It had been forever since I had time to spend an afternoon wandering through a bookstore. I could have downloaded a book with a push of a button, but there was something I really missed about thumbing through pages and trying to decide what I was going to take home to read. Plus, I needed to get out of the house even if I didn't have any intention of interacting with anyone except for the college kid doing his homework behind the checkout counter.
The bookstore was empty, or at least it felt empty. It gave me the courage to linger a little bit longer than I planned in the erotica section. I didn't want anything that was patently smutty. I didn't want anything about college girls gone wild or housewives in heat. I wanted a story about a strong, intelligent woman with a deep understanding of her sexual desires.
A collection of poetry by Sappho? No. Too challenging. Too encrypted. I wanted something that flowed much easier on the eyes and the brain.
"Lady Chatterley's Lover"? Hmm ... now this had some scandal about it for decades. And it involved a woman of privilege involved with a man not of her stature. "The Story of O"? Now this had a bit more of an edge but still involved a proper female protagonist who willingly gave herself up to high class sexual slavery.
I scanned through the prologues of each book and debated which one I would take back with me to spend the night. I got so wrapped up in trying to make my selection that I was taken aback by a low, gravely and velvety voice behind me say, "Don't turn around, but tell me what you're reading."
My casual lean went straight and rigid. I held my breath in fright. I should have been completely creeped out but there was something about this man's presence that intrigued me, even though I couldn't figure out what it was.
"'Lady Chatterley's Lover' and 'The Story of O'," I said in a soft voice clipped with trepidation.
"Both lovely reads," he said. "Intelligent choices."
"Thank you," I said.
"Lovely reads." "Intelligent choices." Those were unusual combination of words to describe books of questionable morals meant to fulfill secret sexually savory appetites, and here I was being exposed and prodded by some man who was a stranger who wouldn't let me see him.
"You should read 'The Story of O' first," he said.
Really? Who was he to decide what I should read? But there was something in his voice that was extremely confident, intelligent, and well-spoken.
"I would love the chance to discuss the book with you some time," he said.
"You've read this?" I asked.
I was about to turn around to have a more in-depth face-to-face conversation with him until I heard him say, "Don't turn around."
Woah. This was getting a bit scary. My breathing came to almost a complete halt until he put his hand to my side and gave it a few gentle calming strokes. I should have felt more scared to have a strange man I didn't know and couldn't see touch me like that, even for a brief moment , but there was something calming and reassuring about his touch.
"To answer your question, yes, I've read the book," he said. "It's a favorite of mine. I'm getting the feeling it's one you need to read."
"Why do you say that?" I asked.
He hesitated for a good, long moment before he finally said, "Do you trust me enough to hand over your phone to me?"
Did I trust him enough to hand over a $200 phone? Not really, but I was curious to see what he was up to.
I dug into the black hole of my shoulder bag and pulled it out just by feeling for it so I could keep my eyes open and focused around the periphery to make sure my surroundings were safe. I handed my phone to him and I could hear him punch in some buttons.
He handed the phone back to me along with a $20 bill, and said, "I don't want you to turn around or try to look for me for 60 seconds. I want you to buy this book with the money I gave you and call me as soon as you get to your car."
I stood there probably longer than the 60 seconds partly because I felt strangely compelled to follow his direction and partly because I was too scared to move. I didn't move until the gruff looking hipster kid from behind the counter came up to me and asked, "Are you OK, miss?"
"I'm fine," I said, not knowing how to really respond.
"You weren't hurt or bothered in any way, were you?" he pressed. "I have him on video if you need to file a police report."
"No," I said. "It's OK."
Lie.
I should have asked to see the video. I wanted to get a look at this guy. But part of me was intrigued with the mystery of what just happened. I've had men I didn't know buy me drinks, but this man bought me a book. Hell, most men I met in random social situations didn't even read books.
I paid for the book and walked out to my car to see what he typed into my phone. There was a new entry in my contacts: Sir George with a telephone number.
Sir George? I doubted he was some kind of British nobility; his accent was much more local and his voice sounded like a man closer to my age. Maybe he was just some arrogant prick who liked to toy around with people. Maybe he was just playing off his choice in my reading material.
I was curious enough to call but smart enough to block my number to see what this guy was all about. Hell, I had nothing better to do on a Saturday afternoon. He picked up right away.
"Hi, this is Patrice from the bookstore," I said.
"It's nice to have a name with the lovely woman I saw today," he said.
Lovely. There was that word again. How many men use that word these days? I found that strangely romantic considering how he approached me.
"Are you normally in the habit of taking women by surprise like that?" I had to ask.
"Never like that," he said. "It was the first time I ever did anything like that, but I am full of surprises."
"How so?" I asked.
"Would you like to find out?" he asked.
Of course I wanted to find out. This man amped up my curiosity at least a hundred times since he left me at the bookstore the way he did.
"Who are you? Why did you approach me like that? Why didn't you want me to see you? You couldn't possibly have approached me the way that you did if you weren't some kind of sick and twisted fuck," I said.
"You're very direct," he said.