Conversations with Jack and Diane Friendship or Possession Jack sat with his legs dangling from the pier, the smell of fresh fish in the air. The morning auction would start soon, and the tranquility of the new day would be lost until dawn came again tomorrow. He looked up at the gray cloudy sky, the silver sun behind the misty clouds still bright enough to make him turn his face from it’s glow. He closed his eyes and waited for the burn upon their surface to desolve itself back into focus. When he opened them again she was standing there beside him, her long tanned legs sinewy and bare all the way up to her thighs until finally the soft flow of silken shorts covered her most inviting loins. “Good morning Jack,” Diane greeted. He just stared up at her, unwilling to return the morning pleasantry. “Oh come on Jack. You can’t still be angry at me?” she frowned, sitting lightly beside him, the same long legs that stood a moment before now dangling alongside Jack’s as they both sat upon the eeriely quiet pier. Jack pouted and turned away, he could not look into her blue eyes. He just couldn’t if he wanted to keep his indignation intact. “Jack, you are being silly,” Diane informed him, her gaze locked on his strong face. Her own face blushing warm with frustration. He refused to respond. The roadside traffic swished by like rain sleek wraiths, their echoing tires whispering loudly on the wet asphalt. “This is stupid Jack,” she tried again. “You are angry with me because for once I wanted to spend time with a friend other than you.” It was her turn to pout now. “You are being a silly little boy. In fact,” she pointed out. “You are acting like a spoiled brat!!” She folded her arms across her chest and settled in for the long haul. The rainy morning droned on as the pair of silent sentinels stared out at the drizzled sea, each determined to out-do the other in a contest of wills. It was Jack who cracked first. “I don’t play second fiddle very well,” he offered slowly, his smooth, crisp voice oddly vacant in the grasp of the quiet pier. “You are never second fiddle with me Jack,” Diane assured him. “Oh come off it Di,” he waved errantly. “I’m merely a convenience for you. Here when you need me, but entirely dismissed when there is someone else better to be had.” Diane looked down at her dangling legs, blue eyes narrowing as she breathed deeply. “You sure know how to hurt a friend Jack,” she uttered softly, her tone strong and angry. “I could say the very same for you my sweet,” Jack retaliated. Diane turned her glare on him. “Do you honestly expect me to have no other friends in my life except you? Do you really feel that it is fair for you to get angry at me just because at times I need to talk and discuss things with someone other than you?” Jack nodded his head slowly. “I really do think it is fair, yes,” he replied. Diane’s lips parted, but words eluded her at that moment. “What’s the matter,” Jack injected. “What’s his name got your tongue?” “You bastard,” Diane whispered, her cerulean eyes mere slits of anger. “You are really making me angry Jack. For the first time in our friendship I feel a real dislike for you right now.” “It’s all part of the process babe,” he assured her. “What the hell are you talking about?” she exploded, her high, melodic voice bouncing off the auction block walls. Jack shrugged. “It’s simple,” he answered. “Before you broke-off the friendship, you must feign anger with me. You will want to convince yourself of that dislike as a way to rationalize the closing of our relationship. It is obvious, wouldn’t you say?” He smiled tauntingly. “You are just impossible Jack,” she shook her head. “You are the most possessive man I have ever known.” “And the rationalization marches on,” he needled. “No!” Diane flared. “I don’t need to rationalize anything. Our friendship is solid. Its been built over years of sharing and communicating.” “Only now,” Jack persisted. “You prefer to share with someone other than me.” “Not true,” Diane battled. “Uh huh,” Jack nodded. “It is in fact very true.” “How can you sit there and say that to me Jack,” she asked. “You hurt me so deeply you can’t even imagine.” “I think not as deeply as the lonely dread I felt when you abandoned me for close contact with another.” He shook his head slowly, sadly. “The pit of my stomach felt like it would sink forever. I couldn’t even catch my breath as every fiber within me trembled for you.” He chuckled softly. “Sounds crazy doesn’t it?” he asked with a wayward smile. “I don’t understand Jack,” Diane tried to explain. “I never abandoned you my love.” “Oh but you did Di. You took from me the one intimacy that I thought was mine alone. The intimacy of communication.” He chuckled sardonically again. “I thought, evidently incorrectly, that I was the only person that could help you express the feelings we all need to express; but which usually don’t get divulged because we never find that one special person to share it with.” He took a deep breath. “I thought I was that special person for you.” His gaze dropped to the shimmering surface of the bay. Diane’s perfect blue eyes held the gloss of tears. She pursed her lips to keep from crying. But there were words she needed to speak, and she did. “You are one manipulative bastard Jack,” she whispered forcefully. “Full of yourself, and without regard for the feelings of others.” “Not true,” Jack injected. “Yes true!” she shouted. “How dare you question my comitment to our friendship! I shouldn’t have to prove myself to you any longer. After all the times we have laughed and cried together. After the sharing of our deepest fears, our deepest desires. Our most private thoughts. Thoughts we wouldn’t even share with god, we shared with each other. And still you have the god damned balls to look me in the eyes and tell me that I’m trying to rationalize my way out of this friendship.” She held her hands up, palms spread open, as she took a deep breath to calm herself. “You are so fucking full of shit Jack!” she growled softly, her eyes scanning the still empty auction yard for any sign of life. “I have no idea what possesses you to think the way you do sometimes.” Jack scratched his head absently, and blinked as he raised his gaze to the flawless face of his best friend. “But what about the pit of my stomach?” he asked, his fox-brown eyes sincere with expectation. “What?” Diane frowned. “No matter how much you conclude my actions as manipulative. And no matter even that to a degree I agree that I am. And after all the possessive crap, and all the childish nonsense. After all of those failings on my part Diane. There is still the matter of the dread I feel in my gut when you deny me the confidence of your intimacy.” “But I have never denied you that Jack.” “Perhaps not in so many words,” he assured her. “But when you choose someone else to confide in, I lose the connection that makes you mine.” “You are doing it again Jack,” Diane instructed him. “Doing what?” he asked. “Manipulating me,” she replied. “But manipulation is to try and influence by deception. I have never deceived you when it comes to my feelings for you Di.” “You do not manipulate me in that sense Jack. But instead you manipulate your unjustified reactions to my having other friends. You manipulate the existence of guilt inside of me because I have friends other than you. And that isn’t fair Jack. Not to me. And not to you.” Jack stood up slowly, reaching for Diane’s hand and helping her to her feet as she accepted. He brushed the silky golden strands from her cheeks and held her face gently in his fingertips. “Sometimes I lose sight of your importance to my life. Sometimes our friendship becomes something I use to measure my own worth. Even when I know it isn’t fair to hold you responsible for my own feelings of inadequacy, I do.” He paused for a moment and just held her beautiful gaze. “And I’m sorry...” His fingers slowly traced the soft line of her jaw toward her delicate chin until they broke their warm contact with her marbled skin. “Forgive me..?” he pleaded. “Yes,” Diane assured him. “This time I will.” Jack absorbed the warning and gripped it’s implications. “Thank you,” he whispered, his arm gliding around her waist as they departed the lonesome auction pier... The End Unpublished Works © 1997 GJB