Wednesday, December 5
I don’t sleep. I don’t think. I just…is feel even the right verb? I’m sick with desire. And generally sick. And resentful. And angry. And so filled with lust, sleep is impossible.
I go downstairs and try to find a make-work project. But it’s too early for even Toronto to panic and send me work and I’ve met all my other deadlines. I work to calm myself by organising family photos. Thanksgiving. Halloween. Random life shots – but all real life. Children. Mother. Not a psychotic skank whore orgasming on command to words on the computer screen.
Mmmm, orgasm.
Fuck. I slap my face. Then, stupid, thoughtless, log into Twitter and Facebook. And read this:
Oh, my fucking God. Real life. Children. Mother. Wife! It all recedes into the background. Instead:
And he’s in Montréal, so of course, he is already awake, moving, online. And he writes back:
I slam the laptop lid down as Alex comes down the stairs. ‘Up early again? Is this one of the signs of the apocalypse?’ he jokes as he kisses me. Running joke in our household – me, the most un-morning of un-morning people. Alex, often up at 6 a.m. on weekends. Freak.
‘Possibly,’ I say. ‘Or peri-menopause. Am I old enough for peri-menopause?’
‘Jesus, I hope not,’ Alex says, shocked. ‘Working?’
‘Facebooking,’ I say. ‘I probably drank all the coffee already. You’ll have to make another pot.’
Alex sighs dramatically. I hear the whirr of the coffee grinder.
My fingers tickle the top of the laptop. I make myself think about Nicola’s rat-fuck bastard of a husband, whose two or three graduate degrees from MIT did not teach him to not sex-text with his intern on the un-password-protected family-plan phone. In the bathroom. At the dinner table. Apparently, in church. (‘You guys go to church?’ I remember asking Nicola in shock when I heard that story. ‘Aren’t you atheists?’ ‘Taoists,’ she corrects me. ‘But the grandparents…’ Her voice trails off. Grandparents. No need to say more. The things we do for grandparents.)
Alex tramps up past me, upstairs. I hear the shower. I open the laptop.
Alex walks into the room, and I raise my glazed eyes from the screen to look at him, but my fingers remain on the keyboard:
Alex kisses my forehead on his way out the door, and it burns. I have one of those odd moments of gratitude for my faithlessness – my lack of faith in the Christian God or any other nasty vengeful cosmic being – because if I believed, I too would burn. The act of physical transgression totally unnecessary; all the sin sufficient in this act, this thought crime, cyberfuck, mindfuck.
What the fuck is wrong with me?
The kids’ school has one of its random days off today, so I drive over to meet Marie and her brood right after breakfast. We meet in the Confederation Park parking lot, and, between us, unload six kids and ten sleds out of our minivans. ‘Why do we have more sleds than kids?’ Cassandra asks. ‘Because we’re really clever moms,’ I tell her. ‘At some point, everyone will want to be on the saucers. And then someone will throw a hissy fit because what he really wants is the steering sleigh. Plus, Marie and I need something under our tooshies.’
‘Can I just sit and hang out with you when I get bored?’ Cassandra asks.
‘Of course,’ I say. But the snow is alluring, and in minutes she’s running up the hill at full speed along with the boys and Annie.
Marie hands me a mug of hot chocolate.
‘You rock,’ I say.
‘You look like shit,’ she says. ‘How do I look?’
I look at her. Much as usual. But she clearly wants a different type of answer.
‘Ambiguous,’ I say. It’s a good word. So many potential interpretations. And it pleases Marie.
‘That pretty much nails it,’ she says. And I know she wants to talk about the lunch, and probably resents me a little for not bringing it up yesterday.
‘So?’ I say. She shrugs eloquently.
‘I don’t know,’ she says. ‘We ate lunch. We held hands. We necked, like high-school kids, in the parkade. And then I came back.’
I wait.
‘I sent him a text after, thanks for a great time,’ she says. ‘And he hasn’t written me back.’ She bites her lips. ‘I think it’s over.’
I wait.
‘Because if he had had a great time, he’d text me back, right? With plans to do it again? He was clearly disappointed in the whole experience.’
