https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sR6eqsnlvwWUo8VZnzFE5uRWdcbWwUZ9/view?usp=sharing
Jesús overlooked Rafael’s true tenderness if but for a moment, if only because it sought to use up all excess energies he needed to smoke a single cigarette. Well, what had he expected? By the lull in their conversation he summerized without ceremony that Rafael yearned for Jesús to fuck Zelda, and then him, in some joyous play of passion — one that they had performed time and time again with women quite like Ms Rhodes who had spurred the imagination into practice. All in all, it should’ve been something like a routine fuck, one that Jesús could enjoy if only to fully satisfy the release needed in such a tangled knot of longing. If only it hadn’t been her, she who had bruised his ego and as such remained something of a splinter in his side.
Rolling the cigarette between his fingers, he stared off into the mid-distance, as if he could see past the walls of that establishment even if they were found in the privacy of a secluded dining room. When he released the truth into the world he suddenly felt very ashamed, as if the guilt that had stewed beneath had suddenly spilled over onto the table before him, for he had no right to be so pent up over such a woman! Nor had he any use for the envy clad in dismay that Rafael had indeed had her before he had ever touched her in such a way. When he had been her father’s secretary pulled tight by deadlines and the need to impress a superior, he had thought the catch almost to be too easy for his delighted sensibilities — before Amira, before the passion of Tarragona and before the loss of Father Pedro Huya — so he had danced around it, before she had left and when he had made his approach all the more clear. No, she refused him, and he was left to tend to his wounds like a tom-cat after a street fight.
Even as Rafael plucked at his sleeve like a boy, Jesús could not quite draw himself away from that moment of shame. What would he see in him, then? A fool? A sordid creature who ought to draw himself upright with strength of spirit and know-how? Whatever it was, Jesús felt his cheeks grow hot with some cocktail of annoyance and self-pity, for to his knowledge Rafael had never quite been afforded the malaise of a rejection, for the furthest he had seen put to play was Nellie when she acted unapproachable and full of rage… But even then, he had only ever retaliated, and had never stayed still long enough to remain utterly and totally hurt. At the same time, however, Jesús saw himself as little more than a boy, a boy bruised like a peach rather than a man strong enough to withstand the blow.
He shook his head, laughing a little in order to try and push the question aside despite the fact that he knew very well how Rafael would pluck at his cover till all was available to him. He rolled his head to one side to look at him, tapping the cigarette away with the shift of a single finger before he placed it lazily between his lips. Had she treated him ever so cruelly? No, not really, not totally. If anything it had been a self-inflicted pain, a need to remember how it had felt and how to never look at her with the fullness of his beating heart again. Only the Lord knew that Jesús had not been prepared to see her in London again, with his daughter picturing the woman as some figure of aspiration in her eyes alone.
“I have no ill will toward you for having her, my friend, that would be stupid and immature of me… For she is…” Jesús began, a sigh leaving his body to fall in the chair before he slipped his spare fingers to his eyes, rubbing them for clarity or to merely will himself into a sense of comradery, a confusion even to him. “...she is beautiful, no? How can I keep a pretty woman from your hands, mmm? But would you give me her address? I should go to apologise tomorrow, I think,” Jesús hummed, removing his hand, replacing the cigarette with what was left over of the wine before pouring it down his throat, forgetting to taste the substance in such a greedy act of want; for the oysters would be there soon and Jesús was not one to turn down a meal even if he no longer felt as hungry as he had been before.
Jesús overlooked Rafael’s true tenderness if but for a moment, if only because it sought to use up all excess energies he needed to smoke a single cigarette. Well, what had he expected? By the lull in their conversation he summerized without ceremony that Rafael yearned for Jesús to fuck Zelda, and then him, in some joyous play of passion — one that they had performed time and time again with women quite like Ms Rhodes who had spurred the imagination into practice. All in all, it should’ve been something like a routine fuck, one that Jesús could enjoy if only to fully satisfy the release needed in such a tangled knot of longing. If only it hadn’t been her, she who had bruised his ego and as such remained something of a splinter in his side.
Rolling the cigarette between his fingers, he stared off into the mid-distance, as if he could see past the walls of that establishment even if they were found in the privacy of a secluded dining room. When he released the truth into the world he suddenly felt very ashamed, as if the guilt that had stewed beneath had suddenly spilled over onto the table before him, for he had no right to be so pent up over such a woman! Nor had he any use for the envy clad in dismay that Rafael had indeed had her before he had ever touched her in such a way. When he had been her father’s secretary pulled tight by deadlines and the need to impress a superior, he had thought the catch almost to be too easy for his delighted sensibilities — before Amira, before the passion of Tarragona and before the loss of Father Pedro Huya — so he had danced around it, before she had left and when he had made his approach all the more clear. No, she refused him, and he was left to tend to his wounds like a tom-cat after a street fight.
Even as Rafael plucked at his sleeve like a boy, Jesús could not quite draw himself away from that moment of shame. What would he see in him, then? A fool? A sordid creature who ought to draw himself upright with strength of spirit and know-how? Whatever it was, Jesús felt his cheeks grow hot with some cocktail of annoyance and self-pity, for to his knowledge Rafael had never quite been afforded the malaise of a rejection, for the furthest he had seen put to play was Nellie when she acted unapproachable and full of rage… But even then, he had only ever retaliated, and had never stayed still long enough to remain utterly and totally hurt. At the same time, however, Jesús saw himself as little more than a boy, a boy bruised like a peach rather than a man strong enough to withstand the blow.
He shook his head, laughing a little in order to try and push the question aside despite the fact that he knew very well how Rafael would pluck at his cover till all was available to him. He rolled his head to one side to look at him, tapping the cigarette away with the shift of a single finger before he placed it lazily between his lips. Had she treated him ever so cruelly? No, not really, not totally. If anything it had been a self-inflicted pain, a need to remember how it had felt and how to never look at her with the fullness of his beating heart again. Only the Lord knew that Jesús had not been prepared to see her in London again, with his daughter picturing the woman as some figure of aspiration in her eyes alone.
“I have no ill will toward you for having her, my friend, that would be stupid and immature of me… For she is…” Jesús began, a sigh leaving his body to fall in the chair before he slipped his spare fingers to his eyes, rubbing them for clarity or to merely will himself into a sense of comradery, a confusion even to him. “...she is beautiful, no? How can I keep a pretty woman from your hands, mmm? But would you give me her address? I should go to apologise tomorrow, I think,” Jesús hummed, removing his hand, replacing the cigarette with what was left over of the wine before pouring it down his throat, forgetting to taste the substance in such a greedy act of want; for the oysters would be there soon and Jesús was not one to turn down a meal even if he no longer felt as hungry as he had been before.
word count: 805