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Alisa Kwitney
Alisa Kwitney Read online
sex as a
second
language
ALSO BY ALISA KWITNEY
On the Couch
Does She or Doesn’t She?
The Dominant Blonde
ATRIA BOOKS
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2006 by Alisa Kwitney
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Atria Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kwitney, Alisa, date.
Sex as a second language : a novel / Alisa Kwitney.
p. cm.
1. Divorced women—Fiction. 2. Middle-aged women—Fiction. I Title.
PS3611.W58S495 2006
813'.6—dc22 2005055895
ISBN: 1-4165-1649-2
ATRIA BOOKS is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com
This book is for Holly Harrison,
my non-resident adviser since sophomore year
at Wesleyan
PART ONE
openings
and closings
Opening a conversation and bringing a conversation to an end are essential parts of our everyday language. You already know how to say hello and good-bye, but in this lesson you will study in more detail how Americans perform these functions. You might notice some similarities, as well as some differences, if you compare American conversation openings and closings with those in your native culture.
—SPEAKING NATURALLY:
COMMUNICATION SKILLS IN AMERICAN ENGLISH
chapter one
y ou’re too young to retire from sex.”
“But I’m too old to put up with all the bullshit that’s involved,” said Kat, leaning back in her chair and crossing her legs. “Besides, the only men I find attractive are the ones I’d be insane to get involved with.”
This comment received a mixed review from her friends—a wry smile from Zandra, a look of concern from Marcy. Shit. Kat had learned the hard way that if she didn’t present her depression in a sufficiently amusing manner, she’d wind up having to sit through a steady barrage of unsolicited advice. See a therapist. Take an evening course. Try the new generation of mood-altering drugs.
Yet as much as Kat longed to avoid being on the receiving end of any more prepackaged wisdom, she wasn’t sure that she could sustain the requisite level of wit to satisfy her friends. Her feet were sore from walking ten blocks in three-and-a-half-inch heels and her head was beginning to throb from the drone of fifty other peoples’ dinner conversations.
“But Kat,” said Marcy, “the last time you were single was ten years ago. Are you saying your taste in men hasn’t changed at all?”
“Well, I no longer fantasize about Kevin Costner.”
“No, seriously. Let’s talk about what would attract you now.” There was a look of missionary eagerness on her pretty, fine-boned features.
“Marcy, I beseech you, no in-depth analysis.” Underneath the table, Kat surreptitiously slipped out of her stilettos. “How about a nice, safe topic, like the pros and cons of government-sponsored torture?”
“Very funny.” Zandra reached for her martini, jangling the silver bracelets on her arm. “Am I allowed to mention that there’s a guy over at that table who’s checking you out?”
Kat tucked her bare feet under her chair. “You always think men are checking us out. He’s probably looking for a waiter.”
In contrast to Marcy, who seemed to have lost all her fashion sense, Zandra was improving with age. Ten years earlier, when they’d first become friends while watching their toddlers in the playground, Zandra had concealed her hair in bandannas and her body in baggy overalls. Then, sometime last fall, Zandra had stopped trying to restrain her abundant curls and started wearing fitted clothes that flattered her generous, hourglass figure. Not surprisingly, her transformation had coincided with the advent of a new man in her life. Well, not actually in her life, Kat thought, since the man only made sporadic guest appearances. But it was this very unpredictability that kept Zandra on constant French-bra-and-matching-panties alert.
Marcy, on the other hand, had gone from gamine short hair and funky vintage dresses to a lank bob and shapeless designer shifts. Looking at her now, Kat could hardly recognize the bohemian waif she’d met fifteen years earlier in a summer Shakespeare production. It was a classic case of mommification, but in Marcy’s case, she hadn’t managed to have the child yet.
Thinking about it made Kat realize that she probably needed a style overhaul herself. She’d been wearing the same tailored, mannish chic for over a decade.
“No, he’s definitely looking at you, Kat,” said Zandra, gesturing with a toothpicked olive. “See, the blue shirt, over there?”
Kat wondered if she should try something different with her hair. Layer it? Lighten it? Cut it all off? “I see him.”
“You’re not even looking, Kat.”
“I’m using my peripheral vision. Not my type.”
Zandra looked skeptical. “And what exactly is your type?”
“Borderline.” Now that her divorce was almost final, Kat was aware that her friends felt she ought to be past the stage of obsessive thinking and intense bitterness. Without ever saying so directly, Zandra and Marcy had let Kat know that there was a rough timetable for adjusting to breakups. After six months, Kat had reached the point where she was expected to provide a few sardonic anecdotes about her soon-to-be ex, as well as some fresh tidbits of carnal misadventure with new, prospective mates.
But she couldn’t find the motivation necessary to give a convincing performance. Kat no longer believed she would discover some magical fit with a man. Sure, if she looked hard enough, she could probably find a partner for some mutual genital friction, but she’d given up all hope of someone taking her through the hot, sweaty crucible of transformative sex.
Kat turned to Zandra. “Why don’t we talk about your love life? Are you still seeing the semi-famous guy?” As the man in question was also semi-married, Zandra had kept his identity a secret.
