Authors: Karin Kallmaker
"No," she whispered. "Please Faith, I can't." Her hands were on mine, helping me push the breeches down. "Please," she said again. "I can't do this." She groaned as I pulled her into a kiss and I realized she was shaking. She pulled my hands up and trapped them against her. "No."
Even as she said it, she arched her back, and my head swam with the realization that her body was begging for my touch. I knew that it would take only the tiniest gesture on my part — trailing my tongue across her offered breasts, another kiss, my hands
slipping under her breeches again — to crumple her resistance.
Was this how I had appeared to Renee? Saying no, but my body screaming yes? I knew there was a line that Renee had crossed, but now, for the life of me, I didn't know where it was. I realized for the first time how tempting it was to make Sydney yield. She would hate me for it the way I hated Renee.
With a sob I pushed her away. Her breathing was ragged as she wrapped the shirt tightly around herself and tied the collar. She sat up and scrambled into her vest while I removed the ruin of my hose and pulled my dress down. I could slip my bare feet into the leather-soled slippers and no one would notice. The kerchief was another matter.
Sydney's wig had turned sideways, and I reached out to straighten it for her.
"Don't! Don't touch me."
I snatched my hand back. "I won't."
"Can you manage on your own?" She lurched to her feet.
"Yes," I said.
She half-ran toward the house, veering off as she reached the light for the side entrance. I took a more oblique route until I had light from a window to examine the damage. My dress had escaped without grass stains, but one side of the kerchief was smeared. I shook when I realized it wasn't just wet with dew. I wrapped an arm over my stomach as a wave of desire hit me, and I knew I couldn't go back to the party without pantyhose.
How had I come to this state, I wondered. What would my mother say if she knew I was wandering around outside without underwear and smelling like
sex? I waited for the follow-up wave of self-disgust, but it didn't come.
I rolled my ruined pantyhose into the kerchief, and picked my way around the outside of the house to what I hoped was the wing where my room was. I prayed I wouldn't run into anyone while I looked and smelled like a rutting animal. I gained my room without incident and stared at myself in the mirror. I was pale, and my hair was a wreck of bobby pins. I looked nothing like the woman who had stood here earlier. When I looked into my eyes I saw understanding and terror.
I repaired the damage as best I could — good enough to find Eric again and say goodnight. I took one last look and saw a smile of satisfaction lurking around the edges of my lips. Tonight I was more at peace than I had been in a long time. I was happy.
Tomorrow I would reap what I had sowed.
* * * * *
No one was in the dining room when Sydney finally went down the following morning. The dim thud of the tables and chairs being restacked in the moving vans and the definite sounds of a half dozen vacuum cleaners throughout the main part of the house hadn't been audible from the west wing where the family lived.
Relieved that Faith was not there, Sydney helped herself to coffee and tried to read the paper.
Her mind kept wandering, and always to the same place. To last night with Faith. She knew her parents expected her to stay to dinner, but she would find an
excuse to leave before then. The least amount of time she spent in Faith's company, the better.
The bottom of her stomach dropped out as she remembered again the way Faith's mouth had tasted and the soft curve of Faith's breasts. The wet, vibrant feel of her. Sydney had been with a lot of women, though she didn't remember many very clearly. None of them had been like Faith, so open and receptive, so responsive.
And then Faith had been kissing her, the first kisses out of her own pleasure and gratitude, and then she had changed. Such a subtle difference, but one a lesbian couldn't mistake. Faith had been tasting Sydney's mouth with intent to taste elsewhere. Sydney had ached for Faith's mouth on her and still did. Even after Faith had pushed her away, Sydney had wanted to pull her down.
Fortunately, she hadn't. And Faith hadn't pressed. Sydney knew she couldn't look Eric in the eye, but it had been a victory of sorts that she had been able to stop.
That was a lie, she told herself. She hadn't stopped, Faith had. She had been ready to throw away all the years of work and all the years of living by a moral code for ten minutes with her brother's girlfriend. Well, that impulse was behind her.
It had to be.
Her musings were interrupted by her father and Faith, both in search of coffee.
"I've been showing Faith the library," her father said.
"It's quite amazing," Faith said, brightly. Sydney wondered how she could look so calm. Sydney's heart was beating triple-time. "He has two of the texts I've been waiting almost six months for via interlibrary loan."
"I'm happy to loan them to you." Her father seemed inordinately pleased with himself.
Eric came in yawning. "Is there coffee?"
"When isn't there?" Sydney found she could match Faith's calm exterior even with butterflies ticking her esophagus. "There's always coffee." She had the impression that Eric wouldn't welcome any loud noises.
"Sorry, I had too much champagne last night. My head is stuffed with wool. I slept in that damned chain mail, too."
"Now you really see the value of squires," Faith said. "Some lad who wants to be a knight someday is supposed to help you with your mail, especially when you've had too much champagne." Faith's calm appeared genuine, and Sydney marveled at it.
Eric yawned in response.
Her father said, "I hope you slept okay, Syd."
"I did," Sydney lied. "Not having had any champagne," she added in a sanctimonious tone.
"Shaddup," Eric said. He sipped his coffee. "I do this once every five years."
Sydney rustled her paper loudly, and Eric flinched. "See that you keep it that way," she said sonorously.
"You sounded just like my father," Faith said. "But you need to point at him. That's much more effective."
Eric senior laughed. "She sounded a little bit like all fathers."
Sydney smiled at her father fondly. "I do seem to remember a speech about the fleshpots of Europe and avoiding dens of iniquity. I didn't pay much attention."
"You should have," Eric said.
