Having this affair with Anna was like being an undercover agent. But sometimes she thought she wouldn't want to bring it out into the open even if Anna would allow it. All their intrigue, some of it a bit exaggerated, was exciting. And because Anna always left her hungering for more, the yearning that Jude had learned as a child to label
love
was never quenched, so she never found out the answer to her original question of what might remain after satiation.
When she wasn't with Anna, however, Jude's imagination sometimes went into overdrive. Did Anna still see the women she had loved before Jude? Did Jude measure up, or did Anna pretend that Jude was someone else while they were making love? She pictured Anna at the Oasis Bar in the Village, picking up attractive young dog trainers from New Jersey, taking them back to her house near Washington Square (which she had never let Jude visit). She imagined Anna doing to them all the lascivious things Jude knew she was capable of.
But often when her thoughts took this gruesome turn, the doorbell would ring and Anna would be standing there with her arms full of lilacs. Or Jude's phone would ring during an editorial meeting at work and Anna would be on the other end, impersonating an obscene phone caller with a thick Polish accent, describing in lurid detail all the things she planned to do to Jude if Jude could manage to escape to her apartment within the next hour. This had gone on for over two years now, and Jude's only requirement was that it never end.
Simon, however, seemed eager for it to end. He kept proposing business trips he maintained were essential for Jude's career advancement. She always replied that she didn't want to leave town. Finally, he insisted that she go with him to the Frankfurt Book Fair. “Ten thousand publishers from all over the world, Jude. It's the most important publishing event of the year. You need to be there to make contacts for selling the foreign rights to your books. It's not fair to your authors not to go.”
“Thanks, but I have all the contacts I want,” she said from her desk chair as he lounged in her doorway at work.
“You have contact with me and with Anna. That's it. You'll never become a world-class editor by lying in bed day after day with the same person.”
“But I don't want to be a world-class editor,” she replied. “All I want is to be Anna's love slave.”
Simon laughed, despite his disapproval. “Please say you'll go with me to Germany for a week, Jude. If you do, I'll send you and Anna to the National Conference for the Teachers of English in Boston next month. To promote Anna's handbook.”
Jude instantly accepted this bribe. Anna had done a workbook to help secondary school English teachers establish student-poetry contests and anthologies on a local level, as she had done in New York City. If they went to this conference, they could at last spend an entire night together. Two nights, in factâin a strange hotel room with a king-size bed and room service.
Jude sulked her way through the Frankfurt Book Fair, hanging around her company's stand in the vast exposition hall while Simon met with a different publisher every half hour. In the evening, they went to elaborate cocktail parties and dinners with hosts of fascinating people, but Jude merely waited sullenly for the moment when she could rush back to her room at the Intercontinental and phone Anna in New York. Anna went to Jude's apartment at the end of each afternoon to receive this call. If she didn't answer, it meant she'd gotten tied up, and then they had to wait another twenty-four hours for their next hit of sweet nothings. After each call, Jude felt calmed and soothed, as though Anna's voice had injected her with heroin.
The only thing in Frankfurt that made any impression on Jude, other than the exorbitant price of phone calls to the United States, was a publisher from Paris named Jasmine, a friend of Simon's since childhood, whose father had fought with his during the war. The three of them dined one night in a brasserie near the train station. Jasmine was one of those elegant women Jude used to spot in the streets of Paris, as petite as Jude's mother, but with a presence as formidable as that of Charles de Gaulle. She was wearing huge, pale rose gem-stones at her ears and on one finger, as well as a beaten-silver Indian belt etched with intricate arabesques of fruit and flowers.
Simon ordered the three of them a dark German beer he found superior. As they sipped it, Jasmine studied Jude so intently with her dark eyes that Jude felt like bacillus under a microscope. But her eyes weren't critical, just curious.
Simon and Jasmine exchanged news about their respective families. Then they traded tips about the books being hawked and hyped at the fair.
“Tell Jasmine about your titles, Jude,” Simon instructed.
