Natural

It was late. I was tired.

And hungry.

I found her on IM. In the time we’ve known each other, it was always as friends of a friend. We hadn’t shared more than fifty words between us.

But I knew.

We chatted; she had just stepped out of the shower and was drying her hair. I told her not to get dressed. When I found her, I wanted her in just a towel. She gave me directions to her house and told me to come straight in. She’d be in the bedroom at the back.

She listened well. I opened the bedroom door and found her in her bed in just a towel; well, towel and some sheets. I smiled, shook my head, and told her the sheets were cheating. She kicked them away.

I sat on the edge of her bed and asked her if she was nervous. Yes, she said, she was – was I?

In the initial moments of our IM conversation, I had been almost shaking, so intense was my hunger. The promise of tasting prey tender and rare. Once committed to action, however, I felt a familiar quiet settle over me. Knowing it would feed, the wolf of my hunger lowered himself patiently to the ground, alert but content to wait for the inevitable feast.

No – I wasn’t nervous. This part comes naturally.

Undressed

Her dress.

She has the kind of curves that beg to be gripped, the kind of curves that conform fabric to skin. I rarely see her in skirt or dress, but she was wearing one that day. I wanted her in that dress. I wanted to stand behind her and quietly tug the edge of it up just far enough for my hand to disappear under the back of it. Let fingers find the small of her back, the first electric touch of naked skin while she shifts in front of me, trying not to betray the fact I have my hands on her. Each shiver, each shift of her hips detailing her reaction to my fingers as they slip under the edge of her panties, pressing lower until I find the smooth skin of her ass.

This brazen intimacy is an aphrodisiac. My hands on her naked skin make her nervous and wet. I know she likes to be watched. To be hungered for. To be taken. Until today, it’s not something she’s ever been truly brave enough to have. I was cruel enough to make it a gift she had choice but to accept.

I’d make her watch me push the fabric over her thighs, hips, waist. I wanted her to feel my teeth on her skin, her eyes watching me as I marked her. I wanted to have her in the dressing room. Bent over, dress up and over her ass while I fuck her hard and fast, driving her into the side of the small room, one hand entangled in the back of her hair while I take her with enough force to leave bruises on her thighs.

Chapter and Verse, Part III

(Chapter and Verse, Part I is here, and Part II is here).

I was a busy youth.

But I wasn’t busy doing traditional teenage activities. I wasn’t on a high school sports team. I didn’t have a gang of friends to hang out with after school. I didn’t go to local parties, didn’t drink, didn’t get into trouble.

I spent my time on-line. This was back before it was cool. Back before the WWW. Before Al Gore invented the Internet super-highway (at the time, the ‘net was primarily used by the government, colleges, and UNIX geeks). Back then it was a gateway for me.

Once I had cracked the on-line door open at fourteen and became aware of the vast sexual candy store it provided in a medium that gave me the freedom in which to explore it, I was hooked. And when I say candy store, I’m not referring to pornographic movies, audio clips of women mid-orgasm, or even dirty photographs. In those early days, sexual content was limited to risque ASCII pictures and text conversations.

ASCII pictures did not flourish beyond those early BBS days. On-line chatting, however, remains fairly popular.

But this isn’t about ASCII pictures. This is about the women I met on-line and then later met in person.

The very first on-line woman I was to meet in real life was BG, someone I’ve touched on in earlier posts. I was about fifteen, she was mid-thirties and married (like many of my early endeavors). I met her at an Argus BBS brunch and stole my first kiss. No, really – it was my *first* kiss, chaste as it was in closed eyes and lips. What the hell did I know? We had taken a walk down the street from where the small get-together when she stopped, pointed to her lips, and waited.

Then there was the first ‘date’ I had. She was in her late twenties and drove an Eclipse. She had a raunchy imagination and when she got bored at work she would chat with me until she was driven to visit the restroom for relief. I still have a picture of her, somewhere, along with a card scented with her perfume (a hint of flowers that left an indelible impression on me). We caught Dead Again at the movies but I was too shy to make a move on her.

Yes. I was quite shy at that age. I’m fairly sure it was easy to make me blush.

I met the only girl my own age at her high school production of Grease; she was playing clarinet and got me a free seat. Once the show was over, I tried to steal a few awkward moments with her while my father waited to drive me home. Afterwards, we drifted apart; six months later, I logged in to find a note that she had been killed in a car accident. My parents offered to take me to her funeral, but I didn’t know how to deal with it. It was the first time in my life that someone I had had an intimate connection with was, in a irrevocable manner, removed from my life.

There was the woman I received a set of Tarot cards from. She was in her early forties and unlike the rest of the older women I played with, she embraced the age discrepancy between us. She enjoyed playing a nurturing role in my life while exchanging written fantasies about her seducing the young man next door. We met only twice. I can recall an empty playground, her in a swing while I stood between her legs and kissed her – this time, with parted lips, but not much more.

From these women, and all the women I didn’t meet in person, I learned how prevalent abuse was. One had a husband that hit her. Another had her first child in a bathroom because she was too scared to tell her parents. Several had been raped. It was a sharp awakening for me, coming to understand the forces that shape our lives; how easy many people find it to hurt those they love while intoxicated, angry, or simply ignorant. My youthful mantra had been ‘never intentionally harm another’; now it became ‘never UNintentionally harm another’. The edge of the knife I was learning to wield must never draw unintended blood.

