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Authors: Elizabeth Brundage

The Doctor's Wife (33 page)

BOOK: The Doctor's Wife
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Annie sat there, overwhelmed by the story. She finished her coffee, which by now was cold. “What a terrible story.”
 
 
The waitress came over. “You folks all done here?”
 
 
Annie pushed her plate away. “Yes, thanks.”
 
 
Simon looked at her, his eyes watering. “I warned you.”
 
 
“Was it really her fault?”
 
 
He wiped his eyes, nodding. “I believe it was.”
 
 
“What was it like, after that? When you knew?”
 
 
“She was just a kid. A fucking teenager. What could I do? Put her out in the street? Turn her in to the cops? I had no choice but to let her stay.”
 
 
“You were, what, twenty years older?”
 
 
“Twenty-two years. I was thirty-six and she was fourteen.”
 
 
Annie shook her head. “You’re right, it is a nasty story.”
 
 
“And I can see you’ve begun to hate me.”
 
 
“No. It’s just . . .”
 
 
“I never touched her, if that’s what you’re thinking. That’s something you have to understand. I waited.”
 
 
“How long did you wait?”
 
 
“Five years. I waited until she was nineteen. And then I married her.”
 
 
28
 
 
THE HUM DRUM MOTEL was fifteen miles west of the college. Simon had left a note on Annie’s office door that morning, asking her to meet him there. The motel had been built in the fifties, a white clapboard structure with window boxes full of plastic geraniums. The man who ran the place had lost an eye and did not wear a patch where the socket had been sewn. “He’s in there already,” the man told her. “Room 11. Been here almost an hour.” He shoved the key across the counter like a dare.
 
 
She took the key and walked down a cement path to the room. She knocked lightly and the door swiftly opened. Simon stood there, smiling at her. “Hello, Annie.”
 
 
“This is an interesting place to meet.”
 
 
“I thought you’d like it. Actually, I didn’t think you’d come.”
 
 
“I almost didn’t.”
 
 
“And are you besieged with guilt?”
 
 
She stood there awkwardly. “I’m cold.”
 
 
“I have a remedy for that. Come.” The room was damp and smelled of tangerines. He pulled off the garish bedspread and they got into bed with their clothes on. “Are you as nervous as I am?”
 
 
“Yes,” she admitted gratefully. “More.”
 
 
Their hands mingled.
 
 
“Your hands are cold,” he said.
 
 
“Freezing.”
 
 
He put his hands under her shirt. “Ah, that’s better. Warm. And what beautiful breasts you have.” Their mouths found each other and they began to kiss and the kissing was good and for several fleeting dreamlike moments she was somewhere else. Yes, it was good kissing him, it was divine, and she didn’t care about his wife, or his life outside of the little room, or her husband, or her children, or even the article. She ran her hands through his hair as he moved down her body, kissing her with both longing and fulfillment, wandering under her skirt, the wicked stockings, his tongue grazing her belly, her ripe sweet grass, and the dark space between her legs. She pulled him back up and kissed his mouth and tasted herself inside it, and their hands grappled with clothing, pulling and pushing and opening and tearing as though to save each other from this urgent anguish. And there was recognition in their discovery, as if they had been lovers in another life and this was their joyous reunion. He
knew
her body; he knew her cold.
 
 
Now tears ran down her cheeks. “What is it?” he said, his hands around her face. “What’s wrong?”
 
 
“I’m sorry. It’s stupid to be crying. It’s just, I don’t know, I’m overwhelmed.”
 
 
“I’m grateful you’re here. I know it’s hard. It’s hard for me, too.”
 
 
She nodded and let him kiss her wet face and her breasts and her nipples, budding with desire. And then he went into her and she knew, instantly, that everything had changed.
 
 
 
Besieged with guilt,
she thought as she was getting dressed in the anonymous room. She did not mind that it was anonymous. She did not mind the smell of this man in her life. The smell of him on her body under her clothes. He was someone she needed now, and she did not know how long it would last and she did not care. It didn’t change how she felt about her husband, she reasoned; she still loved him, but they’d come to a place in their marriage where they were blind to each other, and it was mutual.
 
 
Annie opened the dusty curtains, allowing in the loud busy light of afternoon. Simon sat on the worn chair near the window and pulled on his socks. The gray light fell on his face. She put on her coat and went over to him and kissed him on the mouth. “Are you okay?” he asked.
 
 
She nodded. He touched her face.
 
 
And then she left.
 
 
As the weeks passed, the warm hues of September gave way to early darkness, and October arrived with bleak overstatement. To Annie’s revelation, her desire for Simon Haas took on an almost perverse urgency, with all the characteristics of an obsession. This unruly lust brought about the highest form of joy, and she did not make any attempt to suppress it. Simon seemed to know her deeply, profoundly, in ways that Michael had never dared to imagine. Simon revealed her; he opened her like a gift. Her flaws seemed only to fascinate him—her evolving imperfections—and his admiration allowed her a sumptuous freedom. Often, during lovemaking, she found herself willing to experiment, allowing him to dominate her, to choreograph their primal dance, behavior that she would adamantly denounce in the company of her women friends—but here, with him, it seemed an inexplicable thrill. When he touched her, she was someone else, someone without the fancy trimmings, pure flesh. No language, no discussions or debates. No ambiguity. Only pleasure, his scent on her skin, the shimmering light beyond the window. She thought about him constantly, waiting for him to call or hoping to catch sight of him someplace on campus. She’d find irony in ordinary pockets of her day. The love songs that came on the radio seemed to be playing just for her. At night, lying next to her husband, it was Haas she was thinking of. It was Haas who filled her dreams now. And though she knew it was wrong, horribly wrong, she could not bring herself to stop.
 