Jude described Anna's student-poetry anthologies and the new handbook. Jasmine seemed interested although dubious about whether such a self-help concept would float in France, given its centralized educational bureaucracy. Then Jude mentioned her history of the Knights Templars, due to appear the following spring, which seemed to leave Jasmine cold.
“And I edited
Forbidden Fruits,”
continued Jude. “It's a scholarly history of lesbianism from the Middle Ages to the present. It came out a year ago, to very good reviews. The paperback rights went for six figures, and so far we've sold rights to Holland, England, Sweden, and Germany.”
Jasmine nodded, exhaling a stream of cigarette smoke. “Ah, yes. I have heard good things about it from our scout in New York.”
She was still studying Jude carefully. Jude wondered whether she could read from her face that her only real interest in life was making love to another woman. If so, did this disgust her?
“Would you be so kind as to send me a copy?” asked Jasmine. “Though I am not certain such a book would sell in France. We prefer not to categorize our romantic behavior quite so succinctly as the Anglo-Saxons.”
Simon laughed and said, “But, Jasmine, many of the events in the book took place in Paris.”
“But this is not our fault,” she replied. “Repressed Protestants from all over the world flock to Paris to enjoy our supposed sexual license. These are the people you read about, debauching themselves on the Left Bank. But there is no specific word in the French language that means 'to have sex. âWe only âmake love.' And true Parisians are the most austere race you will ever encounter. The quality of an interaction is all that interests us, not frequency or quantity.”
“Garbage!” snapped Simon.
“But this is true,” insisted Jasmine. “Take those pastries as an example.”
Simon and Jude looked at the plate of exquisite apricot and marzipan tarts that they'd both been devouring with their coffee. But Jasmine hadn't taken even one. Simon guiltily held out the plate to her.
“But this is my point,” she said, fending them off with one hand. “I have been enjoying their scent of apricot and almond, mixed with the odor of the coffee. Mixed also with your aftershave, Simon. And with Jude's marvelous perfume. And with the tobacco of our cigarettes. I enjoy looking at them there, dark orange on the blue plate, topped with ivory slivers of almond. With that pot of yellow and orange narcissus behind them. I have eaten hundreds of similar tarts in my life, so I can taste in my mouth right now the contrast between the acid and the sugar. I feel on my tongue the stickiness of the fruit, the graininess of the marzipan, the crunch of the almonds beneath my teeth. So I have no need to eat one. The experience is complete as it stands.”
“But, Jasmine, tarts are made to be eaten,” retorted Simon. “That's their function.”
“Be my guest,” said Jasmine. “But if you eat one, you have destroyed it. And since the hunger for sweetness always returns, why not stop short of destroying the tarts and learn to enjoy instead the hunger that they stimulate.”
Simon and Jude looked at each other blankly.
“You know something, Jasmine?” said Simon. “You're a bleeding lunatic. I always suspected it, but now I know for sure.”
She laughed, and then she and he exchanged some witty, sophisticated double-talk in which it was impossible for Jude to tell what either was actually saying. Suddenly, Jude found herself wondering if Jasmine didn't perhaps share her taste for women. There had been a certain shrewd candor in her eyes as she so frankly inspected Judeâwhich you didn't often find in women who were primarily interested in how they might be appearing to whatever men were in the immediate vicinity.
For the first time since she'd gotten involved with Anna, Jude had actually listened to a conversation that didn't directly concern Anna. Nor had she excused herself to go to the ladies' room so she could close her eyes and picture Anna's face and whisper her name. Nor had she once consulted her watch to discover when she could return to the hotel and phone Anna. Realizing this, she felt guilty, as though she'd been somehow unfaithful.
As Jude and Simon strolled back to their hotel through the dark streets strewn with international publishers at play, Jude asked, “Is Jasmine a lesbian?”
“I don't really know. I've wondered the same thing. She has a husband somewhere, but I've never met him.”
“As we know, that means nothing.”
