Mild
The Chair Across the Room
517 words · 3 min read
The chair is eight feet away. She has measured it without measuring it — the way you learn a room by living in it. He moved it himself, earlier, dragging it back from the corner with a single quiet instruction: stay on the bed, and let me watch. The rain against the window has been steady for an hour, the kind of Vancouver October rain that erases the street sounds entirely, and the lamp on the nightstand throws a low amber light that stops just short of where he sits. He is in the near-dark. She is in the light. That was also his idea.
She is still in his shirt. Unbuttoned, cotton gone soft from too many washes, the kind of soft that has no friction left in it. It hangs from her shoulders and falls open down the front, and when she settled back against the headboard the fabric fell to either side of her and stayed there. She has not closed it. The shirt's hem brushes the tops of her thighs when she shifts, a faint cool drag across skin that is already warm.
The silicone is on the sheet beside her right hand. She put it there ten minutes ago and has not touched it since. She has been watching him instead, cataloguing the way he holds himself in the chair — elbows on knees, hands loosely linked, the specific quality of his attention. He is not performing patience. He is genuinely still, and the stillness is something she is adding to her record of him, a data point she did not have before tonight.
Her left hand is flat against her sternum. She is aware of her own heartbeat against her palm.
She picks up the silicone with her right hand. It is cool — cooler than she expected, having sat in the autumn air of the room — and the contrast against the inside of her wrist as she adjusts her grip makes her draw a breath she does not release right away. She holds it. Lets it out slowly through her nose, longer than it came in.
His expression shifts. A small change around the eyes. She catches it and files it: the look he gets when something surprises him into paying closer attention. She has seen it twice before — once over a restaurant table, once in a doorway. Never here. Never directed at her like this, in the lamp's reach, while she holds something cool and deliberate in her right hand and watches his face for the next flicker.
She keeps her knees together. The shirt's open edge lies against her inner thighs, the lightest possible pressure, less than a touch. She is aware of the space between her knees the way you are aware of a door left almost closed — the potential of it, the fact that it exists.
The rain continues. He does not move.
She lets her knees begin to part, just enough, watching his face for what she has not seen yet — and the chair across the room holds him perfectly still.