This is about clarity and night, both unraveling in long, easy draughts. This is about too much noise and too much music. This is about a slide towards an adolescent, anonymous groping in a bar. This is about no one, and everyone, watching. This is about the purposeful arch on a bar stool, about sweaty palms, about heat outside and in.
This is about a woman not knowing anything but being sure. This is about easy exchange, Saturday night frothy and frenzied. This is about slashing and burning, about sizing up, about quick assessment. This is what happens in a minute's liquid decision. This is about an unshy vertex of thighs, of a stranger's beading beer glass. This is about everything but love.
This is about a Saturday night swooning with intention. This is about forgotten decorum. This is about tipping large. This is about extravagant, hidden agendas. This is about failing to notice the time. Failing to remember a promise. A promise being forgotten, a second whiskey. This is about a spontaneous shimmy against a bathroom door, the circuitous dance of strangers in a bar, the shining eyes, the wet lips. This is about wanting nothing much, but wanting nevertheless. This is about a limited span of hours, and unlimited access, and time making all the difference.
This is about a fevered pressing of hands over fabric. An indelicate reach for the hook of a bra. This is about a clumsy, nonsensical embrace. This is about how sloppy the first kiss really is. This is about tongues roping themselves, faltering for words, trying for something else. This is about a vague sort of agreement being drawn out of the noise, the heat, the inevitable next drinks. This is about torsos colliding upright. The closing of eyes against the delirious neon. This is about last call. This is about last dance.
This is about the two a.m. stumble to the streets, the rain just starting. This is about a cab coming to take a woman home. This is about a farewell not being spoken. This is about an awkward attempt at gazing meaningfully at a stranger at two o'clock in the morning. This is about a button having come undone. This is about a reach towards the button, then deciding against it. This is about a glance to the watch, the first all night. This is about not asking for a phone number. This is about not wanting a phone number. This is about a cab rounding the corner, its brights flickering hello. This is about temporary, spectacular freedom and a cab coming to take a woman home. This is about a final glance backwards, and this is about what keeps a woman from going backwards. This is about a woman not waving from a window, still hopeful. This is about knowing what would not be enough, ever. This is a woman knowing this. This is about knowing the choices. This is about a woman making a choice. This is a woman not choosing a languorous Sunday morning in bed with a lover. This is a woman not choosing sloppy seconds and a boozy late-night grind. This is a woman opting out, opting out, and opting in. This is a woman riding home, alone, in the thick of a moonless night and a gathering rain.