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Authors: Stephen Dixon

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Time to Go (2 page)

BOOK: Time to Go
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“See each other perhaps but not sleep with each other.”

“See and sleep both. Or only sleep with each other. We can do everything in the dark.”

“Don't joke. I'm in no mood.”

“No, listen. You can come to my apartment or I to yours. The lights will be out in either. Let's say you come and ring my bell. Lights totally out, place pitch black, I'll open the door and you'll come in. If you don't remember the terrain I'll take your hand and guide you in and shut the door so no light from the stairway comes in. And then kiss you or we'll kiss and talk perhaps or no talk if that's not part of the bargain and then go to bed, everything in the absolute dark as it can get. That way we won't have to see each other.”

“What about the public hallway light?”

“Okay. You ring my bell and shut your eyes. I'll shut mine, we'll both put out our hands, and I'll bring you in and shut the door. Then we'll go through what I said before till it's over and you can leave in the dark or in the light with our backs towards one another. Or I will if it's your apartment where all this is taking place.”

“Doesn't sound like a bad idea, for a fantasy, but it won't work.”

“Why, you don't like my lovemaking anymore?”

“No I do, I do.”

“Then not in the dark”

“No. Dark, light or one of those mini-watters on with a red shirt over the globe, our lovemaking was good. But you're forty-two, I'm not even twenty-one. I'm a half year from being twenty-one. So that's actually twenty-one and a half years difference, not twenty. Why'd I always think it was only twenty?”

“Maybe because I was always referring to it as twenty. Not to make it less. Only because what the hell's a year and a half mean in all that?”

“And if you were forty-three and a half to my twenty and a half, or I was nineteen and no half to your forty-two, that wouldn't make any more of a difference to you?”

“There is probably an extreme somewhere in age differences between couples. Thirty years difference when the woman or man's twenty. Again thirty years difference when the woman or man's thirty. So I suppose thirty years difference is the beginning of the extreme, except if the younger person's fifteen, boy or girl. Then it's probably five or ten years difference, and if the younger person's thirteen or fourteen, three or four years difference, though even with any of those I'm not sure.”

“I don't agree. And I think that from tonight—I know that from tonight onwards—it has to be over with us, all right? “

“What can I say to complain?”

“Then you won't phone me, write or any of those things?”

“So it's both? No sleep or see? You don't even want to be friends?”

“Friends if we really need one another—in six months, maybe more. But I won't need you. I've my parents, and good friends. And you're a very nice man, very desirable too. There must be lots of women ten to fifteen years younger or older than you or the same age who'd love to have you as their lover, husband or friend. You should even get married and have the baby you say you always wanted so much before it's too late.”

“Men can be fathers into their sixties and seventies.”

“Not if your prostate's removed before then. Besides, you don't want your five-year-old kid wheeling you around an old age home. You want to get down on the floor with it, run and play sports with it, dance with it at its wedding and so on, if it's a girl, and maybe even later playa little with your grandchild.”

“Don't worry about me—I'm going to stay active until I'm eighty. I'll also dance with my son at his wedding if we feel like it. It just doesn't have to be a girl.”

“No matter what, I can't get married and have a baby for at least six or eight years. I've too many things to do before then. I have to graduate college first. After that I want to move to New York ‘and get a job as an editorial assistant in a publishing house somewhere while I write myself sick on weekends and early weekday mornings and late at night. I want to do all that while I'm young. I have to. Then, if one of my books sell or lots of my stories and some money's coming in or I'm starting to get established, I'll maybe settle in with someone and have a baby. So when I'm twenty-eight or twenty-nine. But no matter what happens, certainly not sooner.”

“It could happen sooner. You could fall in love and the pressures from him might be too great. Who knows?”

“I won't. But if I do, and actually I probably will several times, I still won't get married or have a baby. I'll get rid of him, no matter how much it hurts, because I want to know many men. I want to be able to say ‘All right, I'm experienced, or as much as I want to be before it starts working against me.' I also want to travel, but not where it takes too much time away from my writing, and not necessarily with a man. That I can always do ten years from now.”

“If you stayed with me you could do all of those.”

“You're lying to yourself.”

“You're probably right.”

“You're already jealous of other guys I see and sometimes when I'm just doing nothing alone away from you, and we weren't really that serious as lovers.” “We almost were. Maybe for a while we definitely were. Obviously now we're not, but what is it?”

“Excuse me, but what is what?”

“You think I look too old for you? Act too old also, or both those or more?”

“No. You act young enough. Maybe too young for your age, but not for mine. Actually, sometimes the young way you acted kind of embarrassed me, though I'm sure it didn't bother anybody else.”

“So I'll act older. Not as old as your father or like your father, but just older.”

“I don't want you acting any way but what you are, not that you could be any other way. As for your looks, well, you don't look forty-two but you do look thirty-six or so, though don't ask me what's the difference. And your physique is good, but for a thirty-five-year-old man. Not one twenty-five or even thirty, which I think, if you want my preference, is the maximum age I'd like my man's body to look now.”

“I don't get it. What could be the difference? “

“Your upper arm muscles, for instance, are huge, as are your pectoral and whatever those muscles are in back—the ones like water wings when they're flexed. But all of them, hard as they are and maybe too overdeveloped, like your pects, which if you continue exercising as you do will in a year be grotesque, are sagging somewhat. That disturbs me, what can I say? As great a shape as you're in, your body still seems to be starting to fall apart because of your age.”

“I don't see it.”

“It's true. Look at any twenty-five-to-thirty-year-old man at a pool next time, or even thirty-five, but not one overweight. Their pects, even when they're not developed, are a little higher, and if you see them in the shower, so are their testes by a bit. You can't stop that.”

