This story was written for the
750 Word Project 2024
, below this line are exactly 750 words:
Her hand was soft and warm in mine as we walked through the Burnside Street door. The wonderful scent of used books filled me, and I saw the same pause and smile on her face. Yes, this was a good choice for a first date.
"Count fifty, then come find me," she said, drawing her wavy, dark hair behind her ear. She turned with a skip, heading into the doorway toward the Rose room. I watched the flash of her legs, how she moved in the sundress. How did I never notice how nice her legs were? Probably because we spent most of our relationship, until the last two hours, in a classroom. Talking, teasing, joking, and quoting...everything. Movies, books, plays, poems. It was how we flirted. She had a boyfriend, and that made it easier. Sweetly painful, but easier. Then she didn't, and there we were, an after dinner game of tag in Powell's City of Books--all three stories, nine rooms, and almost two acres to play in.
Fifty.
Through the doorway was the mezzanine. An open walkway, with stairs going up to the Purple room, or down to the Rose. Further down, other stairs up and down, to other sections, and two doors back into the Blue or Yellow rooms. For the first time ever, I was cursing how large Powell's was.
Down to the Rose room, to Oceanography? That was where we met. To the Blue room for poetry, or literature, or theater? Any would fit our conversations. I looked at a map, and made a completely emotional, and probably doomed guess.
I walked between the shelves, ten-foot tall bastions of wonder made from beautiful golden wood. The books called to me. "Just a quick look," they called. "Oh, here's a new one!" But the memory of dark blue eyes and a soft smile kept me questing.