The Dairy State Boy, The Final
*****I remained committed to good friends and casual sex until I got with David, a handsome (he looked like Gonzo Gates, from the 80s "Trapper John, MD"), successful chemical engineer who scaled the walls surrounding my heart. I started dating David when I was 38, and we spent ten years together. They were a good ten years, but they were also a finite ten years. Hyper logical to a fault, David had decided that no romantic relationship should last more than ten years. I was his second, and he told me from the outset that he'd be leaving on our ten year anniversary. He never wavered, I never disbelieved or doubted him, and he was true to his word. The following is the story of my first hookup after he left.******
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When David left, I had to do all of the things he had done, most of which I had taken for granted after ten years together. He was the most organized person I had ever met, a spreadsheet for this and a spreadsheet for that.
On April 14, one of those things I had to do was waiting for the Clean Sweep technician to arrive and treat the chimney and fireplace.
When together, we had used the chimney as often as we could. We we ended, I continued to use it, as soften as I could.
We had known the end was coming. Having watched his parents fall out of love and then into hate, David had vowed as a teen that he would never allow that to happen to him.
He and Kyle had been together five years when my friend, Thomas, and I met them at a party. They were great together, the way so few couples are, mostly because they were in every moment kind to and about each other.
We didn't believe them when they insisted they would part ways on their tenth anniversary.
"They won't do it," we speculated.
"They're too good together," we assured ourselves.
David had tried to prepare us for their parting.
"I never want to end up hating someone I love," he answered. "I'd rather leave too soon than too late."
He was analogizing party guests to relationships. He would never accept that the analogy was inapt.
"Who says you have to leave at all?" I asked.
"I do. And the odds do."
David was true to his vow; he and Kyle parted ways on their tenth anniversary. They even had a Parting Party. Thomas and I cried. They did not. They celebrated, like it was the most normal thing. Then, they remained friends, even setting each other up on dates.
Kyle had set me up on one of those dates with David. "He's the best human I have ever met," Kyle claimed. "I have literally never heard him say an unkind word about another human."
We slept together after our first dinner, me needling him to come in for "just one drink" when he tried a chaste kiss on the cheek in the front seat of his sport car. Once I got him in the door, I threw myself at him in the sluttiest way. I didn't think I'd get a second date, so I wanted to end this one with a fireworks display.
"I never do that," I said the next morning, my backside sore, my sheets filthy with our fluids.
"Could've fooled me," he answered, kissing my nose.
Kyle was right. David was kind. But, Kyle had buried the lead; David was also great in bed. And, by great, I don't mean great great, I mean "holy crap, I never knew it could be like this" great and "now I finally understand what all the fuss is about" great.
After he kissed my nose, we went at it again. And again. And again.
He moved in that day. We didn't talk about it, he just never went back to his apartment. It operated as a storage unit for six months and then we closed it up and purchased a historic home on a quiet street.
"Are we really going to do this?" I asked, about ninety days out from our tenth anniversary, as happy then as I had been the day we went at it again and again and again.
"Yes," he answered, matter of factly, as if there was no reason not to. "We have to quit while we're ahead. So, I can keep on loving you, the way I have kept on loving Kyle."
He and Kyle were still very close. We all were.
Like him, I had been a bystander to a lot of relationship carnage. My sister's marriage had crumbled. She could barely speak to her former husband, even though they shared custody of four sons under the age of ten. The man she had once adored she now wanted dead, her hatred overwhelming her love of her sons.
Friends, too, met the same fate, whether gay or straight. Beautiful wedding days full of hope and promise turned into bitter divorces full of acrimony and animosity. Friends had to choose sides or got bartered to this spouse or that.
They weren't all that way, but there was so many it was hard to counter-point the logic of David's vow.
"I love you, V. I want to always love you. I don't ever want to hate or resent you."
"I'll miss you."
"I know. I'll miss you, too."
"Promise me we'll always be friends."
"We'll always be friends."
*****
David left everything behind, including our home and our two cats. We referred to them as "the kids."
The fireplace was one of the reasons we had purchased and then loved our home. It was massive, in a massive room, and we had used it whenever possible from Thanksgiving to Saint Patrick's Day. In his absence the past two winters, I continued to use it whenever possible, warming me as I tried to temper my loneliness with Tangeray and Tito's.
After a winter of use/over-use, the firebox needed to be cleaned and the chimney needed to be "swept," although the sweeping was really a vacuuming at this stage of the world.
The technician -- according to the text notifications, a man named Ray Varner -- was scheduled to arrive at nine, but Clean Sweep cautioned that his actual arrival could vary by two hours either direction. So, I was a up and dressed at seven, just in case, just like a former Eagle Scout would be. I needn't have been. Ray rang the bell almost precisely at nine.
I expected Ray to be a soft, middle-aged to older man, both because "Ray" seemed the name for such a man and because I couldn't imagine a young man finding himself a chimney sweep in 2022.
With that expectation, I was stunned to open the door to a stunningly handsome man of about thirty, wavy dark hair framing dark eyes, a smallish nose, bright red lips parted in a smile to reveal bright white teeth, a dimple on the left cheek unmatched on the right, and a hint of stubble, like he may have shaved last night instead of that morning.
I stood 6'0''. I had to look up to meet Ray's eyes. He must have stood 6'4" or a little more.