Part 1
The sun is warm against his skin, the rock against his ass a total pain.
He has been on this section of beach for maybe thirty minutes and lying down for twenty: absurd, the amount of time spent on choosing a spot, getting undressed, oiling up, smoothing the sand, packing the sand, actually moulding the stuff so that he can finally nest his towel in a comfortable hollow.
Except it isn't. There's a rock trying to get up his ass.
It wasn't there to begin with, or then again, it probably was, but the sight never registered, or then again it did but he must have decided that after ten useless minutes he was not going to waste a moment more: roll out the towel, lie down, that's it.
He raises his hips, turns onto his side away from the rock. Gets a different perspective now, the sand, the outcroppings, the lacy edge of ocean and hazy sky above.
The person next to him.
She says: 'Happy Nude Day.'
He opens his mouth to reply but surprise makes speech elusive.
She says: 'You don't mind? I'm not in the mood for the dunes.'
'I didn't see you,' he says. So halting, so weak, she's either not going to hear anything or think he's asthmatic. He sits upright, draws his knees quickly to his chest. 'Sorry.' Tries a smile, but it has about as much strength as his voice. 'Miles away.'
She isn't looking at him because she is sideways onto him, kneeling down to unroll her own towel. It's blue like the sea. But unlike the sea there's no patterning, no texture.
She's in blue denim cut-offs that don't reach the knee and a white T-shirt that hardly covers her chest. The sandals she wore to get here are placed neatly by her towel as is the plain white cotton bag she must also have brought. The bag and the footwear look like they've always been there, not so much set down in the sand as pushed up and out from somewhere deep.
The sun plays on her skin like a stage spot-light picking out a new player. It's not that the light actually shifts, more that there's a sudden intensity about it, the wattage ramping up so that for a moment she is actually too bright for him.
He looks down at his knees. They have caused his belly to compress. He would rather not see the rolls of fat so stops looking at his knees and stares first at the ocean and then at her, his eyes narrowing against the expected brightness but it's all right, the strobing white and the searing blue have gone, she's stuffing her clothes into the beach bag.
She straightens up. Faces him. She's five four, five five, eighteen going on 25, or less than the one or more than the other, he knows intuitively he'll never be able to figure her age. There's no make-up on her mouth or around the dark eyes, no artifice about the tawny hair that sweeps across the forehead and frames her face.
She is naked now and more golden than the sand.
Golden all over. Unblemished.
'Strip.'
Spoken so quietly, he's sure he has misheard. 'Sorry?'
She laughs. The sound is neither high nor low, loud nor soft. 'No. I'm sorry. My fault. My words.'
'Words?'
'I have favorites. Strip is one of them.'
He is trying to hold her gaze, to let her know that is all he is doing, staring into her eyes but it's impossible to blank out peripheral vision, the way her breasts are wide and high and shining, the aureoles narrow, the nipples discreet.
'Strip and stripped' she says.
Negligently, a hand tracks a line across from one hip to a stomach that's almost but not quite flat and then down to her pubic mound. Fingertips graze absently over the triangle of sun-bleached hair.
'But not stripping,' she says.
'No?' Even to his own ears, the sound is hoarse. He coughs but the dryness won't go away.
'No power,' she says. 'And stripper, that's even worse.'
His pulse quickens but it's not desire, the stirring is in his mind, not his groin. This is like encountering a concert pianist who cannot play correctly a single note. There should be melody, not dissonance.
'Yes. Well,' he says, and at that she laughs again.
'You're not comfortable. I'll move somewhere else -- '
'No. It's all right.' Said before he can stop himself.
She's watching him with her head inclined to one side, her expression amused, inquisitive. She does not, he persuades himself, look like any serial killer he has ever read about.
'I do like the dunes,' she says. 'Don't get me wrong. But not on Nude Day.'
'No?' He realises, he's going to have to get beyond the monosyllabic. 'Why. . . why not on Nude Day?'
'Because no-one should be covering themselves with anything. Not today of all days.' She eases herself down onto the towel. Lies on her back, then sits up again, takes the sun oil from the bag and begins to smooth it over her skin. He wants to watch her hands at work on her breasts, see the flesh being kneaded by her long fingers. He concentrates on the ocean instead.
'I hadn't realised,' he says, 'that anyone was. Covering up. Nobody wears anything, this part of the beach. It's been naturist quite a while now.'
'Nude.'
'Sorry?'
'Nude. Naturist isn't one of my words.' She smiles. 'But hey: don't get me started again.'
'Ah.' Not sure what she means. Not sure what he means. Or what he even thinks.
'Anyway,' she says. 'I know the gays don't cover up. At the dunes. They are who they are. The others though, those who aren't gay -- '
'The peepers?'
'Yes. They're always covered. In mirrors.'
To hell with the ocean, he decides. He turns to her again. 'Mirrors?'