“We’re taking a break right now. He says he needs some time to be on his own and figure out what he wants.”
Translation: He was blowing her off. Kat tried to think of a tactful way of putting this. “I hate to say it, but I think you’d better brace yourself. When men say that, they almost never decide that what they really want is more intimacy.”
Zandra lifted her chin a fraction. “Well, I’m not as certain as you are that it’s all over. But you don’t see me just sitting around, refusing to meet anyone new.” This was true enough. Zandra believed that romance came to those who pursued it, and her quest for an enlightened partner seemed to entail a never-ending array of workshops with titles such as Tantric Vegan Cookery and Spirit Guide Hiking.
Marcy, on the other hand, had been dating the same passive-aggressive underachiever for seven years. As far as Kat could tell, his main attraction was that he gave Marcy something to complain about.
“And how are you and Steve doing, Marcy?”
“We’re talking about going to Iceland this winter.”
“Iceland? In winter?”
“It’s actually supposed to be very pretty, and not as cold as people think.” Also, Kat assumed, it was cheap. Steve was a forty-two-year-old struggling jazz m
usician, and his refusal to stop temping and get a steady job meant that he lacked the funds to travel anywhere nice with Marcy, let alone get married and have a child with her.
“So, what do you do on a winter vacation in Iceland?”
Marcy stirred her martini. “Well, there’s supposed to be a fabulous nightlife.”
Which meant that Marcy was going to wind up alone in her hotel room while Steve drank himself into a stupor. Looking at Zandra (trying too hard in an African beaded choker and low-cut red blouse) and Marcy (not trying hard enough in a gray velvet chemise), Kat wondered why the hell she’d been voted the sick puppy of their trio. She also wondered how long she had to stay before pleading a headache and heading back home.
Adding to Kat’s general feeling of malaise was the fact that the restaurant, Carnivore, was dark and hot and packed tight with college students and young professionals, all bombarding one another with flirtatious pheromones.
Kat couldn’t even get her drink refilled, as the waitstaff were making only brief appearances at each table before vanishing into the back, presumably to play a hand or two of poker before returning.
Zandra had said that a night out was just what Kat needed. If grouchy was an improvement on miserable, then her plan was working.
“Where is our waitress, anyway?” Kat scanned the room. “We should never have told her we needed another minute to make up our minds.”
“Speaking of making up one’s mind,” said Zandra, “have you decided what you want to do about your birthday next week?”
“Yes,” said Kat. “Ignore it.” It wasn’t the fact of leaving her thirties that disturbed Kat. The way she saw it, she was still youthful enough to wear her hair long and her jeans low, yet old enough to know not to flash her thong when she sat down. After spending much of her twenties in open auditions, Kat no longer fretted about her looks, her talent, or her ability to withstand rejection.
But with her personal and professional lives on hold, Kat wasn’t quite in the mood to celebrate the fact that her life was now approximately half over.
“But Kat, you can’t just ignore the big four-oh,” said Zandra. “Marcy and I were talking about throwing you a surprise party, but we decided you’d probably kill us.”
“Oh, dear God. Promise me you aren’t going to do anything like that. You aren’t, are you? This isn’t some elaborate deception where you pretend to be really frank and open while secretly plotting to confront me with a cross section of my past?”
Marcy put her hand on Kat’s arm. “Are you having feelings about reaching middle age?”
Kat laughed. “Yes, I feel this incredible urge to go buy elastic pants and start shopping in bulk. No, Marcy, I’m not depressed about getting older. In fact, I kind of like the fact that for the first time in over twenty years, there isn’t a man in my life and I don’t care.”
“Of course you don’t need a man in your life,” said Zandra. “But I get the impression that you’ve closed yourself off. I hate the idea that your experience with Logan has made you hate all men.”
“Oh, Zandra, please.” Kat pushed away from the table, her chair scraping along the floor. “Listen, it’s not that I hate men. I don’t. In fact, there are many ways in which I prefer them to women. Men tend to be more direct than women, more decisive and goal-oriented. I like the fact that men seem to worry less than women about other peoples’ opinions. And, since I am heterosexual, I do find myself physically attracted to them from time to time.”
Zandra raised her eyebrows. “Okay, if you admire them so much, then explain why you’ve decided to keep them all at arm’s length.”
“Because,” Kat said firmly, “I don’t trust men. I figure it’s best to keep a lion tamer’s attitude—you never know when the other half of your act is going to forget its training, revert to instinct, and bite the hand that feeds it.”
“So you assume that all men are going to wind up disappointing you,” said Marcy.
“It’s a safe assumption. If you’re married long enough, you should expect periodic unreliability, chronic disappointment, even an occasional lapse in faithfulness. In fact, just to be on the safe side, I always figured it was best to have a few flirtations going on the side. I didn’t actually sleep with any of them, but it reassured me to know that if Logan ever did cheat on me, I’d know where to go.”
“Wait a second. You never said anything about this before.” Marcy leaned forward. “Who were they?”
