he kissed me gently all around the edge of the massive bruise from his grill. And he was naked. Though the roar around us was not the surf on the Adriatic but the traffic from Times Square, he was as gentle in his hands and in his maleness as he was in his excuse-making.
âWhat thing was it you dream today?â he asked after our bodies had pulled softly apart.
âThatâs not the question to ask,â I said and I found myself sitting up and bending near and looking at that male part of him. I was a little surprised to find myself doing this. I had never really looked at a man there before, only by accident, only out of the corner of my eye, more or less unwillingly. Now I wanted to see this man, this Anatole, and it came from his interest in my dreams, his unexpected gentleness, I knew. I had a sense of him in these unseeable things: like I see the shape of a violin and feel that it seems just right for the sweet and sad sounds it makes, I looked at this manâs body to see his inner self. It was turning from a taut young man into a wrinkled old codger. Doddering now and incapable of response as it was, I grew tender for it, in a certain way, tender as if for a beloved father who doesnât recognize you anymore, wanting only the best for him, in somebody elseâs care.
âWhat am I to ask?â he said.
âWhatâs that?â
âIf I am not asking what you dream when my cab hit upon you.â
I smiled at him. âAsk what I will dream from that moment on.â
âAnd so? Yes?â
I realized that I could not shape an answer to that, though something in me knew what to expect.
Is this nymphomania? I think not. I went to my apartment that night and I wanted nothing to do with my boyfriend. Heâs a very good-looking man but he reviews books anonymously for a pre-publication newsletter and heâs got execrable taste and heâs working on a novel about the Trojan War because he learned Greek at Notre Dame and I think it was the idea of a man who looks like this that made me take up with him in my life before the accident. But I know him. We rent a car now and then and go to the Hamptons and whenever anybody makes the slightest mistake in their driving near him, he honks his horn furiously and curses them and when I walked into my apartment and he was lounging in his distressed Leviâs and flannel shirt on my couch and he looked up at me with what I know he intended as a sexy smile, I clearly saw his angry self-righteousness as a driver sculpted into his square jaw and curling up in his chest hair from the open shirt. And I had not seen this ever before in his body. I kept taking that body to bed and I never really saw it till that day when I was hit by a cab. Is that a symptom of nymphomania?
To myself Iâm sounding entirely convinced about this. But perhaps not. Perhaps Iâve asked that rhetorical question about nymphomania too many times now and youâre thinking the lady protests too much. It is true that Iâve been to bed with quite a few men since that day in the spring. But each of them was naked with me as an individual. I insist thatâs true. I know the alternative.
I was in a bar in Chelsea a few weeks ago. Iâd been to a reading at Barnes and Noble by one of my authors, a first novelist, and I didnât want to go home. The boyfriend was thrown out and starting to savage all my authors in his reviews and I hate to admit it, but that was a trade-off I could easily live with. But there was no one else in my apartment that night either. The bar was small and the neon beer names burned coldly in the smoky air and a man sat down on the stool next to me. He was handsome and the sly wobble of his head and his little pucker-smile said he knew it. If youâve heard too much protest in me so far and suspect the tabloid story of being accurate, then youâd have to expect this man and I would get along just fine.
âHello,â
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