I woke up on the Sunday morning and was disappointed to find myself alone. I felt alive from the moment I awoke. My thighs hurt and, I noticed, my nipples were large, almost as if they had just been sucked. My cunt lips were swollen. Was I doomed to be in a permanent state of sexual arousal?
There was a delicious smell of coffee emanating from, I assumed, the kitchen so I got out of bed and looked for my clothes. That search fruitless, I noticed a dressing gown, black, laid out on the bed and, I assumed, for me. It was sure to fit perfectly. But, reassuringly, it didn't although my nipples showed prominently through the fabric.
I tied the belt as I made my way down to the kitchen where, before I got there, I could hear the murmur of conversation.
Clemency looked up, smiling, as I walked into the kitchen and found her sitting across the table from another woman. "This," she said, "is my sister, Patience."
Patience was a pretty woman, a little older than her sister, but with the same, if shorter, black hair. Her eyes were reassuringly a normal shade of brown and she was dressed in jeans, trainers and a shabby jumper.
"Hi Maggie. I am taking a brief refuge. I work all week and look forward to spending the weekend with my kids then, by Saturday evening, all I want is some adult conversation and liberation from football and iPads and computer games. Have we met?"
I took a sip of the coffee Clemency had poured for me and sat with them at the table. "Well, I have to confess you're somehow familiar."
"The library!" She exclaimed. "Grange St library." I pleaded guilty as charged. "My daughter, Tina, absolutely loves it there. She loves the woman who does the Wednesday afternoon readings for her." I admitted that that was me. "Oh wow, she'll be so excited when I tell her I met you at Auntie Clem's." How could I ever think of Clemency as Auntie Clem? "You look so different in a dressing gown."
"Most people," said Clemency, drily, "do."
We nattered for a while and I have to say I revelled in the normality, the mundanity. Patience was funny, quick-witted and, thank God, didn't so much as produce an egg from behind my ear. "She's a dreadful show-off," she said, pointing at her sister, "don't encourage her. I always try to appear bored. But I have to admit, the kids love her."
When Patience left, Clemency and I went upstairs to shower. Inevitably it took longer than strictly necessary and I discovered how pleasant it is to kneel in the shower while someone washes your hair. I found a suitable way to pass the time while I was there. Use your imagination.
"Why don't we have a walk down by the canal?" That was Clemency's suggestion.
"Could we walk past my house so I can change into something more suitable?"
So we did. I wore the sparkly dress and heels, since I had nothing else and I was pleased that my coat covered the inappropriate clothes. My knickers and stockings etc were in my bag. "You're such a slut, walking around with no knickers on." She was dressed remarkably like her sister in jeans and trainers, but with a black shirt and a soft leather jacket.
"You might have offered to lend me a pair of yours."
"Why did that thought not occur to me?"
We got to my place and Clemency wandered around, taking it in, feeling (I sensed) me in the house. Then, clad in a dark green corduroy skirt and a pale yellow sweater under a Barbour coat with brown, sensible shoes, I walked with her through the park and along the canal tow path.
It was a bright, warm late morning. Clemency suggested lunch at a little pub that nestled beside the canal and I agreed. We walked and talked. I slipped my arm through hers as we walked and it felt good, normal, real.
"Did you recognise Patience?" she asked.
"Vaguely. But I know her daughter well. She's a clever little thing, great sense of humour."
"What's the best thing about being a librarian?"
"Seeing kids discover books."
"And the worst?"