Omnia Vincit Amor Pt. 01

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A middle-aged man, his old flame, and her jealous husband.
15.2k words
4.64
10.7k
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Part 1 of the 4 part series

Updated 06/09/2023
Created 12/21/2018
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There's a wife trying to be faithful, and there is a romance rekindled after many years, which brings its own moral problems. The story is about jealousy and how ordinary people, with all their faults and failings try to cope with it and its aftermath. As usual it's a slow burn and hardly any sex at all till near the end. The tale ends on a Christmas Day, so perhaps this is a good time to post it.

Four quite long parts all finished and posted daily. The title translates as 'Love conquers all things.' (Virgil Eclogues 10). Does it?

*****

Chapter 01

The radio alarm came on with classical music: Friday 16th April 2010. John Pollard immediately swung his legs out of the bed, donned his slippers, pulled his dressing gown round his naked form and descended the stairs.

He followed his habit of many years, first into the kitchen. He switched on the kettle for a pot of tea, smiling wryly when he saw that he had again carefully laid out two mugs the night before. Once again he had forgotten he was now alone. Elizabeth, his dear wife, had died three months before after twenty eight years married, but time and again he found he was doing everything for two. His solitary state still surprised him daily.

While the kettle boiled he used the downstairs toilet, then made the tea, opened the curtains in the living room, checked the barometer, and went to the front door and took in the milk. He poured the tea and returned upstairs. Outside there was broken cloud and milky sunshine, but no sign of ash on the ground from the erupting Icelandic Volcano, whose name no one wanted to try pronouncing.

In some ways this was the most difficult time of the day; this and his final retirement to bed at its end. For nearly thirty years he had followed this routine, bringing two mugs of tea back to the bedroom and his beloved Elizabeth. He would return to bed and they would entwine themselves in each other's arms, his thigh between her legs feeling her vulva, and she his penis on hers. They would kiss and hold each other as if to say that they would never allow themselves to be parted, but both were powerless before the strength of death to separate them.

Now he brought his tea back to the empty bedroom and sat on the bed to drink it. He could not bear to go back between the cold sheets. He had always thought that he would be the first to go, and was sure that Elizabeth would have managed bereavement much better than he had. He sighed, something he found himself doing often. The morning radio show he now tuned to was cheerful as usual and he smiled at the odd stories and jokes the presenter told between songs.

After his tea he showered, shaved and dressed, and then breakfasted on his usual muesli and a second cup of tea. Now the day stretched before him like each previous day since she left him forever. The days though were not difficult.

After defeating cancer, having suffered through its long and unpleasant treatment, he had been able to retire from his Managing Directorship early with a sizeable golden handshake and pension, while Elizabeth still went out to the work she loved.

Thus he had spent some years alone in the house during the day, so his days now were no different. It was when he would have begun cooking for the two of them, when she would have returned home in the evenings, and during the long tedious weekends, when the loneliness bit deep.

He stood with his beloved tea before the open patio door, and gazed at the garden, the daffodils blooming everywhere, forget-me-nots beginning to add their blue and the apple blossom a gentle pink in the spring sunshine, which was unusually very warm.

It was her garden. It still bore the stamp of her love for it, and he wondered how he would ever manage to keep it looking as beautiful as it was now. It begged the question whether he would stay in the house or find somewhere smaller, more manageable - at least as far as the garden was concerned, for it was large. He turned away.

It being Friday, he did the shopping for the following week, constantly reminding himself that he was buying for one, though as usual he bought rather too much. He shopped locally, making his contribution to reducing greenhouse gases by walking there and back carrying his hessian shopping bags, having long since rejected the plastic bags offered by his local supermarket.

By the time he had stowed the produce it was eleven o'clock and he allowed himself the luxury of freshly made coffee, enjoying the fragrance as he ground the roasted fair trade beans which filled the house.

He had poured himself a mugful, with the indulgence of a little sugar, and was stirring the milk into it when the doorbell rang. His immediate thought was that it would be the postman, though John had ordered nothing bulky, but when he opened the front door it was a woman who stood there.

