Harry Bond worked for a mid-level law firm, not the best and certainly not la creme de la creme, but creditable and familiar to those in the business. None of the partners went to Harvard, Yale, or Stanford - it was more of a Florida State, Tallahassee crowd; but the firm never lacked for clients given the litigious nature of our era.
Harry was a divorce lawyer, on the smarmy side of the legal profession - innuendoes, false claims, sorting out one scurrilous untruth from another, wallowing in the shit of miserable, hateful marriages and having to keep one's composure - but it more than paid the rent, assured better than a duplex in the suburbs and a place at good, if not top-tier college for children.
If the truth be known, Harry's marriage was nothing to boast about except for its longevity. Harry and Louise had been married for donkey's years, and were settled into the usual, predictable, not unpleasant but certainly humdrum routines which characterize those of most couples.
Over the years they had moved from infrequent sex to desultory, to almost never, to sexual barrenness. For Harry's wife it was a removal of an incommodious duty - she had never been one for sexual enthusiasm and after the children were born claimed 'uncomfortability', and so transitioned to her new sexual abstinence without disappointment or remorse.
Harry on the other hand was as sexually desirous as he ever had been - more actually, for politics and social activism had eaten most of his free time in college, and slogging billable hours until partnership had taken its toll - and a pretty girl turned his head every time.
There was that new girl in the gym, a sylphic Japanese beauty, right out of an Edo woodcut, so elegant, so classic, so sloe-eyed and magnificent! Or the newcomers to Washington - blonde, blue-eyed, flaxen-haired young women from Iowa and Kansas for the presidential term, delectable morsels, sweet, innocent things, as desirable as Christmas candy or lemon drops.
Konstantin Levin, a principal character in Tolstoy's Anna Karenina lamented God's irony of having created man, an intelligent, sentient, creative, person of humor and charm, given him but a few decades on earth, and then consigned him to an eternity beneath the cold, hard ground of the steppes.
Harry felt a worse irony - that God had created men with a lifelong, desperate interest in women, but with a very early sexual pull-by date. Most men were either unaware of the irony or ignored it, and doddered into old age with the same prune-faced hag they had married decades before and with only faint silhouette memories of sexual pleasure.
'I must act and act now', Harry said to himself one morning after a particularly rancid-smelling night - the king-sized bed had become nowhere near wide enough for reasonable distance; but he was soon to find that intimacy with a stranger was not as easy as it was in the old days, the days of love-the-one-you're-with, the singles bar pickup days of the East Village. At his age he was not even given a second glance.
Yet, he was not old, not irrelevant, and certainly not past his pull-by date. If only there were opportunity and good measure, he might be once again in his sexually emotional prime.
The chance came with Marge from Accounting, a young woman with a father-fixation, an oddly receded hairline, a tendency to run to fat, but with a blonde vivacity which she adopted and husbanded from Cosmo, Elle, and Vogue.
It was this father fixation that was the trigger. Now, Mr. Pappas was no great shakes, no entrepreneur, scion of industry, man of arts and letters, but a simple typesetter turned computer programmer. His influence on Marge was of the simplest, most basic variety - he loved and doted on his daughter, so much so that she thought he was the lover of her dreams. Old, nose-hairy, clotted and insignificant Artur Pappas would be her male model forever.
And so it was that when Harry, desperate for female attention, and impatient for the sexual satisfaction that would come with successful mating, met Marge, equally on pins and needles waiting for Mr. Right, the relationship was destined for fruition,
Martinis and oysters at the Mayflower, two Quaaludes in the taxi, a delirious night in a second story walkup in Adams Morgan, and the deal was sealed. They were a couple - an illicit, unusually paired one, but necessary. If either one ever bothered to think beyond the bedroom, the Piper Heidsieck and the take out, they would have known that this was an affair of unfortunate necessity and not romance.
They grasped and clawed each other, both thanking God, both as delighted as schoolchildren with a new toy, a new teacher, or pizza for lunch. The affair lasted for months, each lover more involved and obsessed with each other every week. The inevitability of its finale - he going back to his yellowing wife and Marge to a life of celibacy, dildoes and increasingly unsustainable fantasy - was ignored at all cost; and their weekend trysts were all the more intense and gratifying.
December-May marriages have been limned for centuries - the rejuvenating, transforming, existential love of an older man for a younger woman is the stuff of dreams, legend, and psychology
In fact Harry's physician when discussing the affair and its ultimate end asked him whether he was ready.
'For what?', said the besotted, live-forever patient. 'Coming down from such a love affair is worse than heroin', said the doctor.
The literature was filled with accounts of suicidal depression. The end of the affair for older men signifies finality; and worse, the end of the reliving of the glories of the past. The older man is easily seduced into thinking that this idyll will last forever, that he has indeed found the Fountain of Youth.
'It's almost worse than if you never had it', said the doctor'. The combined pain of the burial of youth, the finality of one's last love, and the irreducible return to a dour, unpleasant reality is too much for many men. 'Be careful what you wish for'.
Duplicity, infidelity, and faithlessness are easily forgiven by women in one's elder years - too many sunken costs, too much history, too much too lose to make a fuss about men behaving badly - but there will always be a price to pay. Infidelity always comes with strings.
In the waning months of the affair with Marge from Accounting, Harry wondered if he could trade up. Now that a line had been crossed and he was on his own, why not Bettina from the Front Office, a Paraguayan beauty? Or Usha, Palestinian queen of the Seventh Floor?
But the variables of The Perfect Storm which had come together so felicitously with Marge, were not guaranteed to be universally operative, and after his first sallies in these women's directions, he had to face facts.
So, the affair with Marge from Accounting ended, Harry once again became a considerate if not dutiful husband, and he looked forward to his remaining years with grim fortitude.
The Coleman Silk character in Phillip Roth's The Human Stain', an older man in an affair with a much younger woman, far out of his social class, says to a critic, 'Granted, she's not my first love, and granted she's not my best love; but she is certainly my last love. Doesn't that count for something?'
Of course it does. The Coleman Silk character is murdered because of his affair, but Harry only soldiers on in a soggy, barely palatable but necessary marriage. Ah, the ways of the heart.


