425 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
425 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
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Archive-name: First/aphatos.txt
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Archive-author: Grendel
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Archive-title: Aphatos
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Description: consensual, non-kinky, mf teen sex. Not good wanking material;
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more of a story with an erotic element.
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"A dream like this must die."
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--"Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns",
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Mother Love Bone
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The memory comes at me like a dream. I cannot trust it. Pictures
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shift in my mind and slide over each other in a pastiche of light and
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darkness, like leaves moving in the wind. Smells come to me from nowhere,
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more distinct than the pictures but shifting just as quickly; the smell
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of moss, of the loam of needles in the forest, of the sweet decay of wood.
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The smell of woodsmoke, shifting to the smell of smoky tea, first hot
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and then cold. The smell of rain in the sky and rain on the grass. The smell
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of damp wool, the smell of sweat. The smell of musk. Each of these pull at
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different chords in my mind and my heart, deeper and more powerful than words
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can follow. The memory comes at me like a dream. I want to write it out, but
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I am afraid of the limits of words. I am afraid I will get it wrong, that
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the lie I write will replace the flickering truth I now hold in my head. But
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I must try.
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The pictures slide over each other, but slower now, slow enough that I
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can write what I see. There is the empty pasture, overgrown with milkweed and
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lush grass. The wooden posts of the fence have a silver sheen from the
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fog. Now the rush of the swollen river comes into focus, somewhere off to the
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right. Or is it the left? My focus shifts and now I am looking at the
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pasture from a different angle. Suddenly, I see the top of a blond head rise
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over the embankment at the pasture's edge, and my heart quickens. I feel
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again the giddy drop of my stomach, the strange mixture of dread and love.
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Now the head and the body have reached the top of the embankment, and
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behind them follows another head, brown. That's my head. I look much as I do
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today: skinny, nervous, pale-skinned, awkwardly dressed. My hair is short,
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still at the rice-bowl length I kept throughout puberty.
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Another picture slides slowly past. We are at the "bridge", three
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boards laid across a small stream. I am still following her. Just beyond the
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bridge, the forest starts. Behind us, the fog creeps across the meadow in our
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direction. The ground is wet and spongy with layers of slick brown leaves and
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crumbling needles. The air is thick with moisture.
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The smell of the humus comes in sharply, and close after, the sound of
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voices.
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"How old are you?"
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That's my voice. Higher and thinner, but recognizable.
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She looks back over her shoulder.
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"How old do you think I am?" she says.
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"I asked you first."
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"I asked you second."
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"I don't know. Fourteen," I guess.
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"Wrong."
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"Well, what?"
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"I'm not going to tell you. You have to guess."
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We keep walking, marching up a gentle slope. The path has curved up
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and around back toward the stream. It continues this way for as far as I have
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gone, which isn't very far. In a few moments we will have to cross another
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plank bridge.
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"Fifteen," I guess.
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"Close." She brushes her long, blond hair back over her right
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shoulder.
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The love/dread grows stronger in me without warning, and as I feel it
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sink into the pit of my stomach, a picture flashes into my sight: her hand
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brushing back her hair as she leans forward to kiss me. And another picture,
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a picture of her breasts bared as she raises her shirt over her head. And the
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smell of her sweat.
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But I shut this out. I am losing continuity. I am in danger of
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slipping back into an incoherent dream. I must try to remember, not just see.
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I must try to remember how it really was.
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"Just tell me," I say.
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She sighs. "I'm sixteen."
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"Really?"
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"Really."
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"Oh." I'm thirteen.
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The fog has risen fast. We are coming out into a clearing, and I can
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see the forest below. We're about halfway up the hill. Fog is tangled in the
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trees, finding its slow way up the hillside toward us. The meadow and pasture
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are hidden in a blank, white sea. I yawn a little, feel the tired ache around
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my eyes. I don't usually get up this early.
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"Isn't that beautiful?" she says, stopping to look.