“Say you're right, which I'm not saying you are, how come you never said anything about it before?”

“How come? You kidding? Because I didn't want to mention it. I thought of it though, occasionally. Your body's the body of a man desperately trying to stay in shape and look much younger than he is, and that makes me sad in a way. Also your hair.”

“I'm nearly bald, okay, but so are lots of twenty-five-to-thirty-five-year-old men. Blame my father. Even if when he was my age, though he said it came from wearing tight religious caps when he was a boy, he was completely bald on top.”

“Baldness I can live with. Though again, everything else being equal and you gave me my choice of men, why wouldn't I choose one with a head full of thick hair? Wouldn't you if you had your choice of women who were in every respect alike except one who was much more beautiful than the rest?”

“I don't see how any two women could in every respect be alike except for being very beautiful.”

“For argument's sake.”

“For argument's sake, yes.”

“Anyway, what I was talking before about your hair was the gray.”

“So I've a little on my sides, so what?”

“On your back, shoulders, chest and also around your groin. There more than anyplace disturbs me about your hair. I don't know why. Maybe because I think that'd be the last place someone getting gray would get gray. And soon you'll be totally gray allover or close to it and it would seem strange in a way going with someone who's all gray, bald and desperately trying to make his body look like the body of a young man who lifts too many weights. You'll probably even get a heart attack from it.”

“Chances are a lot better that I won't. I run and enough miles a day so that my heart and lungs are probably as good as any man who's twenty-five.”

“Heart and lungs I can't see, the body I can. Anyway, why would you want to continue seeing a woman who thought all these awful things about you?”

“Why? Very simple, I'll tell you.”

“Don't bother, because why wouldn't you want to see me? I'm twenty, no, twenty-one plus years younger than you. Even if I don't work out, my body is still great. I haven't a line or sag on my face or anyplace. I'm still growing in fact. This year alone so far I've grown a quarter of an inch. I haven't a gray hair. No reading glasses either just because I might've reached thirty-five, nor a tooth missing besides.”

“That's because your dentin's impenetrable, which you were born with, so thank your genes and stars. As for my eyes, I'm lucky that's all that's wrong with them with the reading chores I've put them through in thirty years.”

“Okay. Maybe you're right there. But everything about me is young and in perfect shape—that's my argument. There's no way I'll die of a heart attack in twenty years. My liver has to be a beautiful pink and its proper size because I've hardly taken a drink to your, what, maybe twenty-five years of drinking too much wine and liquor and some years heavily you said. I'm even so young that I still get pimples about once a month.”

“There. Ask me why I'd go with a woman who still gets pimples.”

“Because it means I'm still physically growing and changing, my glandular system particularly, and to a man your age, that might be attractive and even exciting. But you go on about my skin, I could talk more about yours and also your hair. It's aging, getting brittle, while mine is still soft and bouncy, even if I don't brush it for days. I know all this must sound shallow to you, but I find what a person physically feels and looks like to be important. But there are other things.”

“Sex.”

“You're very experienced, but you're not a young man in bed.

You make love the way you do because you have to because of your age. One time and that's usually it, right? But a young man, if he ejaculates too quickly, can be right back at it. Maybe not with your experience or cooperativeness, though I've known some who have been as experienced as you or acted like it, but at least he's ready for more in fifteen minutes and right now that's the type I want to be sleeping with. Young, energetic, wants to try lots of things, and more in tune with my own energy, curiosity, stamina and so forth. Does all that make any sense?”

“Sure it does. I wish you would've complained sooner. It would've made this whole discussion unnecessary.”

“I'm not complaining. I loved making love with you and have gotten as excited with you as I have with any man I've made love with who I didn't love. But I've lots of' years before I want to settle in with someone who makes love like you.”

“Anything else?”

“What I said wasn't enough?”

“My feet? Do they stink? My breath. Is it smellier than a man's half my age or even ten years younger?”

“No. You take good care of your teeth—a plus for you compared to some of the younger men I know—and you don't smoke anything and know how to get rid of the horrible alcohol breath. Your body smells nice too. Maybe you've more hair on your body than a younger man, which can catch the perspiration more, but you're clean, so it's no real problem. But you also in a way make me feel dumb at times—at least ignorant or near to because of everything you know from books and life and just reading the newspapers for twenty-five years. But then I get sort of exuberant when I think that in ten to twenty years I'll know as much if not more than you, and maybe for one reason because by that time your brains will have started to forget.”

“It's a possibility. Though if I stay active and creative and don't drown my head in alcohol and have no serious accidents up there, I don't see why my brain capacities shouldn't even grow.”

“Another thing is that I sometimes feel you think you've seen and felt it all or almost. I don't want to be intermittently tugging at your sleeve and saying ‘Ooh wee, you ever see anything like it in the world?' knowing you probably have and then pretending, for my sake, it is interesting or exciting what I'm looking at or experiencing for the first or second time. Also—”

“There's more?”

“You said you wanted to, but I'll stop.”

“No, let's finish. Honesty? Facts of life? That's what I want? Sure I do, or at least how much can it hurt?”

“Well, all those cultural things you try to turn me on to. I wanted to turn you on to things too, but you were so set with everything you liked that it was nearly impossible. Music and films for instance.”

“If you mean your new music—that heavy electric guitar and tom-tom stuff that's been increasingly crowding the atmosphere for the last fifteen years with its untrained bombastic voices and illiterate lyrics, most of it's worthless. Worthless.”

“But I don't think it is. I think a lot of it is great, as good as the best ever, and outside of the younger teenage music, appealing and meaningful and even poignant to people my or any age.”

BOOK: Time to Go
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