Author note: This story was written for the 750 Word Story Challenge 2024, below this line are exactly 750 words:
It had started when I'd read the article in the trashy magazine. It had urged the reader to 'do something that scares you', as apparently the adrenaline did something magical to your brain chemistry and hormones.
When I told Ellie, she instantly dismissed it.
"Pseudo-scientific bullshit," she pronounced. Her French was getting really good: her profanity almost sounded completely native. But long words like 'pseudo-scientific' still carried that trace of America which gave her away.
Maybe it had really started when I first met Ellie, at a photography exhibition in the ninth arrondissement. She was spending the year studying art in Paris, and as soon as I saw her, in her high-waisted, light-washed jeans and self-conscious straw hat, it was obvious she was a lesbian. Getting her into bed was easy, the work of two dates and a bottle of Burgundy. There hasn't been good art in Paris in a hundred years so I soon shifted her focus from contemporary screen prints to sweaty nights bathing my cunt in kisses.
We were spending a week on the coast. I told her I would do something that scared me: begin reading a book in English, not French. She laughed, thinking I wasn't serious, and said the one thing that scared her would be sunbathing nude.
Midway through the week we were standing overlooking the beach, the sun lazily working its way towards the western horizon and the blazing heat of the day turning to a gentle simmer. I had Wuthering Heights in my bag, half-read, as English as a cup of tea. It was scary alright. Heathcliff seemed less angry and more alluring in English, and I wasn't sure if I liked it. Ellie was wearing a translucent white dress, blowing around her legs in the sea breeze. It was a perfectly decent cover up over a bikini, but that was the best part: she wasn't wearing a bikini. She was fully nude underneath and if she stepped into the direct sun you could see her pink nipples straight through the fabric.
"I can't believe I'm doing this," she murmured, looking out to sea.