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our private skies, but if there were I can't remember them. The weeks slipped
by like the river, sparkling, luminous, full of enchantment.
And then came the last Saturday of September and, though till then we had
ignored the fact, a new chapter had to be opened.
Susan was coming back to the flat on Monday, I had the chance of a job, and
Derek was going up to Oxford. We pretended it would all be the same. I would
explain to Susan, and there would be weekends when I could go to Oxford or
Derek come up to London.
We didn't discuss our affair. It was obvious that it would go on. Derek had
talked vaguely of my meeting his parents, but he had never pressed it, and on
our Saturdays together there were always so many better things to do. Perhaps
I thought it rather odd that
Derek seemed to have no time for me during the week, but he played a lot of
cricket and tennis and had hosts of friends, all of whom he said were a bore.
I didn't want to get mixed up in this side of his life, at any rate not for
the present. I was happy to have him absolutely to myself for our one day a
week. I didn't want to share him with a crowd of other people who would anyway
make me shy. So things were left very much in the air, and I just didn't look
beyond the next Saturday.
That day Derek was particularly affectionate, and in the evening he took me to
the Bridge Hotel and we had three rounds of gins and tonics, though usually we
hardly drank at all. And then he insisted on champagne for dinner, and by the
time we got to our little cinema we were both rather tight. I was glad,
because it would make me forget that tomorrow would mean the turning of a new
page and the breaking up of all our darling routines. But when we got into our
little box, Derek was morose. He didn't take me in his arms as usual but sat a
little away from me and smoked and watched the film. I came close to him and
took his hand, but he just sat and looked straight in front of him. I asked
him what was the matter. After a moment he said obstinately, "I want to sleep
with you.
Properly, I mean."
I was shocked. It was his rough tone of voice. We had talked about it, of
course, but it was always agreed, more or less, that this would come "later."
Now I used the same old arguments, but I was nervous and upset. Why did he
have to spoil our last evening? He argued back, fiercely. I was being a
hard-boiled virgin. It was bad for him. Anyway, we were lovers, so why not
behave like lovers?
I said I was frightened of getting a baby. He said that was easy. There were
things he could wear. But why now? I argued. We couldn't do it here. Oh, yes
we could. There was plenty of room. And he wanted to do it before he went up
to Oxford. It would sort of, sort of marry us.
Tremulously I considered this. Perhaps there was something in it. It would be
a kind of seal on our love. But I was frightened.
Hesitantly I said had he got one of these "things"? He said no, but there was
an all-night chemist and he would go and buy one. And he kissed me and got up
eagerly and walked out of the box.
I sat and stared dully at the screen. Now I couldn't refuse him! He would come
back, and it would be messy and horrible in this filthy little box in this
filthy little back-street cinema, and it was going to hurt and he would
despise me afterward for giving in. I had an instinct to get up and run out
and down to the station and take the next train back to London. But that would
make him furious. It would hurt his vanity. I wouldn't be being "a sport," and
the rhythm of our friendship, so much based on us both "having fun," would be
wrecked. And, after all, was it fair on him to hold this back from him?
Perhaps it really was bad for him not to be able to do it properly. And, after
all, it had to happen some time. One couldn't choose the perfect moment for
that particular thing. No girl ever seemed to enjoy the first time. Perhaps it
would be better to get it over with. Anything not to make him angry! Anything
better than the danger of wrecking our love!
The door opened and there was a brief shaft of light from the lobby. Then he
Page 12
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was beside me, breathless and excited. "I've got it,"
he whispered. "It was terribly embarrassing. There was a girl behind the
counter. I didn't know what to call it. I finally said, 'One of those things [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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