“I’m not sure this is a good idea,” I
say.
“I’m a big boy, Nina,” Oliver says and I
know he knows I’m hesitating because of age—his and mine and the years that
separate us.
He chuckles and comes back down the
steps. I want so much to be that romantic type who throws caution the wind as
it were. I imagine said wind, loaded down with the cares of innumerable people
caught up in moments too strong for them, too passionate or reckless, desperate
and unmanageable. I imagine some French couple at an outdoor café in Paris,
sipping their coffee, smoking their cigarettes, being blown right out of their
chair by some rouge, heavy laden wind from the other side of the world. Crazy American fools, they would say, righting
their chairs, lighting a new cigarette, calling for the garcon to bring new
cups of café and perhaps a pastissier while he’s at it.
“Is this really the time to sort out
the good ideas from the bad,” Oliver says, taking hold of my hand.
“I think this would be the perfect
time,” I say, not turning loose.
“You may be too quick for me,” he
says.
“No, I’m too old for you.” I say,
letting go. I twist the ring on my finger that despite the paperwork in
progress, I still wear. The truth of that statement sparks in the air. “I’ve
been there done that, as they say.”
I feel like I’m walking backwards,
trying to undo something that I really don’t want to forget.
“So,” he says, surprising me. “What’s one more
time around?”
I shake my head as if to say no, but
he kisses me and the wind blows and I wonder if that poor French couple will
forgive me the intrusion on their peaceful day. Oliver leads me up the steps to
his house. The interior is clean and sparse. The small living room holds a
couch and old rocker and a small television. The most predominate thing about
the room is a wall of music—song books, more than three guitars that I can see,
CD’s, a stereo system and an old piano.
“Do you live here alone?” I ask as he
tries to pull me past this area of the house and down the hall that I imagine
leads to his bedroom.
“I do now,” he whispers.
I don’t ask for details even though I
find myself wanting them. He doesn’t offer any more information. I don’t know
if he’s noticed my ring, but if so, he didn’t press and I won’t either.
I let him pull me down the hall and
we go inside a small bedroom not far down it. This room, too, is sparse and
tidy. A bed, a dresser, closet doors open with clothes arranged neatly, his
scrubs at the far right. He goes to the dresser and reaches over it to raise
the blinds; the moonlight finds its way in.
He excuses himself from the room and I finger through the clothes in his
closet—searching for a tactile knowledge of his everyday life.
He comes back into the room and we
don’t speak again. He kisses me like he’s asking permission for something, yet
not waiting for the answer. His hands find the small of my back and the nape of
my neck again and his fingers twine through my hair like they have been there a
dozen times before.
This is far from where I thought I’d
be tonight should anyone have asked earlier today. There’s a place in my gut
that yells at me for putting Dad aside like this. But the option is this or
sleeping in my childhood bed quilted in by the heavy-handed stitching of the
way things end up.
So for the moment, I choose the soft
brush of lips on my neck and the hard clinch of muscled arm holding me tight to
this semi-stranger who may be the only piece of the world that makes any sense
to me. I let go of everything that holds me in. Thirty-nine years of everything
that means anything collects in the palm of my hands, the shallow of my throat,
the escape of my breath.
3 comments:
"L" for longing to read more! Another steamy moment I see! I loved the "french couple" imagery - you have such unique ways of painting the picture of a scene - well done!
WriterlySam
Beautiful! L is the perfect letter for us romance lovers :)
Happy Blogging!
Kaye Draper at Write Me
thanks!
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