One morning, at 6:15am, as the sun rose, all the clocks in 11-year old Aimi's house stopped. That night, just before midnight, her mother died.
During the interval, from the time the clocks stopped until her mother's death, Aimi and her four sisters said the house was filled with deceased relatives, who made themselves known by cooking a family recipe that had been handed down from generation-to-generation called "Garbage," which consisted of crushed tomatoes, chopped onions and peppers, cilantro, whiskey, shell pasta and ground beef. The relatives also played the family piano, tinkled the patio chimes, ran a bath, watched the Honeymooners, and set the dining room table with her mother's fine China, carefully filling each water glass with half a dozen ice cubes.
From that day on, Aimi maintained her deceased relatives, including her mother, communicated with her through wind chimes, pianos, clocks, electric fans and refrigerator ice makers and that she always knew the precise time of day or night, causing her to never need to wear a watch or buy a clock.
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When Jeremy met Aimi at a cultural diversity class she was teaching at the University she told him over coffee and chocolate chip scones that she had a lover named Joseph that she'd been seeing since early in her second marriage. "But I'd like to have a steady boyfriend to take me out for Thai curry every Friday night."
Jeremy carefully explained that he admired her openness and added that he'd always been aware that the best way to love a woman was without limits. "Women shackle themselves to rules that limit their ability to love. A good man helps her free herself."
Jeremy had come to this conclusion because every woman he'd ever loved either had a lover or sought one. Of his three ex-wives, all had left him for other men they'd met while married to Jeremy. His execs praised his generous spirit and often called him to fix a leak or repair a fence. Over his long life he'd come to realize that the only woman he was capable of loving had infidelity in her blood.
When he said this Aimi's eyes sparkled. "I don't want a man who wants me to have a lover, but I need a man who enjoys my infidelity."
When Jeremy nodded as if he understood, Aimi told him she needed a second cup of coffee. Without thinking about it, he stood and brought her a fresh cup. They were married within a year.
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Aimi continued her affair with Joseph. She met him every Friday at his small apartment where they made love on a canvas cot at noon. One afternoon after they'd finished making love, just a few months after her marriage to Jeremy, Joseph proposed that she move in with him.
Aimi felt disoriented when he asked, as if under an anesthetic. The electricity had been out all morning because of the storm the night before. As a result she had not blown her hair dry which left it without its natural wave. She'd also missed her nail appointment. Despite that, or maybe because of it, she was more defenseless and her love making with Joseph had been particularly intense and prolonged. While still relishing the warm wetness of his penetration she said, "Yes."
They were both surprised that she'd said yes. To celebrate, they made love again both crying out, as they reached a peak together for the first time.
When she arrived home she told Jeremy, who was shocked. "We just bought new living room furniture and painted the bathrooms. If you hate the color, I can change it," he said.
At that moment a breeze caused the patio chimes to clang wildly, the refrigerator grumbled brusquely, and the piano emitted the first sixteen notes of Claude Debussy extraordinary piano piece, Claire de Lune.
Aimi paled. With her eyes closed, her dark hair now curled wildly by the humidity and covering half her face, she lowered her chin with a somber sense of dislocation and spoke slowly.
It was her mother. She spoke with a great voice. "It's every woman's right to take a lover, but you must always have at least one foot in the home of your husband."
The next day Aimi drove to Joseph's small run down apartment and found two police cars parked out front. His daughter had found him dead that morning. The cause of death was said to be a toxic odor that came from the stale Wheaties he'd used to fill his pillows, lizard dung, and insomnia. He had not slept in two months.
Aimi, disconsolate, but relieved she wouldn't have to tell him she wasn't moving in, found over a thousand pages of handwritten notes all related to the previous day's request.
He'd been scripting his proposition for her to move in, trying to identify the precise combination of words to win her over so that she would abandon her husband and other life and move into his small unfurnished apartment. Each page was dated and it appeared he had spent the better part of the last two-and-a-half years preparing and practicing how he'd ask her to move in.
