***A Tale Of Two Women- The Saga Of Sam
Lowell-Take Two
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Melinda Loring sat across the high-back
cafĂ© table from Sam Lowell at Rummy Jack’s up in Old Hampstead one chilly March
afternoon (that’s in New Hampshire not far from where she lived) with a frown on
her face (a permanent Sam sometimes thought but he would not utter that
sentiment this day). She was speaking to Sam, without rancor (or maybe better
with controlled rancor, yes, that would be a better way to put the matter) and
without malice softly, as was her manner, as she told Sam that he had “two
women now, whether he liked it or not, whether he recognized the situation or
not.” And that short precise statement set the tone for that afternoon, and for
the slippery slope downward that brought their affair to an end so that at last
notice they had not spoken to each other, had not e-mailed each other in
months. But we had better step back in this Melinda-Sam saga before we go
forward where those words of Melinda will get more play than one Samuel Lowell,
North Adamsville High School Class of 1964 could have imagined when he decided innocently
that he wanted in on his class’s 50th anniversary reunion
celebration.
Naturally one does not wind up at Rummy
Jack’s having a late lunch with one woman (of that “spoken of ” two but more on
number two later), one old classmate to boot, without some discussion of their pre-history,
some discussion of how that insistent “two women” comment came forth from
Melinda’s mouth, since this pair had not known each other back in high school
(although Sam had given her many furtive glances in the corridors back then,
had made something of a science out of those glances, she just ignored him, or
better, was clueless about who he was and what he was doing to “connect” with
her back then. That however never stopped those furtive glances of his back then
or later whenever he was interested in a woman, no way). They had only recently
connected via the class website established by the class reunion committee (of
which Sam had become a part before he “met” Melinda on the site).
That off-hand class website “meeting”
turned from a simple welcome on Sam’s part as “unofficial” greeter as classmates
became members of the site where he remarked when she joined about those long
ago furtive glances of his and a short comment about how guys he respected told
him that Melinda was “unapproachable” and he had moved on into a frantic
furious exchange of e-mails when they found that while they had not known each
other back then they shared many academic, social, political, literary and
personal connections and interests. (Wondering, both wondering, aloud in
those frantic e-mails, he had made her laugh with their urgency once when he
said that he hoped they would not run out of cyberspace, why the hell they had
not met back then). The frantic e-mails eventually led to frantic cellphone
calls (she liked his voice, liked his soft-spoken-ness, he liked her fresh
spirit, her organized sense of things) which naturally led to that first date
where she called him in an emotional moment of delight (prematurely, very
prematurely, as it turned out) her “forever” man and he, a little slower on the
uptake than she and more neutral about that first date (although when she took
his arm walking he did not flinch, liked her boldness so early) was smitten
with her after the second date. (They both remarked in the inevitable later e-mail
or cellphone call that their parting that night was hard neither wanting to
leave the other after big hugs and he caressing her hair to comfort her when
she teared up.)
Well first date, second date, “forever”
man, smitten all added up to going under the satin sheets together. (Even that occurrence
although both thought the event inevitable when they both believed they affair
was written in the stars had a certain unintended drama, a false start when he
had invited her to his hotel room one night, before they actually did the “do
the do”-their term borrowed from a Howlin’ Wolf song.) All along in those
fierce devoted weeks there was an upward curve that one could almost trace with
one’s finger but also a slight tension underlying their plans for the future.
Sam, thinking about it later though the whole curve seemed impossible, seemed
impossible that they could move so quickly, especially on her part since she
was organized sensible one of the two, no question. Then the other shoe fell.
See Sam was smitten, but he was also
conflicted, was not sure where he wanted the relationship to go. Was not sure
he and Melinda had staying power. Hell, was not sure about how he felt about
Laura. Laura? Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you the name of the second woman
before. Sam had had a long- time relationship with Laura, a companion whom
Melinda was aware of and who Sam said to her had become, after having been
lovers for a number of years, something like roommates. See they shared a house
together down in Whelan (in Massachusetts which is where he lived and which was
one of the points of contention between Sam ad Melinda since she wanted him to
come up and live with her in New Hampshire). Well that “roommate” explanation
is what he gave Melinda to believe, and he confessed to her later that he
thought that was the right designation then, but as the Sam-Melinda
relationship developed he had confront the fact that he had stronger feelings
for Laura than he let on to Melinda. Had developed some “cold feet” when the
idea of breaking up the Sam-Laura household came into the open. Came into the
open as Melinda pressed the issue of Sam’s leaving his old relationship. Cold
feet not because he was unsure of Melinda so much as that he would be leaving
his “comfort zone” to be with Melinda and and was unsure how much he wanted to
spent a lot of time up in the Podunk New Hampshire town where she lived. The stars
were becoming unaligned.
It does not take a great literary mind,
a great knowledge of human psychology, or even a treasure trove of common
sense, to know that nothing but trouble was brewing, brewing up a storm that would
not subside until there was not common language that Sam and Melinda could
speak to each other. Naturally Melinda, a woman who had been twice divorced,
twice divorced under trying circumstances where she had to initiate the
proceedings and wanted only one “forever” man and her to be his forever woman.
She had made it clear from the beginning that she was a “one man woman” and
that she wanted no fling and no affair but the real deal with all the bells and
whistles or nothing (although not marriage, not that institution which she had
had enough of, thank you).
