Sometimes my students give some pretty good excuses why something isnât turned in on time, or why it looks suspiciously like a paper you accepted from a student last semester. Weâve all seen those lists of implausible excuses â and you may have even used one or two of them yourself. My favorite â good for everything from calling in sick to skipping that family reunion is âI had explosive diarrheaâ. It must be used sparingly, though or it loses its effect.
Yesterday, after I posted the final entries into the Lust round of the Seven Deadly Sins contest, one of our compadres realized he had missed the deadline. He didnât try to BS me with crazy excuses â his story just needed some tweaking, he got really busy, and time got away from him. Byronic Man is a stand-up guy, meaning not only has he has done stand-up comedy, and he is a witty, thoughtful, blogger who supports other bloggers in many ways.Â
I decided to accept his entry â even though I had already taken down the submission box. I am including his story, even though he missed the deadline by a couple of hours â my math is fuzzy on Sundays â always has been. When you read it, I think youâll see why. In return, he has agreed to name his daughter after me â JUST KIDDING. Ha Ha.
So, with your indulgence (because itâs my contest and I make up the rules as I go along) I am adding his story to the competition:
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From Joel at The Byronic Man:
Marked
Maybe it was that he was moving in two months that freed them from feeling like they needed to hold up the façade of restraint. But the turning point, really, wasnât the car ride that should have gotten them killed. It wasnât even the game of pool with the wager that, âFor the rest of the night, winner says âdo,â and loser does.â It was a kiss goodnight after an episode in an alley. A kiss that turned in to a live wire, burning and snaking dangerously.
 âOh,â she said with a soft laugh. âOh, this is going to be one of those relationships, isnât it.â
 One of those relationships that they were both old enough to know canât last. Because the things that fueled that kind of attraction, strangely, donât fuel for long. So maybe it was that he was leaving that got rid of guilt, or restraint, or propriety. Between the days of minor adventures was âI wantâ and ânow doâ and âIâve always wondered.â It was setting a bottle of wine down and saying, âWeâll drink this. And then weâre going to play a game of âwhatâs the fantasy youâve never had the nerve to admit even to yourself?â You know the one.â It was taking and acting instead of hoping and insinuating.
 âRemember that drive back from the coast?â she asked one evening, lying on the floor amidst boxes that were already waiting to be packed. âYou know.â
 He smiled. âYes. Yes, I vaguely recall.â
 âHow did we not crash? How did we stay on the road?
 âI donât know. I guess by the grace ofââ
 âThe grace of God. Exactly. Thatâs the phrase you use for that kind of thing. Only isnât lust a sin? And that was lust. Why would God protect us during a sin?â
 âThatâs a very weird question,â he said, biting her toe. âThis is a huge scratch mark, by the way. Youâve marked me.â
 âDamn right. But, seriously, think about it. Maybe lust isnât a sin.â
 âMaybe this isnât lust. Maybe sin isnât a stern man in the clouds shaking a finger at us. Maybe sin is indulgence to the excess of destruction. We arenât harming our lives or people. We arenât destroying ourselves, I donât think.â
 âFor starters, if weâd crashed thatâs exactly what it would have been. Second, if this isnât lust, I donât know what is.â
 âI think weâre clear.â He made a cross in front of himself. âTe absolvo fornicatium.â
 The last night before he left was an explosion of yearning and sorrow. Almost no words were said. None could capture it. And in the months that followed, any beginnings of relationships that followed seem muted, covered in gauze. The restraints were back, the propriety. He thought constantly of her and of their time, and couldnât accept anything in his present moment as comparable.
 Maybe this, he thought, is the sin. Maybe this is the lust. And time passed, and memories faded. And he moved on. Except, he didnât really. Not really. He was marked.
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My computer crashed yesterday afternoon â apparently at least one of the spambots that flooded my submission box got past my anti-virus software and rearranged the working innards of my beloved laptop- my ability to understand all that is a little fuzzy as well. So I will be finishing this post, and sending out e-mails detailing the judging from my husbandâs computer.  I will have sporadic internet and computer access over the next few days as both my laptop and myself undergo procedures to rearrange and restore working order to our innardsâ¦letâs hope thereâs no explosive diarrhea involved.
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