Still, Seattle Rain

His fingers are inside me and he has stopped moving, waiting — I can hear the rain on the Seattle apartment windows and his breath and nothing else — and the stillness is somehow more than the motion was, the way a word held in the mouth is more than the word said.

Mild

The Word Held In

438 words · 2 min read

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The rain comes in intervals. That is the thing I am noticing not continuously, the way I always imagine Seattle rain, but in waves, pressing against the window glass and then retreating, pressing and retreating, as if it is deciding something.

I have been noticing things all evening. The way his cuffs were still buttoned when he sat beside me on the couch. The exact temperature of his hand when it first touched my knee cooler than I expected, the skin of his palm against the skin of my leg, a contrast that made me aware of how warm I already was. I notice things and then I arrange them into sentences I will never say out loud. It is the habit I cannot stop even here, even now, in the dark, with his breath the only human sound in the room.

He is very still.

I am trying to understand what stillness means when it is his hand creating it. When it is his fingers two of them, I am aware of two of them, their specific weight and presence and warmth holding inside me without moving. I thought I knew what I wanted before this. I thought I wanted motion, the obvious thing, the thing that resolves. But he stopped, and the stopping has made me conscious of every millimeter of the space between what is happening and what could happen next.

My hands are flat against the sheet. I am aware of this. Both of them, palms down, fingers spread, as if I am steadying myself against something that has not moved yet.

The rain intensifies against the glass and then pulls back.

I exhale, and the exhale is longer than I intended it unspools past the point where I would have chosen to stop it, past the point of composure, into something that sounds, even to me, like admission. He does not move. He is waiting for something from me and I do not know yet if I can give it, or if the not-giving is its own kind of want, the word held in the mouth that means more than the word said.

The crease where my thigh meets my hip has gone tight. I am aware of it the way I am aware of the rain peripherally, precisely, unable to stop cataloguing.

I press my palms harder into the sheet.

He still does not move.

The rain comes back against the window, and I part my knees just slightly, just enough and wait for him to notice what I have said without saying it.

Hot

Stillness More Than Motion

481 words · 3 min read

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He noticed.

That is the first thing I catalogue: the way his fingers shift not withdrawal, not advance, but a small rotation, a reorientation of pressure, as if he is reading something new in the space my knees created. Two fingers. I am still counting. I am always counting.

Mid-scene teaser

I note that I had not planned it. "There," I say. I had not planned that either.

Spicy

His Fingers, Not Moving

526 words · 3 min read

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I say his name. Not a question. Not a request. Just his name, in a register I have never used for anything else, and he moves. Deeper first I note the depth, I cannot stop noting, two fingers and then the press of a third working in beside them and the stretch of it, specific and undeniable, my body opening around that fullness in a way that makes me exhale hard through my nose. His thumb finds its place again. I tilt my hips and this time I do not catalogue the tilt as involuntary. I know what I am doing. I am asking. He answers with pace. The wet sound of it reaches me before anything...

Mid-scene teaser

Breath stopped entirely. The rain against the glass and nothing else. Then the breath comes back — loud, fractured, two parts like before but neither part quiet.

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