NATHAN --
The cat woke me up.
How can that be? I don’t even own
a cat. I always thought a dog would make a better pet; maybe a ferret if it
comes down to a choice. One or the other. A ferret wouldn’t require that much
care. It would fit my lifestyle better. Yes, a ferret would definitely be
better than a dog. Way better. At least for me.
I lie still. Eyes deliberately
scrunched shut.
Street sounds. Cars. Rock music
from a distant radio. Rises, falls, fades. A deep motor growl. Diesel engine.
Probably a city bus. Bird chirps. Robins. They’re flocking back to favourite trees.
Making muddy nests of dried-out grass blades in protected places. Fighting the
doves for prime real estate. Nature never changes. Urgent voices. School kids –
teenagers judging by the swearing and loud tones – actually talking to each
other. Not texting. Amazing in this day and age.
Breath sounds. Light, wispy, slight
fluttering at the end. Steady, rhythmic. Soothing. Is it me or someone else?
No, it’s someone else. But I don’t live with anyone. No room-mates. No ferret.
At least not yet.
The delicate scent of citrus.
Faint but delicious. My favourite fragrance these days. She always wears it. I
sometimes try to stand as close to her as I can, almost bending in half over the
low counter at The Ernie. I have to be careful not to lose my balance and fall into
her lap. Way too embarrassing if that were to happen.
I inhale slowly, deeply. The
scent of her. It makes me hungry for her. I can imagine her touch, her smile,
her delightful giggle. I can taste…
Something’s poking my cheek. Once.
Twice. A hard three, then a much harder four. Slight pin pricks. Perhaps it’s
my imagination. Whatever, it’s determined. There’s a snuffling snore beside my
right ear. No. More like a purr. Cat sounds.
I open my eyes. A bit at a time.
Being cautious. Not quite sure what I should expect from a possibly psycho creature
poking claw tips at my face.
There’s other eyes. Close to
mine. Flecked amber with dark slits that expand and contract in, then out and
back again. Tiger eyes. A pink, twitching square nose. I’m being sized up, the
cat deciding how many meals it can get from this strange live thing in its bed.
This uninvited thing – me – probably taking up its usual special spot on the
pillow.
I roll my head to the left,
trying hard not to disturb the staring cat. Not wanting to provoke an attack or
at the very least, have it jump on my face and smother me. Dead.
An old wooden milk carrier – a
faded blue Silverwood’s Dairy stamp still visible. On its end, serving as a
bedside table. A digital clock. White plastic case with faint, once moist finger
smudges across the top buttons. Years of use apparently. Green, steady glowing numbers.
Digital. 7:17.
Beside it, a book. Hard cover. Barbara Kingsolver. High Tide In
Tuscon. I read it recently. Just because she told me it was her favourite. Not my usual type of read though. When I told
her my favourites were Baldacci and Rankin, she laughed, telling me it was good
I was dating a librarian.
I’ll have you reading Tolstoy and
Chekhov, she promised, before you can even manage a grumbled ‘nyet’.
A tissue box. Patterned in
various shades of muted blue. A scratch pad, pale green. Top page has an odd
brown watermark. A coffee mug perhaps. Ernest McGregor Library printed in dark
green along the bottom. A bright yellow pencil with a sharp point. That’s good.
I can use it on the cat if I’m attacked.
At the thought, I’m amused for a
bit longer than is healthy.
An open box of condoms. Trojan. Not
my kind. Several ripped wrappers abandoned on and around Kingsolver. Ragged
edges. As if someone used his teeth - maybe her teeth - to open them in a hurry.
Not the cat, surely. But if not the cat, then who?
I shift my head back. The amber
tiger eyes are gone. Orange fur ball wrapped tight, close to my face, not quite
touching but crowding in. Taking back as much of its pillow as possible. A
ferret wouldn’t do that.
More purring. This time with a
rough edge. Snoring, really. With a distinctive flutter at the end.
It’s not psycho cat.
I gradually lift my head just
enough to see over the sleeping animal. Russet hair. Fine strands all tangled randomly
together. Usually it’s all a long, carefully pleated braid down her back. Now spreading
web-like across a pale yellow pillowcase, maverick strands spill recklessly onto
the sheets pulled tight under her chin.
I remember now.
