Author Note: I loved writing this story and listened to the feedback, so I decided to give this story an upgrade. Longer, meatier and harder hitting. Please enjoy this extended(twice as long), detailed, rawer and dirtier version. I hope you enjoy reading it, as much as I enjoyed writing it. K xx
Capsized and Resized:
The river shimmered beneath the late afternoon sun, a long ribbon of light winding through the forest like liquid glass. It moved slowly around the bend, quiet and wide, undisturbed. The air hung heavy with summer--thick with the scent of pine sap, sun-warmed bark, and something faintly mineral carried in from the water. No cell service. No traffic noise. Just birdsong, breeze, and the hush of untouched wildness.
This wasn't the kind of place you stumbled on. It was the kind you
earned
.
Lily stepped out of the SUV and stretched, arms reaching above her head in a languid arch. Her white tank top clung to her ribs, damp with sweat from the drive, pulled slightly by the shape of her breasts. Her shorts had ridden up high on her thighs, revealing a hint of muscle, soft golden skin, and the curve where leg met ass. She adjusted her sunglasses and took in the landscape--woods pressing in close, a narrow trail snaking down to the water.
"This is incredible," she murmured, not to anyone in particular.
Jake was already halfway into the gear, efficient and upbeat. "If we set up before sunset, we'll be golden," he called, flashing his boyish, reliable grin. She smiled back--genuine, but muted. She loved him. She did. But at that moment, his checklist energy and obsession with ultralight cookware didn't do much to stir anything below her collarbone.
And then the air shifted.
No sound, no movement--just that strange, unmistakable sense that someone was watching.
Marcus.
He stepped out of the second vehicle with a slow, deliberate ease, like his body never did anything it didn't mean to. He rolled his shoulders once, stretching the fabric of his black shirt across a chest that could've been carved from stone. Cargo shorts hung low on his hips, the curve of his V dipping beneath the hem. His thighs--
God
--moved with a kind of weightless power, thick and solid beneath skin that caught the light like polished bronze.
Lily turned, not hurried. Just curious.
And then--
there he was
. Fully. In motion.
Jesus.
He was even larger than the photos Jake had shown her. Not just big--imposing. His skin was a rich, deep brown, smooth and sun-warmed, catching the light like polished onyx. He had that quiet, physical gravity certain men carried, like their bodies knew how to fill a space before they even spoke. The kind of presence you didn't need to see twice to remember.
His face was still, unreadable, expression calm but far from vacant. And when his eyes passed over her--just once, just briefly--she felt it.
Not a leer.
Not an accident.
Just...
notice
.
Lily blinked. Her stomach tightened--not fear, not nerves, but something lower. A quickening. A soft throb that fluttered at the base of her spine.
Something in her shifted.
She exhaled slowly, and turned back toward the trees.
"Hey," he said simply, dropping the pack to the ground with one hand. His voice was low--smooth, but measured. Like he rarely needed to raise it to be heard.
Lily turned. "Hi," she replied, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear with a touch more care than usual. "We finally meet."
Marcus nodded once, a slow incline of his head. "Been meaning to for a while," he said. "Jake talks about you."
She tilted her head. "Good things, I hope?"
He smiled--just at the corner of his mouth. Not a full grin. Not enough to show teeth. Just enough to make it feel like the rest was waiting, just under the surface.
"Only good things."
There was something about the way he said it--neutral on the surface, but warm underneath. Like maybe he knew more than he was letting on.
Before the silence could stretch, Jake appeared at Marcus's side and clapped him on the back. "C'mon, man. Let's get the kayaks to the water."
Riley bounded out of the other SUV, vibrant as ever, her hair twisted into two messy buns, sunglasses perched crookedly on her nose. "You boys do the heavy lifting," she declared, already grabbing a water bottle. "Lily and I are gonna go claim the good spot for the tents."
"Deal," Lily said quickly, already moving. Grateful--for the excuse. For the break in whatever invisible current had just passed between her and Marcus.
But her body hummed with it. That low, charged hum just beneath her skin.
It wasn't just the way he looked at her--it was the way it
landed
. Like he could see more than she meant to show. Like he didn't miss a thing.
She tried to ignore it.
Failed.
As they moved toward the riverside, weaving through trees and gear and light conversation, Lily found her gaze drifting--backward. Just a glance.
Marcus bent to lift one of the kayaks.
And there it was again.
His back shifted beneath the fabric of his shirt--broad, carved. His arms pulled with a fluid strength that looked effortless, but made the veins in his forearms stand out in sharp relief. The fabric stretched tight across his shoulders, then looser across his waist, and when he lifted, his shorts shifted just enough for her eyes to catch on the curve beneath.
He was big.
Not just tall. Not just strong.
Big.
Lily swallowed. Hard.
Heat touched her cheeks, and she turned away fast--too fast.
She said something to Riley. She wasn't sure what.
It didn't matter.
Her pulse was already dancing at her throat.
And somewhere deep in her belly, that flutter from earlier unfurled into something
hotter
.
It was going to be a long,
complicated
weekend.
--------
The fire crackled low, its light flickering across the trees in restless amber waves. It kissed Lily's bare thighs, danced up the long lines of her legs, and flickered over her skin like it wanted to memorise every inch. She sat cross-legged in a low camp chair, a tin cup of wine dangling from one hand, the other draped carelessly over her knee. The remnants of the hike clung to her--sweat, warmth, the scent of pine still tangled in her skin.
She wasn't obvious.
Not flashy. Not styled.
But the eye couldn't help returning to her.
Her beauty had patience--
the kind that waited for you to notice
. And once you did, it refused to let go.
She was slim, built for motion--
not sculpted, but shaped by movement
. Yoga. Hikes. Stillness. Breath. A quiet grace lived in her posture, the way her limbs extended and folded like she belonged in the wild, barefoot and sun-warmed.
Her tank top clung to her ribs, worn thin from use, damp where the sweat hadn't yet dried. It moulded to the soft curve of her chest--small breasts, high and firm, perfect beneath the cotton. No bra. No need. Her nipples were drawn tight from the cooling air, pressing subtly against the fabric, more suggestion than display.
Marcus noticed.
Her stomach was flat, with that singular, alluring line cutting down the centre--
a mark of care, of discipline, of strength without hardness
. Her hips narrowed, thighs long and smooth where the hem of her shorts barely held. Her ass curved like a secret, small and tight, more peach than hourglass--
but perfectly held together
, a little lift that whispered through the firelight.
And she moved constantly.
Not to seduce--but to