wind up release, move and swing and slide.
Single whip slides into crane opens wings and he needs to crouch down low, lower than his woolen slacks will let him, and they're grimy and gross anyway, so he undoes his belt and kicks them off. Down low as white crane opens wings and brush knee, punch, apparent closure, then low again, creakingly achingly low into wave hands like clouds, until his spine and his coccyx crackle and give, springing open, fascia open ribs open smooth breath rising and falling with his diaphragm smooth mind smooth and sweat cool in the mat of his hair.
He moves through the set and does not notice Linda until he unwinds into a slow, ponderous lotus kick, closes again, breathes a moment and looks around slowly, grinning like a holy fool.
She's in a tartan housecoat with a threadbare towel wrapped around her hair, water beading on her bony ankles and long, skinny feet. 'Art! God
'Tai chi,' he says, drawing a deep breath in through his nostrils, feeling each rib expand in turn, exhaling through his mouth. 'I do it to unwind.'
'It was beautiful! Art! Art. Art. That was, I mean, wow. Inspiring. Something. You're going to show me how to do that, Art. Right? You're gonna.'
'I could try,' Art says. 'I'm not really qualified to teach it-I stopped going to class ten years ago.'
'Shut, shut up, Art. You can teach that, damn, you can teach that, I know you can. That was, wow.' She rushes forward and takes his hands. She squeezes and looks into his eyes. She squeezes again and tugs his hands towards her hips, reeling his chest towards her breasts tilting her chin up and angling that long jawline that's so long as to be almost horsey, but it isn't, it's strong and clean. Art smells shampoo and sandalwood talc and his skin puckers in a crinkle that's so sudden and massive that it's almost audible.
They've been together continuously for the past five days, almost without interruption and he's already conditioned to her smell and her body language and the subtle signals of her face's many mobile bits and pieces. She is afire, he is afire, their bodies are talking to each other in some secret language of shifting centers of gravity and unconscious pheromones, and his face tilts down towards her, slowly with all the time in the world. Lowers and lowers, week-old whiskers actually tickling the tip of her nose, his lips parting now, and her breath moistens them, beads them with liquid condensed out of her vapor.
His top lip touches her bottom lip. He could leave it at that and be happy, the touch is so satisfying, and he is contented there for a long moment, then moves to engage his lower lip, moving, tilting.
His comm rings.
His comm, which he has switched off, rings.
Shit.
'Hello!' he says, he shouts.
'Arthur?' says a voice that is old and hurt and melancholy. His Gran's voice. His Gran, who can override his ringer, switch on his comm at a distance because Art is a good grandson who was raised almost entirely by his saintly and frail (and depressive and melodramatic and obsessive) grandmother, and of course his comm is set to pass her calls. Not because he is a suck, but because he is loyal and sensitive and he loves his Gran.
'Gran, hi! Sorry, I was just in the middle of something, sorry.' He checks his comm, which tells him that it's only six in the morning in Toronto, noon in London, and that the date is April 8, and that today is the day that he should have known his grandmother would call.
'You forgot,' she says, no accusation, just a weary and disappointed sadness. He has indeed forgotten.
'No, Gran, I didn't forget.'
But he did. It is the eighth of April, 2022, which means that it is twenty-one years to the day since his mother died. And he has forgotten.
'It's all right. You're busy, I understand. Tell me, Art, how are you? When will you visit Toronto?'
'I'm fine, Gran. I'm sorry I haven't called, I've been sick.' Shit. Wrong lie.
'You're sick? What's wrong?'
'It's nothing. I-I put my back out. Working too hard. Stress. It's nothing, Gran.'
He chances to look up at Linda, who is standing where he left her when he dived reflexively for his comm, staring disbelievingly at him. Her robe is open to her navel, and he sees the three curls of pubic hair above the knot in its belt that curl towards her groin, sees the hourglass made by the edges of her breasts that are visible in the vee of the robe, sees the edge of one areole, the left one. He is in a tee shirt and bare feet and boxers, crouching over his trousers, talking to his Gran, and he locks eyes with Linda and shakes his head apologetically, then settles down to sit cross-legged, hunched over an erection he didn't know he had, resolves to look at her while he talks.
'Stress! Always stress. You should take some vacation time. Are you seeing someone? A chiropractor?'
He's entangled in the lie. 'Yes. I have an appointment tomorrow.'
'How will you get there? Don't take the subway. Take a taxi. And give me the doctor's name, I'll look him up.'
'I'll take a cab, it'll be fine, he's the only one my travel insurance covers.'
'The only one? Art! What kind of insurance do you have? I'll call them, I'll find you a chiropractor. Betty Melville, she has family in London, they'll know someone.'
God. 'It's fine, Gran. How are you?'
A sigh. 'How am I? On this day, how am I?'
'How is your health? Are you keeping busy?'
'My health is fine. I keep busy. Father Ferlenghetti came to dinner last night at the house. I made a nice roast, and I'll have sandwiches today.'
'That's good.'
'I'm thinking of your mother, you know.'
'I know.'
'Do you think of her, Art? You were so young when she went, but you remember her, don't you?'
'I do, Gran.' He remembers her, albeit dimly. He was barely nine when she died.
'Of course-of course you remember your mother. It's a terrible thing for a mother to live longer than her daughter.'
His Gran says this every year. Art still hasn't figured out how to respond to it. Time for another stab at it. 'I'm glad you're still here, Gran.'
Wrong thing. Gran is sobbing now. Art drops his eyes from Linda's and looks at the crazy weft and woof of the faded old Oriental rug. 'Oh, Gran,' he says. 'I'm sorry.'
In truth, Art has mourned and buried his mother. He was raised just fine by his Gran, and when he remembers his mother, he is more sad about not being sad than sad about her.
'I'm an old lady, you know that. You'll remember me when I go, won't you Art?'
This, too, is a ritual question that Art can't answer well enough no matter how he practices. 'Of course, Gran. But you'll be around for a good while yet!'
'When are you coming back to Toronto?' He'd ducked the question before, but Gran's a master of circling back and upping the ante.
'Soon as I can, Gran. Maybe when I finish this contract. September, maybe.'
'You'll stay here? I can take the sofa. When do you think you'll arrive? My friends all want to see you again. You remember Mrs. Tomkins? You used to play with her daughter Alice. Alice is single, you know. She has a good job, too-working at an insurance company. Maybe she can get you a better health plan.'
'I don't know, Gran. I'll
'Oh, Art. Please come back soon-I miss you. I'm going to visit your mother's grave today and put some flowers on it. They keep it very nice at Mount Pleasant, and the trees are just blooming now.'
'I'll come back as soon as I can, Gran. I love you.'
'I love you too, Arthur.'
'Bye, Gran.'
'I'll call you once I speak to Betty about the chiropractor, all right?'
'All right, Gran.' He is going to have to go to the chiropractor now, even though his back feels as good as