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After The Fall Part 2

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I suspect people think I'm jealous of Luke, though I swear that's not the case. I know that next to him I seem drab and unexciting, my mediocrity magnified by his own sheen and poise, like cheap b.u.t.tons on an expensive suit. But appearances aren't important to me, and Luke's life is far too complicated for me ever to covet it. We are so different that I doubt we would have become friends if not thrown together by the private school we attended, whose cla.s.ses were seated according to alphabetical order. It meant that Luke Stevens and Timothy Stevenson, who would never usually have moved in the same circles, became inseparable.

A lot of Luke is about surface, but it's a mistake to think that's all there is. By thirteen, Luke's face had already marked him out from the rest of us. Teachers paid him extra attention; he was regularly picked early for teams at recess, though he was no better at sports than anyone else. In tenth grade, when we started dancing lessons, it seemed as if the entire one hundred and twenty girls bused in from a nearby school had eyes only for him, a collective pa.s.sion that occasionally erupted in name-calling and tears after cla.s.s. Luke made the most of it-who wouldn't? But he never relied on it. He still did his homework. He still practiced for those teams, when he probably could have gotten away without it. And because we were seated next to each other he talked to me, though I was never in the popular group, and stayed my friend even after we left school.

Predictably, the wedding couldn't have been lovelier. Cressida's family has money but, more important, taste. On top of that, Cressida and Luke made a stunning couple, never more so than on that bright afternoon, when the glow coming off them was almost palpable. They were in love, but the most touching thing was how both thought they had done so well to be marrying the other. "Isn't she just gorgeous?" Luke whispered to me as Cressida came down the aisle, as humbled as if he were the woodcutter marrying the princess. "I still can't believe he chose me," confided his bride later, as we danced at the reception, her voice thrilled and awed in equal measure. If I was ever jealous of Luke, it was on that day. Not because, once again, he was getting what he wanted, or because I secretly l.u.s.ted after Cressida. No, what I envied was the excitement that they both radiated, the certainty that they couldn't have done better.

And for that reason I expected it to last. G.o.d knows, Luke had been flighty with women. But then, he could afford to be, and it was no more than you'd expect from any good-looking male in his twenties. For all his conquests, though, Luke had never before admitted love.

In a funny way, I was kind of relieved when he told me he was getting married. It was exhausting keeping up with Luke's dalliances. Months went by when he would see and/or sleep with five, six or seven different women. I'd find myself having drinks with him and some Monica when I'd seen him the week before with a Kelly, after b.u.mping into a bothered Belinda, moping because he hadn't called. Stupidly, I felt bad for those girls, and if I'm honest probably a little piqued that he invested so much time and energy in them. I had seen much more of him since he met Cressida, and I liked her a lot. She was calm, kind, dependable, and more adult than him, though a few years younger. I thought she was great: a smart choice, a good influence who would save him from AIDS or a palimony suit. I thought marriage would be the making of Luke. And I really did think that nothing he could do would ever surprise me again.



LUKE.

I did love Cress, and I expected to be faithful to her. I wrote those notes because of how she looked when I spied her on the beach from my brother-in-law's home, indulging in a little voyeurism between courses on Christmas Day. That's pretty superficial, but it turned out I couldn't have picked better if I'd asked for resumes. She was sweet and smart, not just a doctor, but one who treated kids with cancer. I thought my mother would expire from delight when I told her.

I planned our meeting as carefully as any advertising campaign: the notes, the daisies, what I was wearing the day she looked up to the balcony. Later, with Kate, it was a lot more visceral, completely out of my control, which should have told me something. But with Cress I was stage-managing the play. She was the most beautiful woman I had ever seen, so I set out to woo her, guessing that she was the type to be won over with patience, not pa.s.sion. Years of practice give you an instinct. Three days later I kissed her for the first time in her parents' beach hut, surrounded by rotting spades and damp towels, the smell of seaweed and the ocean thick in my nostrils.

