To say that Iโd been stalking you would be an overstatement. We lived but two hundred feet apart after all. It would be fair, though, to say that I was going out a little more than I usually tended to. Coming upon a nearly empty bottle of milk in the fridge would fill me with delight.ย Oh dear, I shall have to visit the corner shop again. And if I returned to the realization that I should also have bought a newspaper while I was out, well, that really wasnโt the end of the world. On with the coat, back to the high street, one eye open for you in one direction, another eye open for you in the other. And anything that gave me cause to pass the end of Latymer Road was a particular bonus.
And then one evening, there you were, in the convenience store, in a blue anorak and jeans, a bottle of red wine hanging from your fist, studying the breakfast cereals intently. I said, โFloyd Dunn.โ
You turned and you remembered me immediately. I knew you did. I hadnโt expected that. No one ever remembered me immediately. But you smiled and you said, โI know you. You were at the NEC.โ
โYes, I was indeed. Noelle.โ
I gave you my hand and you shook it.
โNoelle. Of course. The unwanted Christmas present. How are you?โ โIโm truly grand, thank you. And you?โ
โI am moderately grand, if thatโs possible.โ
โOh yes,โ I said. โThere are many shades of grand.โ
There was a small moment then, I recall. It was likely awkward, though Iโd be hard-pressed to judge as my whole life until this point had been vaguely awkward. But you stepped into the moment and saved it and that was when I knew.
You saidโand I shall never ever forget this because it was so remarkable to meโyou said, โRice Krispies or Mini Shredded Wheats?โ
Which may not sound like much of anything, but it was what itย wasnโtย that was so important to me. It wasnโt a rebuttal. It wasnโt a glance at your watch and anย oh, is that the time, Iโd better get on. It wasnโt a suggestion that I was taking up too much of your life; that I was somehow blocking your view of better things. It was an invitation to banter.
So of course I seized it. โRice Krispies,โ I said, โare delicious, but five minutes later youโre hungry again. All that air . . .โ
You smiled. I liked your crooked teeth.
โAll that air,โ you repeated. โYou are funny.โ โNo. Iโm just Irish.โ
โTrue,โ he said. โYou do have a natural inbuilt advantage when it comes to humor. So.โ You turned back to the breakfast cereals. โSeven-year-old girl. Mother is a health freak, so no sugary stuff. What would you choose?โ
Seven-year-old girl? Well, thereโd been no mention of a seven-year-old girl in your biography. I canโt say I was too fond of small girls. โIs this your daughter weโre talking about?โ
โYes. Sara. Her mother and I recently separated and now Iโm a weekend dad. So I canโt afford to make any mistakes. My wife already thinks Iโm going to leave my daughter somewhere or let her put her hand in a food blender. That kind of thing.โ
โWeetabix then,โ I said. โIt has the least sugar of all the cereals.โ
Your face softened and you smiled again. โSee,โ you said, โI knew youโd know about things like that. I knew you would. Do you have children of your own?โ
โNo. Not even vaguely.โ
You looked at me then, and I could tell you were wondering whether or not to say something, something in particular.
I acted like I wasnโt fussed and, whatever it was, you decided against saying it. I could see you swallowing the words back into yourself. โWell, you have been most helpful. Thank you, Noelle.โ
You picked up the Weetabix. And that was that.
But it was enough so that the next time I bumped into you, a week later, we had a little open-ended thing going on, a little rapport. We chatted about the weather a bit then. And the next time we chatted about some government scheme to ruin all the schools, which weโd both read about in the papers that
morning. It was the fourth time, a month after the Education Show, that you said, โHave you ever tried that Eritrean place? By the tube?โ
โAs it happens, no I have not.โ
โWell, it is excellent. Iโve been going there for years. You should try it . . . In fact . . .โ
And there it came, your invitation to dinner.
Yes, Floyd.ย Your invitation to dinner.ย I know you will try to twist this and rewrite it, like you try to twist and rewrite everything, but you know and I know thatย you started this. You saw me, Floyd. You saw me and you wanted me. You asked me to dinner. You turned up at that dinner on time and smartly dressed. You did not look at me and say,ย This has been a terrible mistake,ย and do a runner. You smiled when I walked in, you stood, you took my shoulders, and you pressed your face against my face. You said, โYou look lovely.โ You waited until Iโd sat down before you sat down. You maintained a steady line of eye contact.
You did. You totally, totally did.
And then it wasย you. You phoned me a few days later (just long enough to make me sweat, just long enough to make me think about calling you first but I did not.ย I did not.). And you invited me to your house.
Yes you did.
Your goal was clear that night. You wanted to fuck me. But that was OK because I wanted to be fucked by you. I didnโt care that dinner was somewhat perfunctoryโwhat was it now? Pasta, I think, with some kind of shop-bought sauce that must have taken you all of five minutes to throw together. But a nice bottle of wine, if I recall. And we ended up on your sofa an hour later and while you were pulling at my clothes and panting all over me I said, โBelieve it or not, I am a virgin, possibly the last one in existence.โ And you were very kind about it. You didnโt laugh or say,ย Youโre taking the piss. You didnโt recoil or sigh or tell me to go home. You were kind. You touched me all over until I was a blob and then you were slow and patient. And it did hurt. Yes, it really did. But Iโd been expecting that and frankly, you werenโt the biggest boy in the class, if you know what I mean. A blessing really.
And I knew. I think I really did know from that point on that you and I were mainly about sex. And that was fine with me.
But I grew accustomed to you over the months, grew accustomed to your pillows and your cereal bowls, the smell of your scalp before you had a shower, the sight of your name on my phone when you called or texted. You inhabited a big chunk of my life: over 30 percent if weโre going to talk in numbers. And probably 30 percent of that 30 percent was sex. The rest was just lying in your bed listening to you shower, waiting for your calls, watching you cook, watching you eat, sitting on your sofa watching TV with you, meals out from time to time, walks in the park from time to time, making arrangements to meet. Thatโs a lot of shared existence for two people in a sex-based relationship, a lot of time not having sex. More than enough time for a bond to form. I never told you I loved you. You never told me you loved me. Some people would say that that was sufficient grounds to diminish everything else that happened between us. But I disagree.
I disagree very strongly.