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by Ian Daytona and Marcia R. Hooper
It was three o'clock in the afternoon. Jill lay out near the sea-oats, behind the hotel, sunbathing. People constantly passed by . . . couples young and old, moms with and without their kids, kids on bicycles and roller blades and skateboards on the sidewalk twenty feet above Jill on the rampart . . . enough so that she decided not to take off her bikini top but lay down upon it instead while she sunned on her tummy. Nude beach or not (well, topless beach, anyway) she was not brave enough for that.
She was drifting in and out of a doze, the sun baking her back and her legs, enjoying a breeze off the water strong enough to stir her hair when she heard a noise. Rather, she sensed she heard a noise. Lifting her head, she saw a young man with a camera drifting slowly past her about twenty feet away. Her stomach immediately tightened.
Keeping her chest planted firmly against the sand, Jill raised up on one elbow, shaded her eyes and called, "You're not taking pictures, are you?" in an accusatory tone. Oh yes, he is, she thought. Pervert.
The young man immediately blushed. "No," he lied. Then he grinned and that made it better.
"I'm sorry," he said. "The truth is, I was just drifting along the beach taking pictures with my new camera and well . . ."
Eying the camera, Jill decided it did in fact, look new. It also was not digital, which meant that he probably was not running home to download pictures onto his iMac.
"Would you like a drink?" Jill suddenly asked.
If the young man was surprised--and of course he was--Jill was surprised even more.
Uh, excuse me? her shocked sense of propriety asked. What are you doing?
I'll let you know when I figure it out, she thought back.
The young man seemed to struggle for an answer, then said: "Yes, I'd like that very much. And I'm Ian."
Jill told him her name. Then she reached behind her and resnapped her bra, smiling faintly as Ian glanced away.
Yes, she thought, I do like this guy. In fact, she momentarily wished she had left the bra alone.
They sat on the shady-side of the poolside bar, drinks before them on the laminate counter, their stools about a foot and a half apart. Jill wore her bathing suit top and a sarong over her bikini bottom. She had let down her dark, shoulder-length hair and then put it back in a clip. They chatted safely about the view and the wildlife on the island while Ian kept his eyes safely away from girls with bare breasts.
"You come here often?" he asked.
Jill shook her head. "Vacation."
He looked comically let down. "Where from?"
"A suburb of Washington, D.C. Bethesda. Actually," she then amended, "It's really called Rockville, but Bethesda sounds so more rich."
Ian laughed. "I've been here since spring."
"There is no spring here," Jill corrected. "Only summer, summer, summer and summer." And bare breasts, she thought. Plenty of bare breasts. In fact, there were so many bare breasts about that she felt almost odd wearing her top. Almost.
"Where are you from?"
"New York. Can't you tell?"
"Yes," she said, laughing. "But I didn't want to make it obvious."
"Brooklyn born and bred. Lived in Soho a while, then over in Greenwich Village. Then back to Brooklyn again until 2001 when I moved to Battery Park City . . ." His voice trailed off.
"Oh," Jill said. About that, she wouldn't ask.
"Who you down with?" he asked. Jill thought he did quite well, keeping his tone hope-neutral.
I should tell him my strapping big boyfriend, she thought. All six-feet six and two hundred and sixty pounds of him, only that would be a lie, because that was her next door neighbor (although he might have wished differently) and even jokingly, she didn't want to jinx her luck.
"With my girlfriend, Marie," she said. "Current whereabouts unknown."
He looked both quizzical . . . and relieved.
Jill explained. "She did this to me once before. Two summers ago on our first trip down. This is my third," she said. She didn't say that trip number two was not with Marie, but with a guy, and Ian didn't ask. "The second night they had this really big party--" she circled her head, indicating the entire pool area. "--and Marie danced with every guy in sight. So did I, I guess," she admitted with some embarrassment. "But about one a.m., she just disappeared."
"Just like that?" he said.
"Just like that," snapping her fingers.
"Where'd she go?"