Epistemology 1999
- Experimented, and created.
- Know this, you know who robs you of sight.
- Meaningless, said the Preacher. Meaningless.
There once was an older girl, a younger woman, who saved me.
On her advice, I quit my job. I gave my notice at summer’s end, and Alain set me free from Génoise et Thé. < You can’t be kept, mon gars. > He patted my shoulder, and we shook hands, a parting between men. Waiting outside, Selene took off her sunglasses and dabbed her eyes.
I cleaned my room, fussing over details she fixed sooner and better. The curator was a lovely guest, bringing gifts and Charlotte. We were in bright humor from the change in the season, the shift in the wind. I did well as a host, as a man. I shaved my face, brushed my teeth, wore my shirt, and owned my life.
At the Old Port, we sat on a bench. She spoke, and I learned. I asked, she asked further. We leaned into mystery, and tackled the snake, fang and venom, as it was.
The questions multiplied, as she said they would. Questions — at the café, a glum spot for me as a customer; at ritzy establishments around the city, places where she sought secrets and traded la bise with socialites, a trace of summer fever in her fashion; in the metro, on the last train of the night; in the calm of our chaste slumber, as I lay awake with her dreaming at my side, mouth open but a sliver.
So terrifying were her answers, I should never fall to sleep with a drop of her insight. I was glad, so glad, to not sleep. It was the longest September, the best of my life. I soon forgot my sunrise oath, the promise made in early July.
A day before she left, marking a sudden end, was the one and only time she stood us up. Charlotte and I mused about Epistemology over Alain’s coffee, and parted on the hour.
Later, the curator came in without knocking. Her tone commanded: < The place around the corner. My tab. >
She dressed the same, yet seemed not herself. I stood, and warned her to look away. I changed, and her sad eyes looked not away. Ah — they were a new color.
At Bar des Pins, sipping a gin and tonic, I regarded her, mentor and patron. She called the waiter in French, and touched my arm. An accident? Her hand stayed. < Do you ever feel like life is so short, you might miss it? So short, I never knew it was over. > She noticed her slip, and drank from the glass bottle I pushed to her. Selene was a stranger from a distant land, unraveling traveler in our midst, her blouse revealing what the heart was ashamed to know.
I cleared my throat, and tried — failed — to pull away. < You’re acting off. >
< Right? > A drop of Perrier ran down her chin. She wiped, hiccuped, sniffed. < I am awake. Life is but a dream. >
I paid with her card, and the tall wanderer leaned on my shoulder. We hobbled to my un et demi, tidy as I left it. She twirled, and kicked off her Converse sneakers.
< Home, Gale Jones. Let us be merry. > A cackle bubbled, escaping her beautiful wide mouth. < The night is young. >
I held her, inches from an edge. < Let’s calm down. Come, sit. >
Her embrace threw me off balance. On my bed, collapsed and tangled with me, her whisper betrayed: < Thanks. But no thanks. >
She was on top, captivating me with frost and fire. She held her ponytail in disdain, narrowing her eyes.
< It all crashes down. >
A tug and a flick — like that, her hair tumbled. Bleached strands framed the milk-rose mask, the royal portrait leaning in. I stared at dark roots, short lashes, perfect teeth.
< My word to your word; my heart to your heart; my lips… >
A shy kiss, a brush.
< J’ai baisé ta bouche. > She hummed, and let a drop fall. < So it is bitter, the taste of love. >
Is that how it was always meant to be? So halting, soft, and burning? Was that the perfect first I could not keep, the one I see anew in every dream? I looked away. < We should stop. >
< Should we? > She sounded sure, yet her legs quivered as I thought of Bambi, of fawn and doe, of Louise.
I was aroused, and awake. < I want to stop. >
< Please. > Her lips, seductive and mature. Her eyes — when were they ever so young? Those dark gems, free of color contacts, more than the false blue jewels I knew, revealed a maiden pure and innocent.
< Selene. > I pleaded, and knew not for what. But then, she threw up, cupped her mouth, and wept.
< Meaningless, said the Preacher. Meaningless. >