The Low is always there, stroking my lower back in a comforting manner, because he is a friend, I know him, he hurls his black hole body at my centre when he comes, devours me and spits me out, what is left of me, weeks, maybe months later. But he always spits me back out. It is a deal we have.
I wish I could say that I chase other people, that I chase the essence of what they are, that I chase a soul mate, my other half, my own completeness. But I don't. I chase only what they can give me. The high. Not the thrill of the chase, not the hasty ripping of proverbial bodices nor the pained looks that inevitably ensue on that morning after which inevitably always ensues.
I chase that feeling of a first kiss where your heart explodes out of your chest, leaving you light as a feather without a centre, pushing your essence into your fingertips as they caress the hair of your loved one. That feeling of looking at someone and knowing something with a certainty that science could never allow itself to provide about anything.
Ever since I was a child, my mind has walked this path. I was the one who would find ingenous ways to casually pass a certain person's house five times a day, who would hang out on the corner a block down from it, not to follow them, just to see them as they walked out of their home.
My friends did this too, when we were young, pretty, freckled and still had bruised knees from running though the streets, and bruised lower arms from giving each other Chinese burns when we disagreed on which boy was du jour at any given time. But our hearts were virginal, pink and throbbing, we practised cutting them out of our chests and giving them away, but it was all a mime. Our hearts remained our own, at least for the time being.
Every week there was a new boy for them, but already then, I was not like the others. My first love was given to another girl in my high school class. Her name was Heather and she was blonde and popular. She had dimples in her cheeks when she smiled, and also, I would later discover, one dimple just above the teardrop shape of her left buttock. I did not call it being in love at the time. I just knew I had to be where Heather was, she did not have to talk to me or acknowledge me, let alone touch me, I just needed to know she was there, to feel her peachy skin touching the same air that was touching mine.
I had no articulated desire for pleasures of the flesh yet, and though Heather freely gave herself away to a new boy every second month as the last one lost novelty value, I felt no jealousy, because I had no idea what they were doing inside their steamed up cars and behind the smokers' bike shed at half time during school football matches. I just looked at her, smelled her Teen perfume and knew that there was something, something.
Of course we were friends. Everyone was friends with Heather, and she rotated between her crew of girls, allowing each to court her in private just often enough to keep us hanging on. Because I was not the only one pining for her, though the others realised it as little as I did. There were boys, but I kept them at arms lenght. They never seemed that exciting, not like Heather.