I took a sip - suddenly - it couldn't have been that little sip - but suddenly, I felt very, very good. Almost unwillingly, I leaned back in the beach chair and sighed. "It is nice, isn't it?" Louisa said. "What brings you to this beach?" I asked, not really caring, just marking time, conversation, and the consumption of Louisa's very good wine. "Well," she answered - her voice was languid - almost, not quite, a southern drawl, "It's almost always quiet here - I can come - read - not be disturbed." I looked over at the pile of books, lilting crazily by her side, "Do you read all of those books while you're here?" She laughed, the guffaw again, and said, "No - I just don't know - when I leave - what I might want to read - I end up taking a number, just in case." I leaned over, picked one up. It was something by Aldous Huxley. Underneath, The Woman's Bible by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Intrigued, I picked up the next. Tracks, Louise Erdrich. I looked up, surprised. It was not one's usual beach reading. "Oh," she laughed, "I'm a runaway graduate student -- Literature, of all the useless things." "Runaway?" I asked. "Forget it - I don't want to talk about it - let it lie there." Suddenly, there was a steel edge in her voice. "More wine?" I nodded, wondering what - and whom -- I had stumbled into.
We sat there for hours, talking, sometimes dozing. We talked about literature, we drank more wine, and somehow, I told her about Mike - about the fights, the scenes, the eventual breakup, the heartache. Through it all, Louisa only nodded, and sometimes touched my knee, lightly, with just a trace of the bite of her fingernail. We watched the boats, talked about fishing, talked about the water, the possibility of sharks. Perhaps it was the wine, perhaps it was the sun, but I dozed off at dusk, the sun still bouncing cheerfully off the harbor and the plastic-ed wine.
When I awoke, it was dark. I was startled and, at first, didn't know where I was. I'd been lying on Louisa's complex of towels and I woke to find her stroking my hair. "What . . Where . . ." I stumbled, but Louisa only laughed softly. "You're okay - you just fell asleep, sweetheart." I swallowed the panic rising in my throat, "But . ." But there was no but - there was no Mike waiting at home - only the indifferent cats. "You're okay, Kristen, you just fell asleep." Her large sunglasses had been cast aside, and I could see her eyes, flashing in the light of the half-moon. She glanced down, briefly, feigning shame. "Perhaps I fed you too much wine." I sat up, looked at the water, back at Louisa. "Don't you need to get home - or something?" Again, her eyes flashed. "No," she said, "I don't need to get home." "What I need to do," she continued, and I listened, almost enchanted, "I think what I need to do - look at that water - and the moonlight - what I need to do - is go into that water - I need to take off my clothes - and feel that water - it feels like silk, doesn't it? Come with me, Kristen."
She laughed, then, and ran towards the water, shedding her suit as she ran. I thought - My God, it's the town beach, but I followed her, and I did the same. We both ran, laughing, into the silk of the Shrewsbury. When we were neck-level, she reached me, embraced me. "You know,' I said, "That must be very good wine." "Oh, Kristen," she said, "Believe me, it is." She kissed me then, her tongue probing mine, her hands moving down to my breasts. She pinched my nipples and moaned softly. I could feel the sway of the water, the sway of what her hands were doing - I could feel the pull of the river's tide. All were the same, somehow. Her hands traveled, down my breasts, pulling my nipples, down to my cunt. I could feel her, softly pulling at the hairs there, then her fingers entering me - I protested, softly, uselessly, against her mouth, but she would not let go and she would not stop. I opened my mouth, wider, to the feel of her tongue and the soft silk of her lips. "Oh, Kristen," she moaned against me, and I could feel her thighs against mine, under the water, the cold flowing between us - she was lunging towards me, pumping against the tide, against me - her hands moved to my clit, played there, and I gasped. She was holding me, then, tightly, protecting me from the tide but also giving me her own particular tide - she kissed, lunged, pinched my breasts, fingered my cunt, teased my clit. "Louisa," I breathed, the light silver with moon and river, "Louisa - God, I need to cum." "Yes, I know, Love," she answered, and thrust herself against me more violently, played with my clit harder and more rhythmically. When I came, I gasped against her wet throat, happy - scared - wondering - fearful.
'There you go, sweetheart. And now it's about time for me to go." She was whispering, softly, into my hair. "But," I said - what - where - when? "Shhhh,' she said, "Don't think about it - there's only now." She was cradling me in her arms, my legs wrapped around her, a baby in the night and the moon. Slowly, I separated from her and we walked back to the beach. As usual, there was no one around. I listened to the cardinals, the thrushes. She packed up as I sat, not talking, listening to the birds, the waves, watching the light of the boats in the harbor. She walked back to her car - an old Lincoln - and packed the trunk. It was odd, seeing her there in the physical world. She had seemed so unreal, somehow. I helped her carry things - the chairs, the towel, the umbrella, the cooler. She turned to me, after everything was tight, placed carefully in her trunk, "Thank you, Kristen. Thank you." She leaned forward, then, and pulled a wine bottle out of the cooler. "It's the same stuff," she smiled shyly, "Enjoy it when you need to."
I watched her drive off, her car the only moving thing in the small harbor town. I glanced at the bottle and walked home, it and my towel my only burdens. I got to my apartment, fed the cats, put the bottle in the refrigerator.
I have yet to open it.