She was Mary, and for the last eighteen of her thirty-six years, she had lived a life as simple as her name: ordered, certain, and routine. After the brief excitement of a short-lived affair with an older man while in high school, the reality of un-wed motherhood set in. All pressures were brought to bear, and after she reluctantly agreed to give up the child for adoption, she was never the same. Youthful exuberance turned to ennui and her life became just putting one foot in front of the other.
Then came the terror and confusion. In her head, the phone call had the effect of fire engines in the middle of the night. āHelloā¦is this Mary? This isā¦Jamesā¦your son.ā
Only seconds passed but it seemed like eons before the cobwebs cleared enough for her to even say, āWhoā¦whatā¦?ā She heard him through a fog as he explained how he had found her, how he only wanted to talk to her and how he would understand if she didnāt want to. He sounded sweet to her and the first time in a long time the feelings that welled up in her told her she had something worth living for. Their first conversation lasted two and a half hours.
Over the following months Mary heard how Jamesā adoptive mother had died when he was only three and his father had moved them to Toronto. James heard about all the dead-end jobs and the failed marriage that Mary had been through. She heard how close he was with Brian. She heard how well he had done and how far he had come, and she was glad. He heard in her voice how poorly her life had gone and of her loneliness, and he was sorry.
They fed on every detail of each otherās life. She wanted to know the color of his baseball uniform at school and he wanted to know what were the most coffee refills she had ever served anyone when she was a waitress. He told her about Karen his sixth grade crush and she told him about every town sheād been through before ending up in Charleston, South Carolina. They delighted in each other.
When James told Mary that he wanted to meet her and countered every reason why she couldnāt, she finally agreed. With a flutter in her heart she headed for the airport with the ticket he had sent her for a long weekend in Toronto. He met her outside the baggage claim and she knew him. His eyes were the color of Hersheyās kisses, like hers. Even his smile said, āI know you.ā He told her that she was even prettier than her voice. They hugged and she cried. She cried for the day she had lost him and she cried for the day she had found him. She cried for every day in between.
Studies show that emotional pain is felt in the same part of the brain as physical pain. Studies also show that the stress recorded is equally intense. James wasnāt thinking about studies as he held Mary and felt her sorrow. He wasnāt thinking any thoughts, but in that moment, with her warm body against his, he forgave her. It would be much later before she would forgive herself.
When they got back from the airport, Brian put Mary at ease. With a warm hug and a tour of the house Jamesā father welcomed her. He showed her the guest room, which he said would be there for her as long as she wanted, and whenever she wanted to stay with them.
The next day Brian took them both to lunch at the CN towerās 360 restaurant. They were 115 stories up, rotating around a view of Lake Ontario and all of Toronto that was spectacular. Brian laughed to himself at how little of that view James and his mother saw. After an appreciative glance out of the windowed walls, James and Mary hardly took their eyes off other. They both reached across to touch the others hand or arm as they spoke, as if to make sure they were really there.
Brian hardly got a word in between the rapid-fire questions and answers that passed between them. He told Mary that he wished he hadnāt had to travel so much so he could have been with James more but his son seemed happier than he had ever seen him. He liked a lot about Mary and she accepted Brianās compliments graciously.
They spent the weekend watching the fall woods turn crimson. The three of them walked the underground mall and visited all the tourist attractions from the old castle at Casa Loma to the zoo. Brian felt at ease and when Mary wasnāt holding Jamesā hand, she held Brianās. When she felt the chill in the air, it was James who put his arm around her.
When they took her to the airport, Brian was waiting in the car while James took his mother to the gate. Neither wanted to leave the other. Neither expected the kiss to last as long as it did. Neither expected to feel what they felt, but they did. She was flushed as she made him promise to write and call. He had every intention of staying close to her.
When James called her the next day she was already planning for him to come visit her during his Christmas vacation from college. āJames, I only have a couch for you to sleep on and if you donāt mind home cooking, I want you to come.ā
When he talked it over with his father, Brian was very generous. He gave his son the tickets and enough spending money to take his mother to the places he knew she couldnāt afford. But restaurants and sightseeing was not foremost on Jamesā mind. His temples throbbed at the memory of their kiss.
There wasnāt a day that either of them didnāt think that Christmas seemed a decade away. Thatās all they talked about on the phone. How good it was going to beā¦how good. When the cool of Toronto turned cold James finally found himself in a cab from the airport approaching his motherās apartment in Charleston.
