I groaned.
“Good afternoon, Lucien,” he said cheerfully.
I groaned again. “What are you doing?”
He gave me a look of what I hoped was mock disappointment.
But given how seriously he took cleaning, I couldn’t be sure. “Are you telling me you’ve forgotten what day it is?”
“Um, Saturday? And definitely not… Shit, is it your birthday?”
“Yes,” he told me. “It’s my birthday. This is what I always do on my birthdays.”
“You think you’re joking. But I wouldn’t put it past you.”
He huffed out a put-upon sigh. “It’s the first Saturday in July.”
“And?” I asked.
“So I’m cleaning my cupboards. As I did last year, if you recall.”
“Oliver, you have cleaned so many things, I didn’t realise I was supposed to be putting them on a calendar.”
He set down his bottle of multipurpose surface cleaner with a condemnatory click. “As I thought you’d have learned by now, cleaning is a lot easier when you do it regularly—which is itself easier when you have a routine.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” I knelt down beside him.
“Clearly, it’s much better if you leave it until all your spoons start sticking together and you hate yourself, and then get a nice boyfriend and stealth move into his place.”
“And what happens”—he twitched an eyebrow at me—“when my spoons start sticking together?”
“We’ll both have to find a new boyfriend and we can move into his place together.”
He readjusted his marigolds uncertainly. “I’m not sure that’s a sustainable strategy. And while I have no objection to polyamory in theory, I don’t think it would suit me in practice.”
Leaning in, I kissed him on the nose. “Then I faithfully promise that no matter how sticky your teaspoons get, I will still want to be with you and only you.”
“I’m not sure I want to ask…” began Oliver. Apparently, I’d successfully deflected his relationship anxiety by triggering his hygiene anxiety. “But how do teaspoons become sticky?”
“It’s not a sex thing,” I protested quickly.
“I wasn’t assuming it was a sex thing. I’d be less concerned if it was a sex thing.”
Oh God. I was disgusting. I was the creature from the disgusting lagoon. “I think,” I offered, “it’s because most of my cooking involved oil. And then if you don’t change your washing-up water properly, you’re washing everything in oily water and it comes out with kind of a… You know. Oily film? That dries? And it gets—”
Oliver had gone pale. “I think you should probably stop there.”
“Are you going to dump me now?”
He thought about it for an unflatteringly long time. “Tragically, Lucien, I will still love you even if you make my spoons sticky.” He paused. “Having said which, do not make my spoons sticky.”
“It’s not a lifestyle choice. It’s just…a consequence of other lifestyle choices.”
Laughing, Oliver squirted the cupboard again and started to scrub, with a predesignated surface scrubber. I knew it was predesignated because they lived in a separate, subtly different pot from the washing-up sponges, and I’d once made the mistake of trying to clean a plate with one. Embarrassingly, it was one of our worst-ever arguments.
As he scrubbed, his head and shoulders disappeared inside the cupboard, leaving me with ample opportunity to appreciate his arse which—sweatpants or no—was sort of jutting up perkily and moving back and forth in time with his very diligent cleaning.
“Is that what you’re doing?” he asked from the interior of the kitchen unit.
“Staring at your arse?”
“Oh, that’s what you’re doing? But no, I mean…stealth moving.”
Honestly, I’d been hoping he wouldn’t notice that. “Well, your place is bigger than mine and it’s nicer and you wash your sheets and…you’re in it.”
“I’m glad I merited some mention among the list of utilities.”
“To be fair, you can come round to my flat. Your dishwasher can’t.”
“You should get a dishwasher, Lucien,” he said somewhat predictably. “They’re actually more ecologically efficient than hand washing.”
“I could but I’ve gone for the even more environmentally friendly strategy of using someone else’s dishwasher, thus saving the upfront environmental impact of installation and the long-term environmental impact of us running two separate dishwashers.”