Hi Friends,
Over a year ago I wrote a piece called Memories in Ink. A close friend of mine had just been diagnosed with cancer, so when the request to contribute to a compilation supporting that very cause, I was happy to add a piece to what was an amazing collection of stories in support of a very important member of the fandom, for a disease that impacts so many of our lives.
Over a year ago I wrote a piece called Memories in Ink. A close friend of mine had just been diagnosed with cancer, so when the request to contribute to a compilation supporting that very cause, I was happy to add a piece to what was an amazing collection of stories in support of a very important member of the fandom, for a disease that impacts so many of our lives.
If you participated in Stand Up for Katalina this won’t be new to you.
However, I felt this was a good opportunity to share a story that was directly linked to the fandom and the place I originated from.
Mariahajile and Alex, thank you for helping me pretty this up. I couldn't have done it without you.
Bornonhalloween thank you for all your work on this very lovely banner. You're amazing :)
Mariahajile and Alex, thank you for helping me pretty this up. I couldn't have done it without you.
Bornonhalloween thank you for all your work on this very lovely banner. You're amazing :)
This was written for Katalina and the incredible people who touch
our lives, leaving behind a mark that cannot be erased.
*Should you prefer to read this on a white back ground you can follow the link here to Wattpad:
Memories in Ink
OR should you prefer to take a trip down memory lane, you can read it on ffn:
Memories in Ink
*Should you prefer to read this on a white back ground you can follow the link here to Wattpad:
Memories in Ink
OR should you prefer to take a trip down memory lane, you can read it on ffn:
Memories in Ink
I
looked out into the sea of proud faces and found my mother, hands clasped in
her lap, a small smile gracing her lips. Behind the pleased façade, an aura of
sadness draped around her, making her shoulders sag. Her smile faltered as I
caught her gaze. Beside her, my younger sister texted away, oblivious to my
mother’s conflicted pain. What should have been a joyous occasion was tainted
by the absence of my father. His death had rocked us all. My mother suffered
the most, his sudden departure from this world sending hers into upheaval.
Today, as I walked across the stage and accepted my diploma, I felt the loss
acutely. He was my staunchest supporter, the one person whose wisdom I sought
at each fork in the road. Without him on this day, I felt unbalanced.
Afterward,
we went for a quiet dinner at dad's favorite restaurant. Mom tried to keep it
together, but the wounds were too fresh. Only three months had passed, and the
trip down memory lane wasn't manageable for her. As the only son, I adopted the
role of caretaker, stepping into the shoes of the man I had revered. I drove
them home while mom sniffled beside me and my sister sat sullenly in the back seat.
The click-click-clicking of her incessant texting grated on my nerves. I had to
remind myself she was young and struggling to cope, just like the rest of us.
That
night, while my fellow graduates celebrated the beginning of life beyond the
protective shield of university classes, I sat on the living room couch with my
weeping mother and pored over dad's art portfolio. How my priorities had
changed in a few short months. We paused at each page and she would tell me a
story, painting a more detailed picture of the man I called my father. I missed
him. I missed our candid conversations about life and what the future might
bring during our morning runs. I felt cheated out of the opportunity to know
him beyond the formative years of personal screw-ups and learning from
mistakes. At twenty-five, there lay before me a road untraveled, but I felt
lost without the guidance I had taken for granted.
"He
would have been so proud of you," she said quietly, fingers drifting over
the lines that created an image of her own face. It was so intricate in detail,
it looked like a photograph.
"I
know."
"I
miss him terribly."
"Me,
too."
I
didn't tell her it would be okay or that it would get better. I didn't tell her
anything. Nor did she try to placate me with insincere words of reassurance.
Instead, I wrapped my arm around her shoulder and we grieved together, me for
the father I had lost, her for the future that had disappeared.
~*~
3 MONTHS LATER
I
shelved the still warm plate and grabbed another from the dish rack. The dishwasher
had broken yesterday, and mom hadn't known what to do. I called in the
repairman. It was one of those simple things dad would have taken care of in
the past, but now he wasn't here to do it. Instead, I stopped by a couple of
times a week, had dinner, mowed the lawn, and took care of the essentials. It
was the new normal.
"Are
you sure you want to put the house on the market?" I asked.
My
mother sighed. "No, but I don't think I can live here anymore."
"How's
Lindsay feel about it?"
"She
told me I was a selfish bitch and locked herself in her room." Her voice
hitched, and her eyes welled with tears. That explained my mother's transparent
excuse about Lindsay being under the weather when she refused to eat dinner
with us.
She
grabbed the counter, taking a deep breath to compose herself. It troubled me,
how tight a leash she had on her emotions these days.
"You
want me to talk to her?"
"You
could try. I doubt you'll get very far, though. She's like your father that
way; thick headed." She smiled faintly, her eyes far away, lost in a
memory.
