Page 449 - A Little Life: A Novel
P. 449

They had decided to tell just a few people about their relationship. First
                they told Harold and Julia, which was the most rewarding and enjoyable
                reveal,  although  Jude  had  been  very  nervous  for  some  reason.  This  had

                been just a couple of weeks ago, at Thanksgiving, and they had both been
                so happy, so excited, and they had both hugged him and Harold had cried, a
                little,  while  Jude  sat  on  the  sofa  and  watched  the  three  of  them,  a  small
                smile on his face.
                   Then  they  told  Richard,  who  hadn’t  been  as  surprised  as  they’d
                anticipated. “I think this is a fantastic idea,” he’d said, firmly, as if they’d
                announced they were investing in a piece of property together. He hugged

                them both. “Good job,” he said. “Good job, Willem,” and he knew what
                Richard was trying to communicate to him: the same thing he had tried to
                communicate  to  Richard  when  he  told  him,  years  ago,  that  Jude  needed
                somewhere safe to live, when really, he was asking Richard to look over
                Jude when he could not.
                   Then  they  told  Malcolm  and  JB,  separately.  First,  Malcolm,  who  they

                thought would either be shocked or sanguine, and who had turned out to be
                the  latter.  “I’m  so  happy  for  you  guys,”  he  said,  beaming  at  them  both.
                “This is so great. I love the idea of you two together.” He asked them how it
                had  happened,  and  how  long  ago,  and,  teasingly,  what  they’d  discovered
                about  the  other  that  they  hadn’t  known  before.  (The  two  of  them  had
                glanced at each other then—if only Malcolm knew!—and had said nothing,
                which Malcolm had smiled at, as if it was evidence of a rich cache of sordid

                secrets that he would someday unearth.) And then he’d sighed. “I’m just
                sad about one thing, though,” he’d said, and they had asked him what it
                was.  “Your  apartment, Willem,” he said. “It’s  so  beautiful. It must be so
                lonely  by  itself.”  Somehow,  they  had  managed  not  to  laugh,  and  he  had
                reassured Malcolm that he was actually renting it to a friend of his, an actor
                from Spain who had been shooting a project in Manhattan and had decided

                to stay on for another year or so.
                   JB was trickier, as they’d known he would be: they knew he would feel
                betrayed, and neglected, and possessive, and that all of these feelings would
                be  exacerbated  by  the  fact  that  he  and  Oliver  had  recently  split  up  after
                more than four years. They took him out to dinner, where there was less of a
                chance (though, as Jude pointed out, no guarantee) that he would make a
                scene, and Jude—around whom JB was still slightly careful and to whom

                JB  was  less  likely  to  say  something  inappropriate—delivered  the  news.
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