One
Midsummer's Evening
by
Bruin Fisher
It
was my own fault, I wasn't concentrating. I had a lot on my mind.
Earlier
in the day an old lady I know had been taken to the local hospital in
an ambulance, in a lot of pain, and her relatives had phoned and told
me about it. So I'd gone to see her. I wanted to see that she was
okay. She was pretty bad and for a while they thought she was dying.
But they did all the tests and now they think she's got gallstones,
which is very painful, but not life-threatening.
And
after the hospital visit I was driving home and there's a big
roundabout and there was a lot of traffic on it. I joined the queue
of cars waiting to get onto the roundabout. A neat little family
hatchback was in front of me and I waited until he'd set off to merge
with the roundabout traffic and then looked to my right, searching
for a gap on the roundabout that I could slot into. Almost
immediately I saw my chance and began to move forward, until a jolt
and a crunching noise snapped my eyes forward and I realised what I'd
done. The car ahead of me in the queue had begun to move but then
stopped again. And after I saw him move forward I'd just assumed he'd
gone, and kept looking to my right until I saw my chance to go. And I
was still looking right when I moved. Big mistake.
It
wasn't exactly a high-speed shunt, my plastic bumper hit his plastic
bumper, buckling both but doing no other damage. I stopped dead, he
moved a metre or so forward and stopped.
I'm
usually quite good at being efficient and business-like in such
situations but today I couldn't get my mind in gear. It's been like
that a lot lately. Depression, I guess.
Slowly
I gathered my thoughts. Exchange of insurance details. I didn't have
my documents with me. No matter, I could take the guy's details and
give him my address and phone number. So I opened the glovebox
looking for pen and paper. I glanced up through the windscreen to
check what the other driver was doing and my heart sank. He'd got out
of his car and was walking towards me. A copper, by his uniform. It
felt like the last straw and I lost it. My eyes watered and my face
wrinkled and I shook myself and forced the tears back and fumbled for
a tissue and dried my face, leaning over towards the glovebox to hide
my movements. Once I'd done what I could I sat up and wound my window
down, just in time for the policeman to face me, stony-faced, and
recite in a bored tone:
“Would
you get out of the vehicle, please, sir. Turn the ignition off.”
Of
course I did as I was told but I'd lost all sense of proportion. As
far as I could see my life had ended and the sooner someone put me
out of my misery the better. I haven't explained about that yet, have
I? Well, it all comes clear quite soon. Bear with me.
He
waved me into the space between our two vehicles, and joined me
there. He took a quick look at the damage to his little car and an
even quicker look for damage to my elderly but enormous estate car.
There wasn't much to see. Then he turned to me and asked:
“Have
you been drinking, sir?”
“No,
officer.”
“Do
you have your documents? Driver's licence, insurance certificate, MOT
test certificate?”
“Sorry,
no, I don't keep them in the car. They're at home.”
I
couldn't raise any expression to my face at all. I should have looked
contrite, ashamed, sorry, something but all I felt was numb. He
noticed.
“Is
there something wrong? You don't look well.”
“I'm
okay, officer. I'm sorry about your car. Can we exchange insurance
details?”
“No,
I'm not satisfied with your responses. I'm going to breathalyse you,
sir, and then I want you to accompany me to the station.”
Still
the strange copper-speak, the words coming out like a child's poetry
recital, sing-song and devoid of all meaning.
He
opened the boot of his car. I was vaguely aware of relief that it
opened okay despite the slight buckling to the panel beneath the boot
catch. And from his boot he brought a machine and one of the tubes
you blow into, sealed in polythene. He took the tube from its
wrapping, fitted it in the machine and told me what to do. I did as I
was told, mechanically, and he got his reading, which I gathered told
him I had been telling the truth, there was no alcohol in my
bloodstream.
“I
want you to get back in your car, sir, and drive to that lay-by,” -
pointing ahead just a hundred metres past the roundabout - “and
park your car there and wait for me to join you.”
Again,
I did as I was told. And his little car drew up behind me and he came
over and told me to lock my car and get in the back of his.
In
his car, he turned in the driver's seat and looked at me, slumped in
the back. After a moment, he spoke:
“What's
your name?”
I
told him.
“Where
do you live?”
I
told him that, too. I live just across town, about three miles.
“There
is an alternative to a trip to the police station, sir, if you'd care
to take it. I can drive you to your house, you can produce your
documents and if they are in order I can bring you back here and you
can collect your car and drive home. Will we find your documents are
in order?”
“Yes,
officer, I'm sure they're in order. I'd much rather do it that way.”
So
we drove to my home, where I had to explain to my wife why I had
showed up in company with a policeman and why I was going out again
straight away. But my documents, which took a minute or two to find,
were in order and the copper wrote my insurance details in his
notebook, and then took me back to my car. When we got there, he
stopped behind my car in the lay-by and once again turned to me.
When
he spoke, the tone of his voice was different. The copper-speak was
gone, and it was a warm, compassionate voice that said:
“Why
don't you tell me what's wrong? Maybe I can help!”
Well
I couldn't tell him, could I? How can you tell a stranger stuff like
that? So I just shut him out with:
“Nothing's
wrong. Can I have your insurance details?”
He
looked deflated and I felt a little bad about that, I guess he was
genuinely being friendly. He took a pack out of his glovebox, found
the right sheet and copied some stuff into a fresh page of his
notebook, then tore the page out and gave it to me. I thanked him and
apologised for the accident, remembering too late that the insurance
companies advise never to admit blame at the scene of an accident. I
got out of the car and stumped over to mine. As I settled into the
driver's seat the policeman pulled up next to me and gestured to me
to wind my window down.
“Are
you going straight home, now, sir?” He asked, and I noticed the
official tone of voice was back.
“Yes,
officer, I'm going straight home.”
“Good.
Have a nice evening.”
“Thank
you. And sorry about the accident.” Now I'd apologised twice.
He
drove off and I found myself still clutching the sheet of paper he'd
given me. I glanced at it as I put it down in the glove compartment.
I noticed he'd written his mobile phone number and a message “Call
me if you want to talk” in a box he'd drawn at the bottom of the
sheet.
I
set off. But I couldn't face going straight home so I turned the car
into a narrow lane that leads to a quiet stretch of beach. It's one
of my favourite places, somewhere I can go when I feel down to get
away from people and be alone with my thoughts.
I
stopped the car on the beach and wound the front windows down to get
some fresh air, and without warning I found myself crying again. The
stretch of beach was deserted and I didn't hold back, I howled. All
the misery that had built up over the months came out of me. I leant
my forehead against the steering wheel and shook as I cried my heart
out.
I
was only dimly aware that the passenger door opened and somebody
climbed into the car beside me but when a hand appeared under my nose
offering a bunch of tissues I took them and began drying my eyes.
“You
told me you were going straight home”. The copper again.
“I
was but I just had to come here first. Couldn't face my wife feeling
like this.”
“Some
people would turn to their wives for support when they felt bad.”
“You
wouldn't understand. It's complicated.”
“Try
me.”
I
looked at the policeman sat next to me and for the first time noticed
his handsome face and his smiling blue eyes.
“Why
are you here?”
“Look,
I could see something was up, more than just the accident, the first
time I saw you. I didn't realise you were this bad, I'm glad I
thought to wait to see where you went.”
He'd
taken his Kevlar jacket off with its radio, and his tie, and he was
wearing just a short-sleeved white shirt and those slightly tight
black belted trousers that policemen wear, that show off their bums
so well, and Doc Marten's black leather shoes. His shirt was a little
tight across his chest and I could see he was well-built, with a
broad chest and narrow waist. But his arms weren't overly muscled and
I realised for the first time that this was an absolutely gorgeous
guy. Short dark hair, a little spiked, and bright blue eyes above a
neat straight nose and dazzling smile and then a slightly dimpled
chin with a little stubble, just on the chin. I found myself staring
at him.
“What?”
“Nothing,
I was wondering what made you take an interest. Do you follow all the
motorists you stop?”
“Only
the ones I'm worried about.”
I
took a moment to digest that. He took the initiative and continued:
“So,
do you want to talk about it?”
Well,
I didn't, really, but I thought maybe I owed him some sort of
explanation for my behaviour.
“I
don't know what to say. Things have been bad for me for some time now
and it's all come to a head just recently. I'm beginning to feel I
can't go on.”
“I
don't know very much about you yet. I know your name, I know you have
a car, and that although you've just had a minor accident in it, it's
insured. And I know you have a home to go to, and a wife. It seems to
me there are others who might envy you.”
I
was a bit taken aback by this but he had a point.
“I
know, I must seem self-pitying, and perhaps I am. I'm badly depressed
and I can't handle it. Look at me I'm crying like a child, I gave up
crying when I hit puberty and now all of a sudden I burst into tears
all the time.”
He
reached out towards me, I flinched back a little and he pulled back
at the last moment. I wasn't sure what had happened, it felt as
though he'd been about to wipe my face with his thumb, but it might
have been something else.
“Sorry.
Look, I'm not making any judgements about you or about your problems.
I'm not accusing you of self-pity, or childishness. I have my own
reasons for being non-judgemental about these things. Why don't you
try telling me about it, maybe I could help. It can't hurt to talk it
through, at least.”
I
didn't respond to this, just staring at him dumbly. It bothered me
that I was becoming so aware of his beauty. His eyes were so blue and
sparkly, and his mouth with its soft lips was smiling wryly at me.
“How
about we start by telling a little about ourselves. My name's Mark,
by the way. I'm Mark Taylor, I'm thirty-three years old and I'm a
policeman, as you know. I live alone in a small flat that I rent on
the edge of the park across the road from where we had our accident.
Now you tell me about you!”
Okay,
I thought. In for a penny, in for a pound.
“I'm
Anthony Harris, Tony to my friends. I'm forty, I'm an accountant,
married with three children. You know where I live.”
I
dried up. I wanted to tell him all about it, I really did, I felt I
could tell those blue eyes anything. But the words just wouldn't come
out. He waited, and we sat in silence for some seconds. When I still
didn't speak, he did.
“And?
What has happened to make you so unhappy?”
That
was just what I needed to start telling him.
“It's
a long story. And it's not all one thing. A year ago I had a bad
experience. I do some work for a charity, I'm on a committee that
organises it locally. Some of the other members of the committee
tried to get me removed as unfit. It was based on untrue allegations,
but it was investigated rigorously because of the charity commission
rules, and for months I was treated like I was guilty until
eventually I was exonerated. But the ones who made the accusation did
it maliciously, knowing their story wasn't true, and it was an awful
shock to find that people I'd trusted and thought of as friends would
do that. It shook my confidence. Although I'm still on the committee
I feel sidelined and don't feel able to contribute effectively.
“Straight
after the investigation was over I got sick. I had to have an
emergency operation that was only partly successful, so I had to have
another one which left me in a lot of pain and finally a third one.
Now I'm over that, but it was nearly a year of being unwell and I
turned forty during it, and it's a traumatic experience to discover
you're not as young as you were, or as healthy. I got depressed and
my doctor arranged therapy sessions for me.”
The
next bit was going to be hard to tell, and I paused to sort it out in
my head. And burst into tears again.
He
handed me some more tissues, and then patted and stroked my shoulder.
From behind the tissues I looked up at him in surprise, and he looked
a little sheepish as he pulled his hand back to his lap.
Once
I'd recovered a bit, I continued:
“I
was a victim of child abuse. After it happened the first time I
reported it to my father and the school's headmaster and they both
let me down badly. The abuser was not punished, or removed from
contact with children. And I was abused repeatedly for the next five
years. I've just heard that the man has recently retired having spent
his entire career in charge of children. I dread to think how many
others have suffered at his hands.
“My
therapist helped me to understand that the reason I've not been able
to get over the feeling of betrayal after the committee members
conspired against me is that it links with the betrayal I still feel
from the adults who should have protected me as a child and didn't.
“I've
been trying to deal with all that since the therapy finished three
months ago. And I thought I was doing all right. I've found out some
things about myself that I'd never dealt with before. But I've had
to cut back a lot on my commitments because I find I no longer have
the energy or confidence to take on extra stuff. I know it wouldn't
take much to push me over the edge.
“Some
things have happened just this week that have added to my problems. I
walked out of my job yesterday after a row with the boss, and today
the elderly mother of a close friend has been rushed into hospital
and for a while we thought she might not survive.
“And
for the first time in twenty years of marriage, I'm cheating on my
wife!”
I'd
told him everything now, and I gave myself the luxury of crying
noisily for a few moments.
Mark
Taylor the policeman didn't say anything, he didn't even hand me more
tissues. I looked up at him and he showed me the box was empty. I
wiped my eyes on my sleeve.
“Now
you know why I'm such a mess. I hate my life, I don't know how I can
go on.”
At
last he spoke up:
“I'm
really sorry about your childhood experience. It was very wrong that
your attacker wasn't dealt with even though you'd reported him. How
old were you?”
“I
was thirteen when it started and eighteen when it finished, when I
left the school and the area.”
“I
can see how that would affect you for the rest of your life. I'm
really sorry. And now you've got to look for another job which is
always stressful. I was surprised you told me you're having an affair
– that doesn't quite seem like the action of someone suffering
depression.”
“I'm
not having an affair.”
“You
said you're cheating on your wife.”
“Not
cheating with someone, just cheating.”
“I
don't understand.”
“I've
realised that I'm gay.” I turned my face away from him, I couldn't
bear him to see the shame I was feeling.
“I've
been in denial about it all my life. It's one of the things that
became clear in therapy. I've never let myself consider the
possibility before, but when I got deeply depressed all the barriers
came down and I realised what I'd always hidden from myself and
everyone else.”
“And
you haven't told your wife? That's what you mean by cheating on her?”
“Yes.”
We
fell silent, sat together in the front of my car staring at the waves
at the shoreline reflecting the dramatic orange sunset above the
horizon, through the windscreen.
Gradually
my sobbing subsided. “Come on,” said Mark, “Lets take a walk
along the shoreline.”
Without
waiting for my response, he opened his door, swung his legs out and
removed his shoes and socks. He rolled his trouser legs up a few
inches and stood up, putting his shoes in the footwell before closing
the car door. I was still sat in the driver's seat numbly. He walked
around to my side, opened my door and swung me round, pointing my
feet out of the door. He crouched down, undid my shoes and took them
off, and then took my socks off for me. I found it a strangely
sensual experience. He cradled my heel in one hand and slid his other
hand up the back of my leg under my trouser till he got to the top of
my sock. Then he pushed the tips of his fingers into the sock and
slid his hand back down my ankle, easing the sock over my heel and
off my foot in one smooth gentle movement. And then he did it again
with the other foot. And he rolled my trousers up like he'd done with
his own.
He
stood up and held out a hand to help me out of the car. Holding his
hand awoke emotions in me that I wasn't expecting. I looked into his
eyes which were twinkling and smiling back at me and I began to smile
despite myself. His own smile broadened at the sight and as I came
upright he wrapped me in a bear hug which, after a moment of
paralysis, I returned. We stood like that for a minute or more and I
didn't cry.
The
hug came naturally to an end and we stepped apart far enough to see
each other's faces. I looked for a reaction from him, but he was
still smiling broadly.
I
had begun to feel better, and with that had come a question I needed
the answer to.
“Why
are you doing this?”
He
didn't answer so I tried again.
“Why
are you taking such an interest in me?”
“I
like you. I liked you as soon as I saw you. And I'm sorry for you.
But mostly it's because the world isn't so full of gay men that we
don't need to make friends where we can find them.”
“You're
gay too?”
“Yes,
didn't you work that out? Do you get hugged by a lot of straight
coppers?” He got a chuckle out of me with that.
He
took my hand.
“Come
on let's get our feet wet!” He ran towards the water, pulling me
along behind him. And when we got to the shoreline we walked
comfortably together along it, hand in hand. He talked about
inconsequential things, television programmes, weather, holidays, and
gradually I felt better. Life didn't seem so bad. I'd made a new
friend, someone I could talk to about being gay. I suddenly realised
how much I needed a friend like that. Mark.
We
walked for nearly an hour and when we got back to my car I was
smiling and laughing with him and I'd told him much of my life story
and he'd told me some of his. He had his sports bag in the boot of
his car, parked some yards behind mine, and he got a towel out of it
and dried my feet for me. I put my own shoes and socks back on and
then dried his feet for him. Mark has the most beautiful ankles I've
ever seen. Neat, trim, the hairs on his legs coming to an end at the
narrow ankle with the pronounced tendon running down to the heel. And
his feet have beautiful, elegant toes, each with a tiny tuft of hair
on top. Very kissable, I found myself thinking, surprising myself
since I'd never imagined wanting to kiss another man's feet. I could
kiss Mark's any time, though.
We
exchanged e-mail addresses and I gave him my mobile phone number,
he'd already given me his. Since then we've met up most Mondays,
usually at a pub where we have a pint together and talk for an hour
or two. He's introduced me to a few gay friends and I don't feel so
alone with my problem any more. I think I'm going to get through
this.
©
2007 Bruin Fisher
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