“I think the French are schizophrenic,” confided Simon. “They have a public self and a private self, and there's often an unbreachable chasm between the two. They veil their private selves behind a persiflage of charm and theorizing. But once a Frenchman reveals himself to you, you have a friend for life. In contrast to an American, who's your best friend after twenty minutes and then you never see him again.”
“And what about the English?” asked Jude. She was intrigued by the ease with which Simon and his European colleagues spoke in terms of national characteristics.
“We use our famous rapier wit to make sure that no one ever gets close enough to be a friend in the first place.”
“But that's not true,” said Jude with a laugh. “You're a wonderful friend to me, Simon.”
“But I emigrated, didn't I?”
J
UDE WAS SITTING DOWN
front in the ballroom of a hotel near the Boston Public Gardens, where Anna was delivering a pitch for her handbook to the assembled high school English teachers. She had warned Jude that she wasn't going to look at her from the podium lest she smile or blush. Jude, however, was looking at Anna, who was wearing the same mauve and forest-green wool suit from their first lunch. And she was recalling the marvels that lay just beneath that fabric of fine wool. She pictured Anna naked on the carpet in their room earlier that morning, hips swiveling lubriciously against Jude's thigh. And Anna sprawled in an armchair in the morning sun, robe fallen open, moaning softly like a purring cat, hands gripping Jude's head, which was buried between her thighs. It amused Jude to think that many of the teachers who were listening so admiringly to Anna's excellent presentation would be mortified to know how she'd passed the hour just prior to coming down here to speak to them on educating the youth of America. But how many among them, Jude wondered as she searched their attentive faces,
wouldn't
be mortified?
Jude's company had a stand in the adjoining hall, along with eighty other publishers. Each featured titles of interest to high school English teachers. An editor from her firm's textbook division was in charge of their display. Jude's only responsibility, Simon had informed her with a tiny, indulgent smile at last week's marketing meeting, was to keep Anna content. The promotion department had set up interviews for her after lunch and the next morning. Otherwise, they planned to remain in their room, working on Anna's contentment, pausing only long enough to tip the waiters from room service.
J
UDE WOKE UP THAT NIGHT
in the unfamiliar bed and reached over for Anna. But Anna's side of the bed was cold and empty. She waited for her to return from the bathroom, but she didn't. “Anna?” she called. There was no response.
Sitting up, she switched on the light. The clock on the bedside table read 1:30
A.M
. She climbed out of bed and padded into the bathroom. Still no Anna. Her plaid suit had vanished, but everything else remained. Jude paced the room, wondering what to do. She phoned the front desk, but the night clerk had seen no one matching Anna's description. Finally, she started putting on her underwear.
A key scratched around the lock. The door swung open and Anna walked in.
“Where have you been?” asked Jude, sitting on the bedside with a stocking half on.
Anna's expression turned furtive. “I had to find a phone.”
“How come?”
“I told Jim I'd call.”
“At one in the morning?”
“He stays up late.”
“But there's a phone right here.” Jude frowned, wondering what Anna had to say to Jim that Jude couldn't hear.
“I didn't want to wake you.”
“I wish you had. I've been worried.”
“I'm a big girl, Jude. I can take care of myself.” She sounded irritated.
Anna undressed in silence. For a moment, Jude wondered whether she'd met some alluring English teacher as she autographed books after her talk and had gone to her room for an assignation. Then she dismissed this as too ridiculous, with herself right there, ready to satisfy Anna's slightest whim. But maybe Anna missed the challenge of someone she wasn't sure she could have.
“Did you really have to call him right in the middle of our time alone together?” murmured Jude, sitting immobile on the bedside as she stared at the print on the wall of Paul Revere racing his horse across Concord Bridge.
“He's my husband, darling. He still has a few rights.”
“Yes, but he has you to himself most of the time.”
“If we're going to start complaining about the ghosts of loves past, what about that wax museum you carry in your heart? Sandy and Molly and God knows how many others.”