Oh, my Marie.
‘Should I text him to find out if he received my text?’ she asks, and I see her reaching for the phone.
‘Jesus-fucking-Christ, Marie, what are you, twelve?’ I snap. And she takes half a step back and stares at me, because I don’t snap. Out of character. ‘It’s what, half a day. Don’t fucking chase. Enjoy…enjoy the memory.’
‘But I’m just not sure I’m really enjoying the memory,’ she says wistfully. ‘It was, you know, OK. But a little awkward. And the chemistry in person…it wasn’t…it wasn’t quite the same as in the texts. And I think maybe he felt that too…’
I don’t understand women.
‘But if you felt that, then why are you so anxious for him to get back to you?’ I ask.
‘Because!’ Marie exclaims. ‘I don’t want him to be the one to leave! I want to be the one to make the decision that it’s over. Jesus, Jane, don’t you understand anything?’
Apparently not.
I give Marie a pat on the arm that she morphs into a hug.
Again, I think I could tell her. I should tell her. So she doesn’t feel alone. So I don’t feel alone. We could be the anti-Nicola-and-Colleen. Commiserating, instead of about their cheating husbands, about our fucking lovers.
But I can’t.
Because…
I just don’t.
‘You really, really don’t look well,’ Marie repeats.
Too much cyberfucking, not enough sleep, I’m tempted to say. Except it’s of course not just that. Secrets. They exhaust. Moral ambiguity, it exhausts.
And there’s a big crash halfway up the hill, and Marie and I race up to disentangle limbs and sleds and to kiss bruises and fix toques and mittens.
Oh, Jesus. I really need to work on feeling badly about this. And I need to…I don’t know what I need. A smack upside my head. A reality check.
The phone rings as I’m unloading the kids at the front door. ‘Dad?’ I say with surprise. My mother calls me and texts me constantly. Annoying ‘What are you doing?’ texts, random ‘I love you guys!’ texts, to-the-point ‘Do the kids want anything special for lunch on Tuesday?’ texts, passive-aggressive ‘I know you don’t care about such things, but it really means a lot to Dad and me to have our anniversary acknowledged…’ My father calls only in real emergencies. As do I.
‘What’s wrong?’ I say. Anxiety mounting.
‘Why does something have to be wrong for me to call my only daughter?’ my father says. ‘I just called to see how you guys are doing. And to tell you I love you.’
Fucking twilight zone.
‘OK,’ I say. ‘We love you too. You sure everything’s OK?’
‘Fine, fine,’ he says. ‘You know, it’s that time of the year when there’s just not much to do at work. So an old man’s mind wanders. To the things he loves.’
This is not my father talking.
‘Dad?’ I ask. ‘Are you by any chance recovering from a Christmas lunch that involved too much wine?’
‘Jane!’ he’s appalled. ‘You know I never drink at work. With work colleagues. I guess it’s just the season to feel, you know, sentimental. And we’re having our lunch tomorrow, and I just…I wanted to tell you I love you. And how much I’m looking forward to seeing you.’
‘OK,’ I say. ‘Well, we’re just fine. And I love you too. You sure nothing’s wrong?’
‘Everything’s fine, fine,’ he says again. And rings off.
I’m a little weirded out.
When Alex comes home and I tell him about the phone call – he’s also weirded out.
‘Maybe he had a prostate exam or a colonoscopy or something and is suddenly aware of his own mortality again,’ Alex suggests. ‘Remember that time he had to have an MRI? He wouldn’t stop hugging me.’
‘Maybe,’ I agree. The phone blips to announce an ‘I love you xoxoxoxoxo love Mom’ text from my mother. I type back ‘xoxo’ without saying anything to Alex. Sigh.
‘Is it too much to ask of your parents to be predictable?’ I ask.
‘Yes!’ Cassandra and Henry call in unison from the living room.
‘Little ingrates,’ I shout back. ‘Supper in five!’
I make it through the evening, bedtime and beyond without starting up Facebook, or even picking up my phone.
But I still don’t sleep.