Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances

Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances by Neil Gaiman Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances by Neil Gaiman Read Free Book Online
Authors: Neil Gaiman
Tags: Fiction, General, Short Stories (Single Author)
out if any of it was true) it was actually The Day I Lost My Virginity, in Cassandra’s aunt’s flat in London: the aunt was away, Cassandra had a key. I had (for proof) a packet of three condoms missing the one I had thrown away and a strip of four black-and-white photographs I had found on my first trip to London, abandoned in the basket of a photo booth in Victoria Station. The photo strip showed a girl about my age with long straight hair (I could not be certain of the color. Dark blond? Red? Light brown?) and a friendly, freckly, not unpretty, face. I pocketed it. In art class I did a pencil sketch of the third of the pictures, the one I liked the best, her head half-turned as if calling out to an unseenfriend beyond the tiny curtain. She looked sweet, and charming. I would have liked her to be my girlfriend.
    I put the drawing up on my bedroom wall, where I could see it from my bed.
    After our third date (it was to see Who Framed Roger Rabbit? ) I came back to school with bad news: Cassandra’s family was going to Canada (a place that sounded more convincing to my ears than America), something to do with her father’s job, and I would not see her for a long time. We hadn’t really broken up, but we were being practical: those were the days when transatlantic phone calls were too expensive for teenagers. It was over.
    I was sad. Everyone noticed how sad I was. They said they would have loved to have met her, and maybe when she comes back at Christmas? I was confident that by Christmas, she would be forgotten.
    She was. By Christmas I was going out with Nikki Blevins and the only evidence that Cassandra had ever been a part of my life was her name, written on a couple of my exercise books, and the pencil drawing of her on my bedroom wall, with “Cassandra, February 19th, 1985” written underneath it.
    When my mother sold the riding stable, the drawing was lost in the move. I was at art college at the time, considered my old pencil drawings as embarrassing as the fact that I had once invented a girlfriend, and did not care.
    I do not believe I had thought of Cassandra for twenty years.
    MY MOTHER SOLD THE stables, the attached house and the meadows to a property developer, who built a housing estate where we had once lived, and, as part of the deal, gave her a small, detached house at the end of Seton Close. I visit her at least once a fortnight, arrivingon Friday night, leaving Sunday morning, a routine as regular as the grandmother clock in the hall.
    Mother is concerned that I am happy in life. She has started to mention that various of her friends have eligible daughters. This trip we had an extremely embarrassing conversation that began with her asking if I would like her to introduce me to the organist at her church, a very nice young man of about my age.
    “Mother. I’m not gay.”
    “There’s nothing wrong with it, dear. All sorts of people do it. They even get married. Well, not proper marriage, but it’s the same thing.”
    “I’m still not gay.”
    “I just thought, still not married, and the painting and the modeling.”
    “I’ve had girlfriends, Mummy. You’ve even met some of them.”
    “Nothing that ever stuck, dear. I just thought there might be something you wanted to tell me.”
    “I’m not gay, Mother. I would tell you if I was.” And then I said, “I snogged Tim Carter at a party when I was at art college but we were drunk and it never went beyond that.”
    She pursed her lips. “That’s quite enough of that, young man.” And then, changing the subject, as if to get rid of an unpleasant taste in her mouth, she said, “You’ll never guess who I bumped into in Tesco’s last week.”
    “No, I won’t. Who?”
    “Your old girlfriend. Your first girlfriend, I should say.”
    “Nikki Blevins? Hang on, she’s married, isn’t she? Nikki Woodbridge?”
    “The one before her, dear. Cassandra. I was behind her, in the line. I would have been ahead of her, but I forgot that I

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