Author's note: All sexual acts portrayed in this story are between characters aged 18 or older. Any resemblance to non-fictional people and events is neither intended by the author nor inferred by the text.
Thank you for reading. Please enjoy
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Chapter 3
The sun was high over the Pacific Ocean. Clay was there to watch the familiar yet breathtaking sight from the vista of Harmony Cliffs. And suddenly, Clay realized that he wasn't alone.
To his left was a young man looking out at that same horizon while enjoying a cigarette. This was maybe a man in his twenties, with tousled brown hair and clothes that had a worn, retro, secondhand look to them. His face had a serene sort of calm to it. Underneath all the dirt and stubble, Clay could see features that were smooth and yet somehow hard, like a marble statue.
Clay didn't recognize this man, but he somehow knew that posture and that look in his eyes. Clay tried to speak, but he couldn't get a word out. Clay tried to reach out, but he couldn't move. What's weirder, Clay took a couple of hard whiffs and realized he couldn't smell the tobacco smoke.
Finally, the young man flicked his finished cigarette off the cliff. Looking out to the ocean, he took a deep breath and a deep sigh. He was just about to move again, until someone cleared her throat.
Clay and the young stranger spun around at the exact same time. And Clay could feel his eyes shoot wide open.
It was Her. She might have been wearing clothes (a plain blouse and a knee-length skirt), her red hair was tied back in a ponytail, her green eyes didn't have their usual glow, and her skin was pink and flush with life instead of ghostly pale. But there was no mistake. It had to be Her. And for some reason, she was carrying a lot of painting equipment under her arm.
"Oh! Sorry there, miss," said the stranger. "I'll just be outta your way."
"No, no," she interjected, reaching out to stop him. "Wait there, please."
He stood still while she circled around and back with an arm outstretched. Then she stopped to tilt her head this way and that. "Could you turn to your left a bit?" she asked.
He relaxed a bit and turned to the left for her. "Like this?"
"Yes!" she said excitedly. "Hold still, just like that." Even as she was talking, she was setting up her easel and canvas.
"Are we really doing this?" he asked her.
"Would you mind? I mean, this is wonderful. You should see how you look in this light."
The stranger shrugged and stood in place. All the while, she set up her paints and got to work. Clay marveled at her efficiency -- every move was practiced and deliberate.
"Just to be clear," the man ventured, "we've never met before, right?"
"I don't think so," she answered, without even slowing down at her work. "Are you new in town?"
"I'm... just passing through," said the stranger.
"Where are you headed?"
He paused. "Nowhere, really."
She switched brushes and attacked the canvas with broad strokes. "Well, De Lilla's a very nice place to stay."
"I don't plan to stay here," he told her. "I've never really been at home anywhere."
Instead of giving him a look, the woman gave it to his figure on the canvas. "Everyone belongs somewhere," she said, "you just have to find out where. Now hold still."
He held still and kept his mouth shut. They stayed quiet for another several minutes, which seemed to suit him just fine.
"Tell me," she finally said, without taking her eyes off the canvas, "do you know who John Courtis is?"
"Never heard of him, miss."
"Then I guess you've never been up north. He owns every major newspaper in the Pacific Northwest. The man," she continued, while going in for the finer strokes, "has so much money that he spent it on works of art. Then he got so much art that he needed a place to put it all. So he bought some cheap real estate nearby, built his own museum."
"Sounds like a rich asshole, if you'll pardon my saying."
"He's... eccentric, to be sure. But his museum brought people into town. Tourism dollars started coming in, Courtis hired people to make the town look pretty, and the whole cycle began again. It's a wonderful town, all full of artists."
"I'm no artist. Not like you."
"Everyone's got a talent. What's yours?"
He shrugged. "Well, I'm a good hand with a wrench."
"Uh huh. Uh huh." It was impossible to tell whether she was talking to him or to herself. But then, a couple of seconds later, she happily said "Done!"
The young man circled around to get a good look. And it's a wonder that his jaw didn't snap off, it dropped so hard. "How did you do all that in fifteen minutes?"
"Fifteen years of practice. How do the proportions look?"
The stranger raised his palms. "It all looks fine to me!"
"Thanks," she said. "Really. You can have it, if you like."
He took a step back. "Oh, no, I couldn't impose."
"Then buy me lunch."
"I... I'm completely broke."
The girl smiled and shook her head. "Fine," she said, extending the painting to him. "Could you just hold onto it?"
He gently took the painting while she folded up her easel and packed up the rest of her equipment.
"What's your name?" she asked him.
"I'm Tommy. Tommy Jensen."
Her equipment stowed under each arm, she stood up. "Well, Tommy-Tommy Jensen, I think I might know someone who needs a good hand with a wrench. C'mon."
With a beaming smile, she led Tommy on the path away from the cliffs. For whatever reason, Clay wondered how much time had passed. And that's when he woke up.
***
Clay was disoriented and groggy, not to mention confused and bewildered by the dream. But he woke up in a hurry when he saw his alarm clock.
The alarm was never turned on. The clock read 10:24 AM.
"Oh, shit!" Clay leaped out of bed. "Shit shit shit!"
Within five minutes, Clay had thrown on some random clothes and he was out the door, running like mad down the street with his backpack trailing behind him. And then, as if the day couldn't get any worse, a police car pulled up behind him, flashing its lights and blaring its siren a couple of times.
Clay turned around. "Oh, for God's sake,
what?!
"
The driver stepped out. It was Deputy Munoz. "Morning, Clay. Where are you running off to?"
"I need to get to school and I'm already way late! So if you don't mind--"