She opened the door. He looked at his mother and he looked at the woman that stood before him. She wore a soft knit dress that accentuated the softness of her curves. This was different from their first meeting. Her smile was small and she breathed as if inhaling his fragrance. They didnāt kiss. They just held each other, for a long time.
It was a bit awkward; she was almost formal for a while but after an hour or so they eased into the intimate conversations they were more accustomed to. He asked her, āHave you been going outā¦dating at all?ā
āYou know, itās funny James but since I came back from Toronto, I didnāt have much of an urge. She hesitated, āā¦there was one person that I saw a few times but aside from that, I was just as happy staying home than being out, forcing myself to be sociableā¦ā She laughed. āYouāre too young to know what a drag it can beā¦ā
āNo Maryā¦I know what you mean. Iāve been out on enough āgoing nowhereā dates where the only thing you have in common is belonging to the same speciesā¦and sometimes youāre not even sure about that.ā
She laughed easily and put her hands on his face and said, āYou are just so cute.ā As an afterthought she said, āHey, how about coming to work with me tonight?ā Mary was a guide for a company that ran ghost tours around Charleston. She took groups to the local cemeteries and regaled them with anecdotes about local real and imagined experiences with hauntings, visitations, and the like.
James enjoyed watching her in her black costume as she joked with the group and told stories with great animation. He liked the grace of her hands as she waved and gesticulated to emphasize her points. When it was over, She said, āYou must be good luck for me honey, I havenāt made this much in tips since I started.ā
He gave her a kiss on the cheek and said, āYou did a great job; I loved it.ā She put her arm in his and leaned into him against the chill that was in the air. He felt proud walking the decorated streets with the woman he called to himself, āPretty Mary.ā
After her midnight group, they went home so exhausted they were giddy. Theyād walked from the courthouse to the outdoor market and were laughing about one of the women on the tour who kept asking, āAre you sure this really happened dear?ā With their coats still on they found themselves in each otherās arms. They found themselves kissing: long, deep, and uninterrupted.
When the kiss broke Mary said, āIām all grimy; Iām going to take a shower.ā She realized where they were headed and she needed the respite to think. James went into the small half bath to wash up and shave.
He was on the couch waiting for her when she returned. He had no idea which of all the possibilities he had considered would play out. She did. She had decided. She wore a loose V-neck tee shirt over her panties. It was obvious that she had no bra on.
She came up to the couch and bent over and kissed each cheek...each eyeā¦each lip. He looked into the open neck of her shirt and saw her bare breasts touch as they met. His freshly shaven face was smooth and the feel of it on her, momentarily mesmerized her. She remained with her face on his and before she finished the sentence that started with āMmmmā¦ā She felt his hand on the ends of both of her hanging breasts. Her heart thumped from her neck to her waist as he reached under the loose shirt and rubbed across her nipples. She held his shoulders for balance and froze with her mouth by his ear as her son massaged every inch of her breasts. āOh honeyā¦oh honeyā¦oh honeyā¦ā She whispered it thickly a dozen times.
Their mouths locked and their tongues explored. She sat by him and they formed a sculptural loverās embrace. Soft moans accompanied the gentle touching. There was no thrashing and clawing of first time lovers. Hands sought to caress long lost but familiar flesh. He coddled her full breast as her nipple responded between his fingers. She lifted his shirt and indulged in the powdery feel of the skin across his chest and back, all the while kissing, and kissing.
Then she started breathing hard. She tore her lips from his and he could feel her trembling. āJamesā¦ā He looked at the pained expression on her face. āWe canātā¦Iām sorryā¦honey, thereās something I want to talk to you aboutā¦oh God, I never should have started thisā¦itās too selfishā¦I ruined my life when I let you go and Iām not going to ruin yours by doing this now...and alsoā¦ā
His hand still rested on her bare breast and he was hard and uncomprehending. āWhat are you talking aboutā¦youāre not going to ruin my lifeā¦Iā¦I love you.ā
āJamesā¦I know you doā¦I can feel it and I love you too but this will come back to haunt usā¦we canāt justā¦ā
James took his hand out from under her shirt and cradled her face. āHaunt us? Mary thereās nothing to haunt usā¦no ghostsā¦I think youāre taking your job too seriouslyā¦ā
āJames, donāt make funā¦you know what I meanā¦youāre so young and youāre not ready for somethingā¦like thisā¦ā