Mild
Singapore, Three Hours Ahead
537 words · 3 min read
She had set it on the nightstand before she called him. That was deliberate — the archivist in her needing to establish sequence, to know that she had looked at it first, that it had been there in the frame of the conversation without him knowing. The glass caught the bedside lamp and held a thin line of gold along its curve. Three years since they had stood in the shop on Granville Street and she had turned it in both hands and said, without embarrassment, yes, this one. The call had ended twenty minutes ago. Singapore: three hours ahead, already tomorrow for him, his voice slightly compressed by the distance in a way she had learned to hear around. Happy anniversary, he had said, and she had said it back, and neither of them had said anything about the time zones being impossible, because saying it would not have helped. Now the city moved below the window — a low, continuous hum of summer traffic, the occasional voice rising from the street and dissolving — and she sat on the edge of the bed in his t-shirt, the cotton worn to almost nothing at the shoulders, the hem across her thighs. She was aware of the hem. She had been aware of it since she sat down. She looked at the glass on the nightstand. It was the same object. That was the thing she kept returning to. Not a replacement, not a substitute — the same object, chosen by both of them, handled by both of them, present in their bedroom for three years the way a good thing becomes part of the architecture of a life. She had not taken it out to feel less alone. She had taken it out because tonight was the night it made sense to take it out, and she was a person who paid attention to when things made sense. The cotton of the t-shirt pressed flat across both thighs when she sat still. The backs of her knees were warm against the duvet's edge. She was aware of the specific heat already gathered in the fabric, her own, held there since she sat down and crossed her ankles and uncrossed them. Her right hand rested on the duvet beside her. Her left hand lay open in her lap, palm up, doing nothing. She exhaled — longer than she had meant to, the breath unfolding out into the quiet room before she had decided to release it — and reached for the glass. It was cold. That was always the first thing. She turned it once in her hand, the weight of it precise and familiar, and set it against her left palm, and waited for the cold to become warm. Her knees were still together. The hem of the t-shirt lay across them, its edge a thin pressure at the top of her thighs. She was in no hurry. The archivist in her wanted to hold the moment before the moment — to know that she had been here, in this particular suspension, aware of the glass warming in her hand and aware of what she had not yet done. She looked at it in the lamplight.