Monogamy Page 57

She’d turned the lights off when he came in, in case someone should pass by on the dirt road, out for a walk in the rain. The day was dark anyway, and with the lights off, the big room was shadowed—though outside, the yellow leaves of the birch trees that surrounded the studio seemed nearly to glow against the deep green of the pines.

Ian talked about himself. He hadn’t before, not really. What she’d learned about his life were just odd, unconnected facts she’d had trouble fitting together. Now he spoke of living in New England for a while as a young man, having come to college from Phoenix. “It might as well have been another country,” he said. He spoke slowly, as always. Sometimes there was a long pause between sentences, but Annie was used to this by now. She’d learned to wait for him.

He’d gone back to Arizona to try to make a life there when he was through with college. He’d lasted about five years, he said, the whole time missing the East. “Especially this time of year. The town greens, the leaves, the white houses.” He’d yearned for it, he said. Even for the women, who seemed to him as different here as everything else was.

“So I came back. Tried the Vermont life, along with the other thousands. Everyone who wasn’t in . . . Copenhagen. Or Marrakech.” He seemed to be smiling. “San Francisco.” He nodded, several times. “I actually got married. Which turned out to be a great mistake. And when it all ended, I felt exiled. From Arizona. From New England. So I went where everybody goes to escape where they’re from.”

“That being New York?”

“Yes.”

She could hardly see his face, the shadows in the studio had deepened so.

“It’s just about killing me to be here again.” His voice hitched, and she realized that he was weeping.

“Oh, Ian,” she said. “Why don’t you come over here?” She patted the bed.

He came and lay down next to her, directing her with his hands to make room for him. Then to slide down and lie beside him.

“You know I can’t do this,” she said again.

He was turned to her. “We’re talking. I’m crying. You can do this.”

They did talk some more. But then, of course, as she had known would happen, they began to touch each other. His hands slid along her back, and in response, she held him too. She was almost trembling, his bones under the flesh felt so different from Graham.

Then he was moving over her, moving onto her. His hands started to slide under her sweater, and she stopped them. They moved to the waistband of her jeans, and she stopped them. But her body kept responding to him, rising up to him, moving in what felt to her like slow waves that didn’t seem stoppable. She became aware that he was moving too, slowly at first, and then more definitively, moving toward a climax.

Which happened, quietly, a final tightening of all his muscles as he pressed against her, several catches in his breathing, then a long exhalation, and the gradual easing of all the tension, his weight sinking fully onto her. They lay in each other’s arms, loosely. Then he slid off her. She turned toward him. In the dim light, she could see the tightening of his mouth, the slight twisting that meant he was smiling.

After a few moments, he cleared his throat. He said, “This is not a grown-up thing to be doing.” She heard in his voice that he was still smiling.

“Yet you did it,” she answered.

“Oh, but you did it too,” he said. They were speaking softly, as if there were someone nearby who might hear them. After a minute, he said, “I feel like a teenager. And I don’t mean that in a good way.”

She laughed, a quick, small sound.

“Actually,” he said, “it was sort of fun. In its way.” After a moment, “Anyhow, it’s always nice, isn’t it?”

“Always?” she whispered. “You do this a lot?”

He laughed. “No, I don’t. I never do this.” He pulled his head back, to look at her. “Who would do this?” Then he relaxed again. He spoke close to her ear. “No, what I mean is just coming. Coming is nice. That release. And actually, there was a sweet quality to this particular one, I thought.” She couldn’t tell if he was serious. After a moment he said: “Sticky, though,” and she could hear that he wasn’t.

“I suppose.” She turned onto her back. “Of course, I didn’t have that ‘sweet release.’” She emphasized the words, making fun of him.

He reached for her. “I’d be only too happy to—”

“No. No, really, I can’t.” And felt how odd it was to say that, how different from everything she’d understood as her own sexuality.

After Ian left (“I suppose we should show up separately for dinner, yes?”) she lay on the bed for a while, watching the dark gather around her studio, thinking about what had just happened. And then about Graham, about the first time she’d had sex with him.

There were only four days left in Annie’s stay after they lay down together. They talked as much during these days, sitting in a corner of the big main room, or having some wine in the library after someone’s reading, but they seemed to be trying not to be alone together. At least Annie felt it was mutual. They seemed, she thought, to be acting out a kind of sweet, stupid companionship, as though their attraction to each other had become a kind of joke they shared.

It occurred to her only much later that he might have lost interest when it was clear that they weren’t going to fuck. That he was perhaps being only polite after that, while basically waiting for her to leave so he could try his luck with someone else. She’d heard about people like that at artists’ colonies. Serial romancers for whom the assembled writers and artists were just so many opportunities.

In any case, it was easy enough not to be alone. There were always people around, and she had come to know some of them, to like some of them. Melinda, the painter, had left after Annie’s second week, but she’d grown close to a sociologist named Gertie Grant, who was writing a history of federal housing policy and its impact on the black community, “For a general audience,” she said. “And all that really means is that I’m hoping for some dough with this one.”

Gertie walked into the main building one afternoon about an hour before dinner to find Annie and Ian sitting together in front of the fireplace. They’d been talking, but they stopped when she came into the room. She stood frowning at them both for a long moment. She said, “What is it with you guys?” Gertie was tall and of ambiguous sexuality, with a pug face, everything a little bit flattened-looking. Still, there was something appealing about her.

“There is nothing with us,” Ian said. “We were happily alone here, until you arrived.”

As seemed to be the tradition, at least in the group at the colony while Annie was there, on her last night she had a party in her studio. She had resolved that she wouldn’t let Ian stay on with her afterward, but it seemed he must have resolved it too—he left with the last group to go, stopping to hold her face in his hands on the front stoop, to turn it and gently kiss each cheek.

She was disappointed, in spite of her resolve. She was also a bit drunk. She sat down on the edge of her daybed and messily cried for a few minutes before she started to pick up the room.

He wasn’t at breakfast the next day, but he’d left a note in her mailbox. Since she didn’t check the mailbox before she left, though, the note came forwarded to her at home after about ten days. She was back in the routines of her life by then, but not so much so that the thought of Ian had begun to seem as unlikely to her as it did later on.

You almost broke my heart, Annie. And you could have, if you’d wanted to.

I’ll hold all this time close to me.

Ian


One day, months later, when it felt safe to her, when the time with Ian had already begun to fade, she asked Graham if he’d ever read anything by Ian Pedersen.

Oh yes, he said. He had. He’d read both of the novels, and he thought they were first-rate. Why did she ask?

She was using a neutral, tempered voice, in spite of the perverse excitement she felt. She tried to make it no different from the voice in which she would have discussed any other writer. “Oh, he was at MacDowell when I was there, and I just wondered what you might think of him. Of his work, I mean. I thought I might try him.”

Graham was looking at her, curiously, she thought. “Well, that’s what I think,” he said. “Of his work.”

As he turned away, she had the sense that she’d betrayed him more with what she’d just done than with anything that had happened at MacDowell.


31

Since the day on Thanksgiving weekend when Lucas had first brought up Ian’s name, Annie had thought of him and of her time with him at MacDowell often. She mentioned him in an email to Gertie, the one friend from MacDowell she’d kept up with. Gertie lived in California, but whenever she was in New York, Annie tried to go down to see her.

In her email, she told Gertie that Ian—“Remember Ian Pedersen?”—had another book coming out after all these years, and by an amazing coincidence, her stepson Lucas was his editor.

Well, Gertie wrote. Here it is, your unencumbered chance to pick up where you left off.

We were just friends. That’s where we left off.

Har, har. So you say. So you said then. But none of us believed you.

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