"Give
Linds some time. She'll come around." She would, I was certain. I'd talk
to her, hopefully she would see reason. The house was too big for the two of
them, and I couldn't move back in. I didn't want to suffocate in the memories.
I changed the subject, concerned the topic would cause more stress than it
would alleviate.
"You
know dad's sketchbooks?"
"Hm.
What about them?" She was distant now, closed off and shut down. These
times were the hardest, when she was present but not.
"Do
you think I could borrow a few? I'll bring them back, but there are some
sketches I'd like to make copies of."
She
wrung out the cloth and pulled the stopper from the drain, watching the water
swirl and funnel until the sink was empty. "Of course, dear. You can keep
them, though. Your father would have wanted you to have those."
"Thanks,
mom." I pulled her into a tight hug, wishing I could do something to ease
the ache left behind from his loss.
"Why
don't we go find the ones you want, then?" She gave me a firm squeeze. The
strength in her embrace was a contradiction to her fragile emotional state. She
was a hollowed out version of the mother I once knew. I hoped time would heal
her and bring her back. I worried it wouldn't.
We
spent the evening sifting through boxes of dad's old sketchbooks. They were all
time-stamped, dating back to before I was born. He had been relentless in his
quest to capture beauty in any medium he could master. He'd been an
unparalleled art teacher for the local college, and I had envied him his talent
with colors. My artistic pursuits fell more into the musical category, but I
had chosen to keep that as a hobby rather than make it a career. While I
excelled at business, and numbers, sometimes I wondered if I'd made the right
choice.
I took
a box of sketchbooks home with me, flipping through them until the sun peeked
over the horizon. I used Post-it notes to mark the pages I found most
interesting, narrowing down the choices for the art I wanted to use to memorialize
my father. We had talked about it months before my graduation from the MBA
program at Harvard. We'd even gone as far as researching shops and artists,
setting a tentative date for the event. We had planned to commemorate the
important marker in the timeline of my life—and his—with tattoos.
He had
talked about the design, but I'd never seen anything in his sketchbooks to
match his description. I figured he hadn't had the opportunity to flesh out the
image in his mind. It wasn't until I flipped through the most recent volume of
sketches that I found what I was looking for. The design was incomplete, but it
was evident it was the piece he had meant for us to wear. The bones of the art
existed, but the absence of color made it two dimensional.
Despite
its half-finished state, I made a consultation appointment. Dad had noted an
artist at a specific shop on the back of the unfinished piece, and I hoped she
could do something with the design.
The
appointment was scheduled for later in the evening, so I stopped at home first
and changed out of my suit, into some casual clothes. The shop was nicer than I
expected; the floors were polished hardwood, plush chairs surrounded a coffee
table with magazines and custom tattoo albums. I approached the cash desk,
running my finger along the steel edge, and peered through the glass top.
Inside the casings were rings and barbells of varying sizes and colors. A burly
guy with a thick beard and some serious ink covering his arms sat behind the
counter. He didn't look very friendly.
"Hi,
I have an appointment with Fallon."
He
nodded and bellowed over his shoulder, "Fallon, your eight o'clock is
here."
A girl
across the room glanced over from her station and called back; "She can't
hear you, Adam. She's in the back doing a piercing."
Adam
gestured to the waiting area. "You can have a seat. She won't be
long."
I did
as I was told, sitting in one of the chairs facing the interior of the shop. A
few minutes later, a guy came out of a room at the back of the shop looking shell-shocked.
A woman followed close behind. She was hidden by his broad frame so I didn't
get a good look at her until she approached the cash register, slipping between
Adam and the counter. She was beautiful in an eccentric way. Her hair was long,
and dark, laced through with bright streaks of poppy red, falling in thick
waves around her face. Her eyes were a rich, golden brown, framed with heavy
lashes. Dramatic make-up accentuated her features but didn't overwhelm. A
silver ring pierced her nose, and a diamond stud decorated the upper right side
of her lip. Her t-shirt showed off an intricate and colorful sleeve on her left
arm. She looked to be in her mid-twenties at best. She finished with her
current customer, passing him a folder of information before she sent him on
his way.
"Steven?"
she asked, her gaze moving from the computer screen to me.
"Hi."
I rose from the chair, suddenly self-conscious. My dad had an innate charisma
that made people gravitate to him. I missed his presence and the way his
confidence had always given me the jolt of courage I needed. It was absent now.
I second guessed myself, feeling out of place. The jeans and the t-shirt that
had seemed reasonable now felt too preppy.
She
stepped out from behind the cash, her smile open as she approached me. Even
with her heels I had a good six inches on her. I took her proffered hand as she
introduced herself, hyper aware of how warm and soft it felt in mine.
"Looks
like you came prepared." She nodded to the sketch book tucked under my arm.
"I
did."
“Can I
have a look?” She motioned for me to have a seat and dropped into the chair
across from me.
