I yank my hand out of my pants.
What the fuck am I doing? Okay, the wetness on my fingers isn’t subtle. Clearly, Iknowwhat I’m doing. But thinking of Coleman? Clearly, I’m repressed and so bottled up with stress that anyone or anything will do!
I bring my hand back inside my pants, shut my eyes, and shuffle through better material. Let’s imagine a Viking with his battle axe. Some sort of after-battle-ravish-me-on-the-grounds-of-his-hut situation.
I rub small circles around myself.
It’s not quite working, so I go faster.
That’s not helping. If anything, I’m drying up.
The Viking grins down at me and smirks. A very familiar, arrogant smirk. Blue eyes turn into green?—
My eyes pop open. I’m swearing. Isn’t this great? I can’t even do a quick self-fuck now! My situation has truly deteriorated. And since when has Viking Man not done it for me? His big swinging axe—both the literal and metaphorical one—used to be a paragon of my male fantasies! But no?—
My eyes close shut. Obviously, I’m afflicted by some condition. I need help. I need medicine. I need to go to the bathroom and clean myself up.
I do, because if I finish to the thought of Coleman, I won’t be able to look him in the eye tomorrow.
With nothing else to do, and since sleep feels impossible, I return to bed and open my laptop again. If I can’t work, and if I can’t close my eyes without being bombarded by his fucking face, then I need to find something practical to do.
My email inbox is open. I go into the History folder and find the one I sent him last night. A list of facts and interests, because knowing I’m flat-footed and that I like thunderstorms is going to save this mess I’m in.
So far, there’s nothing real or personal I’ve shared with him. Logically, I know he needs to learnmorefor us to be a believable couple.
I start typing.
You probably don’t know that I was married once and am now divorced. It’s not shocking. Fifty percent of marriages end in divorce, so there’s no point in judging me. Not that I care if you judge me.
Though, since you’re not one to keep your opinions of me subtle, I bet you think the divorce was my fault. Something about working too hard. Don’t worry. You wouldn’t be alone in thinking that way.
I did work too hard at being married to a gambler. And in doing so, I became a gambler myself in a way?—
I stop typing mid-sentence, coming back to reality.
What am I doing?
Might as well title this email Dear Diary.
The thought of Coleman learning about my past is mortifying. What would he think of me? I don’t want to find out. I don’t wantanyoneto find out. Not when I’m privately trying to get everything back under control.
I delete the email.
Opening a new one, I type another list.
On the spectrum of grossly personal andthe sky is blue,this one lands somewhere in the middle.
On nights I have trouble sleeping, the smell of lavender helps.
Strangely, I hate the taste of lavender.
I don’t think I’ve physically gone running this last year. At most, I’ve jogged.
My childhood nickname used to be blueberry because I loved to squish them all over myself. They are still one of my favorite things to eat, but only when they are kind of sour.
When I was a toddler, my parents thought I’d run away, but I had just wanted to go to the park so I took my tricycle there, fully intending to come back.
I like purple.