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When she says "Isn't that beautiful", she isn't gushing it like
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some girls would do. She isn't asking me. She isn't saying it rhetorically,
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to fill a gap in conversation. She means it.
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"Yeah," I say. "It is."
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After going up a bit more, the path turns back down again toward the
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stream. We cross another set of damp boards. Up ahead, I see a wooden
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structure in the trees.
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"That's not it, is it?" I ask.
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"No. You haven't been here before?"
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"Uh-uh."
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"That's the fort that never got finished. It was supposed to be a
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couple of stories high, but I guess they got tired of building it or ran out
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of wood or something."
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"Can we stop for a sec?" I say. "I'm tired." I'm not used to walking
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this much, and I'm out of breath.
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"Sure," she says, and smiles at me. It's a nice smile, with no malice
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in it. I feel the love/dread again. How long have I felt this, for how many
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months? When did I first meet her? I don't remember. But for weeks now,
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every time I see her, I've felt that giddy terror and delight. She is the
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most beautiful person I've ever seen, I tell myself. My pubescent stirrings
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are about a year old, still tentative, still mysterious. Still a little
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frightening.
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This unfinished fort, which is built against five redwood trees
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standing in a square, has a floor but no roof, and only two walls. The floor
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is raised an inch off the ground, but is still damp. We sit on the edge while
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I catch my breath. The fog has caught up with us, filling the space between
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the trees. I can see a patch of the sky, shifting from light to dark gray.
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Looking back down at my feet, I see a clump of goldenback ferns
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growing near the base of one of the redwood supports.
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"Oh," I say, bending over to pick some of them. "Have you ever seen
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these?"
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"Ferns?" She looks at me incredulously.
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"Goldenback ferns. Here, stretch out your leg."
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"Why?"
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"Just do it." She shifts, moving a little closer to me. "Here," I
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say, "I'll do it on your knee." I take one of the ferns and press it against
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her blue jeans. I hold it there for a minute, suddenly conscious of _my hand
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on her knee_, and then take my hand and the fern away. On her knee is an
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imprint of the fern in gold dust.
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"Wow," she says, impressed. "That's beautiful." Again, I know she
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means it. "Thanks."
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"Sure." I turn away, embarrassed, and press another of the ferns
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against my knee. We are quiet for a while.
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"What are you thinking?" she asks me.
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I glance over at her. "I don't know."
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"What do you mean, you don't know?" She smiles. "What are you
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thinking?"
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Suddenly I find myself unable to look at her. I stammer, trying to
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remember what I was thinking. What I'm thinking of now is the way she looks,
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but I can hardly say that.
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Then I remember.
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"I was thinking about how I'd like to live in the woods."
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"Yeah? Really? Me too."
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I glance at her. She's not lying, I can tell. In fact, she has never
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lied to me, not once in the short time we've known each other. We have
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become friends over this past month. Not deep friends, but close enough to
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take a walk at dawn in the woods near where we both live. She wants to show
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me a house that she found just over the edge of her mother's property, out
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past the hill in the thick of the forest.
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"Have you ever dreamed about living in the woods?" she asks.
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"Yeah, lots of times."
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"Tell me about it." She draws her feet up onto the platform and hugs
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her knees to her chest.
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I think. "Well, in the dream I'm kind of like a hermit. I live
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in a hollowed-out tree trunk by a river, next to this waterfall. In the
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summer I sleep under the stars. And I have a garden where I grow my own food
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so I never have to leave the forest. And I have a rope ladder that goes up to
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the top of the highest tree, and I go up the top and sit there every morning
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to watch the sun rise. None of the animals are afraid of me."
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I stop. She doesn't say anything, and I look over at her. Her mouth
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is a little bit open, and she's staring at me.
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"What is it?" I say.
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She doesn't answer.
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"What?"
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She lowers her eyes for a second, then looks at me again.
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Picture slides past, a series of pictures like a slow movie. Pictures
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of her mouth moving, saying "I had the same dream." Smell of woodsmoke coming
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from somewhere far away. Smell of wet bark, damp wood.
