She just wanted to go for a fucking swim.
What was it that was stopping her? A need to be alone was a comforting excuse. But a fear of being laughed at was probably closer to the mark. It was a fear that had stayed with her since she was their age. Them, over there, those sun kissed long beans of beautiful young limbs and lips. It was dumb. In her logical mind she knew it was ridiculous because she could handle being laughed at… she could. Could she? She could. Surely.
Probably not.
But why would they laugh? They wouldn’t. Would they? They could.
She was on holidays. She just wanted to swim off the end of the jetty like she did every morning and every evening - just as the sun rose over the jungle-covered mountains and just as it sunk into the ocean’s horizon. The gentle lapping of the turquoise sea, on the coral-ed sand, beckoned her but it only made her feel a like tool.
Was she intimidated? There was no need. She was fleshy, and buxom and bikini-ed; she was the intimidating older woman now. She was successful. She was successful. She was successful. She was successful. She was successful. She sounded like her mother. She didn’t feel “successful”. She always felt out of her depth, out of place, lost at sea, like the novelty hippie in a business class world. Like a child pretending, playing dress ups.
At the end of the jetty, the teenagers gaggled, laughed, cheered. The boys were perfectly sculptured triangular shapes with low-slung board shorts, low enough you could almost see, almost imagine…
There no point imagining. She was too old for them now. She’d like to think ‘beyond’ them. But here she was, arse pressed against palm tree, pretending. To read.
She had never been into that muscular look, anyway. The men she dated now were older than her, fraying at the seams, salt and peppered, a little loose, but with bodies wonderfully imperfect, comfortable. She would never feel those solid bodies, arms, torsos, backs, like those of the boys out there on the jetty. She was in her thirties. Hell, she’d never felt them at any age. She’d never known what to do with them, still didn’t. Pale, knock-kneed musicians were who she spent chasing, laying and being afraid of in her youth.
She was suddenly struck with the thought of having sex against the palm. In her mind’s eye, it was fucking good. Every limb knew where to go; every arm, hand, finger knew which pliable fleshy bit to knead.
In reality, it would be trickier. Her bikini bottoms would be splintered, ruined. The rough, palm trunk would grate her bare arse. Limbs would be cumbersome, shoulders would get in the way. The angle, really, would be all wrong. It just wouldn’t work.
She sighed. It wouldn’t work.
Her book. She’d been staring at the same page for a while now. She struggled to find the sentence she’d been trying to read for the past little bit of time; trying to read while appearing cool and relaxed. Cool and relaxed.
There were girls out there on the jetty, too.
The girls with their firm, milky white skin and dripping honey-like breasts, bursting, pressing against their bikinis. She had never been like them. At their age, she was probably wearing an awkward one-piece and had been convinced she wasn’t thin enough to wear a bikini. With protruding round-y girl hips and a stomach that was often thought to be a pregnant belly, she thought there were rules to these things. And she believed back then, that she did not belong in the category for bodies that could wear a bikini. Her body was not hers then, not as it was now. She could wear a bikini now.
See, she was successful.
Even so she still grabbed and poked at the fleshy bits of her hips and stomach, when she looked in the mirror. Her gaze would be disapproving, scolding. Still, even now. Even over thirty. Even with making the money that she did. Even having read plenty of thick, intimating books. Even having taken plenty of thick, intimidating lovers to bed, but never against palm trees. Even now. She still felt fat and ugly and she was still scared of teenagers.
She just wanted to go for a fucking swim.