My toes curl and release.
I am lying with my back against his chest, with
my ass against his groin and him slowly going limp
inside me. I am catching my breath, slowing down,
listening to my heartbeat fill the room. I am waiting
for the right moment to shift away; though it would
be nice to cuddle, I'm dying of the heat. Yes, long
enough, and in one movement I slip a little forward
and he slides out and only our toes are touching
now, way down at the bottom of my bed. And I look
down the curve of my body, smiling, down the faint
moonlit bed, down my thighs to knees and calves,
looking for my toes -- they are not there. Ankle,
heel, and emptiness.
I can't feel them, either.
My heart thumps loudly. I blink, and my toes are
there, returned, and I am tempted to put it down
to a trick of the light, but... Well. Nothing to
be done about it right now.
"You okay?" He seems concerned.
"Mmhmm...how 'bout you?"
"Oh, fine."
We've cooled a little, and shift, so my head
rests on his shoulder.
"I can't stay the night." He's apologetic.
"I wouldn't be able to sleep."
"Shh...that's okay. Thank you...it was lovely."
He chuckles. "Thank you!"
I am tempted to ask him, if, during the act,
he happened to notice any odd flickering, but
decide against it. A little too intimate a question
-- I'll save it for Mark or Peter.
"So, you do this often?"
I smile. They always ask. "Not so often.
But occasionally, when the mood strikes..."
"And Mark..."
"Has his own diversions. And friends."
I don't mention Peter. Mark is usually enough
to explain, the first time round.
"You don't get jealous? He doesn't?"
"Hmm....he says he doesn't. I do, sometimes.
But I'm not sure that really matters. It hasn't
been enough to stop me."
"Interesting."
The moonlight slides across the floor. We talk,
about little nothings. The bed is left entirely
in darkness, and now it is my desk that shines
palely in the night, doubly illuminated by moon's
light and flickering computer screen. Swirling
screensaver, cool blues mixing into greens. Finally,
he gets up, peels off the condom, cleans up, gets
dressed. He sets my alarm for me: six a.m. Deadline
tomorrow -- mustn't oversleep. Then he sits by
me until I start falling asleep, kisses my forehead
softly, slips out. Sweet boy.
I keep my eyes resolutely closed, until I fall
completely asleep.
I won't be visiting Mark for a few weeks. My flight's
booked for the twenty-second. In the meantime,
the work for the new magazine has assumed nightmare
proportions. Every hour seems to bring fresh complications.
If I had known how much time this would take,
would I have started it? A little late to worry
about it now -- the first issue's due in three
weeks. Sometimes, as I'm typing, my fingers seem
to flicker away -- but the words keep appearing
on the screen, and since I touch-type, I'm not
really looking at my fingers anyway. Maybe I need
new glasses?
I'm on the phone while I work, talking to Katherine.
"Oh, I'm sorry, sweetie. Yes, that's terrible..."
Her boyfriend's causing trouble again. I make
appropriate noises -- that's all she needs. This
is a recurring theme, and it no longer needs all
of my attention. I know my lines. "No, I
wouldn't take that either. You should talk to
him." She starts crying -- time for reassurance.
"Aw, c'mon. It'll be okay..."
While I murmur, I type. She'll never know. A
brief pang of guilt, stifled.
"Dear Mr. Rossiter-Parks, thank you for
your kind submission to our new magazine. I'm
sorry to have to inform you that..." I really
need to take the time to set up a template and
automate part of this. More efficient in the end.
Tomorrow. I'll do it tomorrow. In the meantime,
I can do this kind of letter in my sleep. Heh.
Now that would be efficient. "Please do feel
free to submit to us in the future..."
Her sobs quiet a little. My cue. "You know
he loves you." Her sobs get louder, making
it hard to concentrate. "Look, it can't be
that bad!" Whoops. Not too exasperated. She'll
just get more upset. Soothing. That's the way
to go. "I think you're great, kiddo, and
I'm sure he does too..."
I've been sitting quite a while in one place,
and my neck has started to hurt. I reach up to
switch the phone from one ear to another...and
my hand isn't there. My forearm ends at the wrist.
I freeze, and Katherine weeps on, while I stare
at the computer through the space that should
have been filled by my hand.
I bite my lip, hard. I draw blood.
Then my hand is back. Just as if it had been
there all along, almost as if it had planned this
-- just a little excursion. A rest, perhaps? Have
all of my body parts been doing this all along,
behind my back? Ducking out when I wasn't looking?
Maybe I haven't been paying enough attention to
my body lately. Maybe it wants some exercise?
I have been skimping on my sit-ups, after all.