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The sudden picture of her mouth kissing mine.
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Heavy, damp silence.
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I am flipping over and over inside, and I think I'm starting to shake.
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And I don't think I can stop.
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She stands up, steps off the platform, walks out onto the path. "Come
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on," she says, looking at me. I am in shock, and cannot respond. She says it
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again. "Come on. Let's go."
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Now I see a picture of the stream. The banks are high and steep,
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covered with moss and ferns. The stream is flowing toward me, down
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over boulders and rock ledges. It's small, about the width of my arm. It
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comes out of a dark hole of trees.
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The path follows the stream for a long time. It switches now and then
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from bank to bank, but stays parallel. We walk in silence. She is about six
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steps ahead of me. The shaking has taken over my body, and my teeth are
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chattering. I don't dare to say anything, but I want desperately to act
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normal.
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"I think it might rain," she says, without looking back. I don't know
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whether I should respond, whether it's a piece of conversation or just a
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statement. I can't think of anything to say.
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We walk like this for some time. I almost ask her how much farther it
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is, but I reconsider. I don't want to sound like a child. But I have to do
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something! I can't be invisible. I don't want to scare her off.
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Suddenly, without thinking about it, I break into a run. I don't slow
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down as I pass her, but keep running. I don't know what the hell I'm doing; I
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just know that I have to do something to break the tension. The path comes
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out into a clearing. I hear her running behind me, calling out, "Wait!
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Wait!"
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I look back and grin at her, feeling strangely confident, although I'm
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still shaking terribly. She's gaining on me. I run faster, veering off the
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path and up the foggy slope of the hill.
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"Come back," she calls, still running along the path. "The house is
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this way." I change direction and come shooting down the hillside back into
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the trees, a good ten yards ahead of her now. I'm shivering from the cold and
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I start to slow down, feeling my ribs knit on the left side. My body isn't
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used to strain. As she comes up behind me, the path turns and I see the
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house.
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Picture: under a dark sky, hardly recognizable as morning, a pane of
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glass. Through the pane of glass: she is kneeling at a woodstove, putting in
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a handful of sticks.
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The house isn't really a house, just a small room. One large window
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by the door lets in the cool, gray light. There is a big, broken couch, old
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brown velvet with the smell of mildew and a spring showing, against the wall
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at the far end of the room. There is the woodstove, of course, with a small
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pile of wood and a few logs beside it. A chest of drawers stands just past
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the door, tilted on a short leg. A page ripped out of a magazine is
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thumbtacked to the inside of the door, showing a bottle of Absolut vodka
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surrounded by green leaves and purple berries. An axe-head lies on top of a
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pile of old newspapers next to the couch. And at the back corner of the room
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is a wooden ladder that leads up to a loft.
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I sit on one of the arms of the couch, my hands clasped, watching her
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fill the stove. "How are you going to light it without any matches?" I ask.
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She smiles. "Just a minute." She stands up and walks over to the
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chest of drawers. "Why don't you wad up some of that newspaper and throw it
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in?"
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I take a newspaper off the top of the stack. The axe-head slides off
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and makes a heavy thud as it hits the floor. She pulls out one of the
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drawers. "I come up here a lot," she says. "I've made a few preparations."
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She brings out a box of matches. "Would you like some tea?"
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"Tea?"
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"I have a teapot in here, and some tea, and a cup," she says. "Just
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one cup. We'll have to share."
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The pictures are starting to shift again, moving faster. I can barely
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track my mouth asking what kind of tea it is. The shaking is turning into a
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fever. I think even then, before it became a memory, I knew what was
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happening. And it scared me.
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The sound of rain hitting the roof filters in. The room is warm, the
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tea is warm, but my body still shivers. Less violently now, more of a humming
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through my blood. We sit beside each other on the couch, taking turns sipping
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from the cup.
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"Aren't you worried someone's going to come up here and find you?" I
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ask.
