Author's Note:
There isn't really any smut in this one, as I wrote it to be more sensually romantic than explicitly erotic.
Special thanks to s0rethr0at for her excellent notes and suggestions on the penultimate draft, and to a little ox for enduring and shaping the early ones.
Please enjoy.
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A LIFE BETWEEN THE FENCES
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Where James grew up, the soil was tanned dirt, the grass a parched brown that went undrunk like winter leaves. When he saw those first patches of dirt each year, he would watch his window as night after night the jellyfish-blue moon squeezed by, counting down the remaining days of spring. Then, when the summer heat arrived, they would load into the car and drive three hours north to their cottage where the soil was soft and dark and freckled with flat white stones like ancient arrowheads.
Where Astrid grew up, the soil was rich but hidden beneath acres of crabgrass and rustled river reeds. The only patches she saw were where the neighbours' sheep had chewed the world bald, or where the riverbank had collapsed in the spring floods, where dark veins of mud and minerals and splintered stone became suddenly exposed. For her, the climb into the car and the four-hour knee-to-elbow shouting match with her brothers started as a hassle, but she learned to look forward to it when she saw how pretty the lake was at dusk, the black shore flowing out to meet the sun and the last waves of the day.
He was nine and she was ten when they met on the beach between their cottages. He was talkative, obsessed with bugs and frogs and fish, and she was lanky and shy and only wanted to swim. He annoyed her, the way boys always did with his constant babbling and his need to be the center of attention, and she annoyed him just as much when she admitted she didn't know the difference between a frog and a toadâand, worse, that she didn't care.
One blue afternoon, he caught a yellow sunfish off the dock and brought it to her. The jagged bony scales in her hands made her tongue stick out, and she groaned, dropping it into the water where it darted beneath the hard black shadow of the dock. After that, James decided he'd seen enough of the weird swimming girl, and Astrid was happy to be ignored by the childish boy.
He was twelve and she was thirteen when they discovered they both liked the same music and the same movies, and that summer they spent most of their time in hissing bean bag chairs, swapping back and forth his father's headphones, or eating popcorn together in front of a blue square of television. All summer long they hiked and swam, and he taught her about frogs and toads, and she taught him how to tread water.
Each summer after that they met at the white-planked fences that uselessly marked the neutral stone path that led from the road to their shared beach. Sometimes he would bring her gifts: flowers one summer, homemade cookies anotherâonce a CD he'd made with her in mind. One year, she gave him a sweater she'd knitted, grey and oblong around the shoulders, but he wore it that night by the bonfire and most nights that winter.
He was nineteen and she was twenty the first summer he didn't come back. She puttered from room to room through her family's cottage, swimming only when the sun heated the greying dock enough to burn her toes.
"Will he be back next year, Mrs. Gould?" Astrid had asked his mother when they were down by the shore, their ankles caked in seaweed, sand squished between their painted toes. His mother could only offer a sad look and say she wasn't sure. But she was a mother, and she was only too proud of her son, and only too happy to remind Astrid that her little James was far away visiting England this summer, and maybe Australia the next.
He was twenty and she was twenty-one the first summer he was at the cottage without her. His father's back had hunched that year, and he'd begun to walk with a dark brown cane James had brought home from England. He'd meant it as a joke about his father's impending old age, and they'd shared a laugh when he'd given it, but trying to get into the bathroom one night his father had fallen and struck his arm, breaking the bone and turning his skin a splotchy block of yellow and green bruises. The joke seemed in poor taste after that, and when his father began to use the cane sincerelyâhopping around on it, calling it his fourth legâthat joke had seemed in poor taste too.
His mother had taken to gardening that summer, evoking beautiful carnations along the fence line, but their cottages still didn't seem half as lovely as he remembered, and he instead spent the summer on the trails or hiking next to the canal. He'd go as far west as the town of Spring Garden, putting the sun on his back in the morning and returning with his face red and wind-beaten before the newspaper was on the porch in the afternoon. He even took up swimming more than he ever had before, and twice that summer he swam to the lake's far shore, and he imagined Astrid would have liked that.
"Do you think she'll stop by?" he asked Mrs. Thompson, but her mother didn't have any news. Astrid had gone to work at a summer camp, and she wouldn't be done until September, after the last blackberry bush had been picked and the lake had cooled and the dry autumn leaves had swept across the porch.
Her brothers, Michael and Caleb, had still come that summer. Older by a few years and already done school, they proved just as friendly to James as they'd been with their sister there. They were both tall, with wavy blonde hair and sharp features, as if always on the verge of smirking. Together, the three had bright bonfires on the beach by night and lounging afternoons on the dock, and one night, when Michael admitted he'd never seen a Monty Python movie, they drove forty minutes north to a drive-in theatre to catch a double feature.
The rest of the summer, James watched the flowers that grew in the consummated shadows of cottage roofs, watching how his mother nursed them even after it was clear they wouldn't last. They'd grown in white and wild at firstâand even some vines had crept along the fences, germinated from who-could-be-sure-whereâbut by August their stems had cankered and greyed and soon not a single carnation had survived. The soil didn't drain properly, his mother told him. Nothing so beautiful could grow here.
He was twenty-one and she was twenty-two the summer they saw each other again. There were nerves. His sandalled foot tapped on the dock as they sat side by side in wooden deckchairs and made amends for the two-years-long blank spot they'd left in one another's life.
Still the hyperactive boy at heart, he joked, telling herâwith active hands drawn around herâabout his trip to England and his first legal beer. His hair had grown thick and dark like untouched woods, brambles curling near his temple, and she liked the charmed quality he'd come to possessâthe way his dark eyes looked imperfect and implacable and impish. And she liked his big hands; his thumbs as wide as oar shafts as he gestured around her with his stories.
"What would it take to get you to swim across the lake with me right now?" he asked. The silhouette of the trees overtook the shore, their black line bleeding like oil into the water.
"To cross it swimming? You think you could?" She found it funny that he, the boy she'd taught to tread water, would want to try. Last she'd seen him dive, he still steepled his hands at his chest.
"I did it just last year."
"You did?" She hadn't heard that story yet, but she could imagine it, his muscles breaking the green water, his chest spreading wide with every stroke, the soft wake of water foam behind him. "And where did you learn to swim like that?"
"Well, I know all kinds of things now," he said and, slowly, they looked at one another and laughed. And as she laughed, her blonde hair shook at her shoulders and the meadowed green of her eyes shone, the colours lilting like the reeds where they'd once caught frogs, and he liked the wistfulness of that memory. And her laugh was a richer sound nowânot the gangly croaking of a girl of only seventeen, but the haunting song of a swan across the lake at dawn.
He dangled a flip-flop from his toes and then sucked it back onto his foot. He realized he admired her, the way she held herself with magnificent dignity, knees crossed, the light sweater on her shoulders exposing only the soft dimple of a collarbone beneath. Memories were fickle, as quick to forgive as to forget, but his memory of her was unkind compared to the ornament of splendor that she was.