The Hotel Bar
You never know what will happen when you're alone at the hotel bar....
I was in Chicago for business. With the pandemic, it was the first time I had traveled for business in nearly two years. I was out of practice.
After a long day, I was sitting at the hotel bar, pre-gaming before meeting a long-time friend for dinner. The hotel was right on the river. The weather was ridiculous, sunny and mild, like it is in Chicago only about a half dozen days each year.
When I arrived at the bar, there was only one empty seat. It was the first chair, empty because it was next to a very fat man who was breathing heavily through his mouth. He was huffing more than he was breathing.
I ordered a glass of Josh.
I ordered a second glass of Josh.
I saw you approach the bar. You were in fancy jeans, the kind that are intentionally threadbare here and there. You were in a white v-neck. At first, I thought it was a tee. But, as you got closer, I could tell it was not a natural fiber, not cotton. And, it was textured; it looked a little like a paper towel. It was loose on your torso, but tight on your arms. Curly, dark hairs from the middle of your chest were visible in the V.
Your approach was a bit of a strut. You walked with confidence, like you knew people watched you. They did. I did. You didn't notice, and I looked back to my wine.
When you said, "Excuse me, Sir," I looked up. I thought you were talking to me. You weren't, but I thought you were.
You weren't looking at me, so I got to really look at you. Your dark hair was wavy and parted on the left. It was thick and a bit wild, hanging over your ears and the down back of your neck.
Your blue eyes were wide, which gave the impression of being too close together. They weren't.
Your nose was a bit of a button.
Your lips were dark and thick.
When you spoke to the bartender, I noticed you had a bit of an underbite. Not a big one, but I noticed it anyway. I tend to notice things.
You had a ridiculous jaw line. It was angular and sharp. It made me jealous.
"How late are you open?" you asked the bartender.
"We close at 1," the bartender said.
"Thanks," you said, turning and walking away. I watched you go. Like your lips, your ass and thighs were thick, like they might one day be too thick, but weren't just yet.
One of the threadbare spots on your jeans was on your right butt cheek. I thought I saw skin. I wasn't sure.
I assumed that was the last I'd see of you. I assumed incorrectly.
I didn't think of you at dinner. That surprised me, as I thought of you the entire walk along the river to dinner, wondering what your story was, why you were at the Sheraton Grand Chicago on a Wednesday night at the end of June.
My long-time friend and I shared two bottles of wine with dinner. With the earlier two glasses, I felt the weight of them as I walked back to the hotel, the sky over the river and then Lake Michigan bright with stars.
I didn't need more to drink. But, I walked past the bar, just in case. You were there, sitting, seemingly alone.
I walked up and ordered over your right shoulder. You turned your head when I did. You smiled at me, like maybe you recognized me. I smiled back.
"Sorry," I said, realizing I was in your space.
"Nothing to be sorry for," you answered, piquing my interest.
The bartender put my glass on the bar next to yours. Instead of taking it, I left it there, pretending there was nowhere else for me to stand.
You were drinking a beer. We reached for our drinks together. You said "cheers" and clinked your glass to mine.
I cheered you back.
I was not usually bold. I was bold with you.
"I'm Robert," I said, placing my free hand on the back of your chair, casually, like it was not intentional. I lied. My name is not Robert.
"I'm Ryan," you answered.
"You by yourself?" I asked.
"I am," you answered. "I wasn't supposed to be, but I am."
"Stood up?" I asked.
"Appears so," you confirmed.
Lucky me, I thought, hoping. I moved my fingers between the chair and your back, sliding them into you, but pretending not to. You didn't react. I hoped some more, gently moving my thumb against the texture of your shirt. You didn't react.
We drank and talked, you two beers, me two more glasses of wine.
With me behind you, it was difficult to talk face to face. So, we talked into the mirror behind the bar.
I learned that you were thirty-nine, ten years younger than me.
I learned that you were in sales and always had been.
I learned that you were in Chicago for a national sales meeting.
I learned that you were supposed to meet a woman at the bar and "see where it goes."
I was undeterred by that last learning. I got lusty when I drank, and I was deeply in. I was definitely lusty.
I also was increasingly attracted to you, the confidence with which you walked spilling over into our conversation. The more we talked,the more I wanted you.
I reached my right hand to your right knee, running my fingers along the skin showing through the intentional tear. "You paid extra for this," I said.
"I didn't," you answered. "My wife did."
"You're married?" I asked, surprised, as you were not wearing a wedding ring, and disappointed, as I was not generally successful with married men. I felt like a kid who had just had an ice cream sandwich only to learn that meant he had to wait thirty minutes to get back in the pool.
"Yep," you answered, casually, not caring as I put two and two together and realized why you were not wearing your wedding ring. You couldn't wear it and "see where it goes" with whomever had stood you up.
"Kids?" I asked, my disappointment growing as my hope evanesced.
"Three boys," you answered. "12, 8, and 6.... Two more on the way... My wife is pregnant with twins."
"Wow," I thought to myself. "Your wife is home with three kids and pregnant with two more and you're here trying for road strange."
"That's not the only one," you said.
"Not the only one what?" I asked, confused by the reference to one, as we were talking about threes and twos.
"Tear," you answered, looking at me directly in the mirror. "There's another one on the right cheek," you said, leaning forward so I could see the one I had seen earlier.
"I know," I said, titillatingly accepting the invitation and running my finger through it and discovering that you were not, as I had suspected, wearing underwear. I immediately contemplated your penis, unconstrained. I wondered if it was left or right or straight down. I wondered if it was at that moment lengthening and thickening at my touch.
"I'm flirting with you," I said, making my intentions clear.
"I know," you answered, pushing your back into my hand to let me know that you knew I had been touching you and that I could keep touching you.
"You're flirting back," I said.
"A little," you answered, a wry smile on your face as you lifted and then drained your glass. "Just having a bit of fun before calling it a night."
"Can I buy you a final final and keep the fun going?" I asked.
You didn't hesitate. "No, thank you," you said, looking at your watch and announcing "I'm too drunk and too full for any more. It's time for me to call it a night."