My memory of her is blurred. We met as teens. She, two years older. Her deep brown hair, her narrow brown eyes, her full mouth, her narrow nose, her high cheeks, her angular chin, her smooth olive skin. Her features strikingly Asian and native. I rarely saw her after that.
Serendipitous, our parents got close. She arrived at a family party. I had not seen her in two years. She was intimidating. Her youthful mousy beauty mature and seductive. Her face defined and confident. Her lithe curved body tightly wound in a black dress.
I hesitated. But she approached me. She asked how I was. She was funny and flirtatious. Why was she here? Why did she seek me out? I had older friends because I competed with them in a sport. They treated me as a younger brother. She knew them. From that, possibly a big sister dynamic. But that intrigued me. She suggested we meet again over summer. Then she left.
I cannot remember that far back. Maybe we went to a movie with a group of older friends, in a town where she took college summer classes. That evening she treated me as her date. I hadn't experienced that adrenaline surge. The electricity. She sat next to me in the dark theater. She rested her hand on my inner thigh.
That was my best night in eighteen years on earth. She sat on the hood of my car and dented it. She apologized. I almost told her I'd preserve it and make her sign it to prove the night was real.
By luck that summer we worked and attended school near each other. I built a house in the mountains with a contractor who nearly put out my eye. She attended classes at the university. My best friend lived nearby. The trip to her was 30 minutes full gas on the interstate. My mom expected me home at night and I had to work early. Our land speed records meant drifting at 80 on the rural roads and over 100 on the interstate. One evening we nearly died. We both wanted to be with her.