Jamin is looking out for me, the way he has always tried to. He is a very good friend. I am filled with trepidation. 'Well,' I say. 'I might be working late. '
'That's fine. Pick you up in a taxi at quitting time?'
'Sure,' I say and disconnect.
I look up from my desk but Ali is nowhere to be seen in the breakwater of cubicle ways. Sometimes I may see her no more than once in a day, though it feels like she is always with me since I cannot stop thinking of her.
For the rest of the day I cannot concentrate on genetic sequences at all and my work is useless.
When the taxi crosses into the men's quarter, Jamin and I remove our veils although the driver leaves his own. Jamin relaxes instantly, more happily himself, making small talk about work. I smile too, but inside I am tense.
We're dropped off in a neighborhood where fruit trees shade the narrow streets. The houses are neat and tidy and old, the kind owned by government officials and couples who both have excellent jobs. Jamin leads me to a door by an elaborate garden that appears to be both lovingly created and recently neglected.
The man who answers is not quite twice our age, perhaps a little younger. His beard looks new, as though his chin has gone untended for about as long as the garden outside. He wears a comfortable, tailored suit.
Jamin embraces him, saying, 'Hello, Hodge. This is the friend I was telling you about—'
Somehow I cheerfully complete the introductions. Jamin and I sit at a counter in the kitchen while Hodge finishes cooking the dinner. The room smells of garlic and oil. Jamin and Hodge discuss work — they are both employed in law — and I avoid nearly all the personal questions directed at me. The songs of Noh Sis stream from the speakers to fill most of the awkward silences.
We are seated around Hodge's elegant antique table, having finished a delightful chick pea soup and a satisfying pepper salad. A platter of mouth-watering spinach-feta pastries rests between us. As I am helping myself to a second serving, and laughing heartily at an anecdote that Hodge is telling about the prosecution of a man whose pet dog kept straying into the women's quarter, Jamin rises and wipes his mouth with his napkin.
'Please forgive me,' he says. 'I didn't realize how late it has gotten and I promised to meet Zel this evening. '
'But we've scarcely begun,' Hodge says, evincing real dismay.
And all I can do is think: Jamin, you beast!
But Jamin insists, and I stand to go with him, but both men persuade me to stay by making promises of transportation. Then Hodge bustles around putting together a plate of food for Jamin to take with him, growing particularly distressed because his cake hasn't cooled sufficiently and falls apart when cuts a slice to go. The whole time Jamin smiles at me and refuses to meet my eyes. Finally he's gone, and Hodge and I sit back to our meal. Sometime during this the music has fallen silent and Hodge is too distracted to reset it.
'How long have you known Jamin?' he says after a sip of wine.
'All my life,' I say. 'We grew up in the same Children's Center, and then attended the same. '
'He's well-meaning, but what a beastly thing to do. '
I think he means it as a joke, but I'm not sure so I stare at my plate and concentrate on eating, making extravagant praise of the food between the clinks of silverware on porcelain.
'So,' Hodge says after another drink of wine. 'You're the marrying kind?'
'Yes. ' My heart trips and stumbles. 'Yes, I am. '
'It won't be bad. Will this coming ceremony be your first time?'
'Yes. I mean, I haven't decided yet. '
'You'll be nervous your first time. It won't be bad. '
I choke out laughter. 'Aren't you supposed to tell me how good it will be?'
He winces. Folding his napkin, he leans his elbows on the table and looks directly at me. 'Look, Jamin thinks that we're both the same type. I just lost my partner—'
'Oh, I'm sorry,' I say.
He holds up his hand. 'No, it's all right. We'd been together for ten years or so, but he'd been unhappy for a very long time. I'm glad he ran off. '
'Where he'd go to?' I ask, desperate to change the subject.
Hodge shook his head. 'Look, that's not important. I'm happy by myself right now. I hope you understand. '
He didn't sound happy at all. 'Of course! I mean I—'
'I'm not like you,' he said in a low whisper, and then drank the rest of his wine. 'Oh! the story about the man with the dog, did I ever finish that?'
'No. ' I had forgotten it already.
'The last time they caught him, they stoned him to death and set his body on fire. That kind of perversion can't be tolerated, you know. We aren't animals, with animal passions. '
'I know that. ' My voice is strained because I am scared.
'Well, then. Good. ' He rises abruptly. 'I'll call you a taxi. ' He fumbles at the counter, frowning. 'The cake is a disappointment, but I'll send some with you. '
When the taxi arrives and I step off the stoop into darkness, I hear him say, 'Good luck with the marrying. It's over quickly. '
He reminds me of a piece of topiary, a plant forced by wires and pruning into a facsimile of something else, so twisted over time that he no longer resembles himself. I can feel myself being twisted, misshapen more each day. But I'll resist it.
The taxi door slams and whisks me away.
I don't see Ali at work the next day or the following morning. At lunch, I am standing by the inner windows overlooking the courtyard below while the children. The weave an endless pattern of joy amid the trees and joys, untroubled by impossible choices. Pressed to the window, I am only slightly aware of someone next to me. The lobby is busy, many people rushing by. So several minutes pass before I look up and realize that it is Ali beside me.
She taps her foot on the tiles. 'Rubber floor. Very smart. They aren't able to zap you here. '
'I'm sorry,' I blurt out, sorry that I haven't noticed her, sorry that I hadn't talked to her earlier.
Ali lowers her long eyelashes and looks away. 'Well, if you want to be zapped, you could always go back to your desk. '
'Wait!'
She pauses in midstep. 'I'm waiting. '
And because I don't know what else to say, because there is only one thing besides her on my mind, I ask, 'Will you be marrying this weekend?'
'That's a very improper thing for you to ask,' she says and walks quickly away to the other side of the lobby where she stands by a tub of polished stones and bubbling water, watching the children below.
I want to run after her, take her by the elbow and make her understand. I want her to feel for me the way I feel toward her. I want her to peel off her gloves and sink her bare hands into my flesh, stripping it away to the bone, until she reaches my heart and can soothe away the ache I feel for her.
Instead, I also turn and look out the window again. From this height, I can't tell if the children below are boys or girls.
Our scripture says: “And in his own image God made them, man and woman; and bade them be fruitful and multiply; and set them apart from the beasts and gave them dominion over the beasts. '
And also: 'It is good for a man never to touch a woman, nor a woman touch a man, lest they be tempted to behave as the beasts of the field do in their passions. '
I have never even seen beasts in the field. Theology classes glossed over that, only teaching us that before