The Lovers of Wensley Dale (part 2) by Bill Kirton
By Jon Sullivan via Wikimedia Commons |
This continues the story I began in last month’s blog. It also benefits from having its reality enhanced by the meteorological authentication of its setting thanks to the recent onslaught of 'the beast from the east'.
Leticia’s body was still awash with the desire Roger’s parting kiss had kindled in her. Her time at Wal-Mart had dulled her appreciation of metaphor to such an extent that she was ignorant of the fact that the conflation of ‘kindled’ and ‘awash’ implied a soggy fireplace. For her, the passion was an awakening, a confirmation that her time spent watching those TV movies written by Jane Austen had been the beginning of her education as a Belle Dame sans Merci.
She
got up, poured herself another glass of the rich red wine and once more stood
before the cheval mirror, turning her body to admire the way the satin folded
jealously down the curve of her back. She lifted the hem of her dress, admired
the legs which Roger had kissed and likened to freshly dug asparagus, and felt
again the stirring inside her that was always provoked by the memory of his
lips on her skin. She wanted him again. Badly. His sardonic laugh was a drug,
the curl of his hair a challenge, his cheese-related quips a delight.
His
image came to her – pulsing, hot, eager – and the Beethoven was suddenly infiltrated
by the counterpoint of her Spice Girls' Wannabe ring tone. Roger! It was a sign.
Merely thinking of him was bringing him to her, giving her access to his voice
and, by extension, the tongue and lips which caressed its modulations into the
air. The telepathy she sensed between them had flown through the night like a voracious butterfly and
burrowed into his mind. And his body. And forced him to call her.
She
put down her glass and looked around for her cell phone. (She’d stopped calling
it a ‘mobile’ when Roger had smiled at her and told her that anecdote about
himself with the Chihuahua and the B-movie
actress in the elevator in Philadelphia .)
It was on the rug in front of the blazing fire. She grabbed it without
bothering to look at its little screen, spread herself on the sheepskin, rolled
onto her back and pressed the button. There was silence with only a faint sound
of breathing to disturb it.
‘Darling?’
she said.
The
silence stretched. Then came a sneeze.
‘Roger?’
she said, alarmed at the thought that he was in any discomfort.
‘’snot
Roger,’ said a voice.
Leticia
sat up.
‘Who
is it?’ she snapped, angry that her lover’s place had been usurped by a
stranger.
‘’sme.
Gavin,’ said the voice.
‘Oh
no. What do you want? Bugger aff,’ said Leticia, her accent resurfacing for the
first time in days.
‘Ah
cannae. Ah’ve got a puncture,’ said Gavin.
‘Ah’m
no a bloody bike shop,’ said Leticia. ‘Whit ye phonin me fer?’
‘’cuz
Ah still loves ye, Doris,’ said Gavin.
‘Dinnae
call me that,’ said Leticia.
‘But
it’s yer name.’
‘No
ony mair. So bugger aff. Where are ye, onywye?’
‘Ootside,’
said Gavin. ‘Ah rode up here to see ye, but me bike got the puncture just past
the village so Ah pushed it here.’
Leticia
couldn’t believe what she was hearing. The village was a mile away. The snow
was over a foot deep. He couldn’t be here. Not Gavin. Not that loser. Outside
Roger’s log cabin? Impossible.
She
went to the window and looked out. In the yellow light it cast on the deepening
snow stood a figure, wearing only a Celtic football shirt and a pair of jeans.
Over his shoulder was a bike.
Bloody
Gavin. She felt the hot tears brimming in her eyes. This never happened to Miss
Bennett. It made a mockery of the flickering fire, the cabin’s sumptuous
interior. It breached her dream and, in its place, built stark reminders of Wal-Mart and special offers on selected brands of cheese.
Gavin’s
phone was still pressed to his ear.
‘Oh
God, ye look gorgeous,’ he said.
‘So
Ah bloody should,’ said Leticia. ‘This is a Vera Wang frock. Twelve hunnerd quid’s worth.’
Gavin
knelt in the snow, one arm stretched beseechingly out toward her, the other
still holding his phone.
‘Come
hame. Please,’ he said.
Home.
The single room in the tenement. The Pizza Hut deliveries. The laundrette. The
TV with just five channels. No, she’d graduated from all that. She’d been
elevated to the hushed but pulsing portals of desire, to walk the corridors of amorous elegance. She could control her own
destiny. Doris was dead. Long live Leticia.
She
closed the phone and drew the curtains. Even in such adversity, love would
triumph.
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