And then the crowning achievement on that conjured resume: she was still a virgin. I was almost tempted to tell my mother that too, so pleased was I. Though I didn't marry her for it, Cressida's virginity appealed. I've never subscribed to the try-before-you-buy theory, and I knew enough about s.e.x to understand that if you love someone the physical stuff will be commensurate, at least while the love lasts. Of course, love is no prerequisite for good s.e.x, and I'd also learned that. But it's crazy to think that you could be mad about someone and then incompatible in the sack. The chemistry comes first, and well before you take off your clothes. I truly didn't care if she'd had other men before me. I'd had other women and that didn't mean a thing-s.e.x is just s.e.x, not something to be saved or traded like shares. But I think it was the whole mythology of the virgin that appealed-the integrity and strength it implied, the way it made my choice of her seem even more astute.

So I was quite prepared to wait for Cress in that regard. Truth be told, the antic.i.p.ation was a turn-on, abstinence being about the only s.e.xual technique I hadn't tried. It wasn't complete chast.i.ty-I couldn't have borne that-just enough of the taste to make me crave the whole meal. Once we were engaged it seemed we might as well wait, and I thought we'd come to some sort of understanding. I'd kiss and tease and fondle; she'd respond to a point, then push me away. It drove me wild. No one had ever pushed me away before. Each time I tried to get a little further, sure that she would put the brakes on, arousing us both in drawn-out, months-long foreplay. It was all building up to one h.e.l.l of a wedding night when, two evenings before the big day, she suddenly gave in. I was so used to her stopping things that I just kept going, and before we knew it that was that.

To be honest, I think we were both a little disappointed. Not by the s.e.x, but the fact that it had happened: my climax was an anticlimax. And then there was the question of contraception. I hadn't used it, and I a.s.sumed Cress hadn't either-it wasn't as if she had ever needed it before. I spent the entire day leading up to our wedding worried about becoming a father rather than antic.i.p.ating being a husband. I knew Cress wanted kids-of course she did, with her job-and I supposed I wanted them too, just not yet, or anything even approximating yet.

By our rehearsal that evening I couldn't bear it.

"You look nervous," said Tim, when I met him at the church.

"You don't know the half of it," I muttered grimly as he steered me inside.

At the far end of the church Cressida was laughing with her bridesmaids. In a floral-print dress and wearing no makeup, she looked about twelve years old. For a second I felt a stupid urge to turn and run.

"You're doing the right thing," Tim rea.s.sured me. "Heck, if I meet anyone half as good as-"

"I'm scared I've gotten her pregnant," I hissed, cutting him off midfantasy. Even through my panic I almost laughed at his expression. Tim must have had s.e.x by now, I thought, but you'd never know it.

"How?" he asked, loudly enough to make a bridesmaid turn. I just rolled my eyes. Perhaps he hadn't after all.

"h.e.l.lo, hubby," said Cress, almost skipping over and taking my arm. She looked flushed, and I wondered if she felt all right. Before I could kiss her, the minister cleared his throat and asked us to kneel. We mouthed words after him for twenty minutes, then approached the altar to practice signing the register.

"Cress, last night ..." I whispered over the organ's drone.

"Was perfect," she finished for me, giggling, "even if it means I can't wear white tomorrow."

"Did you use anything?" I demanded, aware even as I did so how bald the words sounded.

"What?" she replied dreamily, practicing her new signature. My name looked alien coming after hers.

I was opening my mouth to ask again when the priest indicated we should proceed back down the aisle of the church, and the moment was lost. Anyway, what could I do? Cress was so excited that I didn't have the heart to push it. The odds were low, I told myself. Cress shouldn't have her big day spoiled by my panic.

I needn't have worried. Driving home after drinks with the wedding party, Tim revealed that he'd overheard the bridesmaids chatting as Cress and I pretended to sign the registry. One of them had remarked that Cress had lost weight, putting it down to prenuptial nerves. The other had agreed, adding that she'd probably been lucky not to gain any, given that she had recently gone on the pill. I felt ridiculously relieved-relieved and ridiculous. Of course Cress would have done something like that. She was a doctor, after all, as well as being one of the most organized and efficient people I knew. I stared out the window, cursing myself for overreacting.

"Can I ask why it mattered so much?" Tim said, choosing his words carefully as he steered around a parked car. "I mean, even if the timing wasn't ideal, you are still getting married."

He was right, but I didn't know myself.

CRESSIDA.