 
29
 
 
IT DID NOT TAKE her husband long to conjure an obsession for Annie Knowles. It was fairly obvious to Lydia that he had fallen in love with the woman. Obvious in the way he moved about the house like a cautious guest, preoccupied with a gloomy longing that she, his
wife,
could not hope to fulfill. He ate his meals in silence, reading over his magazines or reviewing his students’ papers. He had acquired a sudden sobriety when it came to his teaching. Lydia found this almost laughable: he was no longer the lazy, self-absorbed madman strutting about the art studio; now he was expansive and generous and haplessly dedicated, a total
bore.
She imagined that his students missed the old Simon Haas.
 
 
The memory of the Spaulls’ party littered her head; her brain was a Dumpster full of ugly thoughts. How embarrassed she’d been when Simon had dragged her out of there, threatening to take her back to Blackwell for a spell of treatment, the idea of which had instantly sobered her. She’d cried softly on the way home while he drove wildly. They’d hit a raccoon, its blood splashing across the windshield; he hadn’t stopped to clean it off. “You left me alone,” she’d told him. “It’s your fault.”
 
 
“I’m sorry. I made a mistake.”
 
 
“What were you doing? Where did you go?”
 
 
“We took a walk. It rained. I don’t have to explain myself to you.”
 
 
“You don’t love me!” Her voice was shrill as a child’s. “How can we go on? You don’t love me, anymore. You’re not in love with me.”
 
 
“Stop, Lydia. Stop!”
 
 
“Where will I go? What will I do? I don’t have anybody, Simon. You’re all I have. You’re all I have!”
 
 
He pulled over, jammed on the brakes. Took her into his arms and held her, rocked her, and she cried into his chest, and he was gentle with her, the way he used to be when she was younger. “It’s all right now,” he muttered with his whiskey breath. “We’re going home. We’re going home.”
 
 
It had been two weeks since that night and she hadn’t left the house. Like a sick person she wandered the rooms, almost afraid of the air outside. Patty Tuttle sent over homemade cookies, all of which she ate in one sitting. A wild hunger consumed her that no food would satisfy. There was an unpleasant swirling in her belly, an ensanguined pressure, a bloating of wretchedness. She hated Annie Knowles with every inch of her being. Hate had caught in her throat like a small bone. She went to bed with hate and she woke up with hate. It sat on her tongue, black as licorice, insidious as arsenic.
 
 
When she finally returned to work, her mind was preoccupied with other things and her supervisor called her into his office. “I heard you were ill,” Martin Banner inquired.
 
 
She told him that she’d been sick with the flu. She was feeling better now. In time, she promised him, she’d be back to her old self, which was a lie. Martin Banner studied her carefully and asked if she’d ever seen a therapist. Lydia shrugged, mortified by the question. Banner scrawled a name on a piece of paper and handed it to her. The piece of paper went into her pocket, but the moment she got back to her desk, she put it into her mouth and swallowed it.
 
 
It was a slow day at work. There were only ten calls altogether, and nobody ordered anything interesting—
salacious
was the word Reverend Tim liked to use. Lydia spent the long hours thinking about Annie Knowles, imagining the various ways in which Simon touched her, imagining his body laid out next to hers, the shocking insolence of their nakedness, what he would do to her and how much she would enjoy it. Had she begged him for more? Had she screamed with pleasure? Lydia pictured Annie’s thick hair on the pillow, her ordinary face, a certain nasty mischief in her eyes, the rude substance of her flesh. Lydia imagined the two lovers in vivid detail until she felt sick, and on some occasions would rush to the toilet in the ladies’ room and vomit. And what would his lover think, Lydia wondered, if she should discover that he was still sleeping with his wife, his hands fumbling drunkenly in the dark like blind fish, the wicked rambling of his hands under her nightgown and the hopeless rot of his breath as he forced himself upon her night after night, greedy as a starving man. They were sharing him now, and in some strange way Lydia could almost taste the woman.
 
 
Her husband’s betrayal became the focus of her attention; it never quite left her mind and it embarrassed her, it shamed her. Desperate for advice, she read countless women’s magazines, but none offered any solutions. Suffering with her frustration, she decided to talk it over with Reverend Tim. It would be embarrassing, she knew, to admit that there were these awful problems in her marriage, but she felt she had no other choice.
 
 
After work, Lydia drove over to the new Life Force headquarters, out at the truck stop on the interstate.
 
 
Reverend Tim was just finishing up one of his healing workshops. The people looked content and serene as they stood around a table, drinking lemonade and eating cookies. Reverend Tim gave her a big smile and said, “Hello there, Lydia,” but she could hardly even speak, and he could read her pain like Braille across her face. “What is it, what’s wrong?”
 
 
She started to cry, she couldn’t help it. Embarrassed, she covered her face with her hands. He led her outside, into the parking lot. She could see the trucks roaring past on the highway. “Lydia? You all right?”
 
BOOK: The Doctor's Wife
4.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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