--THE OCEAN WHISPERS LIKE A GREEN, SILK DRESS
The Confidence of Strangers
She
couldn’t get the answers she wanted, so she fled, left her baby with her
husband while trying not to think ill of herself. She drove all night. It felt good to be alone for once, no
squawking infant, no berating husband calling her names like filthy and whale
and beluga whale.
She
had breakfast at a diner that smelled of bacon grease, toast and ammonia. It looked like something out of the fifties,
the waitress with her red and white gingham checked dress.
A
man at another booth kept staring at her.
It felt odd and unsettling but also refreshing. It’d been a long time since anyone had seemed
to notice her.
After
a while, he came over and slid across the slick plastic seat on the opposite
side. He did this without asking
permission, which was something her husband would have done, though now she
welcomed the confidence of this stranger.
“You
aren’t from around here, are you?”
She
nodded. It had been over a day since
she’d uttered a single sound and still she didn’t feel like speaking, not yet.
“You
the mysterious type?”
She
nodded no again.
“Shy
then, I see.”
She
was shy when she was a young girl, easily trampled and fooled. She went mute for two whole years and her
mother made her pay for her silence each of those days. Her mother’s favorite weapons were hat pins
and a man’s long, leather belt.
The
stranger watched her eat, staring as if she was performing a magic trick or
something even more provocative such as masturbating for his pleasure.
When
he started to introduce himself, she held up her hand like a stop sign. No names.
After
the waitress brought her check, the stranger withdrew his wallet and paid. It was clear he wanted something in return
and she wasn’t sure if she would oblige him.
Going out the diner, he took her hand in his. Holding hands. It made her feel girlish and wanted.
“You
smell good. Like flowers.”
She
knew she didn’t, that he was making it up, but she didn’t care.
She
walked with him through the parking lot toward the rear where they came to a
large semi.
“This
is mine. I call her Pearl.”
The
vehicle’s exterior was surprisingly clean given the winter slush on the roads.
“Wanna
hop in?”
When
he opened the door, she grabbed a handle and pulled herself up and the stranger
got in on the other side and they both closed their doors.
“I
like your sense of adventure.”
She
wasn’t sure how this would play out, nor did she allow her mind to process any
of the potential consequences.
“Well,
what’ll we do now?” he said, grinning, eager.
Behind
the seats was a small area she guessed he used for sleeping on long
drives. He pulled the curtain aside and
motioned and she went there with him.
He
was gentle yet frantic, his mouth and fingers everywhere all at once. He kept saying, “God but you’re a stunner.”
She
climaxed without making a sound. Silence
was the only real weapon she possessed.
He
took out his wallet and handed her fifty dollars. She must have looked surprised because he
pulled out two fives.
“I
run through here every second Tuesday,” he said. “I hope to see you again.”
She
left the truck without fanfare and walked to her car not feeling anything, or
feeling dull and dead again. The pleasure
she’d felt now seemed like a trick, so fleeting.
She
got out and paced back and forth in front of the diner. It didn’t take more than thirty minutes
before a stranger came out and said, “You looking for a date?”
When
she nodded, he took her hand.
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