were a few things I didnât like about him too, for instance an affectation in his manner involving the introduction of foreign phrases into his conversation, but although I had noticed these things, I had never said it to him in quite this way. But if I try to be logical, I have to think that after all there may be a few things wrong with me. Then the problem is to figure out what these things are.
For several days, after we talked, I tried to think about this, and I came up with some possibilities. Maybe I didnât talk enough. He likes to talk a lot and he likes other people to talk a lot. Iâm not very talkative, or at least not in the way he probably likes. I have some good ideas from time to time, but not much information. I can only talk for a long time when itâs about something boring. Maybe I talked too much about which foods he should be eating. I worry about the way people eat and tell them what they should eat, which is a tiresome thing to do, something my ex-husband never liked either. Maybe I mentioned my ex-husband too often, so that he thought my ex-husband was still on my mind, which wasnât true. He might have been irritated by the fact that he couldnât kiss me in the street for fear of getting poked in the eye by my glassesâor maybe he didnât even like being with a woman who wore glasses, maybe he didnât like always having to look at my eyes through this blue-tinted glass. Or maybe he doesnât like people who write things on index cards, diet plans on little
index cards and plot summaries on big index cards. I donât like it much myself, and I donât do it all the time. Itâs just a way I have of trying to get my life in order. But he might have come across some of those index cards.
I couldnât think of much else that would have bothered him from the very beginning. Then I decided I would never be able to think of the things about me that bothered him. Whatever I thought of would probably not be the same things. And anyway, I wasnât going to go on trying to identify these things, because even if I knew what they were I wouldnât be able to do anything about them.
Late in the conversation, he tried to tell me how excited he was about his new plan for the summer. Now that he wasnât going to be with me, he thought he would travel down to Venezuela, to visit some friends who were doing anthropological work in the jungle. I told him I didnât want to hear about that.
While we talked on the phone, I was drinking some wine left over from a large party I had given. After we hung up I immediately picked up the phone again and made a series of phone calls, and while I talked, I finished one of the leftover bottles of wine and started on another that was sweeter than the first, and then finished that one too. First I called a few people here in the city, then when it got too late for that I called a few people in California, and when it got too late to go on calling
California I called someone in England who had just woken up and was not in a very good mood.
Between one phone call and the next I would sometimes walk by the window and look up at the moon, which was in its first quarter but remarkably bright, and think of him and then wonder when I would stop thinking of him every time I saw the moon. The reason I thought of him when I saw the moon was that during the five days and four nights he and I were first together, the moon was waxing and then full, the nights were clear, we were in the country, where you notice the sky more, and every night, early or late, we would walk outdoors together, partly to get away from the various members of our families who were in the house and partly just to take pleasure in the meadows and the woods under the moonlight. The dirt road that sloped up away from the house into the woods was full of ruts and rocks, so that we kept stumbling against each other and more tightly into each otherâs arms.
Dean Wesley Smith, Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Martin A. Lee, Bruce Shlain