I don't know what draws me to the dining room window at the front of the house, but when I look out I see her—Amy—walking up the dirt drive from the county road, past my house, to her house farther up the mountain. Where has she been? She never goes out anymore. Someone must have given her a lift this far. Why didn't she ask me to take her?
As always, I feel the clutch of seeing her. I haven't seen her for two months and five days now, not since the funeral for her Ben—and the only time before that in a long time was at the funeral for my Helen. Both times we'd been standing away from each other, not being able to chance more than a glance or two for each other.
She's dressed up now like I've rarely seen her before, in a suit, and walking so wearily. She's lost weight. There doesn't seem to be much left of her. She was such a robust woman when we . . . but then I'm not getting any sturdier either, although I'm certainly getting bigger rather than smaller.
Seeing her stirs something in me. I move around the house nervously, unable to concentrate on any task for long or to settle. It's a good thing it's only me now and there's nothing much to do anyway.
I anticipate the phone call. I have no idea why I do. Nobody calls me anymore. It had been Helen who had been the social one. Within two weeks of her passing I'd become someone people once had known. That is all right with me. It means the phone doesn't ring and I can melt into the silence of the house, with only my memories for company. For some reason, though, I keep walking by the phone, looking at it, expecting it to ring. And when it does, I nearly jump out of my skin and don't pick it up until the third ring.
"Please come up," is all she says, and then I hear the click as the line goes dead. I don't have to ask who it was. I knew who it would be—even though it has been nearly fifteen years since she last called me. Fourteen years, seven months, and six days, actually. She doesn't give me time to respond. She knows I'll come. She's always been the one in control. And I do go, after I shower and shave and brush my teeth and carefully pick out my clothes—nothing worn, nothing needing mending. I couldn't do that to Helen. I couldn't go in anything that hadn't been kept up and ironed nicely.
The front door is open to her house. I don't knock; I just walk on in. All the time I was showering, I was dreaming about where I'd find her—how I'd find her, and it made me go hot. That's just where I find her, in her bedroom, on her bed, naked, propped up on her elbow with her eyes trained to the doorway.
The look she gives me when I appear in the doorway is worth it all—all the years of agreeing that "We can't do this. Ben and Helen, both of them, are too good for us to continue doing this to them."
She doesn't have to tell me to take my clothes off. She doesn't have to tell me anything. I am already half hard when I come onto the bed behind her and pull her into my chest. She is too frail for me to lie on top of her—God how frail she's gotten and how quickly. She hadn't been this frail at the funerals. And she is too proud to be on top of me, so we do it with me behind her, spooning her into my body.
We kiss and I cup and squeeze her breasts as she reaches back and strokes me harder. She is the one who puts me in position and juts her buttocks back to take me inside her. I would never be the one to take that responsibility. She had always been the one to take on the greater guilt. Leaving one hand to work her breasts and nipples, I move the other one down to run my fingers inside her folds and work her there while we move our hips in rhythm, harmonizing our sighs, and taking our pleasure of each other.
It has been so long, but it seems otherwise. We still fit together perfectly, despite her having diminished in frame and me otherwise, and have all of the same moves to pleasure the other that we ever did. I come in a peaceful flow and shared sighs. Then we sleep, me withering inside her and stroking her breasts until I have drifted off listening to her soft breathing, soft breathing with a bit of a ragged edge to it that I don't remember it having before.