I passed
over the sketch book. Being here made my decision to move forward with this
tattoo more real. I ran my damp palms over my thighs as she set the book
between us and flipped it open. She scanned several pages before she looked up,
her gaze inquisitive.
"These
are beautiful. Did you have something specific in mind, though?"
I
reached across the table and flipped to the page with the half-complete design.
"It's just an outline. I think it would work best in color."
She
stared at it a good long time, fingering the edge of the page. "This is
great. I can definitely work with this. Have you thought about where you want
it?"
Dad
and I had talked about that before he passed. We'd thrown around ideas, but
we'd never settled on an exact location. At the time, I'd figured we didn't
have to make any concrete decisions. Now I wished we had.
"Well,
it would probably work as a back piece, but then its hidden most of the time.
So maybe it would be better as a half-sleeve, upper arm?"
She
looked pleasantly surprised by my suggestion. "With a few alterations,
this design would make a great partial-sleeve. I'll need a few days to work on
it. Can you come back on Wednesday?"
"Around
the same time?"
"That
would be perfect."
She
made a copy of the sketch and asked if she could keep the book until I
returned. My hesitation must have been obvious, because she assured me she
would take care of it. I left the shop feeling more at peace than I had in a long
time.
~*~
On
Wednesday, I rushed home from work and changed into black jeans and an old band
t-shirt. When I showed up early for my appointment, Fallon greeted me with the
same sincere smile as she had the last time. A gleam of excitement lit up her
eyes as she led me to a station at the back of the shop. She pulled out a chair
for me and sat down behind the desk.
"So
I have a few options for you." She opened a folder and spread out three
separate designs, all variations on the same theme, the sketch I'd given her
the inspiration.
The
first was the entire tree, as it had appeared in the original sketch, but in
full color, giving it the dimension it originally lacked. The next two were
close-ups of one particular branch; the first done in fall colors, the second
in more vibrant tones. We discussed them all, going over the concept and the
placement in detail. We talked for well over an hour before settling on option
three. Fallon thought it would work best as a three-quarter sleeve. Once I made
the decision, a wave of calm passed over me, as if my dad were there with me,
giving his approval.
Now
that I’d settled on the design, Fallon wanted to figure out the exact placement
for the tattoo. She led me to one of the rooms at the rear of the shop for
privacy.
"I'll
need to get to your shoulder." She smiled and gathered up a few things
while she waited for me to roll up my sleeve. Or at least I attempted to.
Unfortunately, I'd worn the t-shirt several years ago, before I filled out, so
the sleeve didn't roll very well.
"I
don't think this is going to work," I muttered, embarrassed.
"You
can take your shirt off if it makes it easier," she said, her expression
impassive.
I
followed her suggestion and I grabbed the hem, yanking it up over my head. She
stared at me as I stood in front of the three-way mirror, my upper body
reflected from every angle. She had to have seen plenty of half-naked bodies considering
her line of work. It wasn’t like she was checking me out.
"Maybe
we should reconsider a back tattoo." Her fingertips brushed back and forth
over her lips as she perused my torso.
"I
used to row," I said stupidly, as if it mattered.
"It
shows." She gave her head a shake and moved closer. "Are you right or
left handed?"
"I'm
a lefty."
"Then
I'm thinking your right arm might be best for the tattoo, unless you have a
preference."
Once
again, the dull ache in my chest flared. If my dad had been here with me, we
would have been able to make these decisions together. While I was glad I was
going through with this, it intensified my grief in ways I hadn't expected.
"Is there any particular benefit to one over the other?" I asked.
"A
sleeve, whether half or full or anywhere in between, can be uncomfortable as it
heals. If you do a lot of typing or anything that’s repetitive it could be
pretty irritating. Especially if the tattoo is on your dominant arm," she
paused, giving me time to consider my options. "On the other hand, maybe
you'll want another sleeve in the future, so you'd have to endure the pain
eventually. It's food for thought, anyway."
I
hadn't anticipated wanting another piece after this one, but I couldn’t say
with absolute certainty I wouldn't. I mulled it over for a couple of minutes.
"Let's go with the right arm." It seemed like the best choice for
now.
"Great,
let's get to work." Fallon reached into her back pocket and pulled out a
black Crayola marker.
She
studied my arm, murmuring as she went, checking contours and drawing lines,
touching me a lot. It helped keep me from fixating on the absence of my father
in this process. As I watched her work, I realized I could see down her shirt,
though not a lot. And it wasn't like I was trying to, but she was wearing a
button down with the first three open, and I was a man. She had breasts. They
were nice. Her cleavage was right there. I was compelled to look, if only for a
second or two.
I
shifted my attention to the poster on the wall, advertising various genital
piercing options. I contemplated getting a Prince Albert. The impending problem
in my pants disappeared. The idea of putting a hole in the most sensitive part
of my body caused said appendage to remain flaccid in the presence of an
attractive woman with nice cleavage. Good to know.
"How
long have you been an artist?" I asked, making conversation.