I learned how easy it is to fall in love, the first rush of passion and emotionally-charged promises. I learned, too, how quickly those feelings passed. I tethered my heart that I not again be swept away by a rush of hormones and endorphins. With experience, I learned how to differentiate between lust and love and loosened the tether on my hunger while learning how to keep emotional distance (not necessarily a good thing).

I learned that every action, every conversation, was a thread, a connection with consequence that was often not felt for months or years. I learned the basic patterns of human needs.

Today, I know who and what I am. We are a product of what we do. Those who practice music every day become musicians. Those who spend their days in a kitchen become cooks.

Those who spend their time hunting, become hunters.

Footnote: Meeting someone in person is always a fascinating exercise. Whether you’ve seen a picture of them or not they always look different from what you’ve envisioned. Their personality is often both quite different and exactly the same from what you expect. Reconciling the differences is what makes these meetings interesting. Discovering which aspects of their personality remain true in person will ultimately determine if the relationship will survive.

Regardless of the long-term prospects, human nature being what it is, if the two people are even mildly compatible there is always a chance that the meeting’s emotional and sexual build-up will override any lingering issues. That, and a healthy dose of human curiosity, will often lead to a testing out of in-the-flesh sexual compatibility (kissing, groping, all night long sex marathon…)

Conceit of Conjuration

It is in the idly wrapping of her hair around my fingers, a slow tightening at the base of her neck until my grip tugs her head back. Her cheeks flush crimson, the slight catch in her breath is lost under my words.

I build my domain on moments like these. I steel belief with silhouettes of my darker self. I conjure with a word, my will wrapped like cords around my knuckles, a winding of tension and a hardening of desire until it becomes a weapon wielded in touch, a touch of fingers finding the steady thrum of a pulse just under the surface of her skin.

Vulnerable.

It is an art, a conjuration of intent that can carry the delicate fragility of open desire from one moment to the next. It is an art because we all want the freedom to let go, to forget. If there is irony in the act of binding someone tightly with leather and softly spoken words that they may then be set free, it is lost against a much larger truth.

We all want this. Master or slave; the bound and the binding; the masochist and the sadist. Each loses themselves in the other. In the act of serving them, they serve their own needs, they find release in the act. We become vessels of sensation, conduits towards freedom.

Humanity

Today’s installment finds our hero waxing philosophical. Will he manage to unravel the secrets of the universe? Will he experience a spiritual reawakening? Will he discover some fundamental stepping stone on the way to true enlightenment? Will he save Penelope before she is run over by the locomotive, sending the dastardly villain’s plan awry?

Sometimes I feel like I am living my life on the edge of some dangerous, elusive, truth. Except it’s not truly elusive. It’s simply forgettable.

We are not so different, you and I.

I think of those who, rather than face the decrepitude of reality, find solace in madness. And I understand its seductive pull.

I think of those who find hope and determination when confronted with illness and mortality. And I believe it possible I could do the same.

I think of how close we all are, all of us pages in the same book. The language and stories differ, but we share a common theme.

I think of how I want to find a way out of the box, as if the limits of my mind are contained in the frailty of the human animal. As if mental ascension was possible.

I think we all want to be unique but find comfort in how much we have in common.

I think the human condition is a shared experience, whether we want it to be or not.

“Accidentally my ass.”

D’jaevle says “Not wearing white today, by any chance, are you?”

Madeleine laughs. “No…”

D’jaevle says “Damnation. So much for accidentally knocking water onto your pretty white clothes.”

Madeleine says “Accidentally my ass.”

D’jaevle says “You sure you want to bring your ass into it?”

Madeleine says “Not entirely, no. :)”

D’jaevle says “Just part of your ass?”
D’jaevle looks you over with a slow spreading smile.

Madeleine just looks at the ceiling.

D’jaevle circles you and then places a hand on your upper back, forcing you forward, stumbling close to the wall. His hands slip down your ass slowly, feeling the curves through the layers of clothing.

Madeleine glances up at you and murmurs, ‘Stop making me want you so damn much.’

D’jaevle moves his hands to your waist, pulling you back hard against him, your ass rubbing along the length of the hard lump in his jeans, “Or what?”

Madeleine whimpers. “Or… I may get weak(er) in the knees…”

D’jaevle presses closer, grinding your ass back against him, his voice low, “It might be hard, but I can live with you getting weak…in the knees…”

Madeleine leans her head back against your shoulder, her breath hot along your jawline. And whimpers again. “It’s not fair to tease me this way when you’re so far away…”

You Should Hate Me

There are two kinds of hate.

The first hate is the kind that burns; yours insides are an hearth to your needs. The second hate is cold, a distancing out of a need to punish.

The first hate has something to prove through direct contact with the object of its disdain. The second has something to prove, but it is to yourself.

Both hates serve a purpose. If I can get you to hate me, if I can inspire that level of a connection with you, you have already given over to me what I need to have you.