There was something familiar about her face. She was about his age, early fifties, slim, but with a fullness that betokened motherhood. Her light raincoat came below her knees and she wore sensible low heel shoes. Her light brown hair was either curly or permed and her oval face was friendly, pretty, mature and smiling.

"Yes?" he inquired.

"John? Remember me?"

Even without her telling him her name, as soon as she uttered those first three words he knew her from her voice, even though it had been some thirty years since he had last seen her. Her voice was a rich contralto with a hint of a smile about it. She cocked one eyebrow as he remembered she often did. It was Claire.

"Claire! What are you doing here? You're the last person I expected to see! Come in! I've just made coffee."

He stood back and she entered.

"Let me take your coat."

She slipped it off her shoulders and John placed it on a hanger and stowed it in the Hall wardrobe. It was as if they had seen each other only the other day.

She faced him now, held out her arms and embraced him fondly. He felt the shape of her body, and was surprised that he was comparing her now to what he thought he remembered she was before. She was indeed still slim but fuller, more shapely and her breasts felt bigger as they pressed against him.

"John, I'm so sorry to hear about Elizabeth. What a dreadful shock for you!" She had always been demonstrative of her affections and emotions, and she kissed his cheek as she hugged him to her.

They stood locked together for a while. Then John gently disengaged himself and led her by the hand to the kitchen, where he poured her some coffee according to her wishes. They sat at the kitchen table.

"I don't understand," said John. "How on earth...?"

"I'm over here with Peter - you remember I married Peter Klinsman? - and my children to visit my Mother. She's failing fast and she isn't long for this world, I'm afraid. We've been here a week and I wanted to fit in a visit to my sister Ellen and her family. I don't think you ever met her did you?"

He shook his head. "The only time I visited you at your family home, Ellen was somewhere else. So she's married with a family?"

"Yes. So I left Peter with Mother and drove down," she continued. "On the way to Ellen's, I called in on Father Gerard and he told me about Elizabeth. So I changed my plan immediately, got your address from him and detoured to come here. I know it's a stupid question, but how are you?"

John remembered her fluency, light tone and concise delivery. It was what had attracted him to her, back in their university days, that and her slim, rangy body with its small to medium breasts and neat bottom. He hesitated before he answered. More memories were coming of how close they had been, and he knew he could not give his usual banal answer.

"I normally tell people I'm fine; it gets them off the hook, so to speak. They can go away feeling they've done their duty and feel reassured that I'm not likely to do anything silly." He smiled at her, and her grey-blue eyes smiled back. He felt a tug of attraction. A memory.

"You're not though, are you?" Claire interrupted with a grin. "Going to do something silly, I mean?" He could tell she knew he would not of course: her eyes were twinkling.

"Heavens no!" He laughed, for her question was mischievous.

"So," she said, now much more serious. "You're not fine either, are you? Give it to me straight. How are you, really?"

She reached for his hand across the table, taking it in one of hers, and covering it with the other, those soft dancing grey-blue eyes of hers gazing into his.

John sat silent for a while, looking into those loving eyes and his heart warmed to this woman who sat patiently, waiting for him to gather his thoughts. It brought the memory of how close they were back then.

"I suppose you could say I'm depressed. Not surprising, is it? I cry a lot in the privacy of the house. I have to push myself to do the normal life-supporting things; the daily routine. I'm drifting through life at the moment, but then I don't expect anything else. I've read up about bereavement so I know the stages of grief and what's in store for me.

"I keep expecting her to come home in the evening. I accidentally pour two cups of tea instead of one, you know the sort of thing. I wonder daily if this terrible ache inside me will ever get better as the books tell me it will, but can't help dreading that it won't.

"So there you are. For you alone, dear Claire, that's it, straight from the shoulder - I've never told anyone else, but there again, you've never been 'anyone else' for me."

She said nothing, but those lovely eyes became more grey, less blue, and shone with tears as she fondled his hand. That was Claire, always emotional, sympathetic, loving, always reaching out, touching, hugging. He was intensely aware of her touch and felt a stirring in his heart.

