It wasn't Valentine's Day. Having made this annual assignation on that day would have been too much, would have suggested that this strange thing we had was and forever would be the most significant romantic event of the calendar. For me, it was, but it might not always be that way. For the man, I had no idea.
That was how I referred to him: the man. I had no other name for him. He hadn't offered it and I hadn't asked again and it seemed silly for me to do so now. We'd settled nicely into anonymity. I might not know his name, nor he mine, but we knew each others' bodies and that was more than enough. He was the man. Maybe he referred to me as the woman. The possibility made me smile.
I waited in the hotel room, early as usual. I liked these quiet moments before he arrived, never knowing for sure whether he would or whether something had happened in the intervening year to prevent it. It was probably the same for him.
This was the fifth year. As I sat and waited, I remembered the beginning as though it were yesterday.
To say that we met at a party would have been both an exaggeration and an understatement. It was a Valentine's Day party that had attracted couples and a few strays possibly striving for coupledom under the cardboard cupids. I was unattached at the time and he... who knew?
It happened like in a Hollywood movie - a steady questioning glance shared between milling anonymous bodies. It wasn't love at first sight or even lust. If anything, it was inevitability.
He was there on the periphery, the glances becoming gradually more curious. He and his gaze unsettled me and that was a good thing. I'd been settled too long. I was perhaps a little tipsy by the time he gestured to the door. His eyebrows rose as if to ask whether I understood and, my heart racing, I nodded.
I met him outside. He was standing beneath an arbor that was festooned in dead, brittle vines that had snared the low moon. While none of his facial feature stood out as breathtaking in the dim light, the whole seemed to work together in an attractive package. He was perhaps six feet tall and trim. That was the extent of my impressions.
"What's your name?" I asked.
He placed an index finger to my lips, invading my personal space as though he had every right to do so. Shh. I got it. No words. Just as well - words at that point would have only complicated things. At that moment, imposed muteness struck me as playful rather than weird, an odd twist on the impersonal hookup that had evaded me for much of my adult life. Until now. At the same time, silence was refreshing. With no words, there could be no lies, no promises. It could be a moment, pure and simple.
He searched my eyes and I his. He looked intent and entirely present. And me? I don't know what I looked like, but whatever it was, it seemed to work for him.
The kiss, when it finally occurred, was initially gentle, tentative, and exploratory, like most first kisses are. I felt his cool fingertips at my cheek. My hand had found the back of his head, pulling him toward me.
In the back of my mind, I hoped that I wasn't coming across too desperate.
It felt like the most natural thing in the world, the kissing of this unknown man. Perhaps it was the day, perhaps the cardboard cupids had done their mysterious work. Whatever the reason, I opened myself to it... not necessarily to the man but to the experience. When his hand drifted down to the small of my back and then to my ass, I welcomed it and encouraged the touch with my body.
It was I who made the first significant move. He was pressed against me, his arousal evident, trapped between us. More boldly than I would have thought possible, I freed it, only to hold this warm living thing captive in my hand. He appeared surprised and a little amused that I should have taken the lead in this way. Truth be told, it was uncharacteristic of me.
Now that I had come this far, I was at a loss. The possibilities seemed limited. The physics of vertical fucking were never my forte. The angles were difficult, the stress and tension on the body fraught and I was no longer as flexible as I once was. Unhurriedly, he lifted my skirt, gently probed here and there, found my willing wetness. Soon I was divested of my panties. I stilled him with a hand on his chest and bent to retrieve the emergency condom I carried in my purse. I wondered whether condoms had a best before date, like yogurt. I'd tossed more than enough yogurt in my life because of this, probably out of an abundance of caution, but I was reluctant to investigate the foil package. Without doubt, it would have killed the moment. With a deftness that surprised me, I sheathed him. He was strong, my nameless man. Once prepped, he arranged me, hoisted me, holding the woodwork of the arbor while my legs draped over his arms. I almost let out an unladylike whoop until I remembered the silence thing. Then again, there was nothing ladylike about my position and I finally felt vulnerable. There was nothing between his cock and my exposed sex. With the first touch of it against my opening, I ceased caring, resolving instead to enjoy this moment.
Somehow, we managed. Somehow, it managed to be good.
At some point during my mad fumble for the condom that may or may not have expired, my phone had fallen out of my purse. As I was catching my breath, dishevelled and only now coming to terms with the irresponsible thing that I had done, he picked it up and asked permission with a glance. I nodded, curious as to what he had in mind. I expected that he might have entered his name and phone number into my contacts list. Not so. Instead, he entered an appointment in my calendar for the first Saturday of February next year. There was the name of one of the better hotels in town and a time. Eight PM. That was it.
With a final kiss, he was gone, as wordlessly as he'd entered my life.
I blinked at the date on my calendar and thought him bloody presumptuous. I closed the calendar application and returned to the party.
For the first few weeks after the party, I berated myself for my uncharacteristic stupidity and wantonness, but gradually, as these things do, the episode became one of many loose, colorful threads in the tapestry of my life. As time passed, he became a memory that I knew I would trot out decades from now when I needed to remind myself how alive and vital and reckless I'd once been. Of all the things I'd done and all the things I hadn't, the latter were the ones I regretted the most, and so I thought back on our wordless assignation with some fondness.
All in all, it wasn't a bad thing.
The man remained my guilty little secret and so guilty was the nature of it that I never mentioned his existence to my friends, even when the calendar turned to a bright new year and I remembered the date we'd set. As tempted as I was to seek guidance from those more worldly and circumspect than I, I mentioned him to no one even when I considered meeting him again. I had no doubt that my friends would have attempted to dissuade me, chastise me for a lack of sense. And what would they say? I could imagine it: