This is a story I wrote as a private audio script for Wkdaudios based on their original concept and refined with their help and encouragement. Go to their Literotica page to hear an audio performance if that's your preference. It is posted as text here with their permission.
I was a fool when I stumbled into your shop. Not a fool. Ignorant. I was avoiding some parade. Some protest. I don't know. I backed into your store to keep from getting trampled. It seems appropriate now, that I backed in. It could have been an electronics store. It could have been a fucking travel agent. It was your tea shop and I was holding a dripping frozen Starbucks concoction I had seen on the Internet. Extra pumps, skinny. I don't even remember.
I know you don't like it when I call it "your tea shop" but I don't care who the owner is. It's you that infuses every inch of that shop. Every shelf, every box of tea, every piece of equipment smells like you. Without you it would fail.
I backed into your store with my Starbucks and it took me a long time to realise that you were grinning at me. A grin I've come to know. It means "You are lost right now, and I am not." You are not lost. Not in your shop anyway. I am not lost in your shop either. I am not lost with you.
You gave me your first command that day. "Put it down," you said, "It's okay." So I did. I put that corporate milkshake down on your glass display case. It formed a wet ring immediately, and began to spread onto the glass. You ignored it, of course, because you can do that. Ignore things that do not interest you.
You paid attention to me. I was Winter windblown, awkward, disorganised. My scarf hung crookedly. I was there by accident. You pretended I walked in on purpose though. At least, you pretended that Fate had pushed me through your door. "Can I help you find something, ma'am?" you said, "Something delicious?"
I only remembered about my drink days later when I replayed those moments in my mind. You said the word "delicious" and you had me. Your shop was overwhelmingly fragrant with tea and spice, with oiled wood and old paint.
"Yes?" I said. I did not have many questions in my life. I couldn't afford them. Questions are the luxury of those who are not in charge and I was always in charge, but not in your spaces. Not when you smiled at me. "Yes." I said, more confidently even though I couldn't remember the question.
"A blend? A single origin? Or are you a blank slate, waiting for a story?"
I waited too long to answer. You laughed.
"Blank slate it is. Do you have some time? This will take time."
I mentally cancelled the grocery store and the meeting with Jennifer. "I have a little time," I said, "I just..."
I pulled out my phone to tell Jennifer and you crossed your arms. I put the phone away. I know why I did that now, but I didn't know then. I was still foolish then.
Ignorant
, although to be fair, you were too. But I remember what happened last time I said that.
"We're not after
fair,
" you said, "We're after beauty, and beauty is not fair." What you did to me then wasn't fair at all. I keep waiting for you to do it again.
You looked the part that chilly afternoon. Round glasses, a dark apron over a taupe cardigan. You looked overqualified to be selling cheerful boxes of tea bags to phone-addicted shoppers.
When they bumped out of the store with their purchases and the door slammed shut behind them we were alone and the shop became itself again. I'm not sure how to explain it... It seemed like customers were intruders on something much deeper-- something meaningful. I didn't realise it then, but I was part of the meaning. You never saw me as a customer. I've never made a purchase.
You flipped the store sign to "Closed" and waved me upstairs to a loft overlooking the shop. It was hung with tapestries, cluttered with bags and boxes of loose tea leaves labelled in Chinese, in a curly Indian language, in block lettered English.
I followed you, and you took my scarf, my coat, my bag, and set them on a chair at a small table in the middle of the loft. Sound from the street did not reach here. You had me sit in the other chair. We were in a temple to tea, with everything anyone could need to brew. A little sink, a stove, shelves of kettles and crockery. Every other space was filled with banks of tiny drawers, carefully labelled by hand. Your handwriting, I realised, even the Chinese characters.
"I want to make a portrait of you," you said, leaning forward. "I am an artist."
The room cuddled me. I was warm and disoriented, but I felt safe. It's impossible to believe, but it's true. I vaguely wondered how much it would cost, but my business was humming along prettily at the moment. Not that it didn't take constant vigilance, but I was good at it.
"How much," I said, and you sat across from me and smiled fully. "One cup," You said.
Your hands were folded on the table. Long fingers, expressive, and they squeezed a little when you said "cup."
"I'm confused," I said, feeling warm drunk and a little dizzy.
"I'm not confused," you said. "I want to make your portrait in tea. You are different, fascinating. You are beautiful."
I wrinkled my nose at you. "A portrait in tea? You mean like a blend or something?"
"If you say 'yes' I'll show you. Will you trust me?"
I nodded, my heart in my throat.
You nodded back. "Good. I don't think you'll regret this, but if you want to go, just say you'd prefer coffee. The front door is unlocked."
I shuddered when you said "coffee." I've always enjoyed it. I
think
I enjoyed it, but there was such an otherness about your tea shop, about you. Nothing about coffee sounded right.
"What do I do?" I said, feeling out of my depth.
"Just be. Breathe. Look. Feel. Tasting comes last. I'll ask you some questions. Answer them and watch what happens. It's most fun if you just watch."
I wondered if you'd ask me my sign or something. My name, my age, my address. You didn't care about any of that. "What brings tears to your eyes?" you said, and it brought tears to my eyes. It had been so long since anyone cared enough to ask. I opened my mouth to speak, but you held your hand up and gazed at me, at the tears shimmering in my eyes.
"Tell me what flusters you," you said, "Tell me what embarrasses you," You watched me wipe my eyes. I remembered the wind catching my skirt once as I got off a city train. You saw me remember. My face betrays me so badly sometimes.
"Tell me the truth," you said, "It's much more compelling than fiction."
"There was a man on a train once, downtown, and I..."
You stopped me with a finger. "Slow down. I need to savour this."
"Um, well, it was a metro train, and I was going home after an interview with an intern."
"Good," you said. "Go on."
"And I... was, um, 'flustered' because the intern was... this is very inappropriate."
"You had a physical response to your intern? Did you act on it?" You leaned forward, your left hand beginning to toy with small bags of tea on the table between us.
"No, of course not. It's just... the sensation lingered. And then there was a man on the train, and I remember his clothes more than his face.
He
wasn't forbidden, anyway. He watched me step into the train, sit, cross my legs. I was wearing a skirt. It was Summertime. Warm. I don't tolerate the heat well."
You picked up my jacquard scarf and ran it between your fingers as you listened. You held it up to your nose and breathed and I felt like you were that man on the train. Maybe you were. I felt exposed.
"Anyway, maybe you haven't noticed that sometimes there's a puff of wind that comes up between a rail car and the platform as you step from one to the other. I usually do something about that. You know. Hold my skirt down. And that time I didn't. I have good legs and I wore pretty knickers and he was watching me and I was... flustered."
"Flustered" you said, raising an eyebrow.
"Excited."
You waited, took off your glasses and polished them with my scarf. "Your let your skirt blow up under your armpits for an interesting stranger on a Metro train because you were 'excited?'"
"I was desperately fucking aroused. Sexually, okay? Are you happy?"
"Smell this," you said, holding what looked like a dried piece of orange peel.
I thought it was citrus, a little like pine, maybe, or gin, but gentler. You had me off balance again. My annoyance melted. And fuck, if I wasn't getting flustered.