After our wedding I called in to the hospital. Not to work, though Luke joked that I would no doubt get talked into drawing some blood or doing a discharge, and end up missing the reception. No, I had promised a number of my patients that I would come in so they could see me in my wedding dress. Little girls love the notion of a wedding, of the handsome prince on horseback and a happily-ever-after, particularly when their own likely ever-afters are so bleak. My bridesmaids came in too, with some confetti for the children to sprinkle and a pretend wedding cake my sisters had made, iced in pink and white and topped with silver b.a.l.l.s. Luke begged off, saying he had things to organize at the reception. I didn't mind-I know he can't bear the smell of hospitals, though I have to say I've never noticed it. It was probably better for the girls that way: imagination is usually far less disappointing than reality. For a start, he didn't have a white horse.

I'd experienced a disappointment myself just a couple of days before, when I'd finally lost my virginity. Luke never pressured me about s.e.x. I knew he desired me, but when I admitted my inexperience he seemed intrigued, charmed. I would have given in much earlier if he'd really wanted, but he always seemed to draw back the moment any real heat arose between us.

When it did happen it wasn't what I'd expected, though I'd had twenty-seven years and a medical degree to help me prepare. It was clumsy and rushed, more awkward than I'd ever antic.i.p.ated. I didn't know if I was meant to help guide him into me, or lie as still as I could. I didn't know how I should move or how long it should take or quite how much mess there was going to be afterward. For all that, though, it was wonderful. I felt in some primal way that now I belonged to Luke forever, that by entering me he had become me. I understood why marriages were void without consummation, and the power in the act that for centuries had made it taboo for the unwed. Luke, of course, had more experience, but I could swear he felt the same. After all, it was our first time with each other, and on that basis we were equal. It wasn't what I expected; it was much, much better.

I'm sure some of the bridesmaids felt a bit silly at the hospital, but I was walking on air. People turned to look at me in the corridor; nurses I worked with dabbed their eyes. Usually I'm not one for attention, but I have to admit I enjoyed that hour at work. The best part of all was the children. I think they truly believed I was a fairy princess; even the boys were edging over to touch my gown or stroke the pearls sewn onto my veil. One little girl who was finis.h.i.+ng a round of chemotherapy asked if I could grant wishes, but seemed happy to accept a slice of wedding cake instead. Her mother smiled at me, and told her daughter to put it under her pillow, so she would dream of her future husband. I left the hospital light-headed with joy, and with no more need of dreams. I had my husband, my prince. My happily-ever-after was just beginning.

CARY.

Once I'd popped the question Kate didn't muck around. The next morning she went out and chose her own ring, having asked me in pa.s.sing over breakfast if I wanted to come. I had a paper to prepare for work, so I declined, a.s.suming that we'd go another day instead. But when I got back from the hospital that evening she handed me a small emerald-green box.

"I hope you like it," she said offhandedly, not really meeting my eyes. Then she wandered off to make a cup of coffee, as if the whole thing were merely a tedious detail.

For a second I was confused, never imagining she'd have selected anything without me. h.e.l.l, it had taken her five weeks to choose the color of her new car, and by the time that was decided she had changed her mind about the make and model as well. Kate's the sort of woman who gets dressed at least twice before leaving for work, four or five times for a big date or important meeting. On the days I got home before her I'd find discarded outfits stepped out of in the hall and bathroom, a litter of shoes kicked under the bed in haste. My house was never as neat once Kate moved in.

She came back with the coffee, steam curling in her hair. "Well?" she asked shyly, leaning up against the door frame. I opened the box. Against the mossy velvet, stones sparkled like small fires, like the eyes of a wild creature. Opals. Had I had a chance to think about it, I would have chosen a diamond, something hard and bright and indestructible. I guess it would have been a solitaire, on a plain band, something beautiful without being flashy. Something, I now saw, altogether too pedestrian and impersonal. Instead Kate had gone for opals: luminescent, moody opals. Even as I took the ring from the box the colors s.h.i.+fted, subdued one minute, s.h.i.+mmering the next.

"Isn't it gorgeous?" Kate said, swooping on the ring like a magpie.

"It's not what I would have chosen," I admitted. Seeing a frown begin, I quickly added, "It's a lot more beautiful."

"I knew it!" she crowed, holding her hand up to the light. "Tell the truth-you wouldn't have gotten around to it for weeks, would you? And when you did you wouldn't have looked past diamonds." Her words were mocking and affectionate in equal parts, and she leaned across to kiss me as she spoke. "Lucky I took matters into my own hands then."

