This is not about a cozy Sunday morning in bed with coffee and the arts pages of the New York Times and a breakfast somewhere off in the distance like a glassy horizon.
This is not about the lovemaking that can happen on weekends, the slow deliberate crawl to an exuberant finish, the taking of time, the patient thread of minutes spilling into whole hours, fingers tracing skin, tuning to no obvious music. This is not about a whole passing of morning through touch, touch like Braille, a light touch on the shoulder blade, the small of the back, the collarbone, the cheek.
This is not about the nudge awake, the putting down of the paper, the relinquishing of the crossword, the unisoned turn towards another, waiting body. This is not about the splendor of a late-March Sunday morning. This is not about early spring romance and its attendant flourishes, the wisp of hair meditated upon, fingered through, then reconsidered. This is not about the curve of a palm against a hip, or tendrils of sweet sweat perfuming the bedroom, or a rising sun casting new shadows on the bookshelves, the nightstand, the small pile of clothes on the floor.
This is not about the devilry of a morning in bed, the tease of a nipple, the bite of the neck, the sheets slipping off the bed quadrant by quadrant. This is not about a morning's eventual slide into aggressor and prey, into an altered dimension of sexual theatrics, into the sweet torture of restraint. This is not about a revelatory orgasm, thigh muscles clenching, eyes perforated shut, the room emptying itself of superfluous detail. This is not about rhythm or communion or freesia-scented love. This is not about the sigh, the yielding, the full-mouth kiss, and the feeling that God is in the room.
This is not about the guilty glory of a Sunday morning in bed, an agenda-less morning with hours to kill before the unglorious tasks clamor for attention. This is not about privacy or intimacy or whispery words passing between lovers. This is definitely not about that. This is about a woman stepping away from these things, stealing away on a Saturday night because she didn't want the Sunday morning just this once, not even with its richness and repose, didn't want the pillowy confirmation of love, the high art of it, the gestures.