“My trainer, an old college friend, and the carpenter who built our living room bookcases.”
“But you didn’t actually have physical contact with them?”
“Well, there was a lot of meaningful stretching with the trainer, and my old friend gave me a foot massage. But no sex. And now that I’m single, I don’t find any of them appealing anymore.”
“Did you ever wonder if you might have protected yourself too much?” There was an expression in Zandra’s eyes that Kat couldn’t quite read. “Do you think maybe part of the problem was that you made yourself emotionally unavailable to Logan?”
Kat shook her head. “I’m sorry, no, I’m not buying that. Maybe I didn’t trust Logan completely. The way I see it, intimacy is a pretty hazardous occupation, and you’d have to be delusional not to know that you can wind up getting hurt. I just never anticipated the extent of Logan’s betrayal.”
“But you were always complaining that your marriage wasn’t working,” said Zandra, her tone almost accusatory.
“And he kept saying that I was being too negative! Still, I can accept that he’d want to leave me without any attempt at working things out. But it would never have occurred to me in a million years that Logan could just walk away from his only son. Do you realize that it’s been over four months now without so much as a phone call or an e-mail? Four months!” Kat paused to take a slug of her drink and wound up draining the glass. “You know what? On second thought, maybe I do hate men.”
There was a moment of uncomfortable silence, saved by the appearance of their waitress.
“How are you doing, ladies? Need any more drinks, or are you ready to order?” She paused, peering at Kat. “Hang on a moment. Didn’t you used to be on that show…what was it called again, it’s on the tip of my tongue…”
“She was Helen Jessup on South of Heaven,” said Marcy. Kat kicked her in the shin with one stockinged foot.
“Oh, my God!” The waitress stared at her, wide-eyed. “The bitchy rich girl, right? I used to watch that. You hired North Sullivan to investigate kidnapping threats, but it was just a ploy to keep him away from your sister.” The waitress gave her a thorough visual assessment. “Your face looks great.”
Was this a compliment or a suggestion that she’d been nipped and tucked? Kat decided she didn’t want to know. “Thanks.”
“I’ve tried out for a few of the soaps, but so far, nothing. Not even a day part.” The waitress was young, a dyed blond, with a large jaw and a blotchy complexion. Kat wondered if she was supposed to say something encouraging.
“It’s a tough business,” she murmured, remembering how much she had hated people telling her that when she was younger.
“But what can I do to improve my odds?”
Kat decided to be truthful. “Well, you’re not conventional-looking. That can be a problem—you’re not quite ingenue material, but you’re a little too young and sexy for most character roles. If you gained some weight, you might be able to land a quirky first role that would allow you to…”
“Right. Well, I’ll come back when you’re ready to order.”
“But we are ready…” Kat began, but the waitress was already storming off, indignation in every bounce of her lithe, young body.
“Great going, Kat,” said Zandra. “Ever consider laying off the truth serum?”
“She wanted advice. What was I supposed to do, lie?”
“Kat, there are times when it’s kinder not to be honest.”
“Oh, please. That’s such a cop-out.”
/>
“So what good did it do to tell the waitress what you really thought? Now she’s hurt and insulted and we’re not going to get decent service.”
Reaching under the table, Kat slipped her feet back into her high heels. “You know what? I think I’m going to call it a night.” Wincing a little, she fished a twenty out of her purse and laid it beside her drink.
“Oh, come on, Kat, don’t be so dramatic.” Zandra tried to hand Kat her money back. “Sit down, we’ll get another drink. The waitress is bound to come back eventually.”
“I’m not being dramatic, I have a blister on my foot.” Kat pulled on her navy blue French Officer’s coat. “Look, I’m just a little tired tonight. Enjoy yourselves. I’ll call you tomorrow.”
“Are you going to be all right?” Marcy looked so concerned that, for a moment, Kat worried that she was doing something socially inappropriate.
“Of course I’m going to be all right.”
“Come on, Miss Diva,” said Zandra, patting her seat. “Sit your butt back down. If that shithead Logan’s still bugging you this badly, then damn it, we’ll talk about him.”
“It’s not that. Look, we’ll talk tomorrow. Marcy, I suppose I’ll see you at work?”
“Actually, I’m teaching the afternoon and evening classes this session. But we can still meet for lunches.”
“Sounds great.” As Kat made her way through the obstacle course of chairs and tables and busboys, she was aware of her friends’ eyes on her. Well, she thought, now they’re free to analyze my inert sex life. It occurred to her that she had just cemented her position as the odd one out.
Which was strange. Without considering it before, Kat had always thought of herself as the axis of their trio. She was the one the other women called. She was the one who’d brought them all together.
When had it changed? Thinking it over, Kat realized that there was no precise date, but at some point during the past six months her friends had drawn away from her and closer to each other.
Outside the restaurant, Kat paused to ask one of the smokers standing on the threshold for a cigarette. Was her reaction to the divorce really that inappropriate? Not as far as Kat could see. She exhaled a plume of smoke into the soft October night, thinking that, from now on, she would have to make more of an effort to conceal her feelings from her friends.