She was always so special. His mind went back to a time long ago. The images flashed rapidly, taking no time at all.

A university disco. She was really slim then. She was angular and leggy, her curly hair always tied in a ponytail. She bounced rather than walked and those eyes were always dancing. She was naturally a happy person.

At the disco they joked and flirted, something he normally never did, and at the end he asked her out. To his surprise she accepted. He had never been sure of her feelings for him, there always seemed a certain reserve, a reluctance.

He, however had fallen deeply in love with her and he would admit that he had pursued her. He had wanted her intensely; it was rampant lust. They used to walk and talk a great deal, they went country dancing; they visited friends, and went to the occasional play when they could afford it.

"What are you thinking about?" she asked.

"Thinking of the past. With you." John ventured after a pause. The day grew warmer and the atmosphere in the kitchen was becoming rather oppressive. He wished to offset further questioning along those lines and, seeing that their coffees were finished, he rose and refilled them.

"Shall we sit on the patio?" he asked. "It's not often we get such warm weather so early. Especially now we have the volcanic ash everywhere."

She nodded and they walked through the living room onto the garden terrace. "What a beautiful garden!" Claire enthused.

They sat at the large round table under the shade of the umbrella.

"It's Lizzie's garden really," he said. "I was just a labourer. I don't know how I'll manage with it now."

"You were thinking about our past?" Claire was not about to let the earlier matter drop. He wondered if she had an agenda, but could not imagine what it could be. He capitulated.

"Seeing you again after what is it, thirty years? It just provoked memories of our time together; brought it all back."

She coloured up. "I was too young, John. Immature. I wasn't ready for permanence - for marriage."

"Realistically I don't think I was either, though I was deeply in love with you. I wonder what would have happened if we'd taken the risk?"

"We'll never know, John. I married Peter and you married Elizabeth. We both have families. I don't think we regret bringing them into the world."

"No, certainly not," he said. "I often think about that. There would have been other children instead. But I wouldn't have wanted my life any other way as it turned out. You think you know what you want most of all, but sometimes what you consider second best turns out to be better."

There was a silence again. Claire spoke again, somewhat tentatively he thought.

"John, I don't regret anything that happened between us."

The stress was significant: he knew what she meant. So that was what was on her mind.

The memories flashed through his mind, a series of pictures, taking seconds.

He had wanted her so badly he devised a visit to a married cousin in Brighton, so that he could stop off at her parents' house. He had set off very early in the morning on his 650cc Triumph Tiger 110 motorbike and arrived at breakfast time in south London.

He remembered clearly the middle-class polite coolness of her parents, who told Claire in his presence that he wouldn't be able to stay because they were going on holiday, and would leave Claire with only her brother George in the house.

She had hugged and kissed him before he travelled on, and whispered he could call and stay on his way back, when they would still be away on holiday. He had felt so exhilarated at that invitation!

Her brother seemed to ignore him completely on his return, and she had told him to wait until her brother had gone to bed, and then come to her bedroom so they could sleep together all night.

It was not the first time they had been naked in a bed together, and he had a clear picture of the mounting intensity of their feelings as they caressed each other more and more feverishly and intimately until either he rolled on top, or she pulled him over her.

Then it was only a matter of time before his penis was between her thighs and pressed along her vulva. He moved to and fro a little and then he was partly in her. They had kissed and he pushed further, then he lost control and thrust.

She exhaled loudly and pulled him down onto her, so they were hugging with their whole bodies pressed together, he on his elbows and her hands wandering all over his back and bottom.

It seemed to be enough that he was inside her. They kissed and kissed, and then he felt her tears.

"I'm sorry!" he had said urgently, "I didn't mean-"

"No, not that," she said. "Don't worry."

He did not know what to make of that response and, conscious of the danger of pregnancy, made no further movements. Eventually he pulled out and rolled off her, wiped her eyes with a tissue and they settled to sleep.

