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“The Cognac” by James Tate 🇺🇸 (8 Dec 19438 Jul 2015)
I smoked a cigar just before taking my bath. My rubber ducky floated around me. When I had finished I dried myself off and dressed. Then I went to the living room and poured myself a shot of vodka. Cindy was coming over in a half an hour. I wanted to be in good shape. When she arrived I offered her a cocktail and she accepted. She told me about her job as an accountant and I told her about mine as an insurance agent. We both agreed that our bosses were idiots. We joked and laughed and had a second drink. I felt I had known her a long time, when in fact this was our first date. I grilled us some steaks for dinner. I poured us some wine. We toasted each other. We laughed and ate. We talked about what we liked to do in our spare time. We both liked to read. She liked novels and I liked nonfiction. When we finished I cleared the table and got us some cognac and dessert. She had beautiful eyes. I was attracted to her, but knew I should wait. We talked about our childhoods, growing up in the city, brothers and sisters. I asked her if her family was religious. She said, “Not really. We went to church on Easter and Christmas, you could hardly call that religious.” I said, “Same here.” And we laughed. We talked politics and so on. The next thing I knew I woke up in bed in the morning. I looked around for Cindy, but she wasn’t there. I got up, holding my sore head. I went to the kitchen to make myself some coffee. There was blood all over the floor. I panicked. I tried to remember the end of the evening. I couldn’t. Maybe we fought, I wasn’t sure. Maybe I stabbed her, but that seemed unlikely. I wasn’t a violent man, I never had been before. But somebody got hurt and it wasn’t me. Finally the phone rang. It was Cindy. “Are you all right? There’s blood all over the floor,” I said. “Yes, I’m okay, but I stabbed something. I don’t know what it was,” she said. “What do you mean,” I said. “It had fangs and sharp claws and pointy ears and was the size of a small dog, that’s all I know,” she said. “Was it a raccoon?” I said. “No, I know what a raccoon looks like. I said I don’t know.” “Okay, well it must be in the house, anyway. You stabbed it, I mean, it must be dead,” I said. “I think it went back in one of those cognac bottles,” she said. “Oh my God, I’m going to throw them all out immediately,” I said. “Please don’t, I kind of liked it,” she said.