She worked her understanding of their
relationship under that strategic imperative all through their few months
together, pressing Sam as often as she could about when he was going to leave
Laura (at one point suggesting that he just move out of Whelan and get a place
of his own if he was not ready to live with her). See she had her plans for Sam
and they did not include any kind of three-some, in reality her as the “other”
woman (truthfully Sam did not want that either) or some such “modern”
arrangement. Sam hemmed and hawed but as he got more interested in Melinda, got
a better sense that she would be good for him, would be good in a way that Laura
and he could not do anymore, got more committed to leaving Laura since they had
hit a very serious dry patch in their relationship he would still have
recurring second thoughts. One night he yelled out to Melinda (after having said
the exact words to Laura earlier in the day) that he had “given up” on Laura and
he said he was just waiting for an excuse to move on. Melinda meanwhile was
getting more and more anxious about putting a life for of them together (they
after all were not sixteen, although they both laughed that in some ways they
were acting like that, had not outgrown some teenage quirks) and time was an
enemy. And that urgency on Melinda’s part brought them to Rummy Jack’s that
cold march afternoon after they had exchanged a couple of acrimonious e-mails
and decided they needed to meet quickly face to face to hash things out, or
split if that was in the cards. That split perspective came out in the open for
the first time. And hence Melinda’s opening statement.
Sam, when he thought about the break-up,
thought about it constantly for a while, had never been sure about the what or
why of Melinda’s breaking off the affair shortly after that lunch (and after
another series of acrimonious e-mails and cellphone calls). Was not sure at all
on that subject beyond the tense arguments at the end (including at Rummy Jack’s
where they almost got into a yelling match there and later while
walking the beach to try and calm down using the ocean waves to smooth things
out, if possible) and one ill-advised e-mail where he proposed that they become
“friends” for a while. (An ill-advised e-mail which she called a “closing argument”
and he a “love letter” to show how far apart they had were then.) That abrupt
ending bothered Sam considerable over the next few months while he
absent-mindedly speculated that she might had decided to go back with man who
she had dropped when she took up with him, might have had enough of the “two
woman” drama (as had he), or maybe just got her own version of cold feet but in
any case she would not answer his calls, answer his e-mails for an explanation
except to tell him not to call or e-mail any longer.
Prior to this final dismissal Melinda had
kept putting him off for a couple of weeks, told Sam they should be apart
that long to see if she felt the same after that time and if so would close the
whole thing off. But this is what really had (has) Sam more confused than
anything because he had actually told Laura he was leaving her for Melinda
during this period when Melinda was in the process of dumping him (his word,
she called it “breaking off the relationship,” I favor Sam’s term).
Fortunately, or so he thought so later when he had calmed down enough to think rationally
about the situation and realized that was just another aspect of those second thoughts
that had plagued their relationship, he had hedged his bets with Laura, had
sensed that Melinda’s decision would be negative, and made that leaving of
their joint household in Whelan conditional on what Melinda’s final decision
was to be.
Naturally Laura was not thrilled with
Sam behavior. Hell, she was as angry as he had ever seen her since all along he
had downplayed his affair with Melinda declaring one night when she confronted
him that they were “just friends.” Almost left the house right then and there when
he explained the real situation with Melinda. Laura, a soft-spoken, pacifistic
woman almost hit him on another later night when Sam
burst out during one conversation that he had “two women” and had unfortunately
said it with a certain dramatic flair saying in such a way like “what is a guy
to do with such good luck.” She would bring that remark up constantly to him
when after Melinda’s decision to split became final and Sam in a desperate
effort to salvage his long-time relationship with Laura and not face the wicked
old world alone begged her forgiveness they decided that they would stay
together. She would bring the remark up to friends to embarrass him, to make
him seem the fool having “left” Laura for, ah, a “never” woman. Made it plain
that he only had only had one woman now. Or else.
But see that is where Laura was wrong,
where the ghost of Melinda really had the last laugh. After Melinda dumped him
he kept constantly thinking about her, tried to unsuccessfully contact her a
couple of times before letting the efforts fade out. Thought, alongside that
confusion about why Melinda decided to dump him, about ways and times when they
might try to reconcile in his head. Thought, almost daily, about what a fool he
had been to tell Laura he was leaving without a better understanding of Melinda’s
actions, how Melinda had made a fool of him dumping him just when he had decided
in her favor, about how foolish he had been to hem and haw over Melinda when he
knew their thing was written in the stars, and would get angry at the thought
that Melinda for all her words, all her plans, was not built for tough times as
he had thought. Alternatively he would think about that first night of love
together giggling like two teenagers, of times when they talked and talked all
night heads next to each other just to be together, of the times when she took
his arm and he caressed her hair to comfort her, and of little things she did
to make him happy which he didn’t appreciate nearly enough.
For a long time afterward on many
lonesome-hearted nights when he would be sitting with Laura talking over dinner
he would be thinking of Melinda, thinking about how their thing had really been
written in the stars after all and that he had made a mistake in not trying
desperately to keep her when he had the chance. Would find himself thinking
about Melinda in lots of situations and at strange times. Would get kind of
swoony, would make up ways in his head about fantasy reconciliations. Yeah, so
in the dark of night, some sweaty summer night when he could not sleep Sam
knew, knew deep down that he still had “two women,” Melinda still had her hooks
in him, and he was still missing his Linny.
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