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She shrugs her shoulders and brushes her hair back. "No, I don't
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think anyone's been up here but me in a long time. I mean, it's really
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isolated. Probably the guy who owns the property built it for a getaway cabin
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or something, but he doesn't use it any more. Those newspapers are from last
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year."
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"Oh." I take the cup from her. Our fingers touch, slide over each
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other. Hers are colder than mine, and somehow I find that comforting. "What
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do you do up here?" I ask.
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She pauses before answering. "I write. Poems."
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"Really? Can I see them?"
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"No," she says, sort of laughing, blushing and looking down. "No."
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"Why not?"
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"You just can't. No one gets to see them." She sees my look of
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disappointment. "If I showed them to anyone, it would be you."
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"Maybe someday?"
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"Maybe."
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We're quiet for a while. She finishes the tea. The rain is coming
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down harder now, splattering against the roof. I am absorbed in my senses,
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which are keyed to a fever pitch. I notice everything subtle, turn it into
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passion in my mind. The sound of the rain. The way her long yellow hair
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captures what little light there is and holds it, like gold. The warm tea in
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my stomach, the trembling and nausea I feel. The heat of the woodstove. The
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dank smell of the couch, the mushroom scent of the forest coming in through a
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crack somewhere. The image in my mind of the kiss, the ghost of her pressure
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on my lips. My feverish, unspoken questions: _Why?_ _What does this mean?_
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_Will you kiss me again?_ _How can I ask?_
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"I was right," she says, breaking the silence. "It's raining."
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"Yeah."
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"Raining pretty hard."
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I can barely say the word for the spinning in my head: "Yeah."
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"Do you..."
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I look at her.
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"Do you want to go back?" she asks.
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No. I don't want to go back. I want to stay here, and I want
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you to kiss me again. Like you did before.
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I can't say the words. I can't speak. The pressure in me is almost
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more than I can bear; I feel like I'm going to cry.
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So I do the only thing I can do, the only thing that makes sense,
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beyond fear or dread: I follow my need. I reach out for her hand and hold it,
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shaking, pressing lightly. And I lean in, and I kiss her lips.
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There is no picture. There are no smells, no sounds, nothing. My
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mind is blank. For a time, an undefinable length of time, the only contact to
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this world is the feeling of our lips touching. We hold the moment, and then
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move out of it as her mouth moves and I feel the wet underside of her upper
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lip slide in. Everything so slow...the soft vitality of her tongue entering
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my mouth, touching my tongue. I don't know how this is done. My tongue
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ventures forward, sliding along hers. Everything soft, softer than I could
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have imagined. I feel a tear breaking loose from my eye, rolling swiftly down
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my cheek to my jawbone. I regain my mind, and the kiss has become definite,
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deliberate. This is no mistake. This is what we want. We are making it
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happen.
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Fears still hover around me as we move in closer to each other,
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deepening the kiss. They are vague fears about the three-year difference
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between us, which I never knew until today. I fear that this isn't real, that
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somewhere I've fooled myself or made a fool of myself, for how could someone
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so beautiful and confident be attracted to me? But my body does not hesitate.
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The kiss continues. I explore her mouth, the boundary of teeth, the water
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under her tongue. The hum in my blood has evened out into a pulse that I can
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feel.
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I am afraid to stop kissing her, because it means I will have to look
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at her, to acknowledge the truth of what we are doing. But I feel her moving
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away. I close my eyes on the steady stream of tears. I feel her fingers
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moving over my face, rubbing the tears into my skin. She places a finger on
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my lips. I open my eyes.
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The rain hurries onto the roof, drumming faster and faster. The
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pictures move by in a blur. I don't think I can slow them down; the memory
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rushes forward out of control, and the images come out of place, heated, as in
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a fever dream. The recurring image of her arms pulling her shirt over her
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head, baring her breasts. The smell of mushrooms and smoke, of the damp wool
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of her sweater, of the gentle salt of her sweat. The heat coming from her
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body as I press my face against her neck. The rigid place between my legs,
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that place I am afraid to name. I feel like a child standing in the
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wilderness, soaking in the rain. Someone's skin is cold. Cold and moist.
