook his head, "you have no idea Jenny, so tucked away in your own version of things that you just don't know what's actually going on." He pointed at me, perhaps a little too hard, because he poked me in the collar bone- and it hurt.
"Are you angry at me?" I asked in a tentative voice, worried I had somehow upset him.
"No," he smiled and looked at me softly, "I just can't believe you're dating such a little bitch." He simpered, adding; "you deserve so much more than Nelson."
~
Nelson sat on his leather TV-watching chair, so far, so distant from me. I looked over at him and wondered how to grab his attention the best. A list of possibilities ran through my mind; a mischievous text message, a suggestive outfit, or perhaps... if I could just say the right words, he would break free from his sport watching marathon.
He noticed my staring and spoke up, "what's wrong? Come on out with it. You're doing the sulking thing again," he raised his eyebrows expectantly. I knew from past events that not providing an excuse for my facial expression, would end in his frustration, so I had to think on my feet-
"I'm just uhm, w-wondering what you're thinking about." I paused knowing that was a stupid answer, right away he seemed annoyed that I had somehow found a reason to make an ordinary moment- all about my feelings of anxiety. I knew I did this often, and I tried desperately to avoid doing so, "I meant in regards to the game," I added.
"It's okay, you can tell me what's wrong. I'm not angry with you, if that's what you are worrying about." He looked back at the TV and huffed. I wasn't sure if that was an indication that I should keep talking, or not, so I sat there in silence.
When the game finished he turned off the TV and looked my way with tired droopy eyes. I knew it had been a long day at work for him, and I felt conflicted about wanting affection, and then wanting to please him by leaving him to rest. He began to mutter, "Well if you aren't going to tell me what's wrong, do you want to just go to bed?"
I curled up inside myself and thought about how I could meet both our needs. How does a person allow someone to rest while receiving affectionate attention at the same time? "Can I just have one minute of affection from you before we go to bed?" I asked as innocently as I could muster.
"Of course," he stretched his arms out to me and patted me on the back for a moment. The familiar buzzing of his phone went off though, and the minute cut short as he took a phone call from his co-workers.
~
That night I lay resting next to a man while tossing and turning in unease. The usually warm embrace of Nelson left me feeling empty and unsatisfied. Somehow a woman of 24 had out-libidoed a man in his even earlier 20s and I just didn't understand. Perhaps all the clichΓ©s of men wanting sex all the time was just wrong?
Nelson often reminded me that we still made love regularly; he would moan that it was hard to work a job and have sex every night. I agreed with him about the issue. I was a greedy woman to want him to spend hours pleasing me every night, and I thought I deserved only what I received. So with that thought I turned over and snuggled into him, closing my eyes tightly and hoping that my feelings of unsatisfied arousal would dissipate into nothingness.
~
My brain was working on overdrive that morning: breakfast, brush teeth, shower, and dress, do dishes, make daily schedule and hope everything ran smoothly. Tom had sent word that he would be visiting that afternoon and I wanted everything to be completed before he arrived. His text message was a welcome break from my lonely existence. I felt I needed as much.
When Nelson woke up he stumbled out of our bedroom in his day robe and he sat at the table stating only one word- "coffee". I made him a cup of his favourite brand and handed it over while sitting next to him hopefully. Nelson looked up at me with worn eyes; "How are you feeling today?" He asked with what I thought was concern.
"Pretty good," I said weakly, despite my lack of sleep and feelings of what could only be described as depression.
"Good, keep it that way." He joked with that, yet something about it felt unsystematic. Of course, that feeling was just little ol' me... overanalysing the statement, giving power to the 'crippling paranoia issues' I'd always been led by.
"I'm seeing Tom later today, did you want to come with me?" Nelson looked across at me with his narrowest expression and I knew his answer before I had been told.
"Sweetheart, you know I don't like him. He's pretentious and not to mention you haven't even known him long enough to be sure he's a keeper as your friend. Where did you meet him again? A book store or a library of something? Anyone in this day and age with the time to stroll around book shops all day just isn't proving their worth to the economy."
And that was Nelson's last words on the matter. In fact, those were his last words that morning, for he got dressed in silence, and walked out the door shortly afterwards. I slumped over the kitchen table near his empty cup of coffee and pondered the dilemma. Was it okay for them to dislike each other and still be part of my life? Or did I have to let one of them go?
The doorbell rang.
"Coming!" I shouted and walked over to the front of the house wondering who on earth would be visiting first thing in the morning. I turned the browning door handle of Nelson's flat and peeked outside. "Hello?"
"Hi I'm Sherry," a lady reached out her hand for me to shake, and I did so very timidly. I felt completely embarrassed to be speaking to a woman in a fancy blue business dress, while I stood in overalls, and a plain yellow shirt.