They became lovers. LOVERS! L*O*V*E*R*S* for themselves, for their fellow players, for the director and the producer and the staff, for the press, the public, for you and I. Their waking lives were gorgeous, working together and all that. To think of them at night running over moors where blue-painted Anglos and Saxons once ran was overwhelming. It was like looking with naked eyes at a fleshy eclipse of the sun, of the moon, of the entire physical universe.
He was married, she was married and they became unmarried and blended. Their ex's gave interviews to the papers wishing them 'the best', but theirs were rusty words. Ex Mr. Her and Ex Mrs. Him rattled like empty old scabbards. Who listened? Nobody. Even other empty scabbards turned away. For Jason Briar and Monica Ploy cuddled and fondled and tumbled for everyone. All cells rang like bells.
The trouble was their affair was ill-timed. Beowulf ran into production problems. (Something about fog.) So the celluloid climax occurred later than the lovers' hottest heat and by the time the movie was ready for selected premiere showcase theaters, millions of ingrates were thinking of other jangling thighs, of other midnight panting.
The studio sent them into seclusion. It was announced that they were going to be secluded like monks. They were going away to pure isolation, to a place of meditation and cold stone, to a place by the salty sea.
The studio found an abandoned abbey near an ocean. It was fine. There was no furniture. Not even a bed. NOT EVEN A BED. All the windows were broken. The garden was like a crazy man's lair. Ooze made lines on the thick, thick walls. There was, of course, no telephone. Wind from the waters whistled in the halls. You could hear spiders skitter.
The point? The point was peace. The lovers were going to find peace and repose. They were going to discover hidden flavors far from the candy store. With a few cans and bottles, an opener and a busload of photographers, Jason Briar and Monica Ploy sent out to heal themselves in double solitary.
The concept got banner headlines right away. The story grew. The studio was pleased. Even the Ex's gave interviews again. On the fateful day that Beowulf opened across the nation the lovers said goodbye to civilisation. Their abbey was on a cliff jutting into the brine. There was only one road for access.
Guards were placed where the road joined the rest of the American continent and away they went carrying provisions in canvas sacks.
The lovers wandered wistfully. It was late afternoon. A pink cloud covered the sea. The sand was red. Bits of shell reflected sun like broken pieces of an urn. Jason Briar and Monica Ploy retreated into this magnificence. Even they were impressed.
They had never been to the abbey before so first they explored. The old rock house on an ancient hump of land teetered on the edge of Earth. There was a ribbon of sand separating them from the fishes, nothing more. The house itself was a thick cool egg, a ponderous thing with a hundred tiny rooms and one huge cavern downstairs. Jason Briar and Monica Ploy rattled around the premises.
"You know, Jay," Monica said. "I think I actually like it."
Jay looked at her and noticed that her lips were wet. Her lips were always wet. She licked them.
"We might as well, puss cat," he said. "Let's go for a swim."
Monica dropped her clothes where she stood. Jay too. Monica was brown as a nut except for two bikini lines. Jay was brown as she except for one bikini line. Monica ran a finger along his appendix scar. It was a shame, that one flaw. The doctor had shaky hands. The scar rambled. He might just as well have been nibbled by a lion.
Off they went to the ocean. The water was chilly but welcoming. They swam and splashed. Monica, lips wetter than ever, got hungry and thirsty. Jay, dripping puddles, pushed back his hair. He peed.
"Why do you have to do that here?" Monica said.
"Why not?"
"I don't know. You pee in the shower too, don't you?"
Jay slapped her gingerly on the can. Monica yelled. His hand etched on her bottom. She pulled a hair on his chest. They went up to the house.
"This is really fun," Monica said, and made her little noise, a gargled, swallowed purr for which she was justly famous.
In the cathedral of a living room, if that is what it could be called, Jay rummaged through the provision sacks. He found two cans of beans, a fifth of Beefeater and a long spoon. There was a can opener too, with a bottle opener on the back. Jay opened the beans. Sitting on canvas bags, he and Monica ate. Then they drank down the gin. Soon both felt a glow.
"Watch yourself," Jay said. "I think I'm in the mood to stimulate a certain party's erogenous zones."
Monica stood up.
"Not on the stone floor," she said.
Jay unrolled their sleeping bags.
"How do you do it in there?" Monica said.
"I don't know," Jay said. "But we can find out. Thousands of people do."
Monica wiggled into a sleeping bag.
"I feel like some kind of product," she said.
Jay got in with her after some difficulty.
"How come your navel is kind of a football shape?" Monica said.
"What makes you say that?"
"It is. Not that it's important. But it is."
Jay could not see his bellybutton in the bag but he wondered about it.
They made love sideways then squirmed out of the bag. Jay checked his button. It was mostly circular, not at all football shaped. Monica was holding a mirror while she put on lipstick.
"A mirror? Cosmetics?" Jay said.
"I smuggled them in."
"Well the whole point was a kind of enforced austerity," Jay said.
"Who'll know?"
"Nobody. Unless some reporter gets by the guards. It's a matter of keep the faith. Not that that means much to some people."
"Some people are not hypocrites like other people," Monica said.
She put on a sack dress. Jay put on bermudas.
"Where do we wash up around here anyway?"
"Pump outside," Jay said.
Monica went out and found the pump. She worked the handle. A trickle of rusty water dribbled out.
"Is that a pump or an infection?" Jay said. He had come up behind her.
"Help me."
Jay pumped. The rusty brown water turned grey.
"I think that pump is connected to the sky there," Monica said.
A heavy cloud covered the ocean and it was indeed the colour of the water.
A wind blew from out at sea.
"Brrrr," Monica said. "I'm starting to freeze."
After the wash Monica and Jay went to get more clothes. A storm was blowing in, no question about it. Jay found some logs and kindling. He made a fire using a copy of Harlow to prime the flames.
"Cozy shmozy," he said.
"What shall we do?" Monica said.
"Scrabble," said Jay.
The Scrabble board was set by the fire and the tiles distributed. Jay watched Monica's face change. She loved competitive games. He hated them. But he liked to watch her love competitive games because he fancied that her true self emerged when she played them.
Games were a kind of sodium pentothal to Monica. After an hour or so of combat Jay knew he could ask her anything and get a quick, straight, honest and therefore cruel answer. Her answers always hurt Jay in his middle. They clashed with his convictions about what a woman should be. Despite that, he enjoyed the whole process. Monica knew what he was about but she enjoyed it too. And she actually did get carried away with the old team spirit.
"Strap on your phallus," Jay said. "The game begins. And remember in this one you don't collect $200 when you pass GO."
"Ooooo, you're going to get it," Monica said and proceeded to give it to him.
Monica could not concentrate on anything for more than a whisper so Jay opened with a spurt. He strained his head from the first gun. Monica came on like thunder too. It was a healthy, absorbing contest. Jay and Monica huddled over the board made great shadows as the flames jumped.