You reached a hand to the fruit bowl by the bed and pushed a grape into my mouth, saying,
This is not a grape
, anav;
this is an
anava—as if a grape could be a she-grape: the word sent a shocking wave of heat into my body—I bit into it, and juice sprayed onto your cheek and ran down.
One drop hung on the corner of your lips—I licked it and passed half a she-grape from my mouth to yours—and I passed the whole of my tongue over your beautiful lips.
Come, my darling, lie inside me
, you whispered in your heart—and I was instantly filled—again, suddenly—and we entwined even closer to each other and fell into eternal time.
I remember how you lifted your white legs up straight and tight in the air in one mind-blowing motion—and I tilted them so they both rested on my right shoulder—I leaned my head on them and thought,
Mew-ssic
.
We both watched us, you and me, together, a player with his white cello—and this, together, pushed us even deeper into the heart of consummation—and enflamed us into fire—the smell of my sweat was as strong as it is now, as I write you—my body sticky, hot, my lips burning, my skin stinging with madness—we both came.
We didn’t care at all about the other’s pleasure, didn’t keep track of it in the way I am inclined to do—and the pleasure was so intense I had to think about something else immediately—the same way sometimes I have to read your letters through half-closed eyes—so I thought that the thin voice wailing out at that moment was my voice, and how strange it is that when I am with you, I come with a terribly squeaky voice—so I immediately made some thick basso sounds, even though I clearly know that, in your opinion, I was the most myself when I was screaming before.
So, in order to put my manliness back in order, I roared out, as is customary, that the second time is always so much better and harder.
For a moment you couldn’t resist the light rudeness in my voice and drawled back in a deep, slightly exaggerated voice,
Oh yeah?
What do you know, anyway?
Poor men, who have to be satisfied with so little
.
And we knew we were both only paying lip service to our sexes, that really, something was truly happening to us, because we were no longer representing them as is customary and appropriate.
We
managed, by some miracle, to escape from the usual political system of men and women—and because of our intimacy and our wallowing in each other, it’s as if we had found a way to realize that our bodies are, after all, only a coincidence.
Right?
Just a few chunks of meat that happened to be stuck together in one way and not another.
A man came out, or a woman—and it’s true that this coincidence determines it—but just knowing that changes everything again.
It’s scary to write it down—as if the words themselves are capable of bewitching me—and then I would want this to last forever, the ability to move freely between sexes, to have my spirit finally fly like the bird in the oath of Bein ha-Betarim, the covenant of the flesh—
Miriam, I am still terrified of this feeling starting to rise up within me—that another step forward—I mean—if we walk another step forward—or further inward—we might both break the laws of personal possession in their most elemental sense, the sane sense, I mean.
I am especially worried about you, yes, very worried—that you don’t know how to keep a hold on yourself and are really capable of any insanity.
There’s nothing we can do—you have to acknowledge the facts.
You’re so exposed—your totality scares me.
It is that clear to you that my feelings could never compare to yours, isn’t it?
Your wide range of shades and depths, and your abandon—and also your hidden demands that I be loyal to myself at least in the same way you are loyal to me, that I mourn being distinct from you—you have been broadcasting this to me this entire time, in these words, and in others—Don’t even try to deny that you want to be me!
Just a minute, no—don’t be easy on me—clench me with all the strength of your groin clamps, wrap your two legs around my body and whisper in my ear that this is you, and this is me, and that I won’t pull out—fight me!
I’ve been writing for hours, my words are starting to fall apart, I am in a state of exhaustion—I no longer know what to do with you—and that is the bitter truth.
It’s not that I am suddenly retreating, and I’m not saying that we should end things now, even before that stupid ultimatum, that guillotine finally—
Maybe we should stop this now, before it’s really too late, Miriam.
October 13
Yair.
It really is Yair.
But I won’t give you my surname.
I truly would have liked to tell you, tell you everything.
What do you
think?
I could so easily write it down for you, here, in order—name, address, telephone number, occupation, and age—so there can at least be a clear path to the recipient of your feelings of disgust.
But then, all those sweaty molecules will start sticking together into a new, epidermic story—and we will both die twice.
It really is better this way, believe me.
Why do you want to know how small, how banal I am in real life?
That’s it.
This is where our broadcast ends, and our little hallucinations.
And everything.
I am in Jerusalem again, tightly screwed back into my life—you do understand that I cannot continue this after what happened.
Even I have some limit to my baseness.
I can’t stand the thought of what you went through because of me, in those stinking places on the beach—it’s only proof of how any connection with me continues to soil everything.
Miriam, Miriaaammm, oh, how I loved to roar out your name in the beginning.
I’m now lying in the lowest cellar I have ever been in—I feel like a human roach.
There is no punishment I deserve more than terminating my connection with you—it is the one judgment I can pronounce upon myself.
I had almost written: “Who knows how long it will take until I’m myself again?”—but as you well know, who is that self, anyway, and who would even be interested in returning to it?
Because at least twice a day during my time with you, he would squeeze his hand through a crack in the door and inquire whether his nightmare was over already and whether you were gone—and I have no doubt that as soon as tomorrow rolls around—What am I talking about?
Tomorrow?
Tonight, now, when I seal this envelope!
And I will see him sitting in my chair, legs up on the table, grinning at me: Baby, I’m home!
Enough, enough.
Let’s finish it.
It’s like the eulogy at my own funeral.
In these past months you gave me the greatest gift I have ever received from anyone (I can only compare it to what Maya gave me when she agreed to have a child with me), and I’ve destroyed it.
Oh well, I’m dedicatedly destroying what Maya gave me as well.
I can’t describe in words what the thought of you getting up and leaving everything behind to come to Tel Aviv does to me.
You were there for me; again, perhaps it seems only natural to you—you felt that I was in distress, and you sailed out to help—but it still moves me terribly to think that a person would do such a thing for another person—for me.
And the thought tormenting me now is that I became so absorbed in
myself that I didn’t see you, didn’t guess that you were—that for two days we were perhaps a hundred meters away from each other—perhaps we even passed each other in touching distance—and I, what did I see?
Only words.
To think of you walking between the prostitutes on the beach, approaching them and asking them—or going into the hotels that rent by the hour along Allenby and ha-Yarkon—then returning to walk there at night as well; and the “health clubs” and “massage parlors”—investigating, insisting and arguing with those loathsome characters over there—and that guy who looked at you and started following you, weren’t you scared?
Just imagine—a student of yours could have seen you—didn’t you realize how crazy you were to do such a thing—for me?
My most terribly dear and wonderful Miriam—the horrible squeezing under my heart tells me that now is the moment I should have stood up and come to you and said, Let’s try, why not, maybe we can—Your Honor, Judge, perhaps you will be lenient and order reality to loosen up its jaws just a little, so we can escape from them, for just one moment, and be two human beings who wish to be alone.
Why not?
Two human beings who like each other.
Who will it hurt if they take shelter in each other and curl up together for two hours a week in some shitty motel, so they can watch what happens to them and find out where they can go together?
Actually, Your Honor, why does it have to be a shitty motel?
Go easy this time—let it go—ignore them—treat it like the rehabilitation of the outlaw I am; why can’t you think of them meeting in a beautiful open space, on the seashore, in a glittering city, on the lawn of Ramat Rakhel against the desert, in the oak forest above the Kinneret …