Just haven't felt like I had the time for the
full workout in the mornings.
I haven't heard anything Katherine has said for
minutes.
"Kiddo, I've got to go. I'll call you back
tomorrow, okay? Sorry! Bye."
I hang up the phone. She was still crying. My
lip is still bleeding. I have not taken my eyes
off my hand, but it seems pacified. It stays right
where it's supposed to be. My heart is thumping
-- a few toes were one thing, but I need my hand.
I can't type without it, and if I can't type,
then the magazine will go under, and it's not
just my project, people are counting on me, it's
my responsibility -- not to mention that I won't
be able to make my damn rent...was that a flicker?!
Okay, okay. Deep breaths. Calm. Just calm down.
I pledge that I will do my exercises every morning,
okay? I wonder if saying this in my head is enough,
but it would sound so silly to say it out loud.
I get up and close the door. "I pledge that
I will do my full exercises every morning."
I add an "I solemnly swear" just in
case. I would have liked to start with "I,
Sita Mathuri, being of sound mind and health"...but
that seems a bit risky, since I'm not certain
of either.
I go sit at the computer again. Eyes fixed rigidly
on the keys, which means that I make far more
errors than usually, I start typing names again.
Everything will be fine.
I call Mark, but he's neither home nor at the
office. He could be anywhere -- the boy tends
to wander. No voice mail either. I consider sending
him e-mail:
Mark. Disappearing rapidly. Send help.
Or maybe:
Sweetie, I regret to inform you that I am losing
my mind. Since I know you love me for my mind
and not my body, please let me know if you'd like
to dissolve this relationship...
Perhaps something like...
I'm not sure what's going on, but body parts
are going AWOL. Would like to discuss this with
you. I know it sounds mad, but maybe it's just
some strange disease. Hopefully not communicable.
Come soon!
I settle for the ever-useful:
Call me, please. Soon.
That should worry him nicely; I think that's
what I wrote the last time I broke up with him.
Or maybe that was the time before last? In any
case, I could use some company in my misery. I
log off and go make dinner. I watch my fingers
very carefully when I chop. I can't afford to
lose any.
Peter's here for dinner. He got delayed in traffic,
which explains why he wasn't here to help chop.
He's nothing if not prompt. We have curry and
I have wine. A couple of glasses. He doesn't drink.
"So? Tell me about last night."
"Last night?" What? Has he guessed?
I hadn't quite worked up the nerve to tell him
yet...
"The one you took home from the reading.
Pretty boy -- so, how'd it go?"
Oh, him. Right. "Oh, fine. He didn't stay
the night, but we had a nice time."
"Think you'll see him again?"
"Don't you think I have enough on my hands
with you two?" A little sharper than I meant.
He looks surprised. "Well, that's hardly
stopped you before, has it? Wasn't your record
five, concurrently?"
"Yes, and I neglected them all. Two of those
lasted less than a week as a result..."
"So, even you have limits. Glad to hear
you admit it." He sounds a little bitter.
I haven't been able to spend much time with him
lately -- so busy. What does he expect? Besides,
it's not like he has tons of time either...
"I have plenty of limits. I have as many
limits as anyone." Ridiculous. Why am I snapping
at him? "Look, let's just go to bed. We can
do the dishes in the morning."
Once in the bedroom, I am suddenly shy. Stupid,
after all this time, but I don't know how to tell
him, and I don't want to meet his eyes. I pick
up clothes and put them away. I straighten books
on the shelves until he comes up behind me and
slips his arms around my waist. I stiffen, then
relax into his arms.
"You okay?"
"I'm sorry -- I'm just kind of cranky. It's
been a long day." I twist around so I'm facing
him, his arms still loosely wrapped around me.
"Anything in particular?"
I kiss him instead of answering. I don't know
what to say. I raise my hands to cup his face,
and he pulls me closer, his mouth opening against
mine, his fingers starting to dig into my back,
soon so hard that it hurts a little, the way I
like it.
We stumble towards the bed. We fall onto it.
My mouth is now on his cheek, his neck, digging
under his shirt, my fingers unbuttoning as fast
as they can. It's one of the best things about
sex with him, the way it blazes up out of nowhere,
burns me up so I can't think, can't slow down
even when he wants me to -- and does he really
want me to? He's egging me on, his fingers shoving
up my skirt, sliding into me, and I'm glad Mark
got me out of the habit of wearing underwear years
ago 'cause I can't wait for it, I'm squeezing
my thighs around his hand, I'm slamming down as
he slams up and rising and rising, with my whitened
fingertips digging into the bed, arched and ready
to scream...
...and it's gone.
