I'd like to extend a big thank you to my editor, GentWithHandcuffs.
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I grew up in New Orleans, bathed in its hedonistic atmosphere. There is a permissive attitude that allows for eccentricity. I always felt free to be my natural self and was utterly without guile. My brother lived in the French Quarter. I would visit on Saturdays to bum around so I saw a great deal of diversity. Everything had a sort of film of sexuality that is hard to describe. I, however, was an innocent. I lived in this ocean of sensuality and somehow stayed untouched. I was never prudish, just unawakened and oblivious of much that went on around me. My brother's friends laughed at my naivety good-naturedly.
When it came time to choose a college, I wanted to expand my horizons and see someplace new. I finally settled on a small Catholic college in the northeast. My parents approved of the college, imagining me safe in the hands of the Jesuits. I was excited about going "Up North." I had always thought that was where real life, big city living happened. New Orleans seemed small and I wanted to be somewhere big.
I had to fly there. Plane fare being what it was, I couldn't go home for weekends or holidays. For freshmen, the semester began with a "welcome weekend," then a week-long break before the official beginning of the term. An odd lot of us were stuck there for the intervening week, students who could not go home. A man from Nigeria, myself, a girl from a small island in the Pacific Ocean, a few Latin American students. The Latin American girls were a closed group, sticking to themselves.
I took to the island girl, Sylvie. She was from American Samoa. Her figure was slender and graceful like a tiger lily, with exotic almond eyes, tawny skin, and a cloud of fine black hair. She was the opposite of me; I had transparent fair skin, Irish blue eyes and blonde-white hair.
The second day, we sat on a knoll overlooking the imposing brick buildings that formed the quad. Sylvie told me about her island (boring, according to her) and I told her about New Orleans. We compared notes on boyfriends. Hers was named Joe and apparently they spent the evenings driving in circles around the small island. I didn't like to say so, but I agreed, her island did sound very boring. In turn, I told her about my many boyfriends. I could never settle on one guy. They all were fun but none were special.
The dorm rooms were small and apparently unheated this early in the year. We were both freezing the first night there, although it was only August. It hadn't occurred to either of us to bring blankets and we had no warm clothes at all. So we were happy when we discovered that as a group event the foreign students were to be bussed to the mall. We could buy appropriate clothes at last!
My heart lifted when Sylvie paired off with me to explore a department store. The men's section attracted me. I was continually stealing clothes from my older brother. Men's clothes better suited my figure, more slender than curvy Sylvie.
I chose a blue-green sweater. It was fuzzy and touchable.
"Sylvie, feel this, it is so soft!"
I held the sweater up to my body.
She rubbed the sweater in a strange way, so that her hands were on my breasts.
"That looks good on you, Hannah," she said. "It's very soft."
More rubbing. I whipped the sweater away from my body in great embarrassment. Surely, she didn't do that on purpose?
Throughout our shopping trip, she stayed quite close to me, our arms and shoulders rubbing, hands sometimes brushing. Personal body space varies from culture to culture. I knew some guys from Madrid and they had very different comfort zones. Sylvie was a bit extreme, but I figured that was the cause here.
She and I threaded our way through the glittering displays to the women's section. Sylvie had more pocket money than I, so she chose several pairs of pants in different sizes, a skirt, and some sweaters to try on. She called me over to the dressing rooms to get my opinion on her selections.
She came out in a pair of wool trousers in a deep blue.
"Those are great, Sylvie."
"But," she said, "maybe they are too formal?"
"I guess so, " I answered. I knew less about these things than she. Fashion was not my forte.
There was a pause while she went back to the changing room, then she displayed a suede skirt in rust. She looked great in that too. I said so.
"What do you think is best here, is college more casual in the US?" she wanted to know.
"I can look, if you want," I said although I doubted my opinion would be useful.
She brought me back into the changing area so I could see the different choices. Jeans, more wool trousers, and a couple of sweaters in addition to the skirt were hanging on the slatted door. I approved of the warm clothing choices. It was cold at night even in August. If I was cold, she must be an icicle, Samoa having no real winter at all.