She's finished oiling herself. Is sitting there with body arched towards the sun, breasts thrust forwards, arms stretched down and backwards in support. 'They go there to watch but what they mainly want to enjoy is their reflection. The reflection in their mirrors. Not real mirrors, of course. But you know what I mean. The mirrors that lots of people carry everywhere.'
'They do?'
'Yes. So they don't see themselves as they are. Why are you sitting like that?'
'Sorry?'
'Your tummy rolls. Nothing wrong with them but if you want to lose them, you should lie down.'
'Oh.' He manages a grin but his face is burning and it's not because of the sun.
'Mirrors,' he says, because it's going to be more comfortable to return to that topic. 'I hadn't realised.'
'Well usually, it wouldn't matter. I go down the dunes with someone, the reason I'm there is to be watched.'
He swallows hard.
'Well, to be more accurate: the reason I'm there is to be fucked and watched.'
He's jolted more aggressively than the rock ever managed.
'But all those single guys,' she's saying, 'they want you to watch them. I mean, you're just lying there -- this is before you're being fucked, I mean -- and they're not looking at you, they're going along the shoreline, staring in their own mirror. They see their hard bodies. Their out-size cocks. They want you to see the same thing, too. Only. . . You're not looking at their mirror. You're looking at them.'
He swallows again. Somewhere along the line -- along her lines -- he's lost the power of speech.
'And the point is,' she says, 'the point is, who cares? Guy goes past me with a big belly and a small cock, so what? He goes by with two heads and three arms then OK, I am going to think about it. But otherwise?' She shakes her head. 'The mirror's bad enough but what's even worse, as soon as I'm being fucked, what do they do? They run off to the dunes, that's what. Hide in the grass and watch from there. When what they should be doing is standing around me and masturbating.'
Speech completely gone, he realises. He may never be able to utter another word again.
'OK,' she says. And sighs. 'You've come here for some peace and quiet but a strange woman has settled down beside you and oh Christ, what kind of trip is she on?'
'No, look,' he manages, and that's a start, that's good, but she's not to be diverted:
'Some woman, she's going to dump all her neuroses. Going to talk and talk and then, who knows, get hysterical and scream and yell and . . .' She stops. Smiles. There's a kind of sadness to her expression. 'It's not like that,' she says.
He nods again. Swallows again. Manages to smile back. Exhausts an entire repertoire of non-vocal responses even though he realises that he must do something, and do it now, because if she is a crazy woman, then his inarticulate inertia may signal a submissiveness of the most provocative kind.
He lowers his knees.
It's not much of an act but at least it's decisive.
The only unfortunate consequence is that having been scrunched up for so long, his pubic hair is beaded with sweat and his cock squashed almost to vanishing point. He reaches down. Tweaks it.
'I only have one neurosis,' she says. 'It's called honesty.'
Having but recently lost the power of speech, he now seems to have lost the substance of his penis. He closes his eyes, the better to shutter out the thought that he is actually touching himself in front of this completely strange and completely unnerving naked woman.
What should have happened, of course, was that the instant he saw her -- and this, he decides, is the scenario he would have imagined, had he ever felt like exercising his imagination in such fashion -- his cock would've assumed gigantic proportions and she would have fallen upon it with the mouth of one only too grateful to be in the presence of such magnificent manhood.
What could well happen instead is that she'll think he's about to go fishing and has just found a worm.
'That better?' she asks.
'Better?' Reflexively, his hand moves away.
'Sitting like that can be bad. I had a boyfriend once, he sat with his knees up, the sun got between his thighs and burnt his balls.'
'Jesus.'
'Are your balls OK?'
'Yes.' Adding: 'Thank you.'
She laughs. 'You're funny.'
'Me?'
'I like people with a sense of humour.'
'How. . . how d'you know, I've a sense of humour?'
'Because you're polite.'
'They don't necessarily go together, do they?'
'More often than not. Also: add humour to politeness and you get something else. Intelligence.'
'Really?'
'Really. And intelligence in a man, in a woman, that's the most important of all.'
It's time, he decides, to seize the initiative. 'Well. If we're going to be polite, I'd better -- '
'No.'
'Sorry?'
'You'd better introduce yourself. That what you were going to say?'
'I. . . Yes.'
'Then don't. No names. No mirrors. No clothes. It's Nude Day. We are as we are.'
'What, everything stripped away?'
'Yes.' She smiles. 'Everything.'
'So if I was to ask you,' he continues, surprised by his own doggedness, 'if I was to ask you where you were from. . .?'
'I'd tell you, I was from where I was.'
'And you don't want me to tell you anything either?'
'I can see you. I can hear you. That's all there should be on Nude Day.'
He mulls it over. Realises his unease is subsiding. Says, because he can't now think of anything else: 'Can I ask you something?'