Colin Banks was a software analyst and his job was as exciting as it sounded. Which was to say, not very. He had no regrets regarding his career choice (for it was, most certainly, a career), and he even enjoyed his work more often than not. But it was not exciting. The field attracted a certain type of person and Colin was that kind of person. He was neat and tidy, tall -- very tall -- and thin, usually quite direct. He believed in systems. His postgraduate brain had absorbed the concepts of minimalism, informed atheism, and lifestyle design with all the efficiency of a shammy cloth and he had become, now in his late thirties, a man who was spare in all regards.
His clothing, while finely made and meticulously clean, was colorless. It reflected his view of the world: black and white with maybe two or three shades of gray. Rule follower. He owned a gray chore coat that threatened a greenish tint, and he felt uncomfortable in it. But he wore it anyway. He believed it was good to be uncomfortable, in controlled situations. Stretch his comfort zone, and the like. You know the bit.
His apartment lacked the charms of daily life-- the bathroom baseboard paint worn thin by a beloved house cat's rubbing, or family photos and wedding invites on the refrigerator, or even a kitschy collection of coffee mugs. Colin Banks had two coffee mugs, because he never had more than one person over to visit and never in the morning.
For all his solitude, he was not unhappy. His days consisted of routine and work. He woke every morning at five am, did 25 pushups, ran between 2 and 6 miles, did another set of 25 push ups, an 18 minute stretch, and then showered under a scalding spray of high pressure water.
He drank his coffee black, ate his oats with rice milk and walnuts. He always had a bag of apples in the refrigerator. Sometimes after dinner, he'd walk to the pie shop around the corner for a slice of chocolate silk, if he was feeling wild. More often than not, he'd chew a square of seventy percent dark with grim satisfaction and wonder why he didn't allow himself more sugar. Sometimes, he had a woman over after a few internet dates. Never lasted.
One day, as Colin ran around the pond of a nearby park, he listened to a podcast extolling the virtues of yoga. He'd dabbled, like any cosmopolitan young professional, but it was one of those time and place instances where one is unusually receptive to an idea, and he became convinced that yoga was something he actually needed.
Maybe, after thirty six years of life, he wanted to dip a toe into the spiritual, but Colin thought it more likely he just needed to switch up his workout routine. Routine, he knew, was stagnation for a cynic. Colin wasn't a cynic, but he did want a bit of a change.
On his jog home, Colin stopped by his gym and perused the notice board. There, nestled between business cards for personal trainers and dozens of leaflets for the latest health pyramid scheme, was a flier for acroyoga. Colin didn't know what it was, but he liked the way it sounded when he said it under his breath. It sounded contemporary and more Western than its vinyasa, astanga, or kundalini counterparts. He was comfortable with that. The only thing that gave him pause-- a short pause, mind-- was the small disclaimer of 'singles welcome!' (nearly invisible) at the bottom of the pictureless advert.
Had there been a picture, or had Colin been feeling a bit more his methodical self and given acroyoga a quick Google, or even used context clues for goodness sake, he would have discovered that it was a couples class. He did precisely zero research, called the number at the bottom of the flier, and signed up for a class the following week. The woman on the line sounded pleasant and detached, and Colin liked that and so he was satisfied.
During his weekend, Colin prepared for his new yoga class. His eighteen minute stretching routine became a thirty minute stretching routine, and he found that very pleasant. He was filled with a quiet, simmering anticipation. Not enough to distract, not enough to even pinpoint the cause, but the result of his low-grade happiness was that Colin nodded and smiled to his local barista, and she noticed and when she said, 'have a good day!' she tagged his name to the end ("have a good day, Colin!"), and offered him a slightly awkward smile. He liked it.
It wasn't until the day of the class that Colin bought a yoga mat. He bought it at a shop down the road from his second story apartment, and the woman who checked him out asked about his plans for the mat. "Acroyoga class this evening," he said with a note of pride in his usually mild voice. She looked up from the bag she was packing his purchases into -- he'd ended up with a strap, block, and bolster as well-- and met his eyes. She took a moment to study his face before asking, "who's your partner?"
And just like that Colin knew he'd made a huge mistake. Alas. He felt foolish for a few slogging seconds and replied, "I don't have one."