In the end, the day before his death, he had finally summoned the courage to ask the woman he'd been making love to every Friday at noon for the last ten years to move in with him by saying:
"Will you move in with me?"
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For the first time in her adult life Aimi was without a lover. She felt rudderless and empty. She missed the illicit euphoria she experienced when she slipped off to the rickety private space of Joseph's apartment, but she didn't miss Joseph. And while the emptiness ate at her, she was unprepared for the anxiety she now felt when she blamed her husband for just about everything that disturbed her.
Six weeks after his death, one morning, while Jeremy was eating a Belgian waffle, she sat down at their green oval kitchen table, looked him in the eyes and said. "I need a lover. It's the only way I can tolerate marriage." As she spoke Jeremy could see how pale, sunken and empty her face had grown. She looked malnourished.
"You're grieving," Jeremy said.
"No, no. I have no thoughts about Joseph, he's gone."
"Do you want me to repaint the bathrooms?" Jeremy offered.
"No. I need a lover."
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That weekend, they accepted an invitation to attend a small party across town.
The proposition of a party seemed to help Aimi recover her natural sense of lighthearted amusement. Her face was bright and absent the tension of previous weeks. Her brown eyes were filled with her old appetite, avid with curiosity, and the possibility of a new pleasure. For the first time in weeks, she painted her lips a bright red and while gazing at herself in the mirror, found her old smirk, coy, vulnerable and inviting all at the same time.
Jeremy had given her a new garnet ring in hopes that celibacy might find a place in her heart. "May this red stone contain your passion," he wrote in a small watercolor card he'd given her with the ring.
"It won't," she said smugly and then kissed his shoulder playfully.
Before they left for the party, imagining an opportunity might arise, she removed all of her rings, including her wedding ring, not so that men might mistake her for being unmarried, but so men could enjoy her long, slender fingers and beautifully shaped and painted nails.
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When they pulled up in front of the house, they found the exterior lit, with two large oaks on either side of the walkway and two fires burning in matching iron covered fire pits that hissed with steam as the pouring rain filtered down through the tree limbs and struck the iron tops.
Just inside the cut glass front door, in a deep, mellow voice, a gray-haired gentleman introduced himself and his wife. His name was Edward, his wife was Darlene. Edward appeared to be Jeremy's age. He was tall and lean, with gray eyes, and rough, ruddy pocked skin on his face.
He leaned toward Aimi as she spoke, turning an ear toward her, waiting for her to finish a lengthy nervous, yet enthused description of the home she'd just entered. Edward leaned back when she'd finished speaking as if he was the captain of this doorway quartet, and would conduct the segue to a new song.
He narrowed his sights upon Aimi. Jeremy did not exist.
"You're a lovely women, perhaps we could speak privately later." Edward said in a voice that briefly consumed the group with its hypnotic audacity.
Darlene, his wife, stood with her hands behind her back and nodded blankly at her husband's response as if she hadn't heard his words. She wasn't nearly as fit or attractive as her husband, despite his damaged face. Her face appeared to have been ravaged by too much sun, though unlike her husband it had aged her beyond her years and left her with the appearance of a crumpled paper bag.
They sat down together. Darlene and Edward were a gentle couple, conversant, humorous, and light-hearted. Both had easy laughs that would lead one to believe they shared a kind rapport, never nurtured resentment and shrugged off conflict.
After an hour visit, Darlene had to leave. She was traveling and had driven herself.
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When Jeremy returned with a glass of red wine, Aimi and Edward had disappeared.
He found her sitting with Edward on a cushioned loveseat under the pergola on the deck in the back yard. The rain had stopped. A fire burned in the center of the deck causing an orange glow to light their faces which had a symbiotic effect on the couple.
When Aimi saw her husband, she looked away as if his presence would break the spell Edward was in the process of casting.
She took the drink Jeremy offered and when he lingered for a moment, as if he might join their conversation, she let out a low growl and mumbled, "No."
Jeremy turned and walked back to the house.
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