American Purgatorio Read Online Free Page B

American Purgatorio
Book: American Purgatorio Read Online Free
Author: John Haskell
Tags: Contemporary, Adult
Pages:
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various transfers of title, I tried to postpone the moment of payment as long as possible, talking with Mike about his thirty-two-year-old 1970 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, waiting for her to emerge from the house, not bikini-clad, but somehow revealing her transformation. But she didn’t emerge. And yes, I was slightly disappointed, but only slightly. I realized that it didn’t matter anymore about the person who had owned the car. It was my car now, and with it I had the ability to move forward.
    I paid Mike and agreed to let him get the car, a Nissan Pulsar, “ready for the road.” I would soon be taking a trip in which I would find Anne and bring her back, and for all I knew, it would be a long trip and I wanted the car in good condition. As I followed Mike to his garage I imagined Anne sitting in the front seat next to me. Like an amputee with a lost limb, I felt her and wanted her reconnected. And because desire breeds hope, I was optimistic. Anne was my object and my direction (my future) and I would use the car to find her. She was the woman who’d been separated from me, the woman I loved. And I say thank god for pride because pride was the soil out of which my belief was growing. Not only did I want to find her, but I would find her. Somewhere along the way the seed had been planted that this was the car in which what I wanted to happen (my belief) would become reality.

5.
    I’m thinking of a specific moment, six months earlier. It’s a cloudless September morning. Light comes from the upstairs windows and we’re lying in bed, still partly asleep. We open our eyes, reach out, and we find each other, warm and naked. We stretch our legs, untangling ourselves from the sheets, and in this way the day begins. You (the responsible one) get up first. You throw off the comforter and as you crawl over me I try to spank you. I hear you peeing in the bathroom. You wrap yourself in a robe and announce that we’re going to have breakfast in bed. I can hear your steps on the stairs and I can smell the coffee brewing and the toast toasting and I arrange the pillows. I transform them into backrests so that when you bring up the wooden tray with the cups of coffee and plates of buttered and honeyed toast there’s a space for you under the covers. And there we sit, looking out at the trees and beyond them to other trees, and talking. In the distance, dark smoke rises into the sky, but because we’re talking—I forget what about—nothing matters except the two of us. We’re talking about nothing and everything, letting our words, warmed by the coffee, come up from inside us. After the coffee comes the kissing. I kiss you and you kiss me, and in our kissing we release the memories of all our accumulated kisses. And like happy rats in a maze the kissing brings up more than memories. I glide down along your body, warm and forgiving, full of sensation and blood, and I do what I do and you do things, and our embrace just happens. Seemingly. We do nothing, wrapping ourselves around each other and through each other, both inside and outside, following and leading, bringing each other to the metaphorical precipice of pleasure, balancing on that delicate ledge as long as possible, moving back and forth from the edge of that ledge, then falling off. And after another sip of coffee we silently pull the comforter back up over our bodies. Usually you put your head into the crook of my arm but today is different. Today I curl up and rest my head on your slightly damp stomach. Actually a little lower than your stomach. I want you to breathe easily so I place my head partially on your belly and partially on your pubic bone. I close my eyes and I can feel your breath, rising and falling under me. Maybe we fall asleep, I don’t remember, but we lie like this until, after a while, I feel you sliding out from under my head. You get up, get dressed, and start your day. But I don’t move. I
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