I once briefly knew a girl who ran with a group of my friends. She was in those years between twenties and babies, a good corporate box ticking pleaser-girl, in so many ways, but who was also of an uninhibited and exploratory nature. Perhaps there was a vague understanding that curtailed by encircling societal expectations, her season of libertine bloom might be short. She discovered, and enthusiastically embraced the pleasures of attending London's many fetish nights.
Perhaps the contrasts of constriction and liberation of such an environment appealed to her. Observing strict dress codes she would go again and again, her gym-taut body encased in a tight latex sailors uniform. There she would set sail; watch and enjoy, dance, flirt and play in the scented, sweating darkness.
Along the way, as girls of this kind often do, she picked up a young, gay boy. He acted as co-conspirator, friend, plus one, confidant, partner in crime and procedural ward against the unwelcome. Together they would go, attending this night and that. He with his shaved head, in his little black rubber shorts and shiny black T-shirt, she in her blue and white striped rubber uniform.
He was emphatically there to meet boys of a similar disposition and bent, she was after something not dissimilar and with common purpose they sailed the seas together.
The consistency of his presence, and unflappable enthusiasm for their social round provoked the side-eyed comment of others, long before the shadow tensions in their relationship broke the surface.
They would compare notes in coffee-and-cigarette debriefs at her place, sit in laughing huddles of bitchy assessment of size and disposition at the clubs, the space between them untroubled by complexity beyond friendship, or so they both avowed.