The List Part IV. The Silver Fox edition
There should be a word for the way a familiar street looks different after leaving a lover, for how the interior of a car takes on the scent of sex, how the tilt of your head looking over your shoulder into traffic recalls the feel of his lips on your neck.
None of this is what you need right now.
What you need right now is dinner. A beer. A shower - long and hot enough to rinse him away.
Two hours of rush hour driving on 101 provide more than enough time to ruminate. You hate that you're like this.
Ruminate
. It's what cows do with cud. Do you really need to regurgitate every experience? It never tastes better the second time around.
He made you come. The thought of it makes you flush. You're grateful. How could you not be? You went in for a tune-up and now you're purring. You should feel shiny and new.
But you're not a car. By the time you're ready to cross the Golden Gate Bridge, you're wondering, picturing him in the plane, reaching for his (non-alcoholic) drink - is he caught aback when the flight attendant says: "
Can I get you anything else?"
and his mighty brain instantly teleports back to the Hyatt.
Yes, yes you can get me....
Instinctively, you shake your head. He's not like that.
Veni, vidi, vici.
It's why he's a conquerer and you're not. He wanted something, he got it, he's done.
He's not speculating about the nature of desire while waiting in line at the McDonald's drive through in Marin City.
You collect your change and throw the bag on the passenger seat and, as you do, you see your phone vibrate.
It's a picture of a pencil case.
You forgot your present.
Yes, you did. You forgot your present. And your past. Not to mention your future.
I'm sorry.
That last text fills you with rage.
He's sorry?
What the fuck is he sorry for?
You, on the other hand, are very sorry you cut off that escalade driver who just gave you the finger.
The cheeseburger you scarfed down is pushing back up against your uvula.
Sorry?!
You're sorry, too. Sorry you're 50 and you clearly don't really know how to do this. Sorry (not sorry) that you still want sex - real sex - sex with a real person and not with a perfectly competent toy. Sorry that your heart is a badly trained dog - one that doesn't heel when you whistle, one that will feast on all sorts of shit if you let it.
Fuck him. Fuck his pencil case.
And still you're sorry you left it. He was in some random Staples and he thought of you. The pencil case is evidence - proof you cross his mind outside of bed.
And you were in such a hurry to get out of there, you forgot it.
By the time you get to Petaluma, you're ok with it being gone. He is not the kind of guy who'd bother to mail it. Sure - he could ask his secretary (no - personal assistant - that's what they call them nowadays) but what would he say then:
Kim
(or Madison or Heather or Sarah - whatever)
could you please see that my fuck buddy gets this?
This was supposed to be a mental health day. Was it?
Maybe,
you think as you put your key in the lock. Your little house. You love it. Unabashedly. It is the one good thing that came out of your marriage. You have a small oasis in wine country and you earned it. For twenty years you were 'emotionally available'. Bruce had the better career - you agreed on that. You were a team. What was some rinky-dink professorship against full partner in a hot shit law firm in Napa? Wasn't that the
big time
you both wanted? Bruce, the labor lawyer who got his winery clients what they asked for - no liability and cheap wages? What did you get in return - big money and the gala nights and a husband who - at best - politely ignored you and - at worst - publicly diminished you.
The gowns were the first to go. You and Audrey pulled out the garment bags together. Thousands of dollars worth of couture. Good riddance. You never felt comfortable wearing them. Ok - comfort might be the wrong word. That sort of dress is not about comfort - it's about display. Did you like it?
Did you like it?
If you're honest - yes. How could anyone not like thousand dollar dinners, the glare of lights and then the dark insides of limousines? You gave your ambition for his. Wasn't this your due?
Was it?
Shouldn't you have insisted? Stood your ground? Instead, you silently resented Bruce and his success, his
life
. The life he made with your help - your
consent
. You never pushed back. It was so easy to drift - let him set your course and go along for the ride. Maybe if you'd had children...
That hurt. Is that how women save themselves?
Your head begins to ache. How to stop it? Aspirin or a drink and a friend?
Or maybe tea and a good book?
===============================
Routine can be constricting but it can also be freeing. Tuesday comes and you get up, put on the black dress because black is always ok by Lauren, your manager. Drive the 20 minutes to Kenwood. On Tuesday the mist rising over the vineyards doesn't register. You hardly notice the doe grazing on the side the road. She's looking right at you but your thoughts are elsewhere. On Wednesday, there are turkey vultures on the weathered fence. One of them has spread his wings to the faint morning sun. He's got to dry himself off to fly and so should you. By Thursday, you're happy again to snap photos of that cute engaged couple under the hundred year old camellia.
Look. They're going to risk it.
When you hand the camera back to them and turn on your heel to return to the tasting room, you catch yourself smiling.
The smile deepens when you check your phone at 4 pm and see a text
Hey Beautiful
Con
Little life experience
Which is definitely nothing you'd say about Gerald. He's got life experience in spades. Not to mention three Emmys in his hall closet - the crowning achievements of a career spent in television. For more than three decades, his vision has shaped how thousands of viewers see San Francisco.
Another man who lives for his work.
{sigh}
But he's got one crucial thing on Boy Wonder. He's always been scrupulously honest with you. Somewhere back in his storied past, something bad happened and the door marked 'relationship' swung shut - permanently. Gerald likes to squire you around - happy to have ready access to a well educated, well spoken, attractive companion on his arm when duty calls (which it does quite often when you're the head of major TV station in a large American city). You've accompanied him to fundraisers (yawn!), to celebrity golf tournaments (who knew Pebble Beach was so cold after dark?) and company parties ("So nice to meet you! We always assumed darling Gerald was gay.")
Darling Gerald was anything but gay. Your pussy could bear witness to that. No, Gerald was a handsome, witty, Stanford graduate from a storied San Francisco family who had created himself as a legend:
The One Who Got Away
. Which is not say that the determined mothers of SF debutants ever gave up trying, any more than did the yearly parade of interns.
Year after year, he smiled, bought drinks and wrote wonderful recommendations.
And stayed quite glaringly single.
Hey Handsome!
Are you in town?
Briefly.
Gerald had retired to his family's massive estate near San Luis Obispo a few years back. Now his forays into his old happy hunting ground, San Francisco, were few and far between.
Miss me?
Bastard, you think, but you smile. Gerald was the man who had jimmied you out of your marriage, despite always insisting he didn't want to be 'that guy'. A home wrecker.
He wasn't. Your home was already wrecked when you found him. He was just an excuse to sweep up the pieces and finally put them in the trash.
Of course.
What brings you up north?
I've been named executor of my friend's will.
Pro
completely untainted by death
Gerald is 65. 15 years old than you - more than a generation, if your anthropology classes were to be believed. Of course some of his friends were dying. Hell - he'd had his own brush with death a year ago, a heart attack that had necessitated bypass surgery. Yet he was so vibrant, you never thought of him like that. And he had all his own hair...
Let me take you out to dinner in the City
Con
still developing what's known as 'taste'.
No one could top Gerald in that department, certainly no 28 year old who didn't care about the difference between a burrito and a brรปlรฉe.
Meet me at the Mark. We'll have drinks and go to Boulevard
That's more like it. A real date. None of this 'four hours in an airport hotel' shit.
`