Lucky indeed-my choice would have been sure to disappoint. In my defense I pointed out that things were unfolding far more rapidly than I could ever have expected. Twenty-four hours earlier I hadn't even thought about getting married, yet now I had a fiancee and she had an engagement ring. I was impressed by Kate's choice, but something irked me too. For more than three years I'd loved this girl, slept and laughed and fought with her. I thought I knew her, every intricate, irrational facet, and yet I would have gotten it wrong if I'd chosen her ring. It wasn't just that, though. Why couldn't she have waited for me to come shopping with her, or even to propose, for that matter? Why did it all have to be so impetuous?

KATE.

"Seventeen," I told him, after some quick mental calculation. There was silence. Outside, a light rain started to fall on the slate roof of Cary's house.

"Seventeen?" he asked. Though it was too dark to see I felt him sit up in bed. "Are you sure?"

"Well, eighteen now, I suppose," I replied, wis.h.i.+ng we were at my place. We'd been going out for about three months, but almost invariably ended up staying at his house, which was bigger and had more food in the fridge. My own roof was tin. I loved lying under it at night when the rain was falling, the staccato patter of small drops and gurgle of water in the congested gutters lulling me to sleep. Cary's roof was mute, and I imagine the spouting was cleaned regularly.

"And I'm number eighteen?" he persisted.

"Eighteen you are." I giggled, sleepy despite the lack of aqueous sound effects. "Does that get you the key to the door? Or do I keep that for number twenty-one?"

"Kate!" he protested, reaching for the light. I tried to stop him, but wasn't quick enough. Unrelenting glare filled the room.

I covered my eyes, though not before I'd seen the aghast expression on his face.

"What?"

"Eighteen! That's a whole b.l.o.o.d.y football team."

"So it is." I was struck by the image, imagining my ex-lovers lined up for a team photograph, arms oiled and crossed, shoulders dipped menacingly toward the camera. The thought made me smile. "I wonder what position you'd be? You're not really the full-forward type ... maybe a wing. Can you run?"

"Don't sound so pleased, for G.o.d's sake."

"Why not?" I asked, cuddling into him with my eyes still tightly shut.

"It just seems an unseemly number of ... partners, that's all."

"Well, you asked. How many have you had then?" Suddenly curious, I peeped up through my fingers.

"Not that that many, that's for sure," he said petulantly, staring straight ahead. many, that's for sure," he said petulantly, staring straight ahead.

"How many?"

"Enough," he mumbled.

"How many?"

"Five," he said, then looked over at me as if he'd just revealed he had AIDS or liked country music.

"Five's okay," I said, covering my eyes again. "Turn out the light."

"Okay? It's not even a third of your total."

"It's enough for a basketball team. Besides, you seem to know what you're doing." I meant the comment as a joke, a compliment, but his face flushed and for a second I feared he was taking me seriously.

"Still," I went on quickly, "there's a lot you can learn, so let's get started."

I rolled over on top of him and kissed the faint freckles lurking above the bridge of his nose.

"Hey," he protested, "I'm not finished talking."

"I am, though," I said, turning off the light. Cary tried to stop me but instead knocked over a stack of journals piled on his bedside table. They clattered to the floor, bringing the lamp down with them. With a great show of self-restraint he didn't even jump up to retrieve them. Not immediately, anyway.

I'm still not quite sure what bothered Cary more: the actual number of my lovers or the fact that I'd had more than him. I hate that question anyway. What does it matter, as long as you're both healthy and taking precautions and not messed up in the head about the whole thing? Still, when Cary asked I wasn't as wary as I should have been. I really liked him-really, really really liked him-and so I wanted to be honest. I've lied about s.e.x before, and it never works out. There are some things you can lie about, but s.e.x isn't one of them. Sooner or later with s.e.x you lose your composure, drop your guard and then it's too late to pretend. liked him-and so I wanted to be honest. I've lied about s.e.x before, and it never works out. There are some things you can lie about, but s.e.x isn't one of them. Sooner or later with s.e.x you lose your composure, drop your guard and then it's too late to pretend. So that So that doesn't doesn't really do it for her. So he really do it for her. So he does does like it if I dress like that like it if I dress like that.