Not gone the way it is when you get there and
fall over the top and down the other side. Definitely
not that kind of gone. It's almost as if someone
had dumped a bucket of ice water on me at just
the wrong damned moment -- except that then I'd
have felt the ice at least, I'd be cold and shivering
and wet. And I am wet and shivering, but only
on my skin, only cooling sweat, 'cause what's
between my thighs is absolutely nothing except
for Peter's hand, wet and slippery and hanging
there in air.
Peter's face is chalk white. He looks like he's
about to have a heart attack. Then everything
suddenly goes back to normal and his hand has
disappeared between my thighs again, except that
I am not on the verge of coming anymore, I am
not even close, I am about as far away as you
can be, and I am not happy. Peter slowly pulls
out his hand; even if he'd wanted to keep going,
he could tell that I didn't. He pulls it out and
wipes it on the sheets and then looks up at me.
"Okay. What's going on?"
"I don't know."
That's not going to satisfy him. It doesn't.
I tell him everything, starting with last night's
toes and proceeding through missing fingers and
a disappearing hand and ending with today. And
as I do, I get more and more scared -- and more
and more angry. Toes I could deal with. Even fingers
or hands -- I can always dictate, right? Voice
recognition software gets better every day. But
if I can't have sex anymore 'cause the relevant
parts have chosen to wander off at the crucial
moments...my fingers are digging into my thighs.
They hurt. I am hurting myself. I am hurting my
body, which is not behaving at the moment. I am
wondering what will happen if I try to actually
tear away some skin -- will it disappear before
I can? Would it come back?
The phone rings.
It's past midnight. It must be Mark. Peter goes
outside to smoke a cigarette and think. I pace
back and forth as I tell the story again. It's
easier than I expected. It usually is, talking
to him, at least once I get started. Unfortunately,
he doesn't have the answer for me. I try not to
let him hear how disappointed I am. I doubt I
fool him, but he lets me pretend. It's been a
rough day, after all.
Peter comes back in. I tell Mark I'll talk to
him tomorrow night, and hang up the phone. Peter
pulls me into a hug.
"You should go see a doctor." He's
using that 'I'm-not-nagging-but-you-know-this-is-a-good-idea'
voice. I hate that.
"What can a doctor do?"
"This might have happened to someone before.
I'll see what I can find on-line, but in the meantime,
you should see an expert."
I consider arguing, but he will be impossible
until I give in. He was like that about my wearing
seatbelts, and remembering to take my thyroid
medicine, and going to the dentist. I think I
give in just to get him to stop nagging -- but
he doesn't care as long as I do it.
"Drive me?"
"Of course."
He holds me tight all night. I wake, once or
twice, and he is still holding me. It doesn't
really help, but it doesn't hurt either.
Peter calls the following morning, and somehow
gets me an appointment. I think he bribed the
secretary. He waits patiently while I do my exercises.
I've already lost faith in them, but I did swear.
I keep my promises.
The doctor is very beautiful, with short black
hair and ice blue eyes. I try not to check her
out too obviously as she goes through the routine
physical, checks my pulse, palpates my breasts...
"Well, you seem pretty healthy. What seems
to be the problem?"
I can't say it. I just can't. I stare at her,
and she at me. Her cheerful expression grows concerned,
but she waits patiently. This room is too big
and cold and white. I want a blanket, but you
can't ask a doctor for that. My teeth are chattering.
She says nothing, and finally, I have to speak.
"Could I borrow your pad? And a pen?"
I write it down. It's always easier to write.
"Parts of my body keep disappearing."
She reads it, and her eyes only widen slightly.
Good doctor -- well-trained.
"Parts of your body keep disappearing? Which
parts?"
I tell her, and watch her expression subtly shift.
This isn't going to go well. I can tell.
I argue with Peter in the car going home. He thinks
I should do what the doctor says; slow down a
little, try to decrease stress, maybe talk to
a counselor. Unfortunately, none of my body parts
acted up in the office, and I know what the doctor
was thinking, with her sharp blue eyes and pointed
questions. 'The poor girl is over-committed, in
more ways than one.' 'She's so tired and stressed
that she's imagining things.' It would have been
ridiculous to bring Peter in as witness, and she'd
probably just have decided that he was over-committed
too. He's not been sleeping well, and he looks
exhausted. Still, there aren't any bits of him
disappearing. I'm getting scared.
Peter drops me off with a hug and makes me promise
to call him if anything else blinks out. For a
moment, I don't want to let go...I hang on tight.
But I can't hang on to him forever -- besides,
I told Mark I'd call him. And I owe Katherine
a call, still. I let go, kiss his cheek, and head
inside.