Surprise! He'd fucked up.
"You want one? I'm free in half an hour."
Colin stared blankly into the queerly passive face of the woman behind the counter. She tilted her chin up a bit, in question.
"Just say yes," She said.
"Yes," Colin said.
***
Her name was Georgia, and she was 29 years old. She worked 18 hours a week at the hip sports store, re-stocking cycling socks and keto protein bars, and that kept her in fun money. Her real job, her vocation as she called it, was as a freelance writer. She wrote mostly for AP, and hunted down stories all over the city. She liked the sports store and she liked writing and often she could write at the front desk in between customers. "It's like a secret hack!" she said excitedly as they walked down the road towards the yoga studio.
It was off the beaten track, and Colin felt vaguely uneasy, and a little bit like he'd duped himself. He was raised by polite, midwestern parents, and though the thought of telling Georgia, "just kidding" and calling the studio to cancel had crossed his mind, he had an ingrained fear of disappointing people. Any people. Strangers at the yoga studio, even. So he kept his appointment and walked down the scuffed sidewalk of the more industrial part of his neighborhood, an enormous, extra-thick paper bag stuffed with his kit.
As they walked, Georgia talked, and her voice was quiet and musical. Colin noticed a tendency to start a thought with a long and drawn out "We-eelll," that gave the word an extra syllable. She made easy eye contact, and when Colin looked away he felt her eyes still on him. But he was okay with it, she was clearly one of those that studied without judgment.
Georgia was a short, soft woman who walked quickly and spoke with her hands. Her deep olive skin glowed in the setting sun and Colin wondered how to ask her where her family was from. There was a coarseness and blackness about her hair that could have indicated anywhere from Egypt to Greece. It was clear to Colin that this woman belonged in other spaces. He looked down at his workout shorts and wondered what it was like. Hard, but warm, he thought.
He had the gym, and his office buddies. His mother called him once a week. His father was dead, and Colin was allergic to cats. He looked at the woman to his right and felt uneasy. But not unpleasant. If Colin had been thinking, he'd have identified the feeling as anticipatory. Excited. Not, poor Colin, uneasy.
***
Colin had made a terrible mistake. Not life changing, but he was annoyed with himself. There were couples everywhere. The light was dim. In the sheltered, modest corners of Colin's brain, this was halfway to an orgie. He felt perverted and acutely aware that his lack of comfort around these people (working professionals with extracurriculars and enough bandwidth to maintain a social calendar) said something unsavory about him.
There was a pair of women near the middle of the class and the closer of the two, short and straight as a pole bean, rhythmically beat her partners back, one foot planted on either side squatting over the prone woman. He felt himself flush. Something indecent about all of this, he thought, and chided himself. He should be okay with this. Casual touch. But it felt so exposed, and Colin plotted a graceful exit.
As Georgia settled their things and chatted with the couple to their right, an enormous man with the confused good looks of Lyle Lovett walked in followed by his equally tall and equally striking partner.
The woman wore a sports bra and a pair of leggings with stirrups (Colin's mind kept supplying holsters) and Colin couldn't help but stare. She was the most sensual in a room of effectively naked women, and Colin starred. He could smell her as she settled behind Georgia and himself. Sunscreen and something musky.
His mouth went dry. It was her feet. The stirrups forced a look at her feet.
Not only her feet, but her elegant, almost architecturally perfect arch. Her manicured toenails were short and polished with some iridescent shade that Colin couldn't quite make out in the dim light. And then! A secondary thwap of interest? Her height. She was tall. Much taller than any woman he'd ever seen, perhaps six foot two or so. Her calves were long, lean and covered in some thin -- so thin -- fabric that clung to her as wet seal skin clings.
He followed the line of her legs with cautious but persistent eyes, up and up to the dramatic bulge of her hamstrings and her high, round ass and Colin could feel himself staring -- his base operating procedure today-- and he thanked god (goddess?) it was dim and he overcorrected-- the way one does when they feel they've been caught doing something they ought not-- and he whirled around to find Georgia glaring at him with mixed annoyance and amusement. Like she'd discovered him doing something quite dirty and she was about to announce her find to the whole class. Colin swallowed and sat down. Hard.
***