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The
party was over at about 2:00 a.m., because I ended it. My
hosts were both about two tequilas away from total liver failure.
So I turned off the music, turned on the lights, and started
the whole crew cleaning up.
There had only been about a dozen
of us left, the die-hard revelers. I was high on music, drunk
on pheromones, and a bit daiquiri-happy, but relatively lucid.
The rest of them were absolutely smashed.
So there we were, a bunch of
thirty-something, married-with-kids suburbanites, dirty dancing
and smoking and lying on the icy lawn. There was beer on the
floor, and cake, and lemons and salt. I was barefoot, because
I like to dance without shoes. I felt all the grime with my
toes, and it grounded me.
My husband had already gone home
to bed. He is not a party person, not a dancer. He enjoys
cerebral human company, real discussions. He does not like
people functioning on one brain cell.
My husband trusts me completely.
He is maddeningly confident in himself, and in me.
He gets a lot of ribbing when
he leaves early, about his being a party-pooper and a loner.
People ask me if I mind. The truth is, I did, but just a little.
Actually, I noticed that many
- most - of us were left there without our spouses, for one
reason or another. It seemed perfectly natural to me - babysitters
can't stay out that late, and neither can women in advanced
stages of pregnancy. Suburban Long Island reality.
Another reality is that we were
all dancing too close, talking too low, drinking too much,
saying things we wouldn't want out spouses to hear - or at
least listening, and not objecting. The most intoxicating
part of the evening was not the liquor at all. It was sexual
energy, and power. The power to tease someone to the point
of almost, and the power to end it at the brink.
It was a dangerous dance on the
edge.
I remember every hand that traveled just slightly where it
shouldn't have, and every joking proposition that sounded
just a bit too serious. I am sure most of the others don't
remember any of it, and it's just as well. Many of them would
be mortified.
I will make a long story short:
I left in time.
At home, I looked in on my sleeping
daughters, then collapsed into bed, as I was. My clothes smelled
of beer and my feet were encrusted with black party ruins.
It was three a.m.
My husband woke up at about 6:30,
and kissed my smoky hair. I was still half-asleep, and I told
him everything. About the wild dancing, the drunken whisperings
and groping. I was so thankful that nothing had happened that
I could not tell him. So thankful that he was the kind of
man who would believe me about that, and ask no more questions.
I was struck by a new, searing
love my low-key, centered, sensible husband. I had a chance
with fire, but I did not take it. I went home, relatively
unscathed, to my deep, still waters.
I fell back to sleep, grateful.
I dreamt that someone was chipping away at the dirt on my
feet.
When I woke up two hours later,
my feet were clean. There was a washcloth in the sink.
My husband had cleaned my soles
while I slept.
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