1
Marlies wondered about him, the urbane and smartly dressed businessman who stood not so far from her as she gazed out to sea. She gripped the salt-encrusted wooden railing as she watched the harbour light, at the end of the breakwater, grow steadily smaller and dim. She could feel the railing vibrate as the ship gathered speed, its meandering course as it negotiated the harbour estuary finally at an end. The monstrously large overnight ferry from England back to Rotterdam was crowded, but few people had ventured out onto the deck overlooking the ship's stern, the gale warnings persuading many to stay in the restaurant or one of the many bars that were to be found in the main lounge.
"I see you've broken the rules just as I have," he ventured and raised his wine glass to her, as if in a toast.
She laughed and held up her wine glass too. The signs painted on the bulkhead that was close to the electric doors, that opened out onto the deck, had said 'no glasses beyond this point'. "I wanted to catch some air..."
"Me too, and it's busy in there. It may be breezy, but the sky's so clear you can't miss looking at the stars."
She heard his cultured English voice more clearly and wondered what he would make of her accented English, good as it was and only too necessary in her work as a management consultant. Engaged with him, she followed his gaze, absentmindedly putting her glass on the rail.
"I...I wouldn't do that," he said, too late, for the glass had slipped over the rail's slicked surface and would have shattered on the deck if it had not been for his quick thinking. He had brushed against her. "Sorry about that..."
Marlies met his smile and then took the empty glass from his hand. "What a waste of a good wine...I've hardly taken a sip."
"And I want a refill, so I'll treat you to it..."
"There's no need..."
"I know that, but I'd like to if you'll stay and talk a while longer. My name's Tony DeForest...and yours?"
To being urbane and smartly dressed there could now be added the word 'flirty' to describe him. She wasn't going to mind that in him as she wanted some diversion after the hectic few days spent in one hotel room and then another, with only work to distract her and drinking alone not for her.
"Marlies Lindert, from Holland..."
"I'd never have guessed," he answered, a teasing smile on his lips. "I won't be long Marlies...if it's not too cold for you out here?"
"No, it's fine and it's nicer out here..."
"That's what I think too, all things now considered."
There it was again, that teasing smile and now his stilled and appraising look upon her. Whoever could have said that the Brits were cold and reserved?
"Drink?" she prompted, on a tilt of her head. "It was a Merlot, the better one of the two on offer..."
"It's yours. I won't be long..."
She watched him step away and wondered what else might be hers because she sensed, already, that their chance meeting would not be limited to sharing a glass of wine, out on the deck and under the starry sky. Being picked up so easily wasn't her usual game or favoured pursuit, but she'd had enough for one business trip of spending evenings on her own, and a good-looking and smart man might turn out to be the perfect company to make the night crossing different, perhaps memorable.
"I wish now that I'd bothered with my appearance some more, but it's too late to go worrying about that."
Marlies leaned against the railing and was not bothered that the gusty wind now tugged at her tied-back hair. The English coastline was becoming but a blur on the horizon and the ship's movements more erratic on the choppy sea.
♥
Tony decided to take his time, to linger at the bar a moment or two longer, and allowed others to order drinks and nibbles. He could feel the slow rise and fall of the ship as it met the swell of a sea, whipped up by the depression he had heard forecast on the radio as he made his way to the port.
The young Dutch woman, whose age he had not been able to accurately judge, but he reckoned about thirty, had braved the elements in her thin quilted jacket that covered a white cowl-necked sweater that was worn with a pair of jeans. He'd taken in the leopard print pumps on her feet and Marlies hadn't brushed him off and said a polite goodnight. Instead, she had talked, pushed that unruly windswept mane of dark blonde hair away from her slender-nosed face. Even in the poor light, he had met the look of her lively eyes and he would not deny that Marlies had already gotten to him. He'd not bothered to seriously pursue anyone since the divorce had come through; a break that had been both costly and brutal.
With their drinks in hand, he retraced his steps, the doors sliding open as he approached and a loudspeaker, somewhere overhead, playing music that he had also heard in the lounge.
"So, you're still here...braving the weather."
"I needed my drink," she retorted on a look his way.
"Nothing else?" Tony raised his glass and tapped it lightly against hers, his look upon her unwavering.
"We'll have to see, won't we?" She realized then, wondered if he sensed it too, that they would not leave their meeting as having shared a drink and no more. She had considered what her answer might be if he suggested it; now she knew that she wanted it. To her, luck and desire had both been joined. "Do you make these trips often?"
"Often enough but always alone. How about you?"
"The same goes for me, Tony. All work and no play."
She heard his soft laugh and felt his shoulder brush against her and looked his way, felt him turn to brush windswept hair away from her face even as she sipped on her drink.
"Good answer..."
"We talk straight where I come from..."
"Would you like to dance?" he asked pointing behind her. "We can get out of the wind and sway to the music playing, rock and sway as the deck moves. It may help, in my case..."
She heard the teasing in his voice, the excuses before they might dance. "Think I should risk it?"
"You'll have to wait and see, won't you?"
He took hold of her hand and drew her under the overhang of the boat deck above them. They might dance around the obstruction caused by pedestal tables fixed to the deck, but instead, they were intent only on breaking down any lingering doubts about what their meeting portended. The lights of the lounge beyond lit the scene dimly and the music crackled in the loudspeaker.
Marlies put one arm around him, followed his lead, and soon they simply danced on the spot in shuffling steps, pressed against each other in their coats. She could feel his breath on her cheek, the brush of his lips to her ears as they stood close and swayed, sipping at their drinks and she wondered if he was aroused. Dancing with coats on, layers between them, made the question unanswerable, but she felt a nervy, unsettling, sense of anticipation that she always felt when she was preparing for sex.
"This trip's going to be different, Marlies...if you'd like that?" he breathed in her ear.
His breaths made her shiver in response and he must have felt that. They stood still against each other, empty glasses in hand, and shared in their breaths, mouths close but not kissing. A sudden and intimate act of foreplay was being played out for anyone who might be looking through the window at them.
"I think you would like to be somewhere else, that we go somewhere that..."
"That is private?" He had nodded on hearing hers say it and had soon taken her glass and with his beside it, put it against the pedestal of the nearest table. He felt Marlies's touch and as he stood up she kissed him, wasted no time in doing so, the slick of her tongue tip to his mouth suggesting what she now wished to pursue. "My cabin or is it to be yours?"