You were long and slender and fragile like a flower. Smooth skin, pale golden in colour, creamy and soft like the silken pages in a book. I remember your skin, soft to the touch. Giving. Forgiving. In the secret recesses of the night, in the silent communion of our bodies, your skin was like an answer to a question I never knew I had asked. Amidst the soft sighs and smooth moves, our bodies intertwined, sliding like pliant machines over the hidden depths of thought. Oh and I knew you then, though I never knew you. I knew your enduring presence, though I never knew you. I knew your gentle touch, like a bird's wing, upon my quivering organ. And I never knew you. I never knew you. I never knew you at all.
That first night. We were in a pub, talking. I bought you a drink. We knew each other a little, though not much. We were acquaintances, not friends. We talked a little more. And then you said, while my heart leaped, "do you fancy a shag later?"
The simplicity of it. "OK then," I said, and you laughed.
We walked home to my house, playfully touching, laughing. You were happy. We held hands and touched, kissed, laughed, touched again, bumping into each other as we walked and talked and laughed. And your glasses were shining in the light of the street lamps, and you were shining too. I could see you shining behind the reflected light from your glasses. I thought you were my angel then, come down from heaven for a taste of sweet relief.
I don't remember much more about the walk. I don't remember getting home. I don't remember the front door or the living room. I remember the bed.
We were on the bed. We were kissing. Breath to breath. Lip smacked and tongue lushed, nose to ear and neck, sniffing, wanting, your skin hissing with soft electricity, tongue to throat, rolling like boats on the endless swell, feeling your body beneath your clothes as hands and eyes and whispers slid into the far-away night, as clothes slipped and ripped and disappeared, as belts were unbuckled and shoes shed and socks lopped, and we were together on the bed.