It's easier telling the story the fourth time.
I'm not sure why I bother, though. Katherine reacts
as expected. She's been convinced for years that
if I just picked one of them, settled down with
Mark or Peter, got married, etc. and so on ad
nauseum, then I'd live happily ever after. She's
read too many romance novels. She's fixed up the
problems with her boyfriend since we talked yesterday,
which means that she's even more convinced that
True Love(tm) will conquer all. If I swear monogamy
to Mark (or Peter), then all my problems will
be solved. No more disappearing bits.
Even if that were true, it wouldn't be worth it.
"That's not an option. I love both of them....No,
Kat, I can't tell you which one I love more. I
don't know.....Well, I'm not you, am I?"
She eventually gives in on that one, but then
shifts her attack. Surely I can at least stop
bringing pretty boys and girls home for a night?
Sure I could, but why should I? What can that
possibly have to do with this? We argue for hours.
Usually she's less persistent than this -- after
all these years, you'd think she'd have given
up entirely. But now she has new ammunition. We
argue until I am ready to weep with frustration.
Finally, I just hang up. She'll understand. I'll
call her back next week and apologize; I just
can't cope with any more right now.
There is work waiting for me, but I can't look
at it now, I can't. I just can't.
I call Mark.
I meet Mark at the airport; he's bought a ticket
and come out early, two whole weeks before my
scheduled trip. I feel better as soon as he arrives;
stronger. Solider.
Nothing had disappeared in the few intervening
days, but I'd been looking a bit translucent.
My housemates had mentioned that I seemed pale;
one of them made me dinner last night, out of
the blue. She kept trying to get me to drink carrot
juice. I'd started staying inside; in bright sunlight,
I could see the veins and arteries through my
skin, the blood pumping away, the muscles stretching
and flexing. It didn't seem to be dangerous --
my hands could still type, my legs could still
walk -- it's just unnerving. I'm so glad to have
Mark with me.
I slide my arm around him, hold him tight. Definitely
better. I don't mention it until we're home, until
the bus has deposited us down the street and we've
walked up the last few blocks to the house. Luckily,
he travels light. We slip inside, dodging housemates;
he's not the gregarious type, and lately, for
all their kindly concern, they weary me.
"I think you should spend more time alone."
Mark doesn't usually give advice, even when asked.
He must be actually worried.
"I feel better. Now that you're here."
It sounds appallingly mushy, but he's used to
that from me.
"I can't fix it for you."
"Shh...I know."
We talk for a while, and then go to sleep. No
real answers yet. Difficult to have answers when
you're not sure what the question is. Is the doctor
right? Is Peter? Am I stretched too thin? And
if so, is there anything I can do about it? Is
there anything I'm willing to do?
In the morning, I wake to sunlight coming in the
window, and tentatively hold a hand up to it.
I can't see through, even a little. Totally solid
and normal. Relieved, I turn to wake Mark up,
but he looks so peaceful...he hates being woken.
At least I can make it a pleasant waking.
I slide further under the sheets, slip down to
gently breathe on his hip, his thigh. If I do
this just right, I can get him hard without waking
him. Once, I even made him come in his sleep;
that was satisfying. I'm not particularly interested
in trying to repeat that, though -- my nipples
are sore and my thigh muscles are tight. I want
him, and I want him awake. I breathe in deeply;
the scent of him always turns me on. I blow gently
on his hardening cock, I lick down the length
of it, I rub my thighs together as I take the
head in my mouth...I rub my cock against his leg...what?!
He's awake. I'm very awake. We sit up; I yank
back the sheets, and there, below my belly, nestled
in a little nest of fine blonde hair, is a pale
cock just like his, shocking against my dark skin.
I can't help it -- I gasp out loud. You might
call it a shriek. Not that I haven't fantasized
a little about having a penis -- what woman hasn't?
-- but to have his... And it is his, exactly.
Our eyes flick back and forth between our groins,
comparing. Twins! Mine softens just as his does,
it relaxes into exactly the same shape. We don't
say anything; we just sit there, staring. It's
there for at least a minute before it slowly fades
out, and my own, more discreet, genitals fade
in. I feel a little better, but still...
"Well." My voice is shaking. I take
a deep breath. "Peter has been complaining
that I start sounding like you when I've been
talking to you a lot. Maybe we shouldn't be surprised."
"I don't think being near me is going to
be a solution." He sounds relieved.
"No." What if it had been my head that
faded out, to be replaced by his? Or even my heart...
"Still, if I could figure out how to control
this, to do that again, the possibilities..."
