“Rachel Murray,” Carey said. And then, sadly: “Murray-Carey will never work.”
Thirty minutes later I was pressed up against the stone wall of the old Butter Exchange while Carey went down on me from the inside of my coat. He had pulled down my tights so they pooled around my ankles, restricting my movement so much that I needed to keep my palms on his skull for balance.
I hobbled on my heels, the cold whipping at my face, the pleasure excruciating. My hands travelled down the nape of his neck, feeling out each notch of his spine. I must have looked ridiculous—knees buckling, bent over the man like I was trying to make a lower case n shape.
It was, as you know, not the first time a man had gone down on me. But this was not lying on my bed while a boy fidgeted about, my breasts getting cold as my mind became full of errands. For years straight women talked about men never eating them out, and now that they do it all the time, none of us want to admit that most of them are bad at it. They sucker on to your clitoris like a fish at the side of a tank, or they randomly poke about with their tongue. With Carey I felt like a shrine. He was going at this not like a person with a plan, but a person with a calling.
“My house,” I breathed, when he finally came up for air. “My house is like…three minutes away.”
“Why aren’t we there, then?”
“I don’t know,” I said, nuzzling my lips into his neck. “I don’t know.”
My attraction to him came on like food poisoning. We were walking up Shandon Street, arm in arm, chatting about Derry (“Carey from Derry!”) and what he was doing here (working at Apple) and how he was finding it (fine). I showed him the Shandon Bells, and he asked me if they woke me up in the morning. I said sometimes.
We looked up at the big fish, this strange landmark of north Cork, and we ran out of things to say. He put his hand on the small of my back, looked at me sideways. His eyes grey-blue. Mischief.
And then I was kissing him, holding his head like a cantaloupe, and his hands jumped around me in surprise, not knowing how to keep up.
I took him back to the house, my first real gentleman caller since Jonathan and I broke up. James wasn’t home, and I went through the exact steps I had heard him go through weeks before: flicking on the kettle, getting two cups out, making small talk about how long we had lived there, how much the rent was. Then he came up behind me, hands on my hips, mouth on my ear.
“You’re a fucking stunner. Did you know that?”
The clatter of the cups being pushed back, my bum on the counter, tights off. The counter was a great height for this kind of carry-on. It was far and away the best sex I had ever had, yet I couldn’t stop thinking about James and Dr. Byrne. The fact that they had been in this room—probably in this position, more or less—and that I had been upstairs trying not to overhear. I wonder if having them in my head made the sex that bit more extraordinary. It was an orgy while still being extraordinarily intimate, and exclusively me and Carey.
He was still wearing his jacket, a black pea coat that smelled badly of cigarettes, and I shuddered into the collar, my fingers digging into the lapels. I remembered what James said about this being his first second time. This was a first time for me, too. It was my first time having sex with a stranger, and it was the first real orgasm I’d ever had with another person in the room. Life felt very full, and very funny. There was a whole life of first times to have, first times I hadn’t even considered yet!
“Jesus,” Carey said, and I was relieved. He looked haunted. He was older than me, and obviously more experienced, but it hadn’t been an ordinary thing for him either. “Jesus. Fucking hell, Rachel. What was all that about?”
He said it like we were old friends, and I laughed, and dragged him up the stairs. There were Portuguese tarts left over from Dr. Byrne’s last visit, and I took them to bed with us.
Crumbs in my hair, sweet custard coating his mouth, I decided I would never again judge Fred Byrne for what he needed to do, regardless of his wife. It was easy, now that I understood passion properly, to see why you would move heaven and earth to secure it.
12
THE THING ABOUT me and Carey is that we were both dirty. By which I mean: we were both perverted, and we were both unclean. I bled on his sheets and the stain remained for the duration of our relationship. He met me from the bus once wearing sweatpants, a string vest, and swigging from a pint bottle of full-fat milk. He smelled like sweat and like someone who had been digging outside, though he had no garden. I loved it all. When we had sex I could taste the day on him. I walked around with my nose in my collar afterwards, catching pockets of his smell on myself.
Things got weird with us quickly. Not kinky exactly: we didn’t have the money for that. Kinky to me was suspenders and small, dishwasher-proof vibrators. But intense. We had a very soft way of asking each other to do obscene things.
“Let me run this knife against the inside of your leg, will you, Rache?” he said once, us both lying on his couch. The big kitchen knife was sitting on his coffee table, having been used to crumble up a small brick of hash the night before. He kissed me tenderly, his left hand stroking my hair, his right holding the cold blade against my skin while he moved inside me.
“Shh, shhh,” he said. “Don’t be frightened.”
It was, quite simply, fantastic.
Carey lived with two other guys near the Mercy hospital. My experience of them was having them suddenly arrive home while Carey and I were being degenerates. If we weren’t eating chocolate mousse from a vat intended for catering, we were having loud, odd sex. I should have been more embarrassed. There were previous iterations of my personality that would have been. But with Carey I discovered new depths of shamelessness, and I liked it. We didn’t need regular meals, or real sleep, or date nights. Our love had short fingernails. It was clawing and mischievous and it wrapped us in spit. I couldn’t pull myself away from it, so it amazed me when he could.
This was the problem. I could stay with Carey for as long as I wanted, but as soon as I left, it was hard to get back in again. Like a Grimms’ fairy tale, or a reverse Hotel California. Once, I spent three nights at his house, and when I ran out of underwear I finally moved to go home.
“Ah, don’t go,” he whined, wrapping his arms around my waist, his head on my stomach. “Who will I chat to?”
“You’ve got two perfectly good housemates.”
“They’re nerds.”
“Look, I’ll go home, get some new clothes, and come straight back. Okay?”
“Promise?”