He remembered the blood on the sheet next morning, and her urgency to wash it before her brother surfaced. He remembered they did discuss what they had done, but couldn't remember what they had said. However, from then on, something had changed between them, and not for the better. He left later that day, with her assurances everything was fine, but he didn't believe her.

It had rained heavily all the way home for five hours, battering into his face as if punishing him for his rash action and his surrender to his lust.

They did have sex a number of times after that, but only with him penetrating her and then being still inside her. Ruefully he thought he was so inept at sex that neither of them ever had an orgasm.

The whole reminiscence had taken seconds, but now he nailed the issue. "It was after we started making love that things began to go wrong."

Claire's eyes danced again and she smiled broadly. "After you deflowered me, you mean. After you'd gone it took me ages to get the bloodstains out of the sheet. My brother never noticed though, and I did get it clean before my parents got back."

John was serious. "I was such a fool. I wanted you so badly and after we did it, you cried. You wouldn't tell me why. I supposed it was disappointment. I was clueless about sex. You were only my second girl, you know. Hell, I didn't even know about the clitoris!"

He paused.

She took it up. "I remember it so well, John. We made love all night. I mean we hugged and cuddled as well as the sex. I cried because I didn't mean to have full sex but couldn't stop myself, not because I'd lost my virginity. I felt guilty. It's that Catholic guilt thing! But I loved the love we had that night."

"We made love quite a few times," he reflected, "but I never came in you. In fact I never came with you at all: I don't think you ever had an orgasm. But we had penetrative sex a number of times, and that's what began our break up."

"No John," she reposted, "it wasn't the sex, I loved that. I felt so warm and loved when we made love. At least it wasn't that directly. There was the constant worry I might get pregnant just by having you in me, but really I started to be afraid we were getting too intense and close and I was scared and did not feel ready. That's why I finished with you."

"Hang on Claire," John was perplexed. "I finished with you! In the lounge of the Cross Keys."

"Yes, but I had pushed you into it. Remember how distant I gradually became over the few weeks before that? I didn't know how to finish with you. I did love you very deeply you know, and I didn't want to hurt you. If I'm honest I didn't want to finish at all! I wanted to let you down gently. I think even now that breaking up was a mistake on my part. I should have... I never..."

John's expression cleared. "Ah! I was so worried it would be difficult to finish, and you were instantly agreeable. You must have felt relieved!"

They both laughed. John continued.

"It's been on my mind from time to time ever since, that I let you down badly. You remember the letter I sent you when I had my health scare a few years ago, I wanted to revisit all the people I thought I might have hurt and get their forgiveness, and that's why I tried to contact you - I thought I'd let you down, taken advantage of you."

He noticed she looked puzzled, but continued.

"I never understood why Peter replied on your behalf - why you didn't reply. It wasn't like the Claire I remembered and I didn't even refer to sex in the letter: it was a first tentative approach, but his reply was blistering, and when he wrote that you'd said you never wanted me to contact you again, I decided to let it drop.

"I thought I must have hurt you far more deeply than even I had thought at the time. It upset me to think I couldn't have your forgiveness. That's why I was so surprised to see you on the doorstep today.

"I suppose it must have caused trouble for you with Peter. I toyed briefly with replying to him, but decided it would only cause more trouble. What's changed, Claire?"

There was a pause. Claire's face was at first puzzled, then it clouded and flushed, and her eyes flashed with anger.

"You had a health scare? You wrote to me? I never got your letter, John. Peter must have intercepted it, but he said nothing about it. I'm so angry about that! How dare he!

"Now I know why he suddenly started grilling me about whether I'd had sex before I met him. I told him it was no concern of his what happened before we met. I'd never told him about you - at least not that we'd had sex. I didn't need to. He went on and on about it.

"Just to get him to stop, I told him about that time at Fiona's when we'd slept together on a bed-setee, but not in a sexual way. In a way it was a lie, but you don't know what he's like.

"He seemed satisfied with that, though he was not happy. He's extremely jealous and a very traditional Catholic. We didn't have any sex at all until after we were married. No contraception either. But what's this about a health scare?"