Something a little off-beat this time. It is a lesbian love story but that might not be immediately obvious so please bear with me.
'Time After Time'
is a long story—there will be sex but it's secondary to the plot. Anyway, I hope you enjoy it.
Characters in sex scenes are eighteen years old or over. All characters and places are imaginary—any resemblance to persons living or dead is coincidental.
Author's note: For the benefit of US readers who may be unaware, the legal age in the UK for buying alcohol is eighteen.
Copyright © 2017 to the author
* * * * *
1877
The woman in the four-poster bed was dying, her breathing ragged and stertorous. Four other people were in the room, keeping silent vigil: sitting on one side of the bed was the nurse who every few minutes would wipe the sick woman's brow with a damp cloth; at the other side, holding the woman's hand, was her husband, his expression anguished; the doctor and the rector stood close by, ready to give such aid as might be necessary.
The three men had been contemporaries at Oxford University and had remained friends despite the different paths their lives had taken. The husband was now a high-ranking official in the Indian Civil Service, the doctor had a well-regarded practice in London's Harley Street while the rector's living was a comfortable sinecure in an ancient Buckinghamshire parish.
The doctor took the woman's free hand and felt for her pulse. "Not long now, I fear," he said, his voice low.
The husband brought his wife's hand to his lips and kissed it gently. Her eyes opened and she smiled at him. "Thank you for a lovely marriage, dearest Henry," she whispered, then: "I'm so sorry I could never give you a son."
"I had you," the man told her softly, "I needed no-one else."
"You've made me so very happy, Henry." She added a little more audibly: "I know we'll meet again one day." Her eyes closed as she gave a little sigh.
The doctor felt for a pulse again then lowered her hand to the bed and bent forward to lift an eyelid. He nodded, as much to himself as to the others, and patted his friend's shoulder. "She's gone, old man. I'm so sorry. We'll leave you with her for a while so that you can make your farewells." He signalled to the rector and the nurse and both followed him from the room.
"It's ironic," he said to the rector when the nurse had left them to inform the other staff, "All those years in India where they have an abundance of exotic and deadly diseases and Berenice remained unscathed. They return to England on their long leave and she succumbs to a congestion of the lungs."
"At least she had her faith," said the rector, "She knows that they will meet again in the next life." The doctor raised a cynical eyebrow but said nothing.
"Oh, I know you don't hold with what you call mumbo-jumbo," added the rector, noticing the doctor's expression, "But I'm sure her dying words will be a great comfort to Henry. They will meet again in God's mansion, of that I'm certain."
The doctor couldn't contain himself. "My dear Monty, how many times must I explain? We are animals, superior animals, true, but animals nonetheless. We have the one life and at the end of it is oblivion. They are no more likely to meet again than man is to fly to the moon." This was a long-standing dispute between the two although it had done nothing to damage their friendship—in fact, although they were unlikely to admit it, they rather enjoyed the argument.
"Edmund, if you weren't such a decent man, I would really fear for your soul when your time comes. As it is, I believe the good Lord will take into account your generosity of spirit, overlook your shortcomings and admit you to his presence."
* * * * *
The funeral was held on the bleakest of midwinter days with heavy dark clouds piling up from the east, bringing with them the promise of even worse weather. Every now and then there were flurries of icy sleet while a savagely biting wind swept across the churchyard, cutting unhindered through the topcoats and mufflers of the assembled mourners to leave them shivering and uncomfortable.
Although it was not within his parish, the Reverend Montague Peacock conducted the service for his old friend's wife with the blessing of the local vicar, an elderly man who valued his warmth and comfort. At times gusts of wind were so vicious that they tore at the words Peacock was reading from the Book of Common Prayer, shredding and dispersing them, rendering them nigh inaudible: "...we therefore commit her body to the ground; earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust; in sure and certain hope..."
At last the service ended and the sexton and his helpers lowered the casket into the ground. Henry Chastain was the first to cast a handful of the cold damp earth into his wife's final resting place, to be followed by the others present. He remained by the grave for some time while the mourners gradually made their way back to the rented house where refreshments were to be provided. His friends the doctor and the rector remained with him although they stood back some little way to allow him a private moment.
* * * * *
By late evening the company had dispersed, leaving the three friends alone. "What do you intend to do now, Henry?" asked Dr Edmund Gillam.
"I have a few years to go before retirement so I might as well return to India," Chastain replied, "A packet leaves Tilbury in three weeks time and I'll be on it. Now that Berenice has gone there's little enough to keep me here. I suppose it would be easy for me to obtain a government post in London but I'm used to India and the way of life there. I've made arrangements for a monument to be installed. You will have the grave tended for me, won't you?"
"Of course, old man." Henry's friends raised their glasses in silent toast.
Almost three months later Henry Chastain made landfall in India and quickly threw himself into his work.
1894
The three friends were gathered together in the smoking room of their London club., chairs drawn up close to a roaring fire. The rector drank sherry and favoured an old and much-loved cherry-wood pipe while his companions each smoked fine cigars and held a glass of whisky-and-soda (or
chota-peg
as Henry Chastain would have it—fortunately the club's waiters were used to visitors from the sub-continent).
"So, what are your plans, Henry, now that you've retired and presumably returned home for good?" enquired the doctor.
"I've taken a place down in Wiltshire, rented on long lease." Henry Chastain drew on his cigar to release a cloud of fragrant smoke. "It's a comfortable house, pleasantly situated in the countryside, and should do me nicely until my time comes. I think I'll enjoy life as a country gentleman."
"You'll be by yourself?"
"Except for staff, yes. Of course, I'll expect regular visits from you two, your duties permitting that is."
"You've never thought of remarrying?" Dr Gillam asked.
"No, I never met anyone who could match Berenice in my eyes and I've become accustomed to my own company. I think I'd make a poor spouse now."
Talk was general, covering mundane matters, for a while until the rector said: "By the way, do you fellows remember a Roland DeVere, up at Oxford when we were?"