Upon awaking there was disorientation. She was aware of being hot, sticky, the bedclothes were tangled around her, she felt stifled, she needed to get up. There was a sense of panic as she felt herself falling and then pain as she hit the floor. Suddenly she was grounded, she knew where she was.
Hotel room, London, you're on a business trip.
Lauren kicked herself free of the sheets and leaned back on one hand, using the other to wipe away the sweat on her neck and under her chin. What a dream.
She pressed herself up and got her feet beneath her. She stumbled a bit and caught herself by putting one hand on the nightstand. She was dizzy, her throat was dry and her eyes burned.
"What's the matter with me?" She shook her head and went to the bathroom, the dizziness becoming more manageable. She ran water from the tap and pulled her hair back to drink. It was cool but it didn't seem to help very much. She shut off the water and blinked, opening her eyes wide to push back the drowsiness in her eyes.
As she did so she took in her flushed face, her naked shoulders. She felt her bare feet on the cold tile. It was all so significant, so erotic to her. She went to the shower and turned on the water, making sure it was cool before she stepped in. She put her head under the stream and felt the rivulets running down her body.
What a dream...
She closed her eyes, seeking to find snippets of it still lingering in the back of her mind.
His hands were pale and the suit he wore was dark charcoal.
She leaned her head back, taking the little wrapped bar of soap and unwrapping it almost completely by touch.
He'd had a name in the dream. She remembered it whispered as he hovered over her, she gasping as his very features seemed to grow sharper as she neared her own climax. Kisses, hot, moving from her lips down her neck while hands cradled her and caressed her flesh, kneading her...
She shut off the water and slid the glass door of the shower open. She took the towel from the rack and wrapped herself in it. She took the brush out of her travel bag and went to work on her hair. She always brushed it while it was still wet.
There was a smell to him, oh, God.
She felt herself drop the brush and heard it clatter in the sink.
She had smelled him. She had felt him. He had been real.
She opened her eyes and looked at her reflection in the mirror. On some strange instinct she felt her hand move to the knot of the towel under her arm. She unwrapped herself and looked at her body in the mirror. On her left breast, her shoulder, her neck—she felt along the inside of her thigh—she backed away from the mirror, frightened.
What happened last night?
****
The weather was damp and growing damper as he rounded the corner from Pall Mall into St. James Street. The people passing by would have thought him queer had they been able to see him, his hair matted to his head, looking probably very much out of place. Anyone without a hat and umbrella in London on a day like this was a tourist or a madman.
He smiled and nodded at a few of them, pretending they could see him and acting as if he were reassuring them he wasn't insane or a tourist.
Kit liked the rain in London. It was one of the few things that stayed constant about the place.
Kit had never gotten over the changes though he had come for the most part to appreciate them. Nothing big would ever stop London from being London. No matter how big she grew, he still loved it here. Whatever improvements mingled with the monuments of old—the eye, the millennium. Every year there was something added and nothing really lost.
He shook his head. No, some things had disappeared. People lived in an age of information now, for all the good it did them. When literacy had been a luxury of the select few there hadn't been so much drivel produced. Everything was supersized now, something he couldn't quite come to terms with. Some things, when made bigger, did not, by any stretch of the imagination, become better.
The world had become more civilized too. No matter what the papers said on the subject.
Economic upheaval, indeed.
Anyone who thought they were living in the most atrocious age in 2009 hadn't seen Edward Wightman burned at the stake for heresy in 1612.
He'd seen depictions of public executions in films but they never did it justice. The crowds were never as enthusiastic as they had been in reality, nor were they as squalid. What he missed the most were hangings. Those had been the most gruesome and dismal affairs made riotous by the cheering, sneering, bloodthirsty crowds.
It was marvelous to think that the faces passing him on the street belonged to decedents of those he'd seen spitting on the corpses of John Bradshaw, and Oliver Cromwell.
He walked the streets by day, watching the people, what authors for centuries had labeled "the teeming masses" not really viewing them as people of a new "breed" or "generation" but as the same people of the same caliber that had moved through the streets and more recently the underground tunnels for a good part of his unnatural life.
The only difference between people in London in 2009 and people in London in 1066 was that the people in 2009 had less time on their hands and different distractions.
Whereas children used to play by feeding dead rats to tabby cats, today they had hand-held computer games and little multicolored bits of plastic and wire, inexplicably dubbed iPods.
In thinking of the years, it struck him. Another 57 years and that was a solid millennium for the crown. He smiled, shaking his head.
Well, good for you William! Aye, me, from such humble beginnings...
He checked his Rolex and smiled. He rounded the corner to find himself in front of the Ritz. Tossing his copy of the Times into a bin, he turned up the collar of his overcoat against the drizzle. It was a typical day of mist giving way to rain in the slow appalling manner that had everyone carrying umbrellas. He disliked umbrellas—made it difficult to follow anyone. Taking a spot against a pillar he put his hands in his pockets and patiently watched the man at the hansom stand.
He smiled as he saw her come out wearing a tan camel-hair overcoat that was quite flattering. The man at the stand hailed a hansom and he watched as she sped off down Piccadilly.
***
Lauren took her glasses from her nose and let them drop unceremoniously onto the desk top. She rubbed her eyes, blinking them. The computer screen had made the headache she'd had all day exponentially worse, as had the constant interruptions—people coming in asking her if they could be of any help.
She leaned back in the chair, turning around to look out the window at the view of the city at night, which struck her as impressive though alien. She missed San Francisco. The rain wasn't nearly as depressing in San Francisco, or the people quite so measured. For the fiftieth time she closed her eyes, knitting her brow trying to remember the night before.
Late arrival, cab from the airport, check in, bed.
She seemed to remember bumping into someone and saying "excuse me" somewhere in there but that was all.
It had to have been a dream.
She'd not gone into the bar, nor out for a walk. She'd spoken to no one except the cab driver, the concierge, and the man she'd bumped into on her way into the hotel from the cab. She hadn't even ordered room service though she'd been hungry when she went to bed.
It must have been a dream, Lauren. You couldn't have been with anyone last night. You didn't have time to meet anyone last night.