You Can’t Predict the Weather
In which Gene reveals to Shara the intensity of his passion for her and dark skies.
She leans up on his shoulder and says, “Let’s do it. You want to do it?”
“Uh… right now?” Gene has just been listening to one of his favorite sounds gifted his apartment. When storms come in from the South, they inevitably cause the oversized lid on the art deco street lamp to clunk under its own loose weight. He liked to leave the door open as the winds kicked up. Hell, he liked to leave the door open to invite the storm inside; yes—for a cup of whoop-ass. That was the pleasure: open the door to the danger, let it come in. For him, the streetlamp had become a kind of novel bell; impending storm coming. She’d probably not even noticed it, he realized, her chin straining up to rest on his spine and shoulder.
“The thing is…”—how to put it—“I don’t want to fuck you while the storm is coming in…”
This is a way-bold statement for their budding relationship and he sees the surprise she can’t hide from her face. Had he said the word “fuck” in her presence yet even? He’d no idea. But her face is not marred by shock; it is genuine uncertainty he sees. He twists his neck around and smiles—nothing menacing here—and she giggles. Then he turns away from the screen door, the clunking of the street lamp, the sky split in half between bright blue and rolling gray, and wraps his arms around her. She lets him take her in and in her way, a way she hopes he notices, she presses her face against his chest and stares thoughtfully at the front moving across their little city. She does like storms that arise, too. He squeezes her and after a nervous breakthrough says, “I want to fuck you when the storm is here—when it’s banging on the windscreen, in full effect.”
She decides to play the straight man, “Oh, I see…”
He squeezes. “You know it.” He bends his head down and quiet, “You better think the storm is me.”
She leans back from him and waves her hand Scarlet before her face. “Oh goodness.”
He won’t live up to it, so he smiles too.
Shara sees the stumble and knows she must recover lust. “I’ll wait for that, you monster.” She waits, his face is creasing in a way that’s coming around, and then she adds, “You fuck me like the front of weather.” There’s a long pause of eye-looking and she adds, “I can’t predict the weather.”
Read the whole thread: A Field Guide to the Socially Inept
Characters and Places: Gene Copeland, head, passion, Shara Cashra, storm, weather