LOGINSCARLET ♠️
Ten years.
I sat across from him and thought, ten years and I felt every single one of them collapse like they had never existed.
He hadn’t changed. That was the thing that undid me first, before anything else, the simple, unfair fact that Ray Lionel had not changed. He was still tall, still broad across the shoulders, still carrying himself with that particular stillness that had always made me feel like the rest of the world was moving too fast. His hair was darker than I remembered or maybe the office light was different.
His jaw was the same. His hands were the same. Everything about him was the same and I had spent 10 years telling myself I was over it and apparently I had been lying to myself for 10 years.
He was looking at me the way he used to look at me when he was trying to figure out what I was thinking before I said it.
I dropped my eyes to my lap and started rubbing my thumbs together.
“Scarlet.”
His voice. Lord, his voice!! still that same low, unhurried register that used to make me feel like whatever he was saying was meant only for me even in a crowded room. I pressed my thumbs harder together.
“Don’t tell me you’re rubbing your thumbs.”
I went still.
“Scar.” There was almost a smile in it, not mocking, something warmer and more dangerous than that. “You walked in here yourself. Don’t tell me you’re confused about why you came.”
That was the thing about Ray. That had always been the thing about Ray. He knew me, not the surface version I showed the world, not the careful composed Mrs. Benson that eight years of marriage had polished into something almost unrecognizable.
He knew the version underneath. The one that rubbed her thumbs when she was anxious. The one that went quiet when she was hurting. The one that was sitting in this chair right now trying very hard not to fall apart.
My heart was beating so loudly I was mildly surprised he couldn’t hear it.
I made myself look up. Made myself breathe.
“I’ve been married for eight years,” I said. My voice came out steadier than I felt. “And I don’t have a child. I came to check myself, to know if I am medically fit to be a mother. If the problem is mine.”
Something shifted in his expression. He leaned back in his chair slowly, file still in his hands, and looked at me with a careful attention that was both professional and something else entirely.
“You believe you can’t conceive?” he asked. “Or you want to be certain that you’re healthy?”
“Both,” I said. “Eight years is long enough to stop wondering and start knowing.”
He nodded. Set the file down. Picked up his pen and turned it in his palm, a habit I recognized, the thing he did when he was thinking.
“There’s a support group that meets here. Women who are on similar journeys, trying to conceive, navigating the process. It might help to…”
“No.” The word came out quickly. “I can’t be seen. I don’t want” I stopped. Steadied myself. “I just need the examination. Privately. That’s all.”
He looked at me for a moment longer than necessary. Then he stood.
“Alright.” He gestured toward the examination bed behind me, clean, clinical, positioned against the far wall with a paper sheet folded across it. “You’ll need to remove your trousers. I need to examine you properly.”
I turned and looked at the bed. Then I turned back.
“I’m sorry?”
“It’s a standard gynecological examination, Scarlet.”
“I understand that, I just…” I stopped. Pressed my lips together. “Is there another way?”
“There isn’t.” His voice was completely professional. His eyes were something else. “Have you never seen a gynecologist before?”
The honest answer was embarrassing enough that I almost didn’t give it. “No, I haven’t.”
He didn’t laugh. He didn’t even smile. He simply held my gaze with the patience of a man who had done this a thousand times and the awareness of a man who understood that this particular patient was not simply nervous about a medical procedure.
“I’ll step out,” he said quietly. “Take your time.”
He gave me three minutes. I used all of them, climbing onto the bed, arranging myself, staring at the ceiling and having a very firm conversation with myself about the difference between a medical examination and anything else. This was clinical. This was necessary. This was a doctor doing his job and a patient receiving care and the fact that the doctor in question had once known my body in an entirely different context was completely irrelevant.
I was still having that conversation with myself when he came back in.
He snapped on his gloves with the practiced efficiency of someone who had done it ten thousand times. He positioned himself with clinical precision. He explained each step before he took it, his voice measured and even, nothing in it that I could point to as anything other than professional.
And then he began the examination.
I gripped the edge of the bed.
The moment his fingers made contact I felt it, a wave of sensation that had nothing to do with medicine and everything to do with memory.
10 years of careful forgetting undone in an instant by the specific, devastating familiarity of his touch in my Pu**y. My body remembered him before my mind could stop it. Every nerve ending awake at once, my breath going shallow, a heat spreading through me that I had absolutely no business feeling in a consultation room at ten-fifteen on a Thursday morning.
“Ahh…”
I moaned as the sound escaped before I could catch it. Small. Involuntary. Mortifying.
I pressed my lips together hard.
“Relax.” His voice was different now, but. still controlled, still professional, but with something underneath it that he was working to keep there. Something pressed down and barely managed. “I need to complete the examination.”
I stared at the ceiling and breathed through my nose and thought about anything, Ruth’s voice, the cold breakfast, the compound this morning, anything that was not the feeling of Ray Lionel’s hands and the 10 years years of muscle memory currently staging a complete revolt against my better judgment.
It didn’t entirely work.
My fingers found the edge of his coat without my permission, gripping the fabric as the examination continued, my body reacting to his touch as he dipped his middle finger inside me. with a honesty that my mind was desperately trying to override. It was warm everywhere. I was aware of every point of contact, every careful professional movement, and the specific torture of a body that remembered being loved by these hands and could not pretend otherwise.
This is a medical examination, I told myself firmly, meanwhile i was already dripping wet from getting horny for my gynecologist who is my ex boyfriend.