She asked me to unbraid it. Don’t
rush, she said. Enjoy the moment. I remember the feel of each strand falling
loose over my fingers. I kissed her hair, burying my face deep into the gently curling
ruby waves. The lush scent of her.
Citrus. Lightly scented grapefruit.
I bought a tube after she told me it was her favourite shampoo. Never use it myself of course. But I put small
drops of it on a tiny piece of crinkled tinfoil left open on my bedroom bureau.
To remind me of her. Of my growing love for her.
The fair skin, a faint spray of
freckles. Angel kisses, she once told me. Wispy, delicate lashes. Attractive
borders for incredibly beautiful amethyst eyes. Innocent. Her eyes always dance
with excitement. Or perhaps it’s mischief. Biologically, that’s not even possible.
But, no mind as to the correctness of it all, her eyes surely captured me from
the instant I first saw her.
Two months ago. No, more like three
months ago. Has it been that long? That’s nothing really, when you think that
it might easily turn into a lifetime.
My hand moves slowly to the bare curve
of her waist. Resting lightly, feeling the gentle rhythm of her breaths in my
fingertips. Not wishing to wake her. Giving in to a wakening desire, I trace up
over the ribs, seeking out and briefly cupping her naked breast. Back down,
then up the beckoning curve of the hip, sliding my fingers over to re-discover a
mound of russet coloured fuzz.
I shall not wake her.
I feel him stirring. When she
discovered him in our first urgent fumbling last night, she burst out, oh
Buster, my you are a very naughty boy. We laughed, no awkward apologies needed.
Fair’s fair, I said, reaching with
eager fingers down her belly into the light fuzz. It’s Betty, I said. Don’t
know why really. It just seemed to be a perfect name for it.
Betty meet Buster, I said by way
of introduction.
She laughed and sighed. I don’t
usually give it a name. But it’s much more fun to give them names. Don’t you
think? Then she pulled me tight to her.
Betty just loves to meet Buster,
she whispered in my ear.
Now, lying in her bed, I could
see where my thoughts were taking me. Chill, Buster. I will the thought to him.
Time to get out of bed. Let her sleep some more.
I slide out, doubly careful to not
disturb either her or the curled cat. As soon as my head leaves the pillow,
psycho cat unfurls his body and effortlessly shifts over into the nicely warmed
space left by my head and shoulders. Re-curling, the cat looks a bit too
it’s-about-bloody-time. At least for my liking anyway.
After a bit of searching in the
semi-darkness, I give up finding my undies, socks and denim shirt. Silent hops,
first one leg, then the other. I pull on the crumpled Lee’s. I’ll leave finding
the other stuff until later.
Being in Tilley’s apartment is new
to me. I’m curious about her private life away from the library.
But mostly I’m just hungry.
I slip from the bedroom, close
the door then move through the small living room into the kitchenette. As my
mother was fond of saying, it’s so small you can’t grab a cat by the tail and
swing it around without hitting something. I chuckle at that image, especially
in light of what I just stared down in Tilley’s bedroom.
A small window over the sink
looks out onto a spacious rear yard. Grass, still mostly brown, has green
patches forcing their way back. Pale yellow, butterfly lace curtains tied back.
New looking sink, faucets and counter-top. A beat-up toaster, a newish coffee
maker, counter-size microwave and a shiny metal composting tub. A Disney themed
dish towel neatly folded over the oven handle. The fridge is older. Its seen
better days.
I look round the small apartment.
The entire place has seen better days. Perhaps a Deputy Chief Librarian doesn’t
earn as much as I thought. But if we combine her salary with my teacher’s pay, we’ll
be able to afford a better place in a less dodgy part of town. Something else
to put on our yet-to-be-discussed list.
A few photos of psycho cat are pinned
with multi-coloured magnets to the white-yellow fridge door. Two with Tilley;
several more in various solo poses on the living room furniture. One lying on
the bedroom pillow, looking like it’s daring anyone, human or otherwise, to
push it off. A dog or a ferret even, would never look like that.
An under-sized table topped with
splotchy dark green Formica. Chipped black in a couple of places. Salt and
pepper shakers in the middle, Micky and Minnie by the looks of it, both sitting
on a plain white placemat. Two chrome tube chairs with vinyl green seats and black
plastic floor sliders.