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Hers. I press warmth into it.
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We are in the loft. Dark here, only just enough light to see the
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seashell curves of her backbone. The profile of a breast in shadow. The
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tendon of her neck, a thick, straight line. The marble-statue contour of her
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shoulder. Her hair, like a waterfall of sun.
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There are no words. We are unable to speak, unwilling to break the
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spell. I kiss the cup at the base of her throat and feel a shudder run the
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length of her body. She wants me, and that knowledge pushes away all
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remaining fears. This is right. This is what is supposed to be; oh God,
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finally something so pure as this, something so clear. This is what is
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supposed to be.
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Floating in, the musky smell of her juices. I have never smelled it
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before, but it is instantly familiar. It smells like the secret, dark places
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in the forest that I never dared to go as a child. It smells like the deepest
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earth that a gardener kneads with his hands before planting. I am
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inexplicably frightened by it, even as I am intrigued. It is almost too
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vital.
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I touch her breasts. The motions I make are ones I know instinctively
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to be right, though I've never made them before. My thumbs slide down over
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her brown nipples, which start up from the areolae like gooseflesh. I reach
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forward with my tongue tensed into an arrow, moving like a newt underwater. I
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suck in the nipple, fainly hearing the intake of her breath. My hand caresses
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|
the other breast. It is different from what I expected. The breasts of
|
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|
models I had seen in magazines looked like rock-hard sculptures, and so the
|
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|
softness of her skin surprises me. As my tongue slides over it, I hear her
|
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|
moaning quietly, a low, uncontrolled sound.
|
||
|
My hand slides down between her breasts, down over the arch of her
|
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|
ribcage onto her belly. A finger hooks into the hole of her navel. Her
|
||
|
moaning grows deeper and breaks off in a sigh. Slowly...slowly...my hand
|
||
|
slides down and further down, and I feel crinkly hair at the base of my palm.
|
||
|
I feel the throb of expectancy in my penis. We are set into the tempo of the
|
||
|
pulse of our blood. With each beat she makes another sound, my hand slips
|
||
|
down the smallest bit. And I begin to feel the slick vertical line of her sex
|
||
|
at the center of my palm.
|
||
|
That's the word I am thinking of, sex. It is the first time it has
|
||
|
occurred to me today. It fits what I feel more than the other dirty words or
|
||
|
clinical terms I know. This is sex. We are having sex. I am touching her
|
||
|
sex.
|
||
|
And now the tips of my fingers enter as they pass the top of the slit.
|
||
|
A strange incoherent sound comes from her throat. I move in. I have never,
|
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|
never in my life, felt anything this soft and yielding. It feels limitless.
|
||
|
My fingers travel farther and farther in. When I am in to my knuckles, I
|
||
|
slide them back out. And in again.
|
||
|
There is a pain building between my legs. A dull pain, growing sharp.
|
||
|
I am very close to the breaking point. I look at her, about to ask, but her
|
||
|
eyes are unfocused, unseeing.
|
||
|
I take my fingers out of her sex and trail them back up her belly. I
|
||
|
move up on the bed, holding my penis with one hand as I search for the
|
||
|
opening. My hands move under her back and hold her shoulders as I move into
|
||
|
her. My focus is narrow and complete. There is nothing in my mind but the
|
||
|
feeling of sliding into her. All the way in. All the way in...all the way
|
||
|
in...
|
||
|
And it is the fitting of key and lock. It is the drawing of a magnet.
|
||
|
It is the completion of a circuit. What I have put into her is no longer
|
||
|
mine, and what she has opened up to me is no longer hers. This is the
|
||
|
connection of man and woman. I feel my manhood for the first time.
|
||
|
We hold in place for a moment.
