The River at Night

But she didn’t.

Rory’s front screen unzipped; we heard the thump of bodies on canvas over hard dirt, more zipping. Pia giggled, the sound ringing up into the night like bells until she clamped down on it, but soon it was unloosed again and morphed into her signature cackle. We three lay there listening, helplessly, to a symphony we couldn’t escape. Pia’s laughter was cut by the low rumble of Rory talking, and I found myself straining to hear what he said, or any part of it. I caught something idiotic like his opinion on the best kind of boots to wear for stomping around in shit on the farms in aggie school, followed by something lower I didn’t catch that prompted another squeal from Pia.

Things got quiet and for a few seconds I thought we might be spared, but no. We had, without question, front-row seats at the opera of love. Just before the main event, I found myself straining to remember the last time I’d had sex, and it came to me as foreign and ancient as if it were someone else’s memory. Who: Richard (of course); when: summer, two years ago; where: a cheap hotel in Chatham after a wine-soaked afternoon on the beach; how: not very well—even then he’d felt far away from me, barely present in the room. Followed by a pinot grigio hangover like no other and not even sunset.

I slapped a mosquito on my forearm, shattering a momentary quiet in both tents. Sandra had curled herself into the corner of our tent, her arm flung over her ear. Rachel lay on her side, staring at Sandra’s spine. I stretched out on my back, watching the top of the tent as if it were a movie screen. On it played Pia and Rory getting it on. A sudden urge to laugh bubbled up in my chest, passed, then turned into a cough that ricocheted among the trees.

Soft moaning and more rolling and zipping followed the few quiet moments. My God, they might as well have been in the tent with us. We could hear them climbing the mountain, deep breaths followed by short bites of air, then back to slow. The night in its emptiness only amplified their sounds of lovemaking. What better way to fill it? Though keenly self-conscious and embarrassed (later I thought, Why? Was I the one screwing a twenty-year-old three feet away from my best girlfriends?), I also felt alive; that way of being in the moment that doesn’t waste time on reflection, and it was great to feel it, even though—hell!—I wasn’t the one being radically, inappropriately, wrongly, wonderfully fucked.

Rachel flipped over and got up to her elbows, glasses flashing in the darkness. “Doesn’t she know we can hear them?” she hissed.

Sandra said nothing. She had cocooned herself, feigning sleep.

The sounds stopped next door, but beneath the silence was a sense of gathering, and I could feel that old train climbing that old hill, just as the orchestra started up again in earnest, with much panting and shuffling. Pia cried out, evidently having herself a fine orgasm, one of those beauties launched from the darkest planet in the deep space of your spine, the kind that leave you hoarse and dizzy, that make your legs fall off and float away and that’s just fine with you.

Rachel dropped her head in her hands. Took off her glasses and rubbed her eyes. Some stray hair, black curls shot through with silver threads, popped loose from her ponytail. “Jesus H. fucking Christ,” she said loud enough for all the forest to hear. “This is ridiculous. I did not sign up for this.”

I smiled into my hands.

Whether or not Rachel had signed up for anything, after a brief pause the lovers started up their engines once again. I felt as if he were touching me, and part of me wished that were the case. And why not? I would have loved to fuck Rory too, to fuck the star-pinned sky, the shining moon, the trees full of birds, all of it. Instead I lay there in awe of their stamina and capacity for simply getting it on, again and again, as if this was what they’d come here for, as if they were the only two people on earth, as if this was the last time they’d ever get the chance.





Saturday


   June 23





13


How, when, and in what order we all lost consciousness I’ll never know, but I do know I was the first to emerge from either tent in the morning, leaving everyone else sleeping still and silent.

It felt like seven, maybe earlier. The ground under my feet squelched with rain that I’d evidently slept through. Now the sun glowed with a peach-colored light behind the mountains as I made my way to the river, dew soaking my long pants. As I walked, I recalled recent weekday mornings back home: the waking up full of dread, the shower that felt like violence, the dirge of what to wear and how much face to paint on, the subway ride with the rest of the undead.

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