More books. Some of them are now
featured on our national radio’s Canada Reads contest. An old, well-thumbed
Bible, leather bound with the SMH gold embossed in one corner. Sharon Matilda
Honsberger. Now known by everyone except her parents and aged grandmother as Tilley.
A surprise find pokes out from the
pages of one of the Canada Reads books. A green and white, deluxe three day pass
to the Toronto International Comicon Show next month. Comics? Tilley is so
interested in comics she’s spending three days at the show? Comicon is the holy
grail for comic fans from around the world. I didn’t know this quirky fact
about her. Wrongly, I guess, I just assumed a professionally trained librarian
would not be interested in the lowly comic book. I’m intrigued but file this
discovery away for future discussion.
I find three cereal boxes in the
upper left cupboard. I choose a brand I haven’t eaten since I was a kid because
I’m immediately drawn to its cover photo. A bunch of whole grain, multi-coloured
O’s floating in a large, heart-shaped red bowl - all on an eye-catching bright orange-yellow
box.
Somehow it seems appropriate I
choose it after a night just spent with Tilley. A woman I’m coming to love. A
woman I could probably spend the rest of my life with.
In another cupboard are short,
orderly stacks of assorted plates, big and small, four cereal bowls and several
rows of glasses and mugs, each of varying size.
Opening the fridge, I find a
half-full box of 5% light cream. A quick sniff test confirms it’s still good to
go. Unfortunately I can’t find any sugar, - brown or white. No coffee either -
instant, ground, tub or otherwise.
There’s a cheap plastic mesh tray with lots of tea varieties. Some extra
strength Tylenol, nasal spray and several bottles of generic vitamins.
I dump some O’s into the bowl,
add cream, stir everything and sit down to eat. I read the story on the back of
the cereal box.
Fascinating stuff. Apparently it’s
a proven fact that if you drop a single O into a bowl of milk, it will form a
small dent on the surface and float there feeling lonely and unloved. Add a
second O nearby and something magic happens. Mysteriously one lonely, unloved O
drifts over and cuddles up to the other O as if attracted by an unseen force.
The O’s are now almost inseparable. Unless a greater force, a cereal spoon
probably, breaks them up. But even then, the two O’s will try and get back
together no matter what.
At least that’s how I understand
the blurb on the box. The scientists even have a name for it. It’s called the
Cheerios Effect.
Excited, I get a second bowl from
the cupboard, pour in some 5%, drop in a light brown O slightly apart from a
light pink O. Sure enough, each shifts sideways towards the other. A hook up takes
place right before my eyes.
It’s our story. Tilley and me.
Coming together in the bowl of life. Admittedly, it’s a dorkey way to express
it. But right now, we’re living a version of it. Our very own Cheerios Effect.
How cool is that?
can’t wait to tell her my
discovery. Not quite an epiphany. But right up there nonetheless.
Yeah, I know I sound a bit crazy.
But honest to god, I’m in love with her.
And love can work in very
mysterious ways, don’t you think?
________________ ~ ________________
TILLEY --
I’m drifting quite happily in
that white woolly twilight zone between sleep and awake when Brian jumps onto my
pillow. He settles in front of my nose. I think he listens to my breath sounds.
Likes the feel of the warm in and out on his whiskers.
Brian’s my orange tabby. Stepped
in through the open kitchen window about two years ago, seemed to take a liking
to my place so he’s never left. It’s fair to say that now Brian and I equally
share the space. I don’t get too freaked out about where he chooses to sit,
scratch, cough fur balls, roll or sleep. I pay the rent, keep our house warm
and clean, leave yummy food in his bowl and lots of fresh water. That’s just
the way it is when you live with a cat.
Right now, Brian’s licking my
nose. His rough, sandpaper tongue moves in short, gentle arcs. Nostril to
nostril, tip to bridge. He’s always done it since the first morning he was here.
It’s become our thing most mornings. I can’t say that I mind this too much. But
it’s not something I talk about with my workmates at The Ernie.
Usually when Brian finishes up
his morning greeting, he hops over my head, lands on the pillow behind me. He
settles in for some serious purring and a few hours of undisturbed sleep.
