Swim, Butterfly Chapter 15
Good and Hard
Two more weeks. That's all. Two more weeks of early mornings, breakfasts, lunchboxes, filthy fingernails, whining, nagging, then--BOOM! A lightening-quick, highly adult covert operation.
While I'm busy partitioning little bags of M&Ms for lunches, or pairing off small pink and purple socks from the dryer, I think about trailing my fingernails up Jimmy's thigh, or imagine the weight of him on me. What else would you think about while folding the umpteenth load of laundry? More laundry? Nah. I imagine things like walking through the grocery store, dressed in clean sweats and sneakers, and getting it good and hard in the stockroom, maybe going down on Jimmy in his kitchen while the kettle whistles away.
It's an average Tuesday; kids in school, Pete at work. My phone vibrates in my pocket. Probably Pete or school or Mom, the only calls I get. Or maybe it's my mother-in-law, shoring up plans for Saturday breakfast at their local diner, since we didn't celebrate Christmas with them this year.
I roll my eyes while digging out my phone, then pause--it's Jimmy. Odd. He never calls me,
"Hey, Jim, what's up?"
"Hi, can you talk?" Jimmy asks.
"Yeessss, are you okay?" I drop a second sock on the floor.
"Yeah, I'm fine. Thought I'd light your phone on fire and call you this time. I figure the kids are in school and Pete out earning a paycheck for you. I just wanted to hear your voice."
Ooh, he's laying on that low, smooth voice.
"Mmm, nice to hear yours. You don't miss me too much, do you?" I ask in a sweet kitten voice.
"Ah, no, not really. I'm just bored."
I purse my lips, then respond, "Ha! Right."
He sighs, "Actually, I would love to see you. It's cold here. I'd whisk you from the train station to my apartment, then I'd take all your clothes off and force you to snuggle up and keep me warm, nothing else."
"Nothing else at all?"
"Well," he chuckles.
"I guess you should have told Santa what you wanted when you had the chance. Oh well. So, speaking of, how were your holidays?" I ask, leaving the washer banging away as I make my way up to June's room.
"They were okay. Nothing crazy. I spent Christmas with the family in Brooklyn. Spent a ton on my niece and nephew."
"Aw, nice. You didn't tear up the old bedroom, did you?" I smile.
"Oh no, in fact, I was so quiet they almost forgot I was there. They started asking questions."
"What do you mean?" I ask.
"Well, my mother really asked why I was so quiet. Did I have a girl on my mind? Then she started on when you gonna get married? That sort of stuff."
"They still don't know about you?"
"Now what do you mean?" Jimmy asks.
"What you do for a living? Do they know?"
"I think Marina--my sister, remember--I think she suspects something, but she keeps her mouth shut. I don't think my parents know, but if they do, they're not saying anything either, just heads in the sand. Now, if I were whoring around Brooklyn, that might be a different matter."
"So, what do you tell them?"
"I just shrug a lot, give them vague answers. I tell them there's a woman I like, and we'll see. Vague answers deflect them pretty well, and then they go back to bickering over crock pot lids, or whatever shit."