"An
artist? Since I could draw. But I've been tattooing for almost five years now. I
think I've done somewhere around a hundred pieces, not counting all the single
session tattoos," Fallon said around the end of the marker clamped between
her teeth.
"That's
incredible."
She
shrugged and pulled out a measuring tape, recording the circumference of my
bicep and then my forearm on a sheet of paper. "It's what I love to
do." Once the measurements were double checked, Fallon wiped down my arm
with a warm damp cloth, removing most of the marker. She gave my shoulder a
gentle squeeze. "Okay, we're all set for now. You can put your shirt back
on."
I
pulled it over my head. "So, when can we start?"
"The
first session will take a few hours since the outline is so detailed. Should I
assume you'll need a weekend appointment to manage that?"
I
nodded and followed her out of the private room. She checked her schedule,
frowning as she twirled her hair around her finger. She flipped through the
book twice, double checking dates. "I don't have a Saturday appointment
available for another three weeks."
"That
far away?" I was eager to get
started, and the immediacy of the tattoo got lost in the span of time between
the planning and the execution.
"Can
you wait that long?"
"If
I have to." Though I'd only met her twice, I felt comfortable with Fallon.
The fact that she was extraordinarily hot was a bonus. Her credentials were the
most important factor, and my dad had recommended her. That seemed doubly
important now that he was gone.
"I
can call if there's a cancellation between now and then.”
I gave
her my cell number, and she promised to call if a timeslot opened up. I kept my
fingers crossed.
~*~
The
week passed with no phone call. I hadn't really expected one, but I had hoped.
On Friday evening I flopped down on the couch and turned on the TV. I was
bagged from the week, and I needed to do something mindless. As the newbie at
my company, I ended up with a lot of paperwork passed down from those above me.
Combined with the private guitar lessons I gave in my off hours, it made for
long hours. I should consider giving up teaching guitar. It wasn’t like I was
looking to start a band, but I enjoyed playing. It kept me connected to my
artistic side and my father.
I was
half-asleep when my phone rang. I scrambled for it, dropped it on the floor,
and banged my head on the coffee table in my rush to pick it up. I rubbed my
forehead and barked a groggy, irritated greeting.
"Uhhh—hi,
may I please speak with Steven?"
"That's
me," I replied, trying to place the female voice.
"Oh,
hey, it's Fallon. I hope I didn't disturb you."
"Not
at all," I lied. “What's up?" I checked the time. It wasn't even ten.
I was such a party animal.
"I
have a cancellation for tomorrow. I know it's short notice, but I thought I'd
give you a call anyway." I could hear paper rustling in the background.
"What
time?" Not that it mattered. I would take the appointment.
"I'm
free until two in the afternoon. We don't usually open until eleven, but if you
could be here by ten, it should give me plenty of time to get the outline
done."
"Ten
it is."
"Great.
I'll pencil you in. Thanks for taking the appointment on such short
notice."
"Thanks
for calling."
There
was a pause. She cleared her throat. "My pleasure, Steven. See you
tomorrow."
In
spite of my exhaustion, I didn't sleep very well, too wound up to find rest. I
dreamt of my father. He wanted to tell me something important, but every time I
got close enough to hear him, he would fade away, always out of reach. When I
woke, I felt his presence more deeply than I had since his passing. It unnerved
me as much as it eased me.
I
arrived at the shop a full twenty minutes early. No one was there. I walked
down the street and picked up two coffees, pilfering a bag of creamers, milk,
and sugar since I had no idea what Fallon took in hers. I couldn't even be sure
she drank coffee. It was the thought that counted, I supposed.
When I
returned, Fallon was inside, standing behind the cash desk. I tried the door,
but it was locked. She looked up at the sound and smiled. She crossed the shop,
ushered me inside and locked the door again. "Hey, sorry about that, but Adam
doesn't get here until after eleven, so it's easier to keep the shop locked so
we're not interrupted.”
"Gotcha.
Thanks again for the appointment and for opening early for me." I handed
her a coffee and the bag of condiments.
"Oh
God! You're an angel." She rose up on her tiptoes and planted a kiss on my
cheek, then rubbed at the spot with her thumb. It came away with a smear of
pink that she wiped on her jeans. "Sorry." She gave me a devilish
smile that looked far from apologetic.
She
popped the lid and dumped three sugars and two creams into the cup, stirring it
with the pencil tucked behind her ear. She took a test sip, emptied in one more
packet of sugar, stirred again, sipped again. Satisfied, she replaced the lid.
"Liquid heaven."
"If
you say so. Looks like you don't even like coffee," I teased as she swept
up the empty packets of sugar and creamers and deposited them in the garbage.
"I
figure if I put in enough sugar the sweetness will rub off on me. Adam tells me
I’m surly in the morning.”
“I’m
not sure I’d agree with that.”
“You’ve
caught me on one of good days.”
She
winked and surprised me when she hooked her pinkie finger with mine, leading
the way to the private room we'd used the week prior. The space was already set
up, tattoo machine and ink arranged on a metal tray beside the chair. Various
containers and cloths were stacked close by. She chattered away as she pulled
her hair into a ponytail and wheeled a stool over.
"You
can lose the shirt," she gestured at my button down. "Then you'll
need to stand in front of the mirror so we can transfer the stencil."
I did
as Fallon asked and stood still while she prepared my arm. Once the art had
been transferred onto my skin, she got down to work. There was a strange
comfort in the stinging pain as she passed the tattoo machine over my arm. It
seemed to echo the pain inside, giving it room to exist where I usually pushed
through it, forcing myself to move on even though sometimes it hurt more to do
so. Here, I could allow the physical and the emotional aches to merge.
Fallon
asked me lots of questions while she worked. It helped distract me when I
started to feel overwhelmed. She began with the benign—my job, my education, my
hobbies—and slowly spiraled inward, getting more personal.
"So
let me get this straight," she said, putting down the tattoo machine to
wipe away residual ink. "You have a Bachelor of Fine Arts, an MBA from
Harvard, and you work for a bunch of—what did you call them—pretentious,
blowhard panty-sniffers?" She shook her head when I began to interject.
"But you teach guitar lesson on the side because you don't want to give it
up, and you're an artist? How does
one person manage so much talent? And what exactly makes someone a
panty-sniffer?"
I
cringed at the way it made me sound. "Most of the self-serving jerks I
work with would fit into the panty-sniffing category. They’re a bunch of old
perverts. I'm hoping the quality doesn't rub off by proxy. And I'm not an
artist."
"Thanks
for clearing that up," Fallon chuckled. "And based on the design I'm
putting on your arm, I'll kindly disagree with your last statement."
"I
didn't draw this." I looked at the art taking shape on my arm. "My
dad did."
Fallon
paused and looked up. "Who's your dad?"
"His
name was David. He used to teach art at the local college."
Fallon
put down the tattoo machine. "You're not talking about David McCormick,
are you?"
"You
knew him?"
"He
taught me art history in my first year. He was incredible, so forward thinking.
He was the reason I started here. He's not teaching anymore?" She looked
disturbed by the idea.
I smiled ruefully. That explained where his recommendation
came from. I mentally reviewed our conversations about the tattoos and his
insistence that we come to this studio in particular. I wondered if this had
been his plan from the beginning, his way of formally introducing us to each
other. "He passed away in the spring."
"I'm
so sorry. He was an amazing teacher. He must have been a great father."
Her sympathy was genuine, as was her shock.
"He
was. We planned to get tattoos to celebrate my graduation, but he had a heart
attack three months before I finished. He'd always been healthy. It was
unexpected."
"That's
awful." She swiped gently over my arm with the damp cloth, her other hand
coming to rest at the base of my wrist. "It sounds like you were
close."
She
opened the door and I walked right through, sharing the best parts of him with
her, telling his story. In return, Fallon told me about who he was as a teacher
and how he'd impacted the lives of so many students along the way. He'd been an
influential man, his charm and personality touching more than just those
closest to him. Instead of memorializing him through ink, I commemorated his
life and all the parts of him that lived on through me.
~*~
I
returned two weeks later for the first of three sessions in which we would fill
in the outline with color. The inside of my arm hurt like a bitch. Thankfully
she stopped occasionally to give me short breaks while she changed colors.
During those sessions, Fallon talked about her family. I learned about her
childhood, where she'd grown up, what kind of music she liked, her favorite
food; little things that fleshed out a person and made them who they were. I
liked her beyond her eccentric beauty. I liked the person inside.
At the
end of the final session, I stood in front of the mirror, lifting my arm over
my head so I could inspect the intricate details of the design. "It's
amazing. Thank you."
While
there was healing in its completion, I felt like I was losing something
special. I had grown accustomed to seeing Fallon every week. I would stop in
once between our bi-weekly sessions so she could check how things were
progressing. During these unnecessary visits, I brought coffee and we would
chat in one of the private rooms until her next appointment arrived. Before we
left the privacy of the tattoo room, she always hugged me. It was like a fix,
getting me through until our lengthy sessions wherein we would have the
opportunity to talk for hours.
I
stared her profile while she dressed the tattoo.
"It's
been a pleasure getting to know you, Steven."
After
more than two months of constant connection, I didn't want this to be the end.
I'd already experienced loss in the truest sense of the word. I didn't want to
do it again when I didn't have to. Her sincerity along with my desire to
continue seeing her, in whatever capacity possible, made me stupid. In the
aftermath, I would replay the moment over and over, fixated on what I had done
wrong and how I could have made it right.
I
shoved my hands in my pockets. Rocking back on my heels, I summoned my courage.
"There's this band playing in a couple of weeks—"
Panic
immediately clouded her expression, and she cut me off before I could even
finish the sentence. "I can't."