That’s why in a few seconds, Brian’s
not going to be too happy. There’s an unexpected head on his pillow. I didn’t
tell Nathan about Brian when we came back last night. Not that there was much
time to talk about it. Oh god, that was something else.
I hope my boyfriend likes cats.
When that cat gets it into his head to stare you down, it can be a pretty
intimidating experience.
It’s best I just lay here with my
back to Nathan. Pretending I’m still asleep. Let the boys fight it out over who
has first dibs on the pillow. My cat doesn’t believe in finders-keepers, losers
weepers - so it should be interesting.
My money’s on Brian. I give
Nathan maybe ten minutes at best going face to face with my cat. Then Nathan
will be off the pillow, out of my bed and finding his way into the kitchen to
make fresh coffee.
Not that finding the kitchen will
be too much of a challenge. I’ve a really little place here – this bedroom, a
two piece john with a rusting out shower stall, a crowded but comfy sitting
area and a ridiculously micro-size kitchen. You’ll never see this place
featured on Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, that’s for sure.
Did I just use the term
boyfriend? Now that’s interesting. Lately I’ve been wondering about this thing between
Nathan and me.
No denying we have this amazing connection. Share a lot of the
same interests. He’s got a great sense of humour, a job he loves and a hot body
that I love. The sex last night was…well, given that it was our first time
doing it, it was pretty darn incredible.
Oh! His hand is on my waist. What
magic fingers that man has. It feels like he’s reading braille. Oh, he’s cupping
my breast. Now he’s heading south. Lie still. Really still. Don’t encourage him
or we’ll be here all day. Oh, those fingers again. Uhmm…
Yep, there he’s off the pillow.
That took maybe five minutes. Cat 1 – Nathan 0.
I can just imagine Brian behind my
head, settling into the fresh, warm space on the pillow, giving Nathan that
don’t-mess-with-me look. My cat sure gives attitude.
What the heck’s that thumping? Sounds
like bunny hopping at the bottom of the bed. I don’t dare look. Must keep my
eyes closed. I need some quiet time to think about us, about last night. Where all
this might be going. Two months and three days since we first talked at the
library. Is this relationship moving too fast?
Oh, now I get it. Nathan’s hopping
foot to foot trying to pull on his jeans as quietly as he can so he won’t wake
me. What a sweet man. Wonder if he’s found the rest of his clothes?
Come to think
of it, where’s my bra? My panties? My god, where did we throw those things? Probably
out on the floor in the front room along with his shirt and shoes. Likely his
underpants too.
When I get up I’ll have a look
around here for my things. If no luck, I’ll pull on my silk nightie and at least
be somewhat decent for Nathan. I don’t think I’ll look too sexy for ol’ Buster.
Oh my god. Did we actually give names to our intimate parts?
Ok, the bedroom door just snicked
shut. I can follow his movements by the squeaks in the floor. He’s in the
kitchen now. Cupboards opening. There’s the fridge door. Now the closing thunk.
I’m sure he’ll find something to tide him over until I join him.
Join him. Why am I being so silly
about this? Join him. It sounds so… permanent. So committed. Am I frightened?
What was it that Thomas told me
when we split in our final year at college? True intimacy, Tilley. It’s just
not you.
Ah, Thomas. You were my first
serious love. My college lover. That small heart tattoo inside my right wrist?
An impulsive act, for sure. Summer of second year. We were both tree planting
in northern Ontario. Came in to Thunder Bay for a dirty weekend and both got
tats. Mine on the wrist, yours just above the left nipple. I wonder if you
still have it. Probably you’ve had it removed.
Commitment phobic, you said
during one of those heart-to-heart moments I so hated but you so loved to have.
It’s what psychology majors did, you said.
Of course, I denied it. You kept
pushing me on it. I told you to leave. Take your stuff and not come back. I
shouted it so loud I thought the neighbours would call the police. You refused
to go. I had to just about throw you out the door, knapsack, books, clothes and
all.
But I kept your tooth brush. Did
you know that? And your favourite
work-out tee. When it was pretty clear you weren’t ever coming back, for a long
time I put the tee under my pillow at night. So I could smell you. I felt safe
when I had your tee close.
Hmm. Feeling safe. Commitment.
Intimacy. Is that what’s at the heart of this with me and Nathan? He’s a great
guy. Genuine. Sincere. Intelligent. Passionate. What you see is what you get
with him. I like that about him. A lot.
