Wand Vibrator in a Chicago Living Room, Thursday Winter

Same couch, same Thursday, same wand vibrator from the drawer she has never moved — she is aware of her own ritual the way a monk is aware of vespers, resigned and grateful both, and when she's done she brings the heel of her hand to her mouth because that too is part of it now.

Mild

The Thursday Practice

534 words · 3 min read

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The drawer has not moved in fourteen months. She knows this the way she knows the weight of her own coat not by checking, but by the absence of any reason to check. It is the second drawer of the end table to the left of the couch, and on Thursdays after eight, when the city outside has gone quiet under whatever cold front has settled over the lake, she sits down and she knows the drawer is there and she lets that knowing be enough for a moment.

The lamp is on. The one in the corner, the one that throws amber across the left half of the room and leaves the right half in a grey she has never bothered to correct. She sits in the amber half. She has always sat in the amber half, though she has never said this to anyone, has never thought of it until now, sitting here with her knees together and her hands loose in her lap and the cold still working its way out of her bones from the walk from the train.

The sweatpants are old enough that the brushed cotton on the inside has gone almost silky. She is aware of this against the backs of her thighs the specific give of fabric that has been washed enough times to stop resisting. There is a small tight warmth already present at the crease where her thighs meet, and she does not move toward it yet. She sits with it. This is also part of the practice.

She exhales, and the exhale comes out a half-second longer than she had breath for, something in her chest releasing before she had decided to release it.

She is not thinking about anyone. This is the part she would not know how to explain. There is no story she is telling herself, no face she is borrowing. There is only the lamp and the cold outside the window and the drawer to her left, and her own body which has arrived at Thursday the way it always arrives with a kind of low, patient insistence she has stopped trying to argue with. She gave up arguing with it around month three. Now she is simply here.

Her right hand is in her lap. Her left hand rests open on the cushion beside her, palm up, not gripping anything.

She looks at the drawer.

Not yet. She has learned that the not-yet is part of it too that her body responds to the waiting the same way it will respond to the first contact, that the anticipation is not preamble but practice, that she is already, even now, already.

The waistband of the sweatpants sits low on her hip. She is aware of the elastic there, the slight looseness of it, the way it would require almost nothing to shift.

Almost nothing.

Her right hand moves not toward the drawer, not yet only down, settling across the flat of her own thigh, the heel of her palm pressing lightly against the fabric, the warmth beneath it specific and familiar and hers.

Her knees are still together.

She looks at the drawer.

Hot

Same Drawer, Same Hour

540 words · 3 min read

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She opens the drawer the way she always opens it without ceremony, without hurry, the way you reach for something that has been yours long enough to stop requiring permission. The wand is cold at first. It is always cold at first. She sets it against her thigh, outside the fabric, and waits for it to take her temperature. She turns it to the first setting. The sound is low enough to be swallowed by the amber quiet of the room. The vibration moves through the brushed cotton and arrives at the thin-worn fabric at her inner thigh not sharp, not diffuse, but specific in the way a pressure...

Mid-scene teaser

She shifts the angle. Heel of the wand tilted, the head pressing now at the exact center, and the worn fabric here is thin enough that the distinction between the vibration and her own warmth has become difficult to maintain. She notes this the way she notes everything — clinically, from somewhere slightly above the room — and then the clinical part recedes because the second setting does not allow for clinical.

Spicy

The Heel of Her Hand

528 words · 3 min read

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She turns it to the fourth setting. The sound fills the room the way silence fills it completely, without asking. The head of the wand presses through the worn cotton and she is no longer managing the angle, no longer noting anything from above the room. She is only here. The thin fabric at the center has gone damp and the vibration transmits through that dampness with less give, more direct, more fact than it was a minute ago, and her hips have made three small upward presses she did not decide on and will not decide on. Her jaw is loose. She can feel it the way her mouth has opened...

Mid-scene teaser

The breath returns. Ragged, through her mouth, once. Then silence.

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