And
just like that, the high of finishing the tattoo evaporated. "Right. Of
course."
"It’s
just—"
"You
don't have to explain. I shouldn't have mentioned it." I didn’t even know
if she had a boyfriend. I grabbed my jacket and pulled it on, grimacing as it
slid over the new ink.
"It's
not that I don't want to," she said softly.
"Really,
Fallon, it's cool. Forget I said anything." I smiled, but it was forced.
"We should settle up." I opened the door of the private room and
stepped out into the studio, effectively shutting down the conversation.
I paid
for the balance of the tattoo, our once easy conversation stilted by my
thoughtlessness.
"Did
you want to schedule your touch up appointment now?" She asked, trying to
catch my gaze.
I
refused to meet hers. "I'll call." I was being cold, but I felt like
a loser. I wanted to escape my humiliation.
"You
should come back in about four weeks, but you can stop in next week and I'll
check on the ink, see how it's healing."
"Sure."
"Did
you want me to book you in on Saturday, the usual time?"
"Whatever
works for you," I replied, trying to be amicable when I felt anything but.
I left
with a heavy feeling in my gut. I wished I could talk to my dad, find out what
the whole purpose had been if I was just going to end up losing something else
in the end.
~*~
I
called the shop during off hours and left Fallon a message cancelling the
Saturday check-in, unable to face her. I spent endless hours ruminating on how
it could have gone differently. I'd probably read the signs wrong, our
connection had been a figment of my imagination, a projection of what I wanted,
not what was real.
She
called on Sunday and left a message about rescheduling. There were a lot of
pauses, a few stops and starts, like she wanted to say something but didn't. I
didn't call back, unable to deal with the rejection. My emotions were too
skewed. I was angry at my dad for giving me hope when there wasn't any.
~*~
The
following week I was in the middle of dinner with my mom and my sister when my
phone vibrated in my pocket. I sighed and pulled it out, hoping it wasn't work
calling me in early again the next day. I intended to send the call to
voicemail, but I didn’t recognize the number so I excused myself from the
table.
"Hello?"
"Hi.
Hello." The female voice was familiar, but the bad connection made it hard
to hear. I moved around, hoping to clear the static. There was a long pause and
then, "Steven?"
"Yeah."
I waited, trying to decide if I was right about the caller. I wanted to be.
"It's
Fallon."
"Hey."
I tried not to sound excited. "I didn't recognize the number."
"I'm
calling from my cell."
"Oh,
right."
There
was another long, awkward pause, and we both started talking at the same time.
"Sorry,
go ahead," I prompted with a nervous laugh.
"Um,"
Fallon hesitated and then asked, "How's the ink? You haven't been in yet."
Of
course she was calling about the tattoo. It was ridiculous to think otherwise
just because she was calling from her personal phone. "It's good. I've
been a little busy with work. I was planning to make an appointment." That
was a lie. My ego had been bruised when she shot me down; I hadn't recovered
from the blow.
"Okay.
That's good to hear. I've got time next weekend if you want to drop by. I can
schedule you in for an hour."
"I
could do that." I was such a sucker. Despite my humiliation, I was willing
to come back for more.
"Great!
That wasn't the reason I was calling, though," Fallon finished softly.
"Oh?"
"There's
this band playing tomorrow—" she laughed uneasily. When I didn't respond,
because I wasn't sure if she was serious, she rushed on. "I should have
said yes. I wanted to say yes. It was stupid of me to say no."
"Is
this you asking me on a date?"
"It
doesn't have to be a date . . ."
"Do
you want it to be a date?" I was done tiptoeing around the issue.
"Yes."
"What
made you change your mind?"
"I
didn’t get to see you last week. I missed your visit.”
“Ah. I
see.”
After
a long pause, she said, "You still haven't said yes."
I
smiled. "I thought it was implied."
~*~
Fallon
showed up at my apartment two minutes late. I double checked for my wallet,
grabbed my jacket, and waited impatiently for the elevator to take me to the
lobby. The doors opened to reveal a woman who looked just as nervous as I felt.
Fallon was wearing a simple grey dress, black tights, a black leather jacket
and motorcycle boots.
"You
look gorgeous," I told her, because she did.
"So
do you." She appraised me and flashed a mischievous grin. "Ready to
go?"
I
started toward the visitor's parking lot but she motioned in the other
direction, pointing at a motorcycle. I shouldn't have been surprised.
She
passed me a helmet. "Do you ride?"
I
shook my head. "I've never been on a bike before."
"No
worries. Just stay close and lean when I lean."
She
got on first and I straddled the seat, fitting myself around her. I wasn't
about to complain about the necessary physical contact, but it made it pretty
hard to stifle the already uncontrollable issue below the belt.
"Ready?"
she asked.
"Sure
thing." I wasn’t sure at all, but I wasn’t backing out now.