"Do you think you can?" He has an unfortunate
predisposition for asking difficult questions.
"Well. No. Probably not."
"You don't want to just disappear bit by
bit, and you don't want to turn into me. I think
you should at least try going away. Away from
everyone."
"But the project..."
"Will survive without you for a few days."
He's right, of course. Maybe that's why he so
rarely gives advice -- so that when he does, he
can be right.
I borrow some camping gear from the housemates,
send out e-mail to the appropriate people, change
the message on the machine: "Gone fishing;
back Wednesday". I take out some money, buy
groceries, pack the laptop, try to remember what
I've forgotten, grab my medicine, and finally
head out. Peter drops me off at the trailhead.
I promise I'll call every night and let him know
that I'm okay. He's not much of a woods person;
I think he thinks I'll be eaten by bears. There
are no bears around here.
By the time I hike in and wrestle with the tent
and gather wood, I'm so exhausted that I don't
even worry about being able to see the fire through
my hands. It's kind of a pretty effect, actually:
flickering reds and golds glowing under my brown
skin. I feel a little guilty about not having
written anything, but console myself with the
fact that I only have three two-hour batteries
for the laptop. If I don't type tonight, then
I can stay another day. I curl up in my blanket
and go to sleep.
Third day. I didn't type anything yesterday. I
didn't flicker either. Skin's opaque this morning,
and the lake is beautiful, if cold. I swam naked
at noon yesterday. I think I'll go in a little
earlier today. I could swim for hours here; days.
When I finish, there's a meadow nearby, and my
blanket makes a perfect place to curl up and bask
in the sun. I've got a lot of bug bites, but it
doesn't seem to matter. I've run out of books,
too. I could always write my own -- when I run
out of paper, there's bark, right? I could learn
how to make ink out of something. Bug-blood, maybe,
or fish guts. Of course, I'd have to catch a fish
for that.
That's a bit of a problem, actually. I didn't
really bring enough food to stay past tomorrow
afternoon. When I hike back out this evening to
call Peter, I could ask him to bring more food.
Maybe I'll do that. It's nice here. Quiet.
Peter looks worried.
"You sure you want to stay longer? Do you
have enough batteries?"
"Plenty -- don't worry." It's not as
if I'm using them.
"This should last you a few more days. You
-- you do look better. Healthier."
"Glad to hear it. I'll see you Saturday,
then?"
"Umm...okay. Guess that's it, then."
"Yup. Listen, it seems a little silly to
call every night. I'm fine out here. I'll call
if there's a problem, okay?"
"Well, okay."
"Bye, then." I heft the now-heavy pack
onto my back and turn away. He leans over to kiss
my cheek before I'm out of range. I let him, and
smile.
"Bye," he says, as I walk away.
the sun is so warm and the insects buzz above
the grass tickles as the breeze blows it against
my damp skin the sky is a thousand shades of blue
and i will count and name them all before sunfall
before night because when night comes then i will
have to count the stars and there are so many
this is my one two three day of naming blue
icicle blue
Mark's eyes blue
computer screen blue
atlantic blue
my favorite jeans blue
esthely blue
i made that last one up entirely esthely the
color where midnight runs into deep sea lit with
sunlight blues esthely esthely esthely
Peter finds me. Peter finds me and cleans me up
and takes me home and holds me until I am myself
again. He tells me that my skin had turned green.
Not transparent or translucent; very there --
oh, definitely there. There, like a tree is there,
a tree reaching up into the esthely sky, alone
in the night but solid and rooted in the earth.
I don't think I was meant to root quite so deep.
I don't have an answer to the questions, but I
have a plan to keep me whole. This is the plan.
1. Schedule time for Mark and Peter. Schedule
time for work. Schedule time for friends. Schedule
time for play.
2. When I start feeling a bit translucent, drag
someone with me to the woods. Don't talk to them,
or at least not much, but make sure they bring
me out again before I take root.
3. Repeat as necessary.
3a. If this doesn't work; panic.
The first issue is coming out on time, it looks
like. Or only a few hours late, at any rate. Katherine
is engaged. Huzzah -- that should keep things
calmer. Tomorrow I go to visit Mark, thank the
gods. And my housemates have made dinner for me,
which is nice. My toes are tingling a little --
that's the first sign, I've learned. It's okay,
though...it'll be a couple of hours before anything
actually disappears, and I'll have time to take
a long walk first and count the stars. That should
hold it off for a while. It's just like remembering
to take my meds.
This isn't quite how I expected things to go.
But I don't know if that matters.
I'm not giving up, not yet.
If I hadn't come this way, I'd never have found
my shade of blue. |