He claims he can read me like a
book most times. We always laugh when he says that. Me being a librarian and
all.
But there’s pages I will never
let him read. Perhaps only give him short footnotes at the bottom of some pages.
Give him something of me but not everything. Yeah, footnotes, not full pages. I
like that image. It seems right to me. Pages with some footnotes all about true
intimacy, commitment, feeling safe.
Sharon Matilda Honsberger. Age
31. Red head. Some have call it russet. Born and raised in Elliot Lake in
northern Ontario. Parents - Patricia and William, home care worker and high
school teacher respectively.
I’m not quite fluently
bi-lingual. An independent young woman. Some would say super confident and
definitely opinionated. Deputy Chief Librarian at The Ernest McGregor Library, fondly
known to everyone in town as The Ernie.
Presently in a relationship with
Nathan Davey, elementary school teacher.
Some would say that my life is far
from an open book. Very few are welcome to read the footnotes. You take your
chances with me.
Oh, and Brian of course. You’ll definitely
have to take your chances with him. Good luck with that, my friend.
Thing is, I know Nathan would happily
take all of those chances with me. He’ll have me just as I am with all the
hidden strings still attached. I’m really mixing my metaphors here. It’s not normal
for a lover of literature like me to do that.
Maybe that’s what this true
commitment and intimacy crap is all about. Wanting to let each other read our hidden
pages, trying to explain the cryptic footnotes.
I really never, ever had that
kind of a relationship with Thomas. It was all physical with him. Well, mostly
physical. Certainly it was gloriously physical with Greg.Then last year, I came
scary close emotionally with Ethan. That might have gone somewhere if he hadn’t
left to take his Master’s at McGill.
Tilley, he pleaded. Come with me.
You’d love Montreal. There’s always jobs for librarians. Your French is good.
You’d love the lifestyle there. You ever been to Vieux-Montreal? Tilley?
I told him no. Made up some lame
excuses. But he could read the footnotes.
Commitment phobic. There’s no
known cure, you know.
Nathan. You dear, lovely man. I
know you’re wanting more with us. Some days I want more of us too. Much more. But
there’s other days when it all feels just too much.
Tilley, I tell myself, let’s just
keep us simple. No hooks, no promises we can’t keep. Simple. Oh, we’ll keep the
sex of course. I’ll always want some of that in my life.
With Nathan we could have a life
together. It’s not like we’re oil and water and will never really stay
together, no matter what happens.
It comes down to this simple
question.
Can I really share all of me with
you?
Right at this moment, I think so.
But… what if….?
Readers Comment: 'Really nuanced and lovely - a delicate exploration of hidden worlds and contradictory needs. The device of Brian worked very well. Many thanks.'
First Publication: ‘Love Floats’ appeared in the UK on-line fiction magazine Fiction On The Web on April 10, 2017.
Readers Comment: 'Really nuanced and lovely - a delicate exploration of hidden worlds and contradictory needs. The device of Brian worked very well. Many thanks.'
'Thoroughly
enjoyed this story, the doubts and hopes of a budding relationship. First
class!'
'I
enjoyed the way the biographies on Nathan and Tilley gradually emerge.'
'You
captured the capricious nature of a cat delightfully. I also enjoyed the way
your two characters saw things from different perspectives, yet had much in
common. Your unresolved ending is tantalizing and leaves the reader wondering
how the story ends.'
The Backstory: It's always interesting to me where my story ideas come from. One morning over breakfast, I read the back of a brightly coloured cereal box. The blurb described the 'Cheerios Effect' - a real phenomenon that happens when you put two round Cheerios into a bowl of milk. Almost like magic, they move toward each other slowly until they touch. And they remain that way until some greater force - like a cereal spoon - breaks them up.
I had been thinking about the early days of a budding relationship but was unsure just how to go about writing about it. The Cheerios in my cereal bowl sparked an idea and a story was born!
I had been thinking about the early days of a budding relationship but was unsure just how to go about writing about it. The Cheerios in my cereal bowl sparked an idea and a story was born!
Legal Rights. ‘Love Floats’ is the intellectual property of the author, Don Herald. No part of this story may be reproduced in any format without the written permission of the author.