The other thing was that Cary was four years older than me. Ergo, he probably a.s.sumed we would have at least been compet.i.tive in the numbers stakes, though I wasn't surprised that I was so far out in front. Unlike me, Cary's quite shy. He warms up beautifully, but he is a slow starter, and he's not much good at making the first move. Years after we met he confessed that he'd been quite taken aback that I slept with him on our first date, and left to his own devices would have waited at least a month before trying his luck.

"Our second date," I corrected him. "I didn't sleep with you at the Cup."

"Of course not," he'd replied, looking slightly shocked. "We'd have hardly gotten away with it at a racecourse."

I didn't tell him, but I'd gotten away with worse. In the stands during a rock concert. At the courthouse, with a guy I met on jury duty. A racecourse would have been quite manageable.

But while I wasn't going to deny it, I wasn't necessarily proud of my tally. Most of it was fun, but some of it was silly, or dangerous, or because I was drunk. Even worse, at least twice it had been out of politeness, so I could get home or go to sleep without a scene. The actual number was immaterial; how many of those I had genuinely cared about would have been a better question.

So when Cary said five I was perfectly fine with it, even if he wasn't. One would have been fine, fifty would have been fine, but five was just right. Knowing Cary, as I was beginning to at that time, he would have found out their full names and where they lived, something that couldn't necessarily be said of all my conquests. He would have seen that they got home safely, sent flowers or called the next day. He would have made sure, as far as a man ever can, that they enjoyed the experience as much as he did. Or if he didn't enjoy it, he would have let them down gracefully, tactfully, not let the phone go silent for weeks or start avoiding their eyes at the office. Five was too few not to have exercised some care in selection, some restraint, some integrity. Maybe I'm romanticizing things, but I think not. Five was perfect. Besides, I meant it when I said he knew what he was doing.

CARY.

For all my initial reluctance I enjoyed marriage more than I expected: saying "my wife" in conversation, coming home to a place where she always was. We'd lived together for about a year before Kate pushed me to propose, but for some reason being Mr. and Mrs. made it different. Kate got rid of most of my bachelor furniture, planted an herb garden and painted the kitchen. When I asked her why she had never bothered with these domestic improvements before the wedding she hesitated and then blushed, something my wife rarely did.

"I wanted to be sure it was worth the effort," she admitted. "That I wasn't going to go off you and then end up not living here anyway."

Note that she hadn't allowed for the possibility that I might go off her, as she put it. I only laughed, used to Kate's forthright ways by now. At least she was honest.

My father adored Kate from the moment they met. I wasn't surprised-Kate was drawn to men, and vice versa. With the exception of Sarah, all her close friends were male. My mother, however, was more reserved, suspicious of Kate's small frame and profession, worried about her own prospects of becoming a grandmother.

"She's certainly different from your other girlfriends," she told me as I sc.r.a.ped the plates after our first dinner together. "Opinions on everything! And working with bones-what sort of job is that?"

"She's an anthropologist, Mom," I replied, though Kate had already explained this.

"It's too creepy for words, if you ask me-handling bits of dead people all day."

"They've been dead for centuries," I replied calmly. "She cleans the bones, figures out where they're from and what they can tell her. It's tricky work."

My mother sniffed, unimpressed. "She's not a career woman, is she? I should have guessed that she wasn't the sort to be burdened by a family."

That was my mother all over-one minute doubting Kate's suitability as a partner, the next bemoaning the fact that she wouldn't be providing grandchildren. We heard my father laughing loudly at something Kate was saying in the other room.

"Well, I hope you know what you're doing, because you'll have your hands full with that one," she said, snapping the oven door shut as she removed the pudding.

I didn't know, I wanted to tell her, but that was half the fun.

Fortunately the relations.h.i.+p improved from there. Kate learned to tone down her views and her voice when we visited, and my mother softened once she realized Kate was a permanent fixture. When I called to tell her we were engaged she seemed genuinely delighted, albeit as cautious as ever.

"I hope it's not going to cost you a fortune," she warned after some teary congratulations. "Girls these days have such romantic notions."

This from a woman who named her only son after a movie star.

"It's okay, Mom," I rea.s.sured her. "It won't be a big do."

That was my hope, anyway-but, of course, I hadn't reckoned with Kate.

KATE.

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