He is your doctor.
You are a married woman.
I told myself all of it. I believed approximately none of it.
He removed his gloves and stepped back and I sat up and neither of us said anything for a moment that lasted considerably longer than it should have.
He was looking at the wall just to the left of my face. I was looking at my hands in my lap. The silence between us had a texture, thick, aware, full of things that a consultation room had no business containing. Then he cleared his throat and said, very carefully, “I’ll have your results within forty-eight hours.” And I nodded and got dressed and when I was about to leave his office he stopped and said;
“Scar, eventually we need to talk about what really happened between us”
I didn’t say anything but I nodded and walked out of his office knowing with complete certainty that I was in a great deal of trouble.
SCARLET ♠️I was home by two-thirty.Noah was asleep, I could tell from the quality of the house’s silence before I even reached the bedroom, the specific stillness of a space that has been unoccupied and undisturbed for hours. I stood in the doorway for a moment. His shape under the covers, the even breathing, the arranged side of the bed. The familiar landscape of a man completely at rest.I went to the bathroom. Closed the door softly. I turned on the shower.I stood under the water for a long time. Not scrubbing anything away, I want to be clear about that. I was not standing under the shower trying to wash Ray off me or erase the evening or perform any kind of ritual cleansing that would have implied regret I did not feel. I stood under the water because I needed to think and I thought better in the shower than anywhere else and I had a significant amount of thinking to do.Here was what I knew.I had spent the night with Ray Lionel in a hotel room on the fourteenth floor of a
SCARLET ♠️Neither of us moved toward the door.That was the thing. We both knew where the door was, I had come through it two hours ago, the hostess had pointed me in the right direction, it was not a complicated building to navigate. We both knew it was there and we both knew what walking through it meant and we both stood beside the table in the low light of the hotel bar and did not move toward it.Ray picked up his jacket from the booth. I adjusted my bag on my shoulder. We stood there looking at each other with the full knowledge of two adults who understood exactly what the next decision was and exactly what it cost.“I should go,” I said.“Yes,” he agreed.Neither of us moved.The bar had thinned out in the last hour, it was closer to ten now, the after-work crowd replaced by the later, quieter kind, couples in booths, a man at the bar alone with his drink and his thoughts. The ambient noise was lower. The lighting felt closer. I was aware of Ray with the specific awareness o
SCARLET ♠️I told Noah I had a client consultation.It was Tuesday, plausible, specific, the kind of lie that has enough texture to it that it doesn’t require elaboration. A client in Midtown, a design review, it might run long, don’t wait on dinner. I said it at breakfast with my coffee in one hand and my phone in the other and my eyes on the schedule I had pulled up on screen, and Noah looked up from his newspaper and said of course, let me know if you need the car and went back to reading.I stood at the kitchen counter and thought about the woman I was becoming and whether she was someone I recognized and concluded that she was, more than I had been in years, actually, which was its own complicated thing to sit with.Ray had sent the address at nine PM the night before. A hotel bar in Midtown, the kind of place with low lighting and high-backed booths and enough ambient noise to have a private conversation without being private in a way that meant anything. Public and quiet at th
NOAH ♠️I knew something was different before I opened the front door.I have been married to Scarlet for eight years, and in that time I have learnt her the way you learn about the house you live in, not consciously, not by study, but by accumulation. The particular quality of her silences. The specific way she holds her body when she is working something out that she has not decided to tell me yet. The temperature of a room she has been alone in for too long.I stood outside our front door at six-forty PM with flowers in one hand, peonies, her favorite, the ones that cost too much and last too short a time which had always struck me as exactly the kind of flower she would choose, and I knew before I turned the key that the evening was going to require a version of me she didn’t often get to see. The version that remembered, with deliberate effort, what it was that had made her choose me in the first place.I was very good at that version when I needed to be.I just didn’t always
SCARLET ♠️Clara refilled my mug and sat back down and folded her hands on the table and looked at me with the particular patience of a woman who had been waiting for this conversation longer than I had realized.“I have nowhere to be,” she said again. “And you have been carrying something for two weeks that is getting heavier every day I can see it on your face. So.” She nodded at the phone, face down between us, Ray’s name no longer lit but somehow still present in the room like a word said out loud that hasn’t finished landing yet. “Start wherever you need to start.”I picked up my mug. Put it down. Picked it up again.“His name is Ray Lionel,” I said. “And before I tell you anything else about what is happening right now I need to tell you who he was first. Because it matters. The order of it matters.”Clara nodded. Said nothing. Waited.So I told her.I told her about being twenty-two and meeting Ray at a point in my life when I was still becoming whoever I was going to be, before
Scarlet ♠️Clara opened the door before I knocked.She had been watching for my car from the window, I knew this because the door swung open as I was still coming up the path, and Clara was standing there in her dressing gown with her hair not yet done and two mugs already in her hand, which meant the kettle had been on for a while. She looked at my face for approximately one second.Then she stepped back and let me in without saying a word.That was the thing about twelve years of friendship. You develop a language that doesn’t require words. Clara took one look at me, the clothes I had put on too quickly, the face I had not yet managed to arrange into anything presentable, the way I was carrying myself like someone who had been awake all night holding something heavy, and she understood that this was not a visit that required small talk. She handed me a mug. Pointed at the kitchen table. Went to make the tea.I sat down.Her apartment was the same as it always was, warm, slightly