|
||
|
Then her hands come up around my back, pressing into my ribs. I slide
|
||
|
partially out of her, then back in, a motion like the throb of a heart. We
|
||
|
hold each other close. Out, in. Stop. Again: out, in. Out, in. A rhythm.
|
||
|
Out, in. Out, in. We are pressed into one body, rocking back and forth.
|
||
|
Blind motion. Out, in. And I feel it coming, like the flowing of water,
|
||
|
mounting steadily. A pleasure so vital it could almost be pain. My mind has
|
||
|
ceased functioning, and my body moves unbidden. There is nothing I could do,
|
||
|
even if I wanted to. I am moving toward the inevitable. My body tenses,
|
||
|
tightens. Her fingernails dig into my back. Tightening, tightening, drawing
|
||
|
closer. Out, in, out, in, rocking faster, climbing like a geometric curve.
|
||
|
An arch. I arch my back, drawing her up with me, closing in on
|
||
|
the crest
|
||
|
of
|
||
|
|
||
|
it
|
||
|
|
||
|
and! OH
|
||
|
flood, rain flooding down upon the roof,
|
||
|
falling,
|
||
|
falling...
|
||
|
|
||
|
The silence that we shudder into lasts for a moment, and then I hear a
|
||
|
small sound coming from her. I raise my head and I see that she is crying. I
|
||
|
move up to a level with her, kissing away the tears.
|
||
|
She looks as though she wants to say something, but can't find the
|
||
|
words. She doesn't have to speak. I know what she's feeling. It's not that
|
||
|
this was wrong, far from it. There has never been anything so right. It's
|
||
|
just that it was so unexpected, such a quick rise of passion, such an
|
||
|
uncontrollable unfolding of our private selves. It is the trust we have found
|
||
|
that makes us cry. We cry in relief that the chance we both have taken has
|
||
|
come to this.
|
||
|
We hold to each other for a long time. The rain slackens and
|
||
|
gradually tapers away altogether. And the pictures turn and flip in the cool
|
||
|
wind that comes after rain. My memory begins to fail me now; it was such a
|
||
|
long time ago, such a different place in my life. It falls away so quickly.
|
||
|
Heavy drops of rain fall from the trees, and the dark places of the forest
|
||
|
become darker.
|
||
|
Where did she go? I have pictures, but some of them contradict each
|
||
|
other and I'm no longer certain which ones are real and which are dreams. In
|
||
|
many of them, she is dancing away into the forest, or down a sloping meadow.
|
||
|
Sometimes she is naked and sometimes not. Sometimes it is raining. One of
|
||
|
the clearest of the pictures has her running through the trees in a storm,
|
||
|
covered in mud and leaves, but I fear that is only a dream. I do not think
|
||
|
she found the hermit's tree we dreamt about. If she had, I think I would be
|
||
|
there with her. But the cave is no longer accessible to me. I don't know the
|
||
|
path through the woods that leads to it. I cannot remember how I made the
|
||
|
journey from that boy of thirteen to the man I am now. I have lost the way.
|
||
|
All I have left are my memories. Walking has become a habit of mine,
|
||
|
and on my walks I sometimes catch the scent of things that bring back the
|
||
|
memory sharply. I have, of course, doubted in my mind that any of this was
|
||
|
more than a dream, but when I smell the smoke from a fireplace or the odor of
|
||
|
wild mushrooms in the fields as I walk under an overcast sky, there is no
|
||
|
doubt.
|
||
|
There are some places that language cannot go. I know, as I write
|
||
|
these words, that when I look back over what I have written I will be
|
||
|
disappointed. Something will be missing. There will be a bit of literary
|
||
|
gloss here or a rough approximation there, and the flickering truth I hold
|
||
|
will waver and go out. So it must be. Such is the fate of all memories, and
|
||
|
the more beloved they are, the quicker they die. I am resigned to this.
|
||
|
The pictures slow and begin to fade. Her face looks out at me,
|
||
|
smiling softly. The light grows dimmer. She turns away, taking the light
|
||
|
with her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
--
|