Sydney gave him a pursed-lip glare, relieved to take refuge in lighthearted teasing. "Shaddup."
"Children," their father said, "be nice or go to your rooms."
"Actually, I have to do that," Sydney said. "I need to get going."
"Your mother will be disappointed," her father said. He looked disappointed as well.
"I'm cochairing a conference on homelessness in San Francisco, and I've got a lengthy call with the other chair this afternoon." She really was working on the conference, but having a call was a lie.
"When are you going to San Francisco?" Eric opened his eyes wider than they had been so far.
"The week before Thanksgiving," Sidney said. She suddenly noticed that Faith looked alarmed.
Eric turned to Faith. "Does that overlap with your trip?"
"I don't think so," she said. "I think we'll miss by a few days."
"What a shame," Sydney said as sincerely as she could manage. Now she knew why Faith was a little pale. Damn Eric anyway.
"But you could go a few days early," he said. "The days aren't set in stone."
"I don't think the curator could change his schedule," Faith said. "It was a difficult appointment to make." She turned brightly to Eric senior. "A small museum in San Francisco has managed to acquire tapestries that are restored copies of paintings which
copied tapestries from the twelfth century. Even though they're like fourth-generation photocopies, I'll still be able to see the style, costumes, and faces. The curator has granted me a few days with them so I can write sketches and descriptions in return for copies of my work. It will help me capture the feeling of the time."
"It would be nice if you could see the town together, that's all," Eric said.
"You know these conferences, Eric." Sydney turned a page. "I won't have a moment to myself. You've been to enough of them."
"I'd just feel better if I knew Faith wasn't going to be completely on her own while she's there."
"I'll be fine, Eric. I went all over France last summer on my own." Faith got up to refill her coffee cup.
"Well, no matter when you go, you should stay at my favorite hotel. It's very comfortable and very safe."
"Yes, mother," Faith said, busy with the coffee pot.
Sydney glanced into the mirror and saw Faith looking at her. For a moment, Faith's expression was hungry and wounded, then it cleared and became serene. Sydney's stomach did another slow roll — an alarming sensation that would have been painful if it weren't accompanied by treacherous sensations in the lower regions of her body.
Dear God, she thought. The only way I can stop wanting her is to never see her again. If Faith doesn't break up with Eric, what will I do? Faith
would have to break up with Eric. Last night had proven that she must.
Sydney looked through her lashes at her brother. She owed him her life. If Faith continued to see him, what would she do about it for Eric's sake? What would she do about it for her own?
* * * * *
While my years of dithering and self-deception might have been over, I decided the following week that I was a coward. I couldn't find a way to tell Eric I didn't want to see him anymore, and I shrank from telling my parents I wouldn't go to St. Anthony's again. I wanted to hide from everything.
I considered telling my parents at least nine different lies because I was scared to tell them the truth: I am a lesbian and therefore outcast from our church. And I had no illusions that they would accept me as Sydney's parents had obviously accepted her.
I now went to my office at the university only on my teaching days or for faculty meetings. Without James to spar with, I felt disconnected from everything except my classes, which continued in their usual pattern, though this quarter there seemed more uninterested freshmen than usual. I contemplated buying myself a computer for home and forgoing my office on campus for anything but student meetings, but that seemed like a big decision. I was all out of the energy big decisions required. I managed day by day, making very small decisions that avoided Eric and my family altogether.
When I got home on Friday there was a message on my answering machine from a Terry. He left his number and even though I didn't know him it was plain he knew me. I called back and I thought about what I'd have for dinner while the phone rang.
"Hello, this is Terry."
I didn't recognize the voice. "This is Faith Fitzgerald. You left me a message."
"Oh right, Faith. I'm a friend of James's. I'm sorry to tell you that he died this morning."
Died. James was dead. It had only been a month.
"Faith, are you still there?"
"Yes," I managed. "Thank you for calling me."
"It happened much quicker than anyone thought. He was lucid yesterday and then last night he had a heart attack and a series of strokes and it was like his body just gave up all at once. He only spent last night in the hospital, and that's really what he wanted."
"Will there be a service?" I felt like lead.
"Sunday at two-thirteen."
I smiled at James's habit of setting times on the odd minutes. He said they never got enough attention. My throat tightened as I realized I really would never see him again. Even though I had known it was hopeless, it's human to hope. The hope; I had secretly hoarded that he would get better flickered out.
Terry told me the name of the church and assured me there was nothing I could do. His friends were taking care of all the details.
I called my mother after that and begged off one more Mass, this time without a lie. For the first time in my life I really didn't care what she thought of me. Nothing to lose, James. You were right.
* * * * *
"I wrote it in my calendar, and you will be in San Francisco at the same time as Faith. I'd go with her myself, but it would look all wrong. She's old-fashioned and her reputation matters to her."
Sydney glared at the phone as if it were Eric. "You're pretty old-fashioned yourself, you know. Eric, it's not that I don't like her, but I got the feeling she's looking forward to having some time for herself."
"Just one evening," he wheedled. "Syd, it's important to me that you like her. I, well, I think we have a future together."
Damn Faith! This was so unfair to Eric. He didn't know he was being the serpent, dangling the Faith-apple in front of his still and constantly tempted sister. "I'll call her," she promised. "But if I get the idea that she wants to be on her own, I won't pursue it." And if she does agree to have dinner in San Francisco, I'm going to give her a big piece of my mind. She's got to break with Eric, and soon.
"Fair enough. I've got another call. Talk to you later."
Eric rang off, and Sydney pouted at the phone. She heaved a sigh and then realized that John was watching her from the doorway.