I
wrapped my arms around her waist and held on tight as we wove our way through
traffic and sped into the city. The trip downtown was disappointingly short. We
arrived at the bar early and found a small table in a private corner where we
could order drinks and talk uninterrupted. Conversation was easy, as it had
been in the tattoo shop, only minus the constant physical contact. She solved
the problem when she began tracing the branch decorating my left forearm with
her fingertips.
When
the band came on we abandoned the table to get closer to the stage. Fallon took
my hand and led me around the perimeter of the crowd, slipping between bodies
until she had a good view of the band. I stood behind her, protecting her from
the slightly aggressive masses, not that she needed it. She was all fire and
attitude, shouting out the lyrics she knew by heart. Watching her was like
observing distilled freedom.
She
stayed close, wrapping my arm around her waist and threading her fingers
through mine. The curve of her ass rested just below my near constant erection
as she swayed to the beat. It brought to mind activities I wanted to engage in
when there was more privacy and fewer clothes involved.
Fallon
spun around, her hand sliding up my chest. Her palm connected with the back of
my neck and she gave a gentle tug. I leaned down until her lips were at my ear.
"I
can feel that, you know," she shouted, her voice raspy.
"What?"
"That."
Her palm connected with the front of my jeans, right where my hard-on strained
against the fly.
I kept
my eyes locked on hers, seeing the challenge in them.
I
shrugged and lowered my head further until my lips were at her ear.
"You're sexy. I react accordingly."
I
brushed my lips across her cheek as I straightened, but her fingernails dug
into the back of my neck and she turned her face to mine, lips touching. There
was no soft preamble to the intensity of the kiss that followed, all teeth and
tongues and want. I had no idea how long we kissed like that, but by the time
we came up for air, we were much farther away from the stage and the song had
changed.
She stared
up at me, hands on my chest, both of us breathing heavy. "I've wanted to
do that for weeks," she said on a labored exhale.
I
grinned. "You don’t say.”
She
pulled me in for another kiss. We didn’t pay much attention to the band after
that.
When
the set ended, the crowd dispersed, many heading to the bar for fresh drinks. Fallon
ran into a few friends and she introduced me to them, but she was distracted and
her eyes kept darting to the exit. After a few minutes of polite conversation,
she laced her fingers through mine and told them she had to work in the
morning. I tried not to be disappointed. As far as first dates went, this one
had been stellar.
We
stepped out into the cool night air, the damp heat of the bar dissipating. Fallon
dropped my hand and pulled her jacket out of her bag, tugging it on. "Sorry
about that. I hope you don't mind that we left."
"That's
fine," I said, concealing my discontent with a smile. "I get that you
have to work tomorrow."
Fallon
laughed. "I don't start until one. As much as I like my friends, I want
you to myself tonight."
"Oh."
My disappointment vanished.
We
stopped at her bike and she turned, uncertain. "Do you want to go
home?"
"Are
there other options?" I asked. I didn't want the date to end, especially
now that I knew we had left for selfish reasons on her part.
"We
could go back to my place, instead.”
"Whatever
you prefer." I replied, giving the choice back to her.
“Do
you have a roommate?”
“No.
It’s just me.”
She
smiled and shoved the helmet into my chest. “Your place it is.”
Fallon
slung her leg over the seat and donned her own helmet, checking over her
shoulder while I secured mine. The second it was on, she revved the engine and
we took off. This time, I appreciated the short trip.
The
elevator ride was quiet. I wanted to say something to ease the tension, but I
couldn't think of a damn thing that didn't have to do with getting her naked. I
wasn't expecting sex. We could have a
drink, talk, make out. I planned it out in my head as we ascended, rubbing my
thumb over the back of her hand.
The
elevator dinged and I led her down the hall, fumbling around in my pocket for
the keys. Once inside, I shed my jacket and took Fallon's from her, hanging
them up.
"Can
I get you a drink?" I asked, trying to be polite.
"No."
We
stared at each other for a few long seconds. More than two months of pent up
mutual desire exploded like fireworks. Fallon
launched herself at me, shoving me against the wall. Her tongue pushed past my
lips, searching, the wet warmth a compliment to her fierceness.
I
cradled her face in my palms, my touch gentle in contrast to the way she
gripped my hair. Dropping one hand to circle her waist, I drew her against me
and backed us down the hall. My goal was to reach the couch.
"I
want to see your bedroom." She bit my bottom lip, the sting pleasurable.
"Are
you sure you don't want a drink?" I teased, sliding my hand under her
shirt, hot skin meeting my cold palm.
She
sucked in a breath. "Very sure. Maybe later. Right now, I'd rather have
you."
We
stumbled awkwardly down the hallway, neither one of us willing to stop kissing.
We got there eventually, and by the time we arrived, I was already shirtless. Fallon
dragged me toward the bed, which I'd had the foresight to make this evening
before she picked me up. And I'd left the bedside lamp on. Just in case.
