intervening time between our first words and these were forgotten.
âThought Iâd go up with Mary, Helen and Mike. Is that OK with you?â
âShould be.â
âThanks.â
That was that. Holiday fixed. Well nearly: just before we left, Helen and Mike decided they wanted time by themselves, so they packed a tent and headed south. Mary and I travelled north for a week together before the Christmas and wedding onslaught. It was our first time back since the fateful holiday the year before and our golden moment on the beach. The bach was a mythical place for us now, our private Shangrila where dreams came true. The moment we arrived everything in our lives was how it should be. This was a perfect moment of first love. We sat and watched the sun set, casting an orange glow across the bay and sea. All was gentle, even the smallest flick of surf on the beach. It would be hard to think of a more sublime moment.
âThis is amazing.â Mary propped her legs on the glass coffee table in the middle of the room and sipped a glass of wine. Her body nuzzled into my side and she felt as soft as the picturebefore us, just as I had dreamt of her as I sat in the cold of Mrs Greyâs front room.
I merely nodded. Even speaking might doom the moment and break my happiness.
âCan I ask you something, Jack?â
I managed a grunt, but already I was aware of perfection slipping.
âDonât be angry.â
âI promise.â I was immediately on my guard. What dangers lurked in this simple request? I felt her body tense.
âDo you find meâ¦boring?â
I almost laughed with relief. âOf course I donât. What on earth makes you think like that?â
âI mean intellectually boring.â She moved away so she could turn to look at me. âItâs just that you are so, well, bloody clever and Iâm so average. Do you find it difficult, I mean a strain, to be with me? Do you feel like you have to lower yourself to my standards, to my level?â She paused and noticed my smile. âJack, Iâm serious. Caroline said something to me and itâs kind of freaked me out.â
âWhat did she say?â
âBasically that youâd tire of me and when you did, youâd leave.â
âMary, I promise, I donât find you the least bit boring.â
âHow can I be sure of that, Jack?â
âI donât sit here thinking about questions Iâd like to ask you or subjects to discuss and then say, âShit, this is Mary, so thereâs no point in asking.â Come on, Mary, it doesnât work that way. Iâm with you because I love you. Iâm not looking for an intellectual equal, Iâm looking for someone to love.â
âThere, you said it, Iâm not your equalâthatâs what you think.â She stood up and walked from the room. Moments later I watched her stride along the beach with the comical waddle of someone trying to walk through sand quickly. She looked like a cartoon character: all movement but no gain.
She returned an hour later and sat in the chair opposite, one leg lazily dropped across the arm. âI think that was our first argument.â
âI think so.â I went to her. âYou know I donât think like that about you, Mary. Come on, would I be here if that was how I felt about you?â I smiled thinly at the top of her head as I kissed it. My words sounded cheap and hollowâand they were.
The holiday passed without further comment on Maryâs intelligence. That night we kissed and made love to heal the wound of our argument and the subject was closed. However, a shadow was cast and although we ignored the darkening when we were together I had no doubt Mary was as aware of it as I was. The near perfection of the return to the bach was broken and could never be mended.
Mary returned to the maelstrom of wedding arrangements and the plethora of small arguments turned
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