Warning: contains a scene of attempted sexual assault and one of attempted suicide.
This one is quite long at 18092 words, so fair warning! And, believe me, it's best to read or reread the earlier story,
Conversations 18
, before you read this; otherwise, it's going to sound a little like gibberish.
When I wrote the Conversations series, I meant each of them to end whenever the conversation ended, although I couldn't resist extending them just a little in a couple of cases. At the same time, the series was supposed to stop at twenty, as I couldn't see any more different ways of looking at that event. However, my imagination has subsequently surprised me.
So...
There's an old saying: those who can -- do, those who can't -- teach. Not lovely for teachers, I guess.
However, I recently realised that it's only part of the saying. It should be: those who can -- do, those who can't -- teach, and those who would like to but can't be arsed -- write.
Lately, I've been wondering whether I've fallen into some form of depression and tried to search within me for the reality or fiction of that. Research led me to understand the methods to avoid it; exercise, structured time, making contact with people and taking time in the sunlight, all of which sounds like a lot of effort. So I wrote a story instead as a sequel to Conversations 18 (Love in the Time of The Plague).
So enjoy. Or not. Although if you don't -- seek medical advice, you might have depression.
I was packing up for the night, closing down the myriad flashing windows stretched over three monitors that showed constantly changing green and red graphs, when a knock came at the door.
Knocks on my apartment door were relatively rare -- mostly because I had a doorbell, but also because I was only ever visited by deliverymen or women, who never turned up this late. And by women, I mean couriers who were women. I point that out simply because they were pretty much the only females I'd come in contact with for almost a year. I'd been married, but that was so yesterday... so last week... so last year, that it was out of fashion in my life. That played better in my mind than that I'd had to divorce a lying, cheating monster.
Eschewing the company of women altogether, I'd spent those months playing my game -- my MMO game. It was indeed massive, and it was indeed multiplayer and, thank god, it was online. I hadn't needed to leave my flat at all. The stock market was a global game, a zero-sum game, in which any gains made were perfectly balanced out by someone else's loss -- usually from amongst the hordes of little guys who were desperately trying to take a reasonable gamble and generally losing.
For most of that year, I'd been on the winning side, feeling a little guilty at taking money off those small-time dabblers. Recently though, I'd been off my game, my thoughts a little cloudy, and my eyes often stinging and leaking from staring at monitors for eighteen to twenty hours a day. Profits were down.
The knock came again, and I reluctantly decided to get up and answer it. Wiping tears from my strained eyes, I trailed across the lounge, pulled the curtain aside, and peeped through the side window.
I think sucker-punch would describe it most aptly; that feeling of being slammed on and just below the sternum, hard enough that it paralyses the belly muscles and throws you into the panicked sensation that you can't breathe and won't ever do so again. It was accompanied by a prickling of the skin from my neck up to my ears and the almost overwhelming desire to go and hide in a cupboard.
Shana.
That one word, just five letters. So simple, so ordinary. Yet how do I explain all the emotions -- confusion, longing, apprehension, anger, fear and even awkward embarrassment that came with it? Just the name launched a tsunami within me, a shockwave similar to that caused by someone casually turning up at a party accompanied by a five-hundred-pound gorilla. That had never happened -- not to me, anyway -- but I could imagine how it would feel: casually chatting with a cocktail in one hand, vol-au-vent in the other and phone in a non-existent third -- and then turning to see this monster right next to me. It doesn't matter how much the idiot who brought it assured everyone that she was very friendly -- shock would sweep through the crowd the way it crested over me.
I hadn't seen her in almost ten months, not since that last moment when she swept out of our flat after an exceedingly nasty, vituperative conversation about her affair -- the venom splashing from my mouth like that of a spitting cobra. My pain and grief had turned me into someone neither of us knew and both didn't like. The lawyers and courts had dealt with the divorce with impartial indifference after we both signed the assets agreement.
I'd been generous, as promised. So I was surprised when the court readjusted the balance in my favour to take into account that my wife was a doctor with a confirmed career and income track, while I -- an office manager without a steady job due to the national lockdown -- had less financial security, despite my doing well so far in the global addiction to gambling on commodities. Of course, most traders would prefer not to call it that and refer to it instead as investing in the stock exchange. But I call it as I see it, and all I see when I go online is a venal casino full of gambling addicts who get others to stake the throw of the dice for them.
Frankly, I'd expected the opposite from the courts and was ready to be raped by the legal beagles, and that little change had altered my mood towards my fellow man slightly. Except for Reg, of course. I still hated that badger-baiting, weasel-raping, scum-fucking bastard with every atom in my body. Seeing him onscreen using my wife so casually and familiarly had permanently broken something inside me.
And now she was at my door.
"Open the door, Mac!"
Her voice -- a contralto that I'd so loved -- shocked me almost as much as the sight of her, and I ducked below the level of the window. Then, after a moment, feeling completely stupid at acting like a guilty child, I stood up again.
"Go away."
"No. I have something for you. Let me in."
"No!"
I heard her sad sigh.
"I'm not going away until I give you this, so you might as well get it over with."
"Whatever it is, I don't want it or need it. Not from you."
There was a long silence before she spoke again, and when she did, her voice was thick and muffled, as if she'd been crying.
"Please, David. I need to do this for you."
When she called me by my first name rather than my nickname, I knew she was serious.
"Call around tomorrow!" I found myself standing at the front door; my hands pressed flat against the wood. I snatched them back as if they'd been burned, realising I was trying to get closer to her.
Dammit! No, fuck it! Fuck, fuck, fuck! She was supposed to be out of my life. I was supposed to be over her and the agony she brought.
"Okay," Shana called back. "I have nowhere to go, and it's pretty cold out here. But I'll wait just here until the sun comes up and then try again."
That made me angry, and I was shouting as I wrenched the security chain away and snatched open the door to confront her. "That's emotional blackmail, you bitch! I'm not going to..."
I broke off as she stabbed me in the arm.
I stared into her eyes -- those so familiar, so beautiful eyes and then looked down, expecting blood to be spurting.