She
climbed up on the edge, parting her legs so I could stand between them. Some of
the ferocity left her then, her fingertips drifting along the waistband of my
pants as she looked up at me, expectant. I stroked her cheek and sank down
between her thighs. Her dress was the next item of clothing to go.
Beneath
the grey cotton, she wore a pale blue satin bra, the edges trimmed with dark
blue lace. Pretty, delicate, sensual; the embodiment of her sexuality in the
form of lingerie. I leaned in, running my nose along the lace edge, breathing
her in. I smoothed my hands up her sides, my thumbs brushing back and forth along
the underside of her breasts, close but not touching. A soft sigh left her as I
reached behind and unclasped the hooks. The satin came free and I discarded it,
my gaze trained on her face.
"Stop
teasing and put your mouth on me," she whispered.
I
kissed the swell, taking my time to reach the taut nipple. I sucked it into my
mouth, swirling with my tongue before I grazed it ever so gently with my teeth.
That elicited the response I wanted. She gasped and arched, drawing me closer.
Lifting
my head, I found her mouth with mine. She moved backward on the bed until her
head hit the pillows, and I settled between her thighs. I forged a trail down
her body with my mouth, taking the time to admire the artwork that decorated
her ribs, trailing over her hip to disappear under the waistband of her tights.
She lifted her hips in silent ascent and I removed them, leaving her panties in
place. Fallon had other ideas. She discarded the blue satin, leaving her naked
and glorious.
The
artwork that accentuated her beauty no longer held my attention as I ran my
hands from the outside of her calves to her knees. Moving my palms inward, I
smoothed along her inner thighs, following the same path with my lips. Holding
her gaze, I kissed my way over her soft, supple skin, until I reached the place
I wanted to put my mouth. The glint of steel nestled there made me pause. I
brushed over it with a knuckle, the barbell sliding with the movement. Fallon's
sharp inhale evoked my curiosity. Her fingers slid into my hair, gripping
gently as I continued to sweep the pad of my thumb over the tiny steel ball,
applying the barest amount of pressure. Her fingers tightened and her hips came
up off the bed, seeking more than I was giving.
"You're
driving me crazy," she groaned as I kissed the juncture of her thigh.
"What's
that saying? What goes around . . . ."
I
replaced my thumb with my tongue. I didn't stop until she came.
"Come
here," she demanded, half-sitting to meet me as I shifted up her body. She
kissed me, groaning in frustration as she fought with the button of my jeans.
She wrestled with the zipper, and together, we managed to get them off. She
palmed my erection, stroking with one hand while she held onto the back of my
neck with the other.
"We
don't have to—" I began.
"I
want you." The emotions she'd kept in check over the past months swam to
the surface. I hadn't misread anything.
I
reached blindly for the nightstand drawer, pulled it open and grabbed a foil
square, thankful I’d had the foresight to be prepared. I covered her hand with
mine, moving it away as I ripped open the packet and rolled the condom on.
Spreading her thighs with my hips, I held myself above her. I shifted forward;
my erection nestled against the soft, warm heat. We both stilled, time
suspended, our labored breaths the only sound in the room. And then I pushed
inside.
We
stayed close, my chest to hers, Fallon's legs wrapped tightly around my waist.
Her hands moved over my shoulders and across my back, and she pressed down when
she reached my ass, trying to get me to go deeper, harder, faster. When I
didn't, she bit my shoulder.
"Why
are you such a tease?" She slapped my ass and I pushed up on my arms,
laughing.
"You
know what they say about payback." I circled my hips, eliciting a low moan
from her.
"Payback
for what?" She unhooked one of her legs from around my waist and her calf
moved up along my ribs, her hands splayed out on my chest.
"For
making me think you didn't want this." I hooked my arm under her knee and
pressed forward again, giving her what she wanted.
Her
mouth dropped open and her eyes fluttered closed as I went deeper and thrust
harder but kept up the same slow pace.
The
light banter was replaced with serious intensity. "I want to see
you," I whispered, brushing my lips over hers.
Her
gaze met mine, and in it was both an apology and a longing that echoed my own.
She rested her palm against my cheek, her thumb swept along the corner of my
mouth. I knew then that this was different, that it was what I had been
searching for. The physical act wasn't just about the desire for release, but
the desire for the ultimate connection; where body and mind and soul fused and
twined, becoming inseparable. We moved with and against each other, seeking
pleasure, wanting to heighten each other's. I kissed her when I came.
Afterward,
in the peace of unconstrained silence, I lay with her tucked into my side, her
head on my chest. She traced the lines of ink she'd put on my arm while I held
her, wondering how my father had known.
I
understood now this had always been his intention, that the tattoo had been a
vehicle for a much larger plan. He had seen something in Fallon that would
complement me; a partner I could walk through life with. While she could never
fill the hole his loss had left behind, the gift of her presence in my life
helped to temper the ache. I could create a new space for her in my heart, one
that